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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of A History of England Principally in the
+Seventeenth Century, Volume I (of 6), by Leopold von Ranke
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: A History of England Principally in the Seventeenth Century, Volume I (of 6)
+
+
+Author: Leopold von Ranke
+
+
+
+Release Date: April 9, 2009 [eBook #28546]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF ENGLAND PRINCIPALLY
+IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY, VOLUME I (OF 6)***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Paul Dring, Frank van Drogen, and the Project Gutenberg
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+A HISTORY OF ENGLAND PRINCIPALLY IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
+
+by
+
+LEOPOLD VON RANKE
+
+VOLUME I
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+Once more I come before the public with a work on the history of a
+nation which is not mine by birth.
+
+It is the ambition of all nations which enjoy a literary culture to
+possess a harmonious and vivid narrative of their own past history. And
+it is of inestimable value to any people to obtain such a narrative,
+which shall comprehend all epochs, be true to fact and, while resting on
+thorough research, yet be attractive to the reader; for only by this aid
+can the nation attain to a perfect self-consciousness, and feeling the
+pulsation of its life throughout the story, become fully acquainted with
+its own origin and growth and character. But we may doubt whether up to
+this time works of such an import and compass have ever been produced,
+and even whether they can be produced. For who could apply critical
+research, such as the progress of study now renders necessary, to the
+mass of materials already collected, without being lost in its immensity?
+Who again could possess the vivid susceptibility requisite for doing
+justice to the several epochs, for appreciating the actions, the modes of
+thought, and the moral standard of each of them, and for understanding
+their relations to universal history? We must be content in this
+department, as well as in others, if we can but approximate to the ideal
+we set up. The best-written histories will be accounted the best.
+
+When then an author undertakes to make the past life of a foreign
+nation the object of a comprehensive literary work, he will not think
+of writing its history as a nation in detail: for a foreigner this
+would be impossible: but, in accordance with the point of view he
+would naturally take, he will direct his eyes to those epochs which
+have had the most effectual influence on the development of mankind:
+only so far as is necessary for the comprehension of these, will he
+introduce anything that precedes or comes after them.
+
+There is an especial charm in following, century after century, the
+history of the English nation, in considering the antagonism of the
+elements out of which it is composed, and its share in the fortunes
+and enterprises of that great community of western nations to which it
+belongs; but it will be readily granted that no other period can be
+compared in general importance with the epoch of those religious and
+political wars which fill the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
+
+In the sixteenth century the part which England took in the work of
+emancipating the world from the rule of the western hierarchy
+decisively influenced not only its own constitution, but also the
+success of the religious revolution throughout Europe. In England the
+monarchy perfectly understood its position in relation to this great
+change; while favouring the movement in its own interest, it
+nevertheless contrived to maintain the old historical state of things
+to a great extent; nowhere have more of the institutions of the Middle
+Ages been retained than in England; nowhere did the spiritual power
+link itself more closely with the temporal. Here less depends on the
+conflict of doctrines, for which Germany is the classic ground: the
+main interest lies in the political transformation, accomplished
+amidst manifold variations of opinions, tendencies, and events, and
+attended at last by a war for the very existence of the nation. For it
+was against England that the sacerdotal reaction directed its main
+attack. To withstand it, the country was forced to ally itself with
+the kindred elements on the Continent: the successful resistance of
+England was in turn of the greatest service to them. The maintenance
+of Protestantism in Western Europe, on the Continent as well as in
+Britain, was effected by the united powers of both. To bring out
+clearly this alternate action, it would not be advisable to lay weight
+on every temporary foreign relation, on every step of the home
+administration, and to search out men's personal motives in them; a
+shorter sketch may be best suited to show the chief characters, as
+well as the main purport of the events in their full light.
+
+But then, through the connexion of England with Scotland, and the
+accession of a new dynasty, a state of things ensued under which the
+continued maintenance of the position taken up in home and foreign
+politics was rendered doubtful. The question arose whether the policy
+of England would not differ from that of Great Britain and be
+compelled to give way to it. The attempt to decide this question, and
+the reciprocal influence of the newly allied countries, brought on
+conflicts at home which, though they in the main arose out of foreign
+relations, yet for a long while threw those relations into the
+background.
+
+If we were required to express in the most general terms the
+distinction between English and French policy in the last two
+centuries, we might say that it consisted in this, that the glory of
+their arms abroad lay nearest to the heart of the French nation, and
+the legal settlement of their home affairs to that of the English. How
+often have the French, in appearance at least, allowed themselves to
+be consoled for the defects of the home administration by a great
+victory or an advantageous peace! And the English, from regard to
+constitutional questions of apparently inferior importance, have not
+seldom turned their eyes away from grievous perils which hung over
+Europe.
+
+The two great constitutional powers in England, the Crown and the
+Parliament, dating back as they did to early times, had often
+previously contended with each other, but had harmoniously combined in
+the religious struggle, and had both gained strength thereby; but
+towards the middle of the seventeenth century we see them first come
+into collision over ecclesiastical regulations, and then engage in a
+war for life and death respecting the constitution of the realm.
+Elements originally separate unite in attacking the monarchy;
+meanwhile the old system breaks up, and energetic efforts are made to
+found a new one on its ruins. But none of them succeed; the
+deeply-felt need of a life regulated by law and able to trust its own
+future is not satisfied; after long storms men seek safety in a return
+to the old and approved historic forms so characteristic of the
+German, and especially of the English, race. But in this there is
+clearly no solution of the original controversies, no reconciliation
+of the conflicting elements: within narrower limits new discords break
+out, which once more threaten a complete overthrow: until, thanks to
+the indifference shown by England to continental events, the most
+formidable dangers arise to threaten the equilibrium of Europe, and
+even menace England itself. These European emergencies coinciding with
+the troubles at home bring about a new change of the old forms in the
+Revolution of 1688, the main result of which is, that the centre of
+gravity of public authority in England shifts decisively to the
+parliamentary side. It was during this same time that France had won
+military and political superiority over all its neighbours on the
+mainland, and in connexion with it had concentrated an almost absolute
+power at home in the hands of the monarchy. England thus reorganised
+now set itself to contest the political superiority of France in a
+long and bloody war, which consequently became a struggle between two
+rival forms of polity; and while the first of these bore sway over the
+rest of Europe, the other attained to complete realisation in its
+island-home, and called forth at a later time manifold imitations on
+the Continent also, when the Continent was torn by civil strife.
+Between these differing tendencies, these opposite poles, the life of
+Europe has ever since vibrated from side to side.
+
+When we contemplate the framework of the earth, those heights which
+testify to the inherent energy of the original and active elements
+attract our special notice; we admire the massive mountains which
+overhang and dominate the lowlands covered with the settlements of
+man. So also in the domain of history we are attracted by epochs at
+which the elemental forces, whose joint action or tempered antagonism
+has produced states and kingdoms, rise in sudden war against each
+other, and amidst the surging sea of troubles upheave into the light
+new formations, which give to subsequent ages their special character.
+Such a historic region, dominating the world, is formed by that epoch
+of English history, to which the studies have been devoted, whose
+results I venture to publish in the present work: its importance is as
+great where it directly touches on the universal interests of
+humanity, as where, on its own special ground, it develops itself
+apart in obedience to its inner impulses. To comprehend this period we
+must approach it as closely as possible: it is everywhere instinct
+with collective as well as individual life. We discern how great
+antagonistic principles sprang almost unavoidably out of earlier
+times, how they came into conflict, wherein the strength of each side
+lay, what caused the alternations of success, and how the final
+decisions were brought about: but at the same time we perceive how
+much, for themselves, for the great interests they represented, and
+for the enemies they subdued, depended on the character, the energy,
+the conduct of individuals. Were the men equal to the emergency, or
+were not circumstances stronger than they? From the conflict of the
+universal with the special it is that the great catastrophes of
+history arise, yet it sometimes happens that the efforts which seem to
+perish with their authors exercise a more lasting influence on the
+progress of events than does the power of the conqueror. In the
+agonising struggles of men's minds appear ideas and designs which pass
+beyond what is feasible in that land and at that time, perhaps even
+beyond what is desirable: these find a place and a future in the
+colonies, the settlement of which is closely connected with the
+struggle at home. We are far from intending to involve ourselves in
+juridical and constitutional controversies, or from regulating the
+distribution of praise and blame by the opinions which have gained the
+day at a later time, or prevail at the moment; still less shall we be
+guided by our own sympathies: our only concern is to become acquainted
+with the great motive powers and their results. And yet how can we
+help recognising manifold coincidences with that conflict of opinions
+and tendencies in which we are involved at the present day? But it is
+no part of our plan to follow these out. Momentary resemblances often
+mislead the politician who seeks a sure foothold in the past, as well
+as the historian who seeks it in the present. The Muse of history has
+the widest intellectual horizon and the full courage of her
+convictions; but in forming them she is thoroughly conscientious, and
+we might say jealously bent on her duty. To introduce the interests of
+the present time into the work of the historian usually ends in
+restricting its free accomplishment.
+
+This epoch has been already often treated of, if not as a whole, yet
+in detached parts, and that by the best English historical writers. A
+native author has this great advantage over foreigners, that he thinks
+in the language in which the persons of the drama spoke, and lets them
+be seen through no strange medium, but simply in their natural form.
+But when, too, this language is employed in rare perfection, as in a
+work of our own time,--I refer not merely to rounded periods and
+euphony of cadence, but to the spirit of the narrative so much in
+harmony with our present culture, and the tone of our minds, and to
+the style which by every happy word excites our vivid sympathy;--when
+we have before us a description of the events in the native language
+with all its attractive traits and broad colouring, a description too
+based on an old familiar acquaintance with the country and its
+condition: it would be folly to pretend to rival such a work in its
+own peculiar sphere. But the results of original study may lead us to
+form a different conception of the events. And it is surely good that,
+in epochs of such great importance for the history of all nations, we
+should possess foreign and independent representations to compare with
+those of home growth; in the latter are expressed sympathies and
+antipathies as inherited by tradition and affected by the antagonism
+of literary differences of opinion. Moreover there will be a
+difference between these foreign representations. Frenchmen, as in one
+famous instance, will hold more to the constitutional point of view,
+and look for instruction or example in political science. The German
+will labour (after investigation into original documents) to
+comprehend each event as a political and religious whole, and at the
+same time to view it in its universal historical relations.
+
+I can in this case, as in others, add something new to what is already
+known, and this to a larger extent as the work goes on.[1]
+
+In no nation has so much documentary matter been collected for its
+later history as in England. The leading families which have taken
+part in public business, and the different parties which wish to
+assert their views in the historical representation of the past as
+well as in the affairs of the present, have done much for this object;
+latterly the government also has set its hand to the work. Yet the
+existing publications are far from sufficient. How incredibly
+deficient our knowledge still is of even the most important
+parliamentary transactions! In the rich collections of the Record
+Office and of the British Museum I have sought and found much that was
+unknown, and which I needed for obtaining an insight into events. The
+labour spent on it is richly compensated by the gain such labour
+brings; over the originals so injured, and so hard to decipher, linger
+the spirits of that long-past age. Especial attention is due to the
+almost complete series of pamphlets of the time, which the Museum
+possesses. As we read them, there are years in which we are present,
+as it were, at the public discussion that went on, at least in the
+capital, from month to month, from week to week, on the weightiest
+questions of government and public life.
+
+If any one has ever attempted to reconstruct for himself a portion of
+the past from materials of this kind,--from original documents, and
+party writings which, prompted by hate or personal friendship, are
+intended for defence or attack, and yet are withal exceedingly
+incomplete,--he will have felt the need of other contemporary notices,
+going into detail but free from such party views. A rich harvest of
+such independent reports has been supplied to me for this, as well as
+for my other works, by the archives of the ancient Republic of Venice.
+The 'Relations,' which the ambassadors of that Republic were wont to
+draw up on their return home, invaluable though they are in reference
+to persons and the state of affairs in general, are not, however,
+sufficient to supply a detailed and consecutive account of events. But
+the Venetian archives possess also a long series of continuous
+Reports, which place us, as it were, in the very midst of the courts,
+the capitals, and the daily course of public business. For the
+sixteenth century they are only preserved in a very fragmentary state
+as regards England; for the seventeenth they lie before us, with gaps
+no doubt here and there, yet in much greater completeness. Even in the
+first volume they have been useful to me for Mary Tudor's reign and
+the end of Elizabeth's; in the later ones, not only for James I's
+times, but also far more for Charles I's government and his quarrel
+with the Parliament. Owing to the geographical distance of Venice from
+England, and her neutral position in the world, her ambassadors were
+able to devote an attention to English affairs which is free from all
+interested motives, and sometimes to observe their general course in
+close communication with the leading men. We could not compose a
+history from the reports they give, but combined with the documentary
+matter these reports form a very welcome supplement to our knowledge.
+
+Ambassadors who have to manage matters of all kinds, great and small,
+at the courts to which they are accredited, fill their letters with
+accounts of affairs which often contain little instruction for
+posterity, and they judge of a man according to the support which he
+gives to their interests. This is the case with the French as well as
+with other ambassadors in England. Nevertheless their correspondence
+becomes gradually of the greatest value for my work. Their importance
+grows with the importance of affairs. The two courts entered into the
+most intimate relations: French politicians ceaselessly endeavoured to
+gain influence over England, and sometimes with success. The
+ambassadors' letters at such times refer to the weightiest matters of
+state, and become invaluable; they rise to the rank of the most
+important and instructive historical monuments. They have been
+hitherto, in great part, unused.
+
+In the Roman and Spanish reports also I found much which deserves to
+be made known to the readers of history. The papers of Holland and the
+Netherlands prove still more productive, as I show in detail at the
+end of the narrative.
+
+A historical work may aim either at putting forward a new view of what
+is already known, or at communicating additional information as to the
+facts. I have endeavoured to combine both these aims.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[1] _Note to the third edition._--In the course of my researches for
+this work the representation of the seventeenth century has occupied a
+larger space than I at first thought I should have been able to give
+it; it forms the chief portion of the book in its present form. I have
+therefore allowed myself the unwonted liberty of altering the title so
+as to make this clear. Still the representation of the sixteenth
+century, which is not now mentioned in the title, has not been
+abridged on this account. The history of the Stuart dynasty and of
+William III make up the central part of the edifice; what is given to
+the earlier, as well as the later times may, if I may be allowed the
+comparison, correspond to its two wings.
+
+
+
+
+TRANSLATORS' PREFACE.
+
+
+'The History of England, principally during the Seventeenth Century,'
+which is here laid before the reader in an English form, is one of the
+most important portions of that cycle of works on which Leopold von
+Ranke has long been engaged. His History of the Popes, his History of
+the Reformation in Germany, his French History, his work on the
+Ottomans and the Spanish Monarchy, his Life of Wallenstein, his volume
+on the Origin of the Thirty Years' War, and other smaller treatises,
+all aim at delineating the international relations of the states of
+Europe. His History of England may well be regarded as the concluding
+portion of this series; for the relations of England, first with
+France, and then with Holland, eventually determined the course of
+European politics.
+
+The book however is more than a history of this period, for Professor
+Ranke, according to his custom, has prefixed to it a luminous and
+interesting sketch of the earlier part of our history, presented, as
+all summaries ought to be, in the form of studies of the most
+important epochs. And at the end of the work are Appendices, which
+supply not only happy examples of historical criticism in the
+discussions on the chief contemporary writers of the period, but also
+a mass of original documents, most of which have never before been
+published. Above all, the critiques on Clarendon and Burnet, and the
+correspondence of William III with Heinsius, will well repay careful
+study; and the Appendices throw light on some of the more important
+details connected with the history of the time, besides shewing the
+student how a great master has found and used his materials.
+
+The present translation was undertaken with the author's sanction, and
+was intended in the first instance for the use of students in Oxford.
+Its publication has been facilitated by a division of labour, the
+eight volumes of the original having been entrusted each to a separate
+hand. The translators are Messrs. C. W. Boase, Exeter College; W. W.
+Jackson, Exeter College; H. B. George, New College; H. F. Pelham,
+Exeter College; M. Creighton, Merton College; A. Watson, Brasenose
+College; G. W. Kitchin, Christchurch; A. Plummer, Trinity College. The
+task of oversight, of reducing inequalities of style, and of
+supervising the Appendices and Index, has been performed by the
+editors, C. W. Boase and G. W. Kitchin. Notwithstanding the
+disadvantages incident to a translation, it is hoped that the work in
+its present shape will be welcomed by a large number of English
+readers, and will help to increase the deserved renown of the author
+in the country to the history of which he has devoted such profound
+and fruitful study.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ BOOK I.
+
+ THE CHIEF CRISES IN THE EARLIER HISTORY OF ENGLAND.
+
+ PAGE
+
+ INTRODUCTION 3
+
+ CHAP. I. The Britons, Romans, and Anglo-Saxons 5
+
+ The Anglo-Saxons and Christianity 10
+
+ II. Transfer of the Anglo-Saxon crown to the Normans
+ and Plantagenets 22
+
+ The Conquest 28
+
+ III. The crown in conflict with Church and Nobles 39
+
+ Henry II and Becket 41
+
+ John Lackland and Magna Charta 47
+
+ IV. Foundation of the Parliamentary Constitution 58
+
+ V. Deposition of Richard II. The House of Lancaster 74
+
+
+ BOOK II.
+
+ ATTEMPTS TO CONSOLIDATE THE KINGDOM INDEPENDENTLY IN ITS TEMPORAL
+ AND SPIRITUAL RELATIONS.
+
+ INTRODUCTION 91
+
+ CHAP. I. Re-establishment of the supreme power 93
+
+ II. Changes in the condition of Europe 104
+
+ Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolsey in their earlier
+ years 109
+
+ III. Origin of the Divorce Question 120
+
+ IV. The Separation of the English Church 134
+
+ V. The opposing tendencies within the Schismatic State 151
+
+ VI. Religious Reform in the English Church 171
+
+ VII. Transfer of the Government to a Catholic Queen 186
+
+ VIII. The Catholic-Spanish Government 199
+
+
+ BOOK III.
+
+ QUEEN ELIZABETH. CLOSE CONNEXION OF ENGLISH AND SCOTTISH AFFAIRS.
+
+ INTRODUCTION 221
+
+ CHAP. I. Elizabeth's accession. Triumph of the
+ Reformation 222
+
+ II. Outlines of the Reformation in Scotland 238
+
+ III. Mary Stuart in Scotland. Relation of the two Queens
+ to each other 254
+
+ IV. Interdependence of the European dissensions in
+ Politics and Religion 280
+
+ V. The fate of Mary Stuart 300
+
+ VI. The Invincible Armada 316
+
+ VII. The later years of Queen Elizabeth 330
+
+
+ BOOK IV.
+
+ FOUNDATION OF THE KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN. FIRST DISTURBANCES
+ UNDER THE STUARTS.
+
+ INTRODUCTION 359
+
+ CHAP. I. James VI of Scotland: his accession to the
+ throne of England 361
+
+ Origin of fresh dissensions in the Church 361
+
+ Alliance with England 364
+
+ Renewal of the Episcopal Constitution in Scotland 368
+
+ Preparations for the Succession to the English
+ Throne 375
+
+ Accession to the Throne 381
+
+ II. First measures of the new reign 386
+
+ III. The Gunpowder Plot and its consequences 403
+
+ IV. Foreign policy of the next ten years 418
+
+ V. Parliaments of 1610 and 1614 436
+
+ VI. Survey of the literature of the epoch 450
+
+
+ BOOK V.
+
+ DISPUTES WITH PARLIAMENT DURING THE LATER YEARS OF THE REIGN OF
+ JAMES I AND THE EARLIER YEARS OF THE REIGN OF CHARLES I.
+
+ INTRODUCTION 467
+
+ CHAP. I. James I and his administration of domestic
+ government 469
+
+ II. Complications arising out of the affairs of the
+ Palatinate 484
+
+ III. Parliament of the year 1621 497
+
+ IV. Negotiations for the marriage of the Prince of
+ Wales with a Spanish Infanta 509
+
+ V. The Parliament of 1624. Alliance with France 522
+
+ VI. Beginning of the reign of Charles I, and his First
+ and Second Parliament 537
+
+ VII. The course of foreign policy from 1625 to 1627 554
+
+ VIII. Parliament of 1628. Petition of Right 566
+
+ IX. Assassination of Buckingham. Session of 1629 580
+
+
+
+
+FIRST BOOK.
+
+THE CHIEF CRISES IN THE EARLIER HISTORY OF ENGLAND.
+
+
+As we turn over the pages of universal history, and follow the
+shifting course of events, we perceive almost at the first glance one
+comprehensive process of change going on, which, more than any other,
+governs the external fortunes of the world. Through long periods of
+time the historic life of the human race was active in Western Asia
+and in the lands bordering on the Mediterranean which look towards the
+East: there it laid the foundations of its higher culture. We may
+rightly regard as the greatest event that meets us in the whole course
+of authentic history, the fact that the seats of the predominant power
+and culture have been transplanted to the Western lands and the shores
+of the Atlantic Ocean. Not merely the abodes of the ancient civilised
+nations, but even the capitals which were the medium of communication
+between East and West, have fallen into barbarism; even the great
+metropolis, from which first political, and then spiritual, dominion
+extended itself in both directions over widespread territories, has
+not maintained its rank. It was due to this tendency of things,
+combined with a certain geographical cause, that neither could the
+medieval Empire attain its full development, nor the Papacy continue
+to subsist with unimpaired authority. From age to age the political
+and intellectual life of the world transferred itself ever more and
+more to the nations dwelling further West, especially since a new
+hemisphere was opened up to their impulses of activity and extension.
+So it was that the chief interests of the Pyrenean peninsula drew
+towards its ocean coasts; that there grew up on either side of the
+Channel which separates the Continent from Britain, the two great
+capitals in which modern activity is chiefly concentrated; that
+Northern Germany, together with the races which touch on the North Sea
+and the Baltic, developed a life and a system of their own; it is in
+these regions latterly that the universal spirit of the human race
+chiefly works out its task, and displays its activity in moulding
+states, creating ideas, and subjugating nature.
+
+Yet this transmission, this transplanting, is not the work of a blind
+destiny. While civilisation in the East succumbed and died out before
+the advance of races incapable of culture, it was welcomed in the West
+by races possessing the requisite capacity, which by their inborn
+force gave it new forms and indestructible bases for its outward
+existence. Nor have the nations and kingdoms arisen each from its
+mother earth, as it were in obedience to some inward impulse of
+inevitable necessity, but amid constant assimilation and rejection,
+ever repeated wars to secure their future, and a ceaseless struggle
+with opposing elements that threatened their ruin.
+
+The object of universal history is to place before our eyes the
+leading changes, and the conflicts of nations, together with their
+causes and results. Our purpose is to depict the history of one of the
+chief of the Western nations, the English, and that too in an age
+which decisively modified both its inner constitution and its outward
+position in the world, but it cannot be understood unless we first
+pourtray, with a few quick touches, the historical events under the
+influence of which it became civilised and great.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE BRITONS, ROMANS, AND ANGLO-SAXONS.
+
+
+The history of Western Europe in general opens with the struggle
+between Kelts, Romans, and Germans, which determined out of what
+elements modern nations should be formed.
+
+Just as it is supposed that Albion in early times was connected with
+the Continent, and only separated from it by the raging sea-flood
+which buried the intermediate lands in the abyss, so in ethnographic
+relations it would seem as if the aboriginal Keltic tribes of the
+island had been only separated by some accident from those which
+occupied Gaul and the Netherlands. The Channel is no national
+boundary. We find Belgians in Britain, Britons in Eastern Gaul, and
+very many names of peoples common to both coasts; there were tribes
+which, though separated by the sea, yet acknowledged the same prince.
+Without being able to prove how far natives of the island took part in
+the expeditions of conquest, which pouring forth from Gaul inundated
+the countries on the Danube and Italy, Greece and Western Asia, we yet
+can trace the affinity of names and tribes as far as these expeditions
+extend. This island was the home of the religion that gave a certain
+unity to the populations, which, though closely akin, nevertheless
+contended with each other in ceaseless discord. It was that Druidic
+discipline which combined a priestly constitution with civil
+privileges, and with a very peculiar doctrine of a political and even
+moral purport. We might be tempted to suppose that the atrocity of
+human sacrifice was first introduced among them by the Punic race. For
+they were from primeval times connected with the Carthaginians and
+Phoenicians, who were the first to traverse the outer sea, and sought
+in the island a metal which was very valuable for the wants of the
+ancient world. Distant clans might retain in the mountains their
+original wildness, but the southern coasts ranked in the earliest
+times as rich and civilised. They stood within the circle of the
+relations that had been created by the expeditions of the Keltic
+tribes, by the mixture of peoples thence arising, by the war and
+commerce of the earliest age.
+
+In the great war between Rome and Carthage, which decided the destiny
+of the ancient world, the Keltic tribes took part as allies of the
+Punic race. If Carthage had conquered, they would have maintained in
+most, if not all, the lands they had occupied, and especially in their
+own homes, their old manners and customs, and their religion in its
+existing form. It was not merely the supremacy of the one city or the
+other, but the future of Western Europe that was at stake when
+Hannibal attacked the Romans in Italy. Rome, which had already grown
+strong in warring against the Gauls, won the victory over the
+Carthaginians. Thenceforth one after another of the Keltic nations
+succumbed to the superiority of the Roman arms, which at last invaded
+Transalpine Gaul, and struck its military power to the ground.
+
+From this point the reaction against the Keltic enterprises
+necessarily extended itself also to Britain.
+
+The great general who conquered Gaul did not feel sure of being able
+to accomplish his task unless he also obtained influence over the
+British tribes, from which those of the Continent constantly received
+help and encouragement, unless he established among them the authority
+of the Roman name.
+
+It was an important moment in the world's history, well worthy of
+remembrance, when Caesar first trod the soil of Albion. Already
+repulsed from the steep chalk cliffs of the island, he found the flat
+shore on which he hoped to disembark occupied by the enemy, some in
+their war-chariots, others on horseback and on foot; his ships could
+not reach the shore; the soldiers hesitated, encumbered with their
+armour as they were, to throw themselves into a sea with which they
+were not familiar, in presence of an enemy acquainted with the
+ground, active, brave, and superior in numbers; the general's order
+had no effect on them; when however an eagle-bearer, calling on the
+gods of Rome, threw himself into the flood, the men would have thought
+themselves traitors had they allowed the war-standard, to which an
+almost divine worship was paid, to fall into the hands of the enemy;
+fired by the danger that threatened their honour, and by the religion
+of arms, from one ship after another they followed him to the fight;
+in the hand-to-hand combat in the water which ensued they gained the
+superiority, supported most skilfully by their general wherever it was
+necessary; the moment they reached the land, the victory was won.[2]
+
+We cannot reckon it a slight matter, that Caesar, though not at the
+first, yet at the second and better prepared expedition, succeeded in
+carrying away with him hostages from the chief tribes. For this very
+form was the one customary in that century and among those tribes, by
+which he bound them and their princes to himself.
+
+It was the first step towards the Roman supremacy. But Gaul and West
+Germany had first to be subdued, and the Empire securely concentrated
+in one hand, before--a century later--the conquest of the island could
+be really attempted.
+
+Even then the Britons still fought without helmet or shield, as did
+the Gauls of old before Rome. In Britain, just as on the Lombard
+plains, the war-chariot was their best arm; their defective mode of
+defence necessarily yielded to the organised tactics of the legion.
+How easily did the Romans, pushing forward under cover of their
+mantelets, clear away the rude entrenchments by which the Britons used
+formerly to secure themselves against attack. The Druids on Mona
+trusted in their gods, whose will they thought to ascertain from the
+quivering fibres of human sacrifices; and for a moment the sight of
+the crowd of fanatics collected around them checked the attack, but
+only for a moment: as soon as they came to blows they were instantly
+scattered, and their holy places perished with them. For this is the
+greatest result of the Roman wars, that they destroyed the rites which
+contradicted the idea of Humanity. Yet once more an injured
+princess--Boadicea--united all the sympathies which the old
+constitution and religion could awaken. Dio has depicted her,
+doubtless according to the reports which reached Rome. A tall form,
+with the national decoration of the golden necklace and the chequered
+mantle, over which her rich yellow hair flowed down below her waist.
+She called on her peoples to defend themselves at any risk, since what
+could befall those to whom each root gave nourishment, each tree
+supplied shelter: and on her gods, not to let the land pass into the
+possession of that insatiable, unjust foe of foreign race. So truly
+does she represent the innate characteristics of the British race,
+when oppressed and engaged in a desperate defence. She is earnest,
+rugged, and terrible; the men who gathered round her were reckoned by
+hundreds of thousands. But the Britons had not yet learnt the art of
+war. A single onslaught of the Romans sufficed to scatter their
+disorderly masses with a fearful butchery. It was the last day of the
+old British independence. Boadicea would not, any more than Cleopatra,
+adorn a Roman triumph; she fell by her own hand.
+
+Within a few dozen years the Roman eagles were masters of Britain as
+far as the Highlands: the Keltic clan-life and the religion of the
+Druids withdrew into the Caledonian mountains, and the large islands
+off that coast; in the conquered territory the religion of the arms
+that had won the victory, and the might of the Great Empire, were
+supreme. The work which was begun by superiority in war was completed
+by pre-eminence in civilisation. It seemed an advantage and an
+improvement to the sons of the British princes, to adopt the Roman
+language, and knowledge, and mode of life; they delighted in the
+luxury of colonnades, baths, feasts, and city life. Men like Agricola
+used these modes of Romanising Britain by preference. Just as the
+Britons exchanged their rude shipbuilding and their leathern sails for
+the discoveries of a more advanced art of navigation, so they learnt
+to carry on their agriculture in Roman fashion; in later times
+Britain was considered as the granary of the legions in Germany. Most
+of the cities in the land betray by their very names their Roman
+origin; London, though it existed earlier, owes its importance to this
+connexion. It was the emporium destined as it were by nature for the
+peaceful commerce that now arose between the Western provinces of the
+Empire. Once in the third century an attempt was made to make the
+island independent, but it failed the moment the marts on the opposite
+coast fell into the hands of the Emperor who was universally
+recognised. Britain seemed an integral part of the Roman Empire. It
+was from York that Constantine marched forth to unite its Eastern and
+Western halves once more under one government.
+
+But soon after him an epoch began in which the third great
+nationality, at first thought to be part of the Keltic race, then
+driven back or taken into service by the Romans, but always
+maintaining its peculiar original independence--the German, rose to
+supremacy in the West. In the fifth century it had become everywhere
+master in the militarily-organised Roman frontier districts:
+encouraged by the embarrassments of the authorities it advanced into
+the peaceful provinces.
+
+It is of importance to remark what the fate of Britain was in these
+struggles.
+
+From the Romanised territory an Augustus, called Constantine, set up
+by the revolted legions, invaded Gaul, not merely to check the inroads
+of the barbarians, but at the same time to possess himself of the
+Empire. He at one time held a great position, when the legions of Gaul
+and Aquitaine also took his side, and Spain saluted him Emperor. But
+the authority of Honorius the generally recognised Emperor could not
+be so easily set aside: discontented followers of the new Augustus
+again went over to the old one: before them and the barbarians
+combined Constantine fell, and soon after paid for his attempt with
+his life.
+
+The result, then, was that Honorius restored his authority to a
+certain extent everywhere on the Continent, but not in Britain. To the
+towns which had taken up arms while Constantine was there he gave the
+right of self-defence--he could do nothing for them. The Roman Empire
+was not exactly overthrown in Britain--it ceased to be.[3]
+
+At this time, when the connexion between Rome and Roman Britain was
+broken off, the Germans possessed themselves of the latter country.
+
+
+_The Anglo-Saxons and Christianity._
+
+Germans had been long ago settled in this as in so many other
+provinces of the Western and Eastern Empires. Antoninus had brought
+over German tribes from the Danube, Probus others from the Rhineland.
+In the legions we find German cohorts, and very many others joined
+them as free allies. In the civil wars between the Emperors we hear of
+one side relying on the Franks, the other on the Alemanni in their
+service; Constantine the Great is called to be Caesar by help of the
+chiefs of the Alemanni. But besides this, German seafarers, who
+appeared under the name of Saxons, after they had learnt shipbuilding
+and navigation from the Romans, settled on the opposite coasts of
+Britain and Gaul, and gave their name to both. Not then for the first
+time, nor at the invitation of the Britons, as the Saga declares,[4]
+did the descendants of Wodan make their first trial of the sea in
+light vessels. Alternating between piracy and alliance--now with a
+usurper and now with the lawful Emperor, between independence and
+subjection, German seafarers had long ago filled all seas and coasts
+with the terror of their name. In the North too they are mentioned
+together with Scots and Attacotti. When now the Roman rule over the
+island and the surrounding seas came to an end, to whom could it pass?
+To the peaceful Provincials, if they could indeed gird on the sword,
+or to the old companions in arms of the Romans? There is no doubt
+that the same general impulse which urged on the German peoples, in
+the great revolution of affairs, into the Roman provinces, led the
+enterprising inhabitants of the German and Northern coasts, Frisians,
+Angles, and Jutes, as well as Saxons, into Britain. A fearful war
+broke out, in which it may be true to say the ruined towns became the
+sepulchres of their inhabitants, but no man found the quiet time
+necessary for depicting its details. After it had filled a century and
+a half with its horrors, and men again lifted up their eyes, they
+found the island divided between two great nationalities, which had
+separated themselves as opposing forces. The natives had as good as
+abandoned the civilisation they had learnt from Rome, and leant on
+their kinsfolk in North Gaul, and the Scots in Ireland and the
+Highlands; they occupied the west of the island. The Germans were
+settled in the east, in the greatest part of the south, and in the
+north, in most of the old Roman settlements,--but they were far from
+forming a united body. Not seven or eight merely, but a large number
+of little tribal kingdoms, occupied or fought for the ground.
+
+If we wish to point out in general the distinction between the
+Anglo-Saxon and other German settlements, it lies in this, that they
+rested neither on the Emperor's authorisation whether direct or
+indirect, nor on any agreement with the natives of the land. In Gaul
+Chlodwig assumed and carried on the authority of the Roman Empire;--in
+Britain it went wholly to the ground. Hence it was that here the
+German ideas could develop in their full purity, more so than in
+Germany itself, over which the Frankish monarchy, which had also
+adopted Roman tendencies, had gained influence.
+
+Just as the natives who would not submit were driven out of the German
+settlements, so within their boundaries the germs of Christianity,
+which had already spread in the island, were as good as annihilated.
+Among the victorious Germans the Northern heathenism existed in full
+strength. In many names of places, at the water-springs, the
+watersheds, in the designations of the days of the week, the names of
+the gods of Germany and the North appear; the kings trace their
+descent directly from them as their immediate ancestors; the Sagas and
+poems about them symbolise those battles with the elements, the
+storm, the sea, and the powers of nature, which are peculiarly
+characteristic of the Northern mythology. With this, however, arose
+the question, so important for the history of the world, whether the
+great territory already won for the ideas of the universal culture and
+religion of mankind should be again lost.
+
+Towards the end of the 6th century the epoch began in which, as the
+German invaders of Gaul had already done, so now those of Spain and
+Italy, whether Arians or heathens, came over to the Catholic faith of
+the Provincials. This took place under the mediation of the chief
+Pontiff, who had raised the city, from which the Empire took its name,
+to be the metropolis of the Faith. Lombards and Visigoths became as
+good Catholics as the Franks already were. The relationship of the
+royal families, which held all Germans in close connexion, and the
+zeal of Rome, which could not possibly suffer the loss of a province
+that it had once possessed, now combined to call forth a similar
+movement among the Anglo-Saxons, yet one which worked itself out in a
+very different way. Since among the natives a peculiar form of
+church-life, not unconnected with the Druidic discipline, had arisen,
+with which Rome would hold no communion, and which rejected all
+demands of submission, the spiritual enmity of the missionary was
+united to the national enmity of the conqueror. When a king still
+heathen, while attacking the Britons, directed his weapons against the
+monks of Bangor, who (collected on a height) were offering up prayers
+against him, and massacred them to the number of twelve hundred, the
+followers of the Roman Mission saw in this a punishment decreed by God
+for apostasy, and the fulfilment of the prophecies of their
+apostle.[5] On the other hand British Christian kings also made common
+cause with the heathen Angles, and wasted with fire and sword the
+provinces that had been converted by Rome. Had not in the vicissitudes
+of internal war the native church organisation of the North won
+influence over the Anglo-Saxons, heathenism would never have been
+conquered; it would have always found support among the Britons.
+
+When this however had once taken place, the whole Anglo-Saxon name
+attached itself to the Roman ritual. Among the motives for this change
+those which corresponded to the naive materialistic superstition of
+the time may have been the most influential, yet there were other
+motives also which touched the very essence of the matter. Men wished
+to belong to the great Church Communion which then in still unbroken
+freedom comprehended the most distant nations.[6] They preferred the
+bishops whom the kings appointed (with the authorisation of the Roman
+See), to those over whom the abbot of the great monastery on the
+island of Iona exercised a kind of supremacy. Here there was no
+question of any agreement between the German king and the bishops of
+the land, as under the Merovingians in Gaul; they even avoided
+restoring the bishops' sees which had flourished in the old Roman
+times in Britain. The primitive and independent element manifests
+itself in the decision of the princes and their great men. In
+Northumberland, Christianity was introduced by a formal resolution of
+the King and his Witan: a heathen high priest girt himself with the
+sword, and even with his own hand threw down his idols. The
+Anglo-Saxon tribes in fact passed over from the popular religion and
+mythology of the North and of Germany, which would have kept them in
+barbarism, to the communion of the universal religion, to which
+belonged the civilisation of the world. Never did a race show itself
+more susceptible of such an influence: it presents the most remarkable
+example of how the old German ideas, which had now taken living root
+in this soil, and the Roman ecclesiastical culture, which was
+vigorously embraced, met and became intertwined. The first German who
+made the universal learning, derived from antiquity, his own, was an
+Anglo-Saxon, the Venerable Beda; the first German dialect in which men
+wrote history and drew up laws, was likewise the Anglo-Saxon. Despite
+all their reverence for the threshold of the Apostles they admitted
+foreign priests no longer than was indispensable for the foundation of
+the new church: in the gradual progress of the conversion they were no
+longer needed, we soon find Anglo-Saxon names everywhere in the
+church: the archbishops and leading bishops are as closely related to
+the royal families, as the heathen high priests had been before.
+
+It was exactly through the co-operation of both principles, originally
+so foreign to one another, that the Anglo-Saxon nature took firm and
+lasting form.
+
+The Kelts had formerly lived under a clan system which, extending over
+vast districts, yet displayed in each spot characteristic weaknesses
+which the hostility of every neighbour rendered fatal. Then the Romans
+had introduced a military administrative constitution, which displaced
+this tribal system, while it also subjected Britain to the universal
+Empire, of which it formed only an unimportant province. A
+characteristic form of life was first built up in Britain by the
+Anglo-Saxons on the ruins of the Roman rule. The union into which they
+entered with the civilised world was the freely chosen one of the
+religion of the human race; they had no other connexion to control
+them. Their whole energies being concentrated on the island, they gave
+it for the first time, though continually at war with each other, an
+independent position.
+
+Their constitution combines the ideas of the army and the tribe: it is
+the constitution of armies of colonists bringing with them domestic
+institutions which had been theirs from time immemorial. A society of
+freemen of the same stock, who divided the soil among themselves in
+such a manner that the number of the hides corresponded to that of the
+families (for among no people was there a stronger conception of
+separate ownership), they composed the armed array of the country, and
+by their union maintained that peace at home which again secured each
+man's life and property. At their head stands a royal family, of the
+highest nobility, which traces its origin to the gods, and has by far
+the largest possessions; from it, by birth and by election combined,
+proceeds the King; who then, sceptre in hand, presides in the court
+of justice, and in the field has the banner carried before him; he is
+the Lord, to whom men owe fidelity; the Guardian, to whom the public
+roads and navigable rivers belong, who disposes of the undivided land.
+Yet he does not stand originally so high above other men that his
+murder cannot be expiated by a wergeld, of which one share falls to
+his family--not a larger one than for any other of its members,--and
+the other to the collective community, since the prince belongs to the
+former by birth, to the latter by his office. Between the simple
+freeman and the prince appear the eorls, ealdormen, and thanes, in
+some instances raised above the mass by noble birth or by larger
+possessions, natural chiefs of districts and hundreds, in others
+promoted by service in the King's court and in the field, sometimes
+specially bound to him by personal allegiance: they are the Witan who
+have elected him out of his family (in a few instances they depose
+him); they concur in giving laws, they take part in making peace. Now
+the bishops take place by their side. They appear with the ealdormen
+in the judicial meetings of the counties: if the Gerefa neglects his
+duty, it is for them to step in; yet they have also their own
+spiritual jurisdiction. It is a spiritual and temporal organisation of
+small extent, yet of a certain self-sufficing completeness. Many of
+the present shires correspond to the old kingdoms, and bear their
+names to this day. The bishops' sees often coincide with the seats of
+royalty; for the kings wished each to have a bishop to himself in his
+little territory, since they had to endow the bishopric. How many
+regulations still in force date from these times!
+
+The Anglo-Saxons always had an immediate and near relation to the
+kingdom of the Franks.
+
+It was with the daughter of a Frankish prince that the first impulse
+towards conversion came into a Saxon royal house. By the Anglo-Saxons
+again the conversion of inner Germany was carried out, in opposition
+to the same Scoto-Irish element which they withstood in Britain. Carl
+the Great thought it expedient to inform the Mercian King Offa of the
+progress of Christianity among the Saxons in Germany: he looked on him
+as his natural ally. Both kingdoms had moreover a common interest as
+against the free British populations on their western marches, who
+were allied with each other across the sea: decisive campaigns of Carl
+the Great and King Egbert of Wessex coincide in point of time, and may
+have supported each other.
+
+Similarly, we may suppose that Egbert, who lived a number of years as
+an exile at Carl's court, and could not have remained uninfluenced by
+his mode of government and improved military tactics, was then also
+incited and enabled, after his return, to subdue the little kingdoms
+and unite them with Wessex: by the side of the 'Francia' of the
+continent he created in the island a united 'Anglia.' But still there
+subsisted a yet greater difference. Sprung from the stock of Cerdic,
+Egbert belonged to the popular royalty which we find throughout at the
+head of the invading Germans; he is, so far, more like the
+Merovingians whom Carl's predecessors overthrew, than like Carl
+himself; and he was almost entirely destitute of that strong
+groundwork of military institutions on which the Carolingians
+supported themselves. His rise depended much more on the fact that the
+old families in Mercia, Northumbria, and Kent had disappeared, and the
+succession in general had become doubtful; after Egbert had conquered
+the claimants to the throne in a great and bloody battle, he was
+recognised by the Witans of the several kingdoms as their common
+prince, and his family as that which in fact it now was,--the leading
+one of all. After the example of Pipin's family, whose alliance with
+the Papacy was the most important historical event of the epoch and
+founded Western Christendom, the descendants of Cerdic also got
+themselves anointed by the popes--for the religious movement still had
+the predominance over every other. The amalgamation of the tribes and
+kingdoms found its expression in the Church, through the prestige and
+rank of the Archbishop of Canterbury, almost earlier than it did in
+the State; the unity of the Church broke down the antipathies of the
+tribes, and prepared the way for that of the kingdoms. In the midst of
+this work of construction, so incomplete as yet, but so full of hope,
+of these birthpangs of a new life, the very existence of the country
+was threatened by the rise of a new Great Power. For so may we well
+designate the influence which the Scandinavian North exercised by land
+over Eastern Europe, and at the same time over all the Western coasts
+by sea.
+
+Only a part of the German peoples had been influenced by the idea of
+the Empire or the Church; the inborn heathenism of the rest, irritated
+by the losses it had sustained and the dangers that continually
+threatened it, roused itself for the most formidable onslaught that
+the civilised world has ever had to withstand from the heroic and
+barbarous children of Nature.
+
+The mischief they wrought in Britain, from the middle of the ninth
+century onwards, is indescribable.
+
+The Scoto-Irish schools, then in their most flourishing state (they
+trained John Scotus Erigena, of all the scholars of that time the man
+who had the widest intellectual range), fell before the Danish, not
+the Anglo-Saxon assaults; an element of intellectual activity which
+might have been of the greatest importance was thus lost to the
+Western world. But the Northmen persecuted the Romano-English forms as
+bitterly as they did the Irish. In the places where those Anglo-Saxon
+scholars had been trained, who then enlightened the West, the Northmen
+planted the banner which announced utter destruction; with twofold
+rapacity they threw themselves on the more remote abbeys which seemed
+to derive protection from their inaccessibility, and to guarantee it
+by their dignity; in searching for the treasures which they believed
+had been placed in them for security, they destroyed the monuments and
+means of instruction which were really there; in Medeshamstede, where
+there was a rich library, the flames raged for fourteen days. The
+half-formed union of the various districts into one kingdom seems to
+have crippled rather than strengthened the power of local resistance:
+the Danes became masters of Kent and of East-Anglia, of
+Northumberland, and even of Mercia; at last Wessex too, after already
+suffering many losses, was invaded; from both sides at the same
+moment, from the inland and from the coast, the deluge of
+robber-hordes poured over its whole extent.
+
+Things had come to such a point that the Anglo-Saxon community seemed
+inevitably devoted to the same ruin which had overtaken first the
+Britons and then the Romans, they seemed doomed to make way for
+another reconstruction. Britain would have become an outpost of the
+restored heathenism, which could then have been with difficulty
+repulsed from the Eastern and Western Frankish empires, afflicted as
+they were by similar attacks, and governed by the discordant and weak
+princes who then ruled them. At this moment of peril King Alfred
+appeared. It was not merely for his own interests, nor merely for
+those of England, but for those of the world, that he fought. He is
+rightly called 'the Great;' a title fairly due only to those who have
+maintained great universal interests, and not merely those of their
+own country.
+
+The distress of the moment, and the deliverance from it, have been
+kept in imperishable remembrance by popular sagas and church legends.
+It is well worth the trouble to trace out in the authenticated
+traditions, brief as they are, the causes that decided the event. We
+may state them as follows:--Since the attacks of the Vikings were
+especially ruinous, from their occupation of the strong places whence
+they could command and plunder the open country, one step in the work
+of liberation was taken when Alfred, for the first time, wrested from
+them a stronghold which they had seized, deep in the west. Then he,
+too, occupied strong positions, and knew how to defend them. With the
+bravest and most devoted of his nobles, and of the population that had
+not yet submitted, he established a hill-fortress on a height rising
+like an island out of the standing waters and marshlands in the still
+only slightly cultivated land of Somersetshire; this not only served
+him as an asylum, but also as a central point from which he too ranged
+through the land far and wide, like the enemy, except that his object
+was to guard it, and make it ring once more with the already forgotten
+name of the King. Around his banners gathered, with reviving courage,
+the population of the neighbouring districts also: the Saxons could
+again appear in the open field; from their advancing shield-wall the
+disorderly onsets of the Vikings recoiled, the victory was theirs.
+Hereupon, moreover, as if the decision between the two religions
+depended on the result of the war, the leader of the heathens came
+over to Christianity, and took an Anglo-Saxon name. The Danes attached
+themselves to the principles and the powers which they had come forth
+to destroy.
+
+King Alfred is a marvellous phenomenon: suffering from a disease which
+sometimes broke out with violence, and which he never ceased to feel
+for a single day of his life, he not merely withstood the extreme of
+peril at that moment so big with ruin, but also founded a system of
+resistance throughout the kingdom, in which his arms so worked
+together by sea and land that each new band of Vikings betook
+themselves again to their ships, and those that had already penetrated
+into the country, gave way step by step. We remark with interest how,
+under Alfred and his children, his son who succeeded him, and his
+manlike daughter, the protecting fortresses advance from place to
+place, and provide free space for the Anglo-Saxon community. The
+culture already existing, the whole future of which had been saved by
+Alfred, attained in him its fullest development. How many years had
+passed since the hour when an illuminated initial letter gave him his
+first taste for a book, before he could master even the elementary
+branches of knowledge! then he devoted his whole efforts to instil new
+life into the studies that had almost perished, and to give them a
+national character. He not merely translated a number of the later
+authors of antiquity, whose works had contributed most to the
+transmission of scientific culture; in the episodes which he
+interweaves in them he shows a desire for knowledge that reaches far
+beyond them; but especially we find in them a reflective and
+thoughtful mind, solid sense at peace with itself, a fresh way of
+viewing the world, a lively power of observation. This King introduced
+the German mind with its learning and reflection into the literature
+of the world; he stands at the head of the prose-writers and
+historians in a German tongue--the people's King of the most primeval
+kind, who is also the teacher of his people. We know his laws, in
+which extracts from the books of Moses are combined with restored
+legal usages of German origin; in him the traditions of antiquity are
+interpenetrated by the original tendencies of the German mind. We
+completely weaken the impression made on us by this great figure, so
+important in his first limited and arduous efforts, by comparing him
+with the brilliant names of antiquity. Each man is what he is in his
+own place.
+
+Though the Anglo-Saxon monarchy wanted that element of authority which
+the kings of other German tribes drew from the Roman government by
+transmission or succession, yet it had strengthened itself, like the
+others, by union with the Church. Alfred, too, was at Rome in his
+boyhood: it stood him in good stead that he had been anointed, and, as
+men said, adopted by a Roman pope. In the reconquest of the land,
+Church ideas had played an important part. It was impossible to drive
+out the invading foes, they could only be held in check; never would
+they have submitted to the Anglo-Saxon commonwealth had they not at
+the same time been converted to Christianity. Nothing, moreover,
+contributed more to this than the effort, which was then the order of
+the day in the Christian world, to base the organisation of the Church
+on monasticism: from Italy this tendency spread to Germany, from South
+France to North, from thence to England, where it produced its
+greatest effect. Now the power of conversion is inherent only in
+sharply-defined doctrines; and it was precisely this tendency that
+penetrated the Northern natures: the sons of the Vikings became the
+champions of monachism; to the fury with which the fathers had
+destroyed the monasteries succeeded in the sons a zeal to restore
+them. And in what good stead this stood the Anglo-Saxon kings! The
+kingly power obtained, through the splendour which the union with
+religion bestowed on its victorious arms, a reverential recognition by
+the old native population as well as by the invaders.
+
+Alfred's grandson had regained Northumbria by a somewhat doubtful
+title, and had then maintained his right in a great battle, renowned
+in song; his great-grandson, Edgar, in one of his charters thanks the
+grace of God which had permitted him to extend his rule further than
+his predecessors, over the islands and seas as far as Norway, and over
+a great part of Ireland. We are not to look on it as a mere piece of
+vanity, when he seeks after new titles for his power, when he calls
+himself Basileus and Imperator; the former is the title of the
+Eastern, the latter of the Western emperors; he will not yield the
+precedence to either the one or the other, though the latter are so
+closely related to him by blood. We cannot express the feeling of a
+supreme power, independent of men, derived from the grace of God, the
+King of kings, more strongly than it was expressed by Edgar under
+Dunstan's influence; the ruling motives of life in Church and State
+make it conceivable that a monkish hierarch, such as Dunstan, shared,
+as it were, the King's power, and shaped the course of the authority
+of the state.
+
+It was still the ancestral Anglo-Saxon crown which glittered on
+Edgar's head, but, if we may so say, its splendour had at the same
+time received a monkish and hierarchic colouring.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[2] The words of some MSS. in Caesar's Commentaries, iv. 25,
+'deserite, milites, si vultis, aquilam, atque hostibus prodite,' might
+well be taken for the genuine words, originally noted down in his
+Ephemerides (journal).
+
+[3] Brettanian mentoi hoi Rômaioi anasôsasthai ouketi eschon, all'
+ousa hupo tyrannois ap' autou emene. Procop. de bello Vand. I. No. 2.
+p. 318 ed. Bonn. Compare Zosimus, vi. 4. on, we may assume, the better
+authority of Olympiodorus.
+
+[4] The simplest form of the Saga occurs in Gildas, with very few
+historical ingredients. Nennius enlarges it with Anglo-Saxon
+traditions. Beda has combined both with some notices from the real
+history. Since the departure of the Romans was rightly fixed about
+409, and Gildas said the Britons had rest for forty years, Beda
+settled that the Saxons arrived in 449.
+
+[5] Beda, Hist. Eccl. ii. 2. Some have wished to consider the remark,
+that Augustine had been then long dead, as a later interpretation, 'ad
+tollendam labem caedis Bangorensis;' this, however, is against the
+spirit of that age.
+
+[6] 'Omnem orbem, quocunque ecclesia Christi diffusa est per diversas
+nationes et linguas uno temporis ordine.' Beda, Hist. Eccl. iii. 14.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+TRANSFER OF THE ANGLO-SAXON CROWN TO THE NORMANS AND PLANTAGENETS.
+
+
+In the families of German national kings we not unfrequently find
+among the women a hideous mixture of ambition, revenge, and
+bloodthirstiness, which brings kings and kingdoms to ruin. In England
+it appears, despite of Christianity and monastic discipline, in its
+most atrocious form after the death of Edgar. His eldest son, for some
+years his successor, was treacherously murdered by his stepmother (who
+wished to advance her own son to the throne), at a visit which he paid
+her as he returned from hunting. It was that Edward whose innocence
+and leaning towards the Church have gained him the name of Martyr. The
+son of the murderess did ascend the throne, but the guilt of blood
+seemed to cleave to the crown; he met with the obedience of his
+father's times no more. The Anglo-Saxon magnates seized the occasion
+which this crime, or the subsequent vacillation of the government
+between violence and weakness, offered them, to aim at an independent
+position, and to indulge in a personal policy, each man for himself.
+
+At this very moment the Danes renewed their invasions.
+
+Little did Edgar and those around him understand their position, when
+they attributed the peace they enjoyed to their own military power, in
+the splendid and extensive display of which they took delight. In
+reality it was the state of the world at large that brought this peace
+about. First of all, it was due to the settlement of the Normans in
+North Gaul, under the condition that they should be of one religion
+and one realm, and should fulfil the natural duty of keeping off
+fresh incursions: the current of Northern invasion thus lost its aim
+and direction. But it was of still more decisive effect at the first
+that the energetic family which arose in North Germany, and even
+assumed the imperial authority, not content with warding off the
+Danes, sought them out in their own country instead, and carried the
+war against heathenism into the North. The Saxons beyond the sea were
+indebted for the peace which they enjoyed chiefly to the great and
+splendid deeds of arms of their kindred on the mainland. How much all
+depended on this became very clear when Otto II, in the full glow of
+great enterprises, met with an unlooked for and early death. Within
+the empire two able women and their advisers succeeded in maintaining
+peace; but in Denmark, as in other neighbouring countries, the hostile
+elements got the upper hand. The Danish king's son, Sven Otto,
+abandoned the religion which he regarded as a yoke laid on him by the
+German conquerors; he could not destroy the order of things
+established in Denmark, but he revived the old sea-king's life, and
+threw himself with the old superiority of the Viking arms on the
+English coasts.
+
+Ethelred on this attack fell into the greatest distress, mainly
+because he was not sure of his great nobles. How often did the
+commanders of the fleet desert it at the moment of action, and the
+leaders of the inland levies go over to the enemy! Ethelred sought for
+safety by an alliance with the Duchy of Normandy, then daily rising to
+greater power. Thus supported, he proceeded to unjustifiable outrages
+against his domestic as well as his foreign foes. The great nobles
+whom he suspected were mercilessly killed or exiled, and their
+children blinded. The Danes who remained in the land he caused to be
+murdered all on one day.
+
+The consequences of this deed necessarily recoiled upon himself. When
+Sven some years after again landed with redoubled enmity, which was to
+a certain extent justified, he experienced no effectual resistance
+whatever; Ethelred had to fly before him and quit the island. But now
+that Sven too, who had been already saluted by many as King, died in
+the first enjoyment of his victory, a question arose which extended
+far beyond the personal relations and embarrassments of the moment.
+
+The influence always exercised by the Witans of the Anglo-Saxon
+kingdoms in determining the succession to the throne remained much the
+same when they were all fused into a single kingdom; even among the
+descendants of Alfred, the great men designated the sovereign. In the
+disturbed state of things in which they now found themselves, the
+lawful King having fled, and the other, who had put himself into
+actual possession of the supreme authority, being dead, they framed
+the largest conception of their right. They formally made conditions
+with Ethelred for his return, and he consented to their demands
+through his son.[7] Since he, however, did not fulfil his promise--for
+how could he have altered his nature?--they held themselves released
+from their engagement to maintain this family on the throne. Sven's
+son, Canute, had taken his father's place among the Danes; he had been
+long ago baptised, he was of a character which commanded confidence,
+and possessed at the time overwhelming power. After Ethelred's death
+the lay and spiritual chiefs of England decided to abandon the house
+of Cerdic for ever, and to recognise Canute as their King. How many
+jarls and thanes of Danish origin do we find around the kings under
+all the last governments. Edgar was especially blamed for the very
+reason that he took them under his protection. But they had been
+subjected only by war; no hereditary sentiment of natural loyalty
+attached them to the West Saxon royal house. The ecclesiastical
+aristocracy was besides determined by religious considerations; to
+them these disasters and crimes seemed sufficient proof of the truth
+of those prophecies of coming woe which Dunstan was believed to have
+uttered. They repaired to Canute at Southampton, and concluded a peace
+with him, the conditions of which were that they would abandon the
+descendants of Ethelred for ever, and recognise Canute as their King;
+he, on the other hand, promised to fulfil the duties of a King truly,
+in both spiritual and temporal relations.[8] Yet once more, Ethelred's
+eldest son, Edmund Ironsides, who was himself half a Dane by birth,
+roused himself to a vigorous resistance: London and a part of the
+nobility took his side; he gained through force of arms a settlement
+by which, though indeed he lost the best part of the land and the
+capital itself, he maintained the crown; he died however, soon after,
+and then the whole country recognised Canute as King. The last scion
+of the royal house in the land was banished, and all the claims of the
+family to the crown again declared void. The Anglo-Saxon magnates
+undertook to make a money payment to the Danish host; in return they
+received the pledge from the King's hand, and the oath by his soul
+taken by his chiefs.[9] It was a treaty between the Anglo-Saxon and
+the Danish chiefs, by which the former received the King of the latter
+as also their own.
+
+This extremely important event links the centuries together, and
+determines the future fortunes of England. The kingly house, whose
+right and pre-eminence was connected with the earliest settlements,
+which had completed the union of the realm and delivered it from the
+worst distress, was at a moment of moral deterioration and disaster
+excluded by the spiritual and temporal chiefs, of Anglo-Saxon and
+Danish origin. They had first tried to limit it, to bind it by its own
+promise; when this led to nothing, they annihilated its right by a
+formal resolution of the realm, and procured peace by raising to the
+throne another sovereign who had no right by birth. Canute did not owe
+the crown to conquest, though his greater power contributed to the
+result, but to election, which now appeared as the superior right:
+hitherto the Witan had always exercised it within the limits of the
+royal family; this time they disregarded that family altogether.
+
+Canute decreed or allowed some bloody acts of violence, in order to
+strengthen the power that had fallen to his lot; but afterwards he
+administered it with a noble spirit answering to his position. He
+became the leading sovereign of the North: men reckoned five or six
+kingdoms as subject to him. England was the chief of them all, even
+for him; it was in possession of the culture and religion which he
+wished should prevail in the rest: the missionaries of the North went
+forth from Canterbury. England itself, however, gained a higher
+position in the world by its union with a power which ruled as far as
+Norway and North America, and carried on commerce with the East by the
+Baltic. In Gothland the great emporium of the West, Arabic as well as
+Anglo-Danish coins are found; the former were carried from the North
+as far as England. Canute favoured the Anglo-Saxon mode of life; he
+liked to be designated the 'successor of Edgar;' he confirmed his
+legislation; and it was his intention, at least, to rule according to
+the laws: as he even submitted himself to the military regulations of
+the Huskarls, so he commanded right and law to be administered in
+civil matters without respect to his own person.
+
+But a union of such different kingdoms could only be a transitory
+phenomenon. Canute himself thought of leaving England again
+independent under one of his sons.
+
+With this object he had married Ethelred's widow Emma. For, according
+to Anglo-Saxon ideas, the Queen was not merely the King's wife, but
+also sovereign of the land, in her own right. It was settled that the
+children of this marriage should succeed him in England. Probably
+Canute did not wish the inheritance of the crown in his house to
+depend merely on the goodwill of the Witan.
+
+After Canute's death we can observe a wavering between the principles
+of election and birthright. The magnates again elected, but limited
+their choice to the King's house. After the extinction of the
+Danish-Norman family, they came back to the English-Norman one; they
+called the son of Ethelred and Emma, Edward the Confessor, to the
+throne of his fathers, though, it is true, without leaving him much
+power. This lay rather in the hands of the Earls Godwin of Kent and
+Leofric of Mercia; especially in the former, whose wife was related
+to Canute, did the Anglo-Saxon spirit of independence energetically
+manifest itself. He was once banished, but returned and recovered all
+his offices. When however, Edward too died without issue, the dynastic
+question once more came before the English magnates. It might have
+seemed most consistent to recall the Aetheling Edgar a member of the
+house of Cerdic from exile, and to carry on the previous form of
+government under his name. But the thoughts of the English chiefs no
+longer turned in that direction. Not very long before a king from the
+ranks of the native nobility had ascended the throne of the
+Carolingians in the West Frank empire; in the East Frank, or German
+empire, men had seen first the mightiest duke, then one of the most
+distinguished counts, attain the imperial dignity. Why should it not
+be possible for something similar to happen in England also? The very
+day on which Edward the Confessor died, Godwin's son, Harold, was
+elected by the magnates of the kingdom, and crowned without delay[10]
+(Jan. 5, 1066). The event now happened which was only implied in what
+occurred at Canute's accession: the house of Cerdic was abandoned, and
+the further step taken of raising another native family to its throne.
+
+It was not this time a pressing necessity that brought it about; but
+we cannot deny that, if carried through, it opened out an immeasurable
+prospect.
+
+For such would have been the case, if the attempt to found a Germanic
+Anglo-Saxon kingdom under Harold, and maintain it free from any
+preponderating foreign influence had been successful. By recalling
+Edgar the influence of Normandy, against which the antipathies of the
+nation had been awakened under the last government, would have been
+renewed. But just as little were those claims to be recognised which
+the Northern kings put forward for the re-establishment of their
+supremacy. Even as regards the Papacy, the government began to adopt
+an independent line of conduct.
+
+The question now was, whether the Anglo-Saxon nation would be
+unanimous and strong enough to maintain such a haughty position on all
+sides.
+
+The first attack came from the North; it was all the more dangerous,
+from the fact that an ambitious brother of the new King supported it:
+only by an extreme effort were these enemies repelled. But, at the
+same moment, an attack was threatened from another enemy of infinitely
+greater importance--Duke William of Normandy. It was not only this
+sovereign, and his land, but a new phase of development in the history
+of the world, with which England now entered into conflict.
+
+
+_The Conquest._
+
+Out of the antagonism of nationalities, of the Empire and the Church,
+of the overlord and the great chiefs, in the midst of invasions of
+foreign peoples and armies, the local resistance to them and their
+occupations of territory, a new world had, as it were, been forming
+itself in Southern Europe, and especially in Gaul. Still more
+decidedly than in England had the invading Vikings in France attached
+themselves to the national element, even in the second generation they
+had given up their language; they discovered at the same time a form
+which reconciled the membership in the kingdom, and the recognition of
+the common faith, with provincial freedom. In France no native power
+successfully opposed and checked the advancing Normans, such as that
+which the Danes had encountered in England. On the contrary they
+exercised the greatest influence over the foundation of a new dynasty.
+A system developed itself over the whole realm, in which, both in the
+provincial authorities and in the lower degrees of rank, the
+possession of land and share in public office, feudalism and freedom,
+interpenetrated each other, and made a common-weal which yet
+harmonised with all the inclinations that lend charm and colouring to
+individual life. The old migratory impulse and spirit of warlike
+enterprise set before itself religious aims also, which lent it a
+higher sanction; war for the Church, and conquest (which meant for
+each man a personal occupation of land) were combined in one. Starting
+from Normandy, where great warlike families were formed that found no
+occupation at home (for these young populations are wont to multiply
+quickest), North French love of war and habits of war transplanted
+themselves to Spain and to Italy. How must it have elevated their
+spirit of enterprise when in the latter country the Papacy, which had
+just thrown off the supremacy of the emperor, and entered on a new
+stage in the development of its power, made common cause with their
+arms, and a practised Norman warrior, Robert Guiscard, appeared as
+Duke of Apulia and Calabria 'by grace of God and of S. Peter and,
+under his protection, of Sicily also in time to come'![11] The Pope
+gave him lands in fief, which had hitherto belonged to the Greek
+Empire, and which the Germans had been unable to conquer; he promised,
+in return, to defend the prerogatives of S. Peter. Between the
+hierarchy which was striving to perfect its supremacy, and the warlike
+chivalry of the 11th century, an alliance was formed like that once
+concluded with the leaders of the Frankish host. The ideas were
+already stirring from which proceeded the Crusades, the foundation of
+the Spanish kingdoms, and the creation of the Latin Empire at
+Constantinople. In the princely fiefs of the French Crown, and above
+all in Normandy, they seized on men's minds. Chivalrous life and
+hierarchic institutions, dialectic and poetry, continual war at home
+and ceaseless aspirations abroad, were here fused into a living whole.
+
+In the Germanic countries also this close alliance of hierarchy and
+chivalry now sought to win influence, but here it met with a strenuous
+resistance. In England, Edward the Confessor had tried to prepare the
+way for it: Godwin and his house opposed it. And when the former named
+the Norman Robert Archbishop of Canterbury, and the latter drove him
+out, the English quarrels became connected with those of Rome;
+Stigand, the archbishop put in by Godwin, received his pallium from
+Pope Benedict X, who had been elected in the old tumultuous manner
+once more by the neighbouring Roman barons, but had to succumb to
+Hildebrand's zeal for a regular election by the cardinals, on which
+the emancipation of the Papacy depended. It seemed, then, intolerable
+at Rome that there should be a primate of the English Church,
+connected by his Church position with a phase of the supreme
+priesthood now condemned and abolished: it is very intelligible that
+this priesthood in its present form took up a hostile position towards
+the England of that time. In this, moreover, it found an ally ready to
+act in Duke William of Normandy, who wished to be regarded as the born
+champion of the Anglo-Saxon dynasty, and as the natural successor to
+its rights. Once already his father had collected a fleet to restore
+the exiled Aethelings, and was only kept back from an invasion by
+unfavourable weather. There had often since been rumours, that Edward
+had destined Duke William to be his successor; men asserted that
+Harold had previously recognised this right, and that in return
+William's daughter, and a part of the land as an independent
+possession, had been promised him.[12] In his own position William had
+cleared the ground for himself with a strong hand. He had beaten his
+feudal lord in the open field, and thus not only recovered a frontier
+fortress lost during his minority, but also strengthened the
+independence of the duchy. At the same time William had vanquished his
+rebellious vassals in arms, banished them, deprived them of their
+possessions, and got rid, with the Pope's consent, of an archbishop
+who was allied with them. Death freed him from another mighty
+opponent, the Duke of Brittany, who threatened him with a great
+maritime expedition. It throws a certain light on his policy, to see
+how he made himself master of the county of Maine in 1062. On the
+ground that Count Heribert, whom he had supported in his quarrel with
+Anjou, had become his vassal and made him his heir,[13] he overran
+Maine, and put his adherents in possession of the fortresses which
+commanded the land. However we may decide as to the details told us
+about his relations to Edward and Harold, it seems undeniable that
+William had received provisional promises from both--for Harold loved
+to side with Edward. He was not the man to put up with their being
+broken. The system, however, which through Harold's accession gained
+the upper hand in England, was in itself hostile to the Norman one:
+and that a king of England like the present might some day become
+dangerous to the duke, amidst all the other hostilities which
+threatened him, is clear. To these motives was now added the
+approbation of the Roman See. The Pope's chief Council deliberated on
+the enterprise, above all did the archdeacon of the Church,
+Hildebrand, declare himself in its favour. He was reproached--then or
+at a later time--with being the author of bloodshed; he declared that
+his conscience acquitted him, since he knew well, that the higher
+William mounted, the more useful he would be to the Church.[14]
+Alexander II now sent the duke the banner of the Church. As a few
+years before Robert Guiscard had become duke, so now a Norman duke was
+to become king, in the service of the Church. The Normans were still
+divided in their views as to the enterprise, but when this news
+arrived, all opposition ceased, for in the service of S. Peter and the
+Church men believed themselves secure of success; then lay and
+spiritual vassals emulously armed ships and men; in the harbour of S.
+Valery, which belonged to one of those who had been last gained over,
+the Count of Ponthieu, the fleet and the troops gathered together.[15]
+The Count of Flanders, the duke's father-in-law, secretly favoured the
+enterprise; another of his nearest relations, Count Odo of Champagne,
+brought up his troops in person; Count Eustace of Boulogne armed, to
+avenge on Godwin's house an affront he had once suffered at Dover; a
+number of leading Breton counts and lords attached themselves to
+William in opposition to their duke, who cherished wholly different
+projects. To the lords and knights of North France were joined many of
+lower rank, whose names show that they came from Gascony, Burgundy,
+the duchy of France, or the neighbouring districts belonging to the
+German Empire. Of their own free will they ranged themselves round
+William, to vindicate the right which he claimed to the English crown,
+but each man naturally entertained brilliant hopes also for himself.
+William is depicted as a man of vast bodily strength, which none could
+surpass or weary out, with a strong hardy frame, a cool head, an
+expression in his features which exactly intimated the violence with
+which he followed up his enemies, destroyed their states, and burnt
+their houses. Yet all was not passionate desire in him. He honoured
+his mother, he was true to his wife. Never did he undertake a quarrel
+without giving fair notice, and certainly never without having well
+prepared for it beforehand. He knew how to keep up a warlike spirit in
+his vassals: there were seen with him only splendid men and able
+leaders; he kept strict discipline. So also he had seized the moment
+for his enterprise, at which the political relations of Europe were
+favourable to him. The two great realms, which might otherwise have
+well interposed, the East Frank (or the Roman-German) as well as the
+West Frank, were under kings not yet of age: the guardianship of the
+latter lay with the Count of Flanders, who thought he did enough in
+not standing openly by his son-in-law, of the former with great
+bishops devoted heart and soul to the hierarchic system.[16] Harold,
+on the other hand, had no friend or ally, in North or East, in South
+or in West. To encounter the combined efforts of a great European
+coalition he had only himself and his Anglo-Saxons to rely on. Harold
+is depicted as coming forth perfect from the hands of nature, without
+blemish from head to foot, personally brave before the enemy, gentle
+among his own people, and endowed with natural eloquence. His enemy's
+passion for, and knowledge of, war were not in him; the taste of the
+Anglo-Saxons was directed more to peaceful enjoyments than to
+ceaseless wars. At this moment too they were weakened by great losses
+in the last bloody war; many of the most trustworthy and bravest had
+fallen, others wavered in their fidelity; Harold had not been able to
+put even the coasts in a state of defence; William landed without
+resistance, to demand his crown from him. When reminded of his promise
+Harold was believed to have answered in the very spirit of Anglo-Saxon
+independence, that he had no right to make any such promise without
+the consent of the Anglo-Saxon chiefs and people. And not to meet the
+invading foe instantly at the sword's point would have seemed to him
+disgraceful cowardice. And so William and Harold, the North French
+knights and the national war-array of the Anglo-Saxons, encountered at
+Hastings. Harold fell at the very beginning of the fight. The Normans,
+according to their wont, knew how to separate their enemies by a
+pretended flight, and then by a sudden return to surround and destroy
+them in isolated bodies. It was the iron-clad, yet rapidly moving
+cavalry, which decided the battle.[17]
+
+William expected, now that his rival had fallen, to be recognised by
+the Anglo-Saxons as their King. Instead of this the chiefs and the
+capital raised Edgar the Aetheling, grandson of Edmund Ironsides, to
+the throne: as though William would retire before a scion of the old
+West-Saxon house, of which he professed to be the champion. He held
+firmly to the transfer made to him by the last king without regard to
+any third person, ratified as it was by the Roman See, and marched on
+the capital.
+
+Edgar was a boy, and the magnates were at variance as to who should
+have the authority to exercise guardianship over him. When William
+appeared before the city, and threatened the walls with his
+siege-machines, it too lost courage. The embassy which it sent him was
+amazed at the grandeur and splendour of his appearance, was convinced
+as to the right which King Edward had transferred to him,[18] and
+penetrated by the danger which a resistance, in itself hopeless, would
+bring on the city. Aldermen and people abandoned Edgar, and recognised
+William as King. There is an old story, that the county of Kent, on
+capitulating, made good conditions for itself. To the nobles also, who
+submitted by degrees, similar terms may have been accorded, but their
+position was almost entirely altered. We need notice only this one
+point. Their chief right, which they exercised to a perhaps
+unauthorised extent, was that of electing the King; they had now
+elected twice, but the first election was annulled by defeat in the
+open field, the second by increasing superiority in arms; they had to
+recognise the Conqueror, who claimed by inheritance, as their King,
+whether they would or no. There is something almost symbolic of the
+resulting state of things in the story of William's coronation, which
+was now celebrated by the tomb of Edward the Confessor at Westminster.
+For the first time the voices of the Anglo-Saxons and the Normans were
+united to greet him as King, but the discordant outcry of the two
+languages seemed a sign of conflict to the troops gathered outside,
+and made the warlike fury, so hardly kept under control, boil up again
+in them; they set the houses of London on fire. Whilst all hurried
+from the church, the ceremony it is said was completed by shuddering
+priests in the light of the flames: the new King himself, who at other
+times did not know what fear was, trembled.[19]
+
+By this coronation-acclaim, two constituent elements of the world,
+which had been fundamentally at conflict with each other, became
+indissolubly united.
+
+That against which the Anglo-Saxons had set themselves to guard with
+all their strength during the last period, the inroad of the
+Norman-French element into their Church and their State, was now
+accomplished in fullest measure. William's maxim was, that all who had
+taken arms against him and his right had forfeited their property;
+those who escaped, and the heirs of those who had fallen, were
+deprived alike. In a short time we find William's leading comrades in
+the war, as earls of Hereford, Buckingham, Shrewsbury, Cornwall; his
+valiant brothers were endowed with hundreds of fiefs; and when the
+insurrection which quickly broke out led to new outlawries and new
+confiscations, all the counties were filled with French knights. From
+Caen came over the blocks of freestone to build castles and towers, by
+which they hoped to bridle the towns and the country. It is an
+exaggeration to assume a complete transfer of property from the one
+people to the other; among the tenants in chief about half the names
+are still Anglo-Saxon. At first, those who from any even accidental
+cause had not actually met William in arms were left in possession of
+their lands, though without hereditary right: later, after they had
+conducted themselves quietly for some time, this too was given back to
+them. In the next century it excited surprise that so many great
+properties should have remained in the hands of the Anglo-Saxons.[20]
+It would have been altogether against William's plan, to treat the
+Anglo-Saxons as having no rights. He wished to appear as the rightful
+successor of the Anglo-Saxon kings: by their laws he would abide, only
+adding the legal usages of the Normans to those of the Danes,
+Mercians, and West Saxons; and it was not merely through his will, but
+also by its higher form, and connexion with the ideas of the century,
+that the Norman law gained the upper hand. But however much we may
+deduct from the usual exaggerations, this fact remains, that the
+change of ownership which took place, like the change in the
+constitution and the general state of things, was of enormous extent:
+the military and judicial power passed entirely into the hands of the
+victors in the war. And in the Church alterations no less
+thoroughgoing ensued. Under the authority of Papal legates, the great
+office-holders of the English Church, who had been opposed to the
+newly arisen hierarchic system, were mercilessly deprived of their
+places. The King was afterwards personally on tolerably good terms
+with Stigand, the Archbishop of Canterbury, but was not inclined on
+his account to oppose the Church. The archbishopric, and with it the
+primacy of England, passed to the man in whom the union of the Church
+authority and orthodoxy of that which we may call the especially
+hierarchic century was most vividly represented, the man who had been
+the chief agent in establishing the dogma of Transubstantiation, the
+great teacher of Bec, Lanfranc. In most of the bishoprics and abbeys
+we find Normans of kindred tendency. It was precisely in the
+enterprise against England that the hierarchy concluded its compact
+with the hereditary feudal state, which was all the more lasting in
+that they were both still in process of formation.
+
+In this way was England attached by the strongest ties to the
+Continent, and to the new system of life and ecclesiastico-political
+constitution which had then gained the upper hand in Latin Europe.
+Under the next three successors of the Conqueror, none of whom enjoyed
+a completely legal recognition, it sometimes appeared as though
+England would again tear herself away from Normandy: such variances
+were not without influence on home affairs: in the general relations
+of the country they wrought no change at all. On the contrary, these
+were developed on a still larger scale, owing to the complicated
+family connexions which so peculiarly characterise that epoch. From
+the county of Anjou which, like the dominion of the Capets, had been
+formed in the struggle against the invasion of the Normans, a
+sovereign arose who had the right to rule the Norman conquests, the
+son of the Conqueror's granddaughter, Henry Plantagenet. He had
+become, though not without appeal to the sword, which his father
+wielded powerfully on his behalf, master of Normandy, and had then
+married Eleanor of Poitou, who brought him a great part of South
+France: he then succeeded more by fair means than by force in
+establishing his right to the throne of England. Henry was the first
+to establish in France the power of the great vassals, by which the
+crown was long in danger of being overthrown. The Kings of Castille
+and Navarre submitted to his arbitration. And under a sovereign whose
+grandfather had been King of Jerusalem, and one of the mightiest
+rulers of that Western kingdom established in the East, the
+tendencies, which had led so far, could not fail to extend themselves
+to the utmost in all their spheres of action? The hierarchic and
+chivalrous spirit of Continental Europe, which under the Normans had
+seized on England, was much strengthened by the accession of the
+Plantagenets. It thus came to pass that after the disastrous loss of
+Jerusalem, the knights of Anjou and of Guienne, from Brittany (for
+Henry had added this province also to his family possessions) and from
+Normandy, gathered together in London, and took the Cross in company
+with the English. England formed a part of the Plantagenet Empire--if
+we may apply this word to so anomalous a state--and contributed to its
+extension, even though no interest of its own was involved. But
+towards such a result the relations which this alliance established
+between England and Southern Europe had long tended. Not seldom was
+the military power of the provinces over the sea employed for
+enterprises that aimed at the direct advantage of England itself.
+Whether and when the German element without this influence would have
+become master of the British group of islands none could say. The
+English dominion over Ireland in particular is derived from Henry II,
+and his alliance at that time with the Papacy; he crossed thither
+under the Pope's authorisation: at the Pope's word the native kings
+did homage to him as their lord.[21] And the foreign-born Plantagenets
+struck living root in England itself. As Henry II's mother was the
+daughter of a princess descended from the West-Saxon house, he was
+hailed by the natives as their lawfully-descended King; in accordance
+with Edward the Confessor's prophecy, that from the severed bough
+should spring up a new tree: they traced his descent without scruple
+back to Wodan. This King, moreover, has impressed his mark deeply on
+English life; to this day justice is administered in England under
+forms established by him.
+
+The will of destiny cannot be gainsaid. Just as Germany without its
+connexion with Italy, so England without its connexion with France,
+would never have been what it is. More than all, the great
+commonwealth of the western nations, whose life pervades and
+determines the history of each separate state, would never have come
+into existence. But on this ground first, amidst continual warfare,
+was gradually accomplished the formation of the nationalities.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[7] Se in omnibus eorum voluntati consensurum, consiliis acquieturum.
+
+[8] Florentius Wigorniensis: 'Post cujus (Aethelredi) mortem episcopi
+abbates duces et quique nobiliores Angliae, in unum congregati pari
+consensu in dominum et regem Canutum sibi elegere--ille juravit, quod
+et secundum deum et secundum seculum fidelis eis esse vellet dominus.'
+The oath which Ethelred had taken was, however, only 'secundum deum.'
+
+[9] Florentius, 593: 'Accepto pignore de manu sua nuda cum juramentis
+a principibus Danorum, fratres et filios Eadmundi omnino despexerunt
+eosque esse reges negaverunt.'
+
+[10] In Ingulphus (Savile Script. 511) it is said expressly: per
+Archiepiscopum Eboracae, Aedredum (Aldredum). But it is surprising
+that the Bayeux Tapestry expressly names Stigand (Lancelot:
+Description de Tapisserie de Bayeux, in Thierry, I). Yet Harold could
+not possibly have meant, by passing over the Archbishop of Canterbury,
+to declare him to be incompetent, since he had been appointed by his
+party.
+
+[11] Juramentum fidelitatis Roberti Guiscardi: 1059 in Baronius,
+Annales Eccles. ix. 350.
+
+[12] The simplest statement occurs in the Carmen de bello Hastingensi,
+p. 352, according to which Edward promised the succession, and sent
+ring and sword to the duke by Harold; but as early as in William of
+Jumièges we have the tale of Harold's captivity in Ponthieu, and the
+promise made him, and the chief outlines of what in Guilielmus
+Pictaviensis, and Ordericus Vitalis, lies before us with further
+embellishments, and to which the Bayeux Tapestry (itself, too, a kind
+of historical memorial of the time) adds some further traits.
+
+[13] Guilielmus Pictaviensis, Gesta Wilhelmi ducis, in Duchesne 189,
+already relates this in reference to the English affair.
+
+[14] Gregorii Registrum, vii. 23; Mansi, xx. 306.
+
+[15] William of Jumièges, Hist. vii. 34. 'Ingentem exercitum ex
+Normannis et Flandrensibus ac Francis ac Britonibus aggregavit.'
+
+[16] Guilielmus Pictaviensis 197 assures us that help was promised
+from Germany in the name of Henry IV.
+
+[17] William of Malmesbury, Gesta Regum, III. § 245. 'Magis temeritate
+et furore praecipitati quam scientia militari Wilhelmo congressi.'
+
+[18] 'Contulit Eguardus quod rex donum sibi regni Monstrat et adfirmat
+vosque probasse refert.' So Guido (Carmen de bello Hastingensi, 737)
+makes Ansgard on his return speak to the citizens.
+
+[19] Ordericus Vitalis 503. In Guido the ceremony is described with
+the greatest calmness, as though it passed undisturbed; but the
+conclusion of his work seems wanting.
+
+[20] Dialogus de Scaccario, i. 10. 'Miror singularis excellentiae
+principem, in subactam et sibi suspectam Anglorum gentem hac usum
+misericordia, ut non solum colonos indempnes servaret, verum ipsis
+regni majoribus feudos suos et amplas possessiones relinqueret.' In
+Madox, History of the Exchequer, ii. 391. In Domesday Book the memory
+of Edward the Confessor is always treated with the greatest respect.
+Ellis, Introduction to Domesday Book, i. 303.
+
+[21] 'Ut illius terrae populus te sicut dominum veneretur.' Breve of
+Hadrian IV.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE CROWN IN CONFLICT WITH CHURCH AND NOBLES.
+
+
+Highly as we may estimate the due appreciation and expression of those
+objective ideas, which are bound up with the culture of the human
+race, still the spiritual life of man is built up not so much on a
+devout and docile receptivity of these ideas as on their free and
+subjective recognition, which modifies while it accepts, and
+necessarily passes through a phase of conflict and opposition.
+
+In England the authority both of Church and State now came forward
+with far more strength than before. The royal power was a continuation
+of the sovereignty inherited from Anglo-Saxon times, but, leaning on
+its continental resources, and supported by those who had taken part
+in the Conquest, it developed itself much more durably. The clergy of
+the land were far more closely and systematically bound to the Papacy;
+thus it had become more learned and more active. The one sword helped
+the other; just at this very time, the King and the Archbishop of
+Canterbury were depicted as the two strong steers that drew the plough
+of England.
+
+But yet, below all this there existed a powerful element of
+opposition. After the new order of things had existed more than eighty
+years, among a portion of the Anglo-Saxon population the design was
+started of putting a violent end to it, of destroying at one blow all
+those foreigners who seemed its representatives, just as the Danes had
+all been murdered on one day.
+
+It was an evil thought, and all the more atrocious because manifold
+ties had been already gradually formed between the two populations.
+How could they ever become fused into one nation if the one was always
+plotting the destruction of the other?
+
+It was not merely by alliances of blood and family, but even still
+more by great common political and ecclesiastical interests that the
+English nationality, which contains both elements, was founded. And,
+in truth, the leading impulse towards it was that the conquerors, no
+less than the conquered, felt themselves oppressed by the yoke which
+the two supreme authorities laid on them, and hence both combined to
+oppose them. But centuries elapsed before this could be effected. The
+first occasion for it was given when the two authorities quarrelled
+with each other, and alternately called on the population to give its
+voluntary aid.
+
+For, as the authorities which represent the objective ideas are of
+different origin, they have never in our Western Europe remained more
+than a short time in complete harmony with each other. Each retains
+its natural claim to be supreme, and not to endure the supremacy of
+the other. The one has always more before its eyes the unity of the
+whole, the other the needs and rights of the several kingdoms and
+states. Amidst their antagonism European life has moulded itself and
+made progress.
+
+Close as their union was at the time of the Conquest of England, yet
+even then their quarrel broke out. Though the Conqueror pledged
+himself again to pay a tribute which the Anglo-Saxon kings had
+formerly charged themselves with, and which had been long unpaid, yet
+this was not sufficient for the Roman See: Gregory VII demanded to be
+recognised as feudal lord of England. But this was not what William
+understood, when he had allowed the papal banner to wave over the
+fleet that brought him to England. It was not from the Pope's
+authorisation that he derived his claim to the English crown, as if
+this had been merely transferred to him by the Papal See, but from the
+Anglo-Saxon kings, as whose heir and legal successor he wished to be
+regarded. He answered the Pope that he could enter into no other
+relation to him than that in which his predecessors in England had
+stood to previous popes.
+
+For the first time the popes had to give up altogether the attempt to
+make kings their feudal dependents; they attempted, however, an
+almost deeper encroachment into the very heart of the royal power,
+when they then formed the plan of severing the spiritual body
+corporate, which already possessed the most extensive temporal
+privileges, from their feudal obligation to the sovereigns. The
+English kings opposed them in this also with resolution and success.
+Under the influence of the father of scholasticism, Anselm of
+Canterbury, Primate of England, a satisfactory agreement was arranged
+long before the Concordat was obtained in Germany. In general there
+was little to fear, as long as the Archbishop of Canterbury had a good
+understanding with the Crown; and this was the case in the first half
+of the 12th century, if not on all points, yet, at least on all
+leading questions. Far-reaching differences did not appear until the
+higher ecclesiastics embraced the party of the Papacy, which happened
+in England through Thomas Becket.
+
+
+_Henry II and Becket._
+
+It was precisely from him that this would have been least expected. He
+had been the King's Chancellor, or if we may avail ourselves of a
+somewhat remote equivalent expression, his most trusted cabinet
+minister, and had as such, in both home and foreign affairs, rendered
+the most valuable services. The introduction of scutage is attributed
+to him, and he certainly had a large share in the acquisition of
+Brittany. It was through the direct influence of the King that he was
+elected archbishop.[22] But from that hour he seemed to have become
+another man. As he had hitherto rivalled the courtiers in splendour,
+pleasure, and pomp, so would he now by strictness of life equal the
+sanctity of the saints; as hitherto to the King, so did he now attach
+himself to the interests of the Church. It might, so we may suppose,
+be some satisfaction to his self-esteem, that he could now confront
+his stern and mighty sovereign as Archbishop 'also by the grace of
+God,' for so he designates himself in his letter to the King; or he
+might feel himself bound to recover the possessions of his Church,
+which had been wrested from it by the Crown or the high nobility. But,
+as spiritually-minded men are moved more by universal ideas than by
+special interests, so for Becket the determining impulse without doubt
+lay above all in the sympathy which he devoted to the hierarchic
+movement in general.
+
+Those were the times in which the attempt of the Emperor Frederic I to
+call a council, and in it to decide on a contested papal election, had
+created general excitement among the peoples and churches of Southern
+Europe, which would only consent to be led by a pope independent of
+the empire. Driven from Italy, Alexander III, the Pope rejected by the
+Emperor, found a cordial reception in France; and here he now
+collected on his side a papal council in opposition to the imperial
+one, in which the cardinals, whose election the Emperor was trying to
+annul, and the bishops of Spain and South Italy, and those of the
+collective Gaulish dioceses (more than a hundred in number), and the
+English bishops also, gathered around him, and laid the Pope elected
+by the Emperor under the anathema. It was inevitable that the idea of
+the Church, as independent of the temporal power, should here find its
+strongest expression. Some canons were passed which prohibited the
+usurpation of ecclesiastical property by the laity, and made it a
+crime in the bishops to allow it.[23]
+
+Thomas Becket was welcomed in this council with a seductive kindness;
+but besides this, what is harder than to set oneself against the
+common feeling of one's own order, when moderation already appears to
+be apostasy? He returned to England filled with the ideas of
+hierarchic independence; in preparing to carry it through, he
+necessarily brought on the conflict which had hitherto been avoided.
+
+The Plantagenet King, whose whole heart was in the work of securing
+the obedience of the manifold provinces that had fallen to his lot;
+who hastened ceaselessly from one to the other (when people thought
+him far away in South France, he had already recrossed the sea to
+England), ever occupied in extending his inherited power by
+institutions of a legal and administrative nature, was not inclined to
+give way to the Church in this attempt. He would neither make the
+election of the higher clergy free, nor allow their excommunication to
+be valid without State control; he not only maintained the right of
+the lay courts to try ecclesiastics for heinous offences, which else
+often remained unpunished; but, even in the sphere of spiritual
+jurisdiction, he claimed to hear appeals in the last instance without
+regard to the Pope. In all this the lay and spiritual nobility agreed
+with him; in a Council at Clarendon they framed 'constitutions,' in
+which they declared these rules to be the law of the realm, as it had
+always been observed, and ought to be observed henceforth.[24]
+
+Becket did not possess the inflexible obstinacy which distinguishes
+most of the champions of the hierarchy. As the accordant voice of
+Europe moved him to take up the hierarchic principles, so now the
+accordant voice of his country's rulers made an impression on him: he
+listened to the ecclesiastics who entreated him not to draw the King's
+displeasure on them, and to the laymen, who prayed him not to bring on
+them the necessity of executing it on the ecclesiastics: he virtually
+accepted the Constitutions of Clarendon. But then again he could not
+prevail on himself to observe them. Only when his vacillation
+endangered him personally, so that he could expect nothing else to
+follow but a condemnation by a new assembly of the royal court, did he
+come to a decision. Then he took the hierarchic side resolutely; in
+contradiction to the Constitutions, he appealed to the Pope. It is a
+remarkable day in English history, that 14th October 1164, on which
+Thomas Becket, after reading mass, appeared before the court without
+his archiepiscopal dress, but cross in hand. He forbade the earl, who
+wished to announce the judgment to him, to speak, since no layman had
+power to sit in judgment on his spiritual father;[25] he again put
+himself under the protection of God and the Roman Church, and then
+passed from the court, no man venturing to lay hands on him, still
+armed with his cross, to a church close by, from whence he escaped to
+the Continent. By this he brought into England the war of the two
+powers, which had already burst into flame in Italy and Germany. The
+archbishop and primate rejected the supreme judicial authority of the
+Curia Regis; only in the chief pontiff at Rome did he recognise his
+rightful judge: by undertaking to bring into full view the complete
+independence of the spiritual principle on this ground also, he broke
+down that unity of authority, which had, been hitherto maintained in
+the English realm, and entered into open war with his King.
+
+Henry II was, like most of the sovereigns of that age, above all
+things a warrior; you could see by his stride that he spent his days
+on horseback; and he was an indefatigable hunter. But yet he found
+time besides for study; he took pleasure in solving, in the company of
+scholars, the difficulties of the theologico-philosophical problems
+which then largely occupied men's minds; there is no doubt that he
+also fully understood these politico-ecclesiastical questions. He was
+by no means a good husband, rather the contrary, but, in other things,
+he could control himself; he was moderate in eating and drinking.
+Success did not make him overweening, but all the more prudent:[26]
+ill-success found him resolute; yet it was remarked that he was more
+severe in success, milder in adversity. If contradicted, he showed all
+the excitability of the Southern French nature; he passed from
+promises to threats, from flatteries to outbursts of wrath, until he
+met with compliance. His administration at home witnesses to a noble
+conception of his mission and to a practical understanding; from his
+lion-like visage shone forth a pair of quiet eyes, but how suddenly
+did they flame up with wild fire, if the passion was roused that
+slumbered in the depths of his soul! It was the passion of unlimited
+power; an ambition for which, as he once said, the world appeared to
+be too small. He never forgave an opponent; he never reconciled
+himself with an enemy or took him again into favour.
+
+He would of himself have been much inclined to abandon Alexander III,
+and attach himself to the Pope set up by the Emperor: his ambassadors
+took part in a German diet at which the most extreme steps were
+approved of. But Henry was not sufficiently master of his clergy nor,
+above all, of his people for this; the solemn curse of Thomas Becket
+wrought on men from far away. Was there really any foundation for what
+men then said, that the King thought it better that his foe should be
+in the country rather than out of it? An apparent reconciliation was
+brought about, which, however, left the main questions undecided, each
+side only consenting generally to a peace with the other. Becket did
+not allow himself to be hindered by it, on his return to England, from
+excommunicating leading ecclesiastics who had supported the King's
+party. But at this Henry's deep-seated wrath awoke. Beset by the
+exiles with cries for protection, he let the complaint escape him in
+the presence of his knights, that among so many to whom he had shown
+favour there was not one who had courage enough to avenge the insults
+offered to him.[27] As opposed to the Church sympathies which through
+the clergy wrought on all people, the temporal state was mainly kept
+together by the reciprocal relations of the feudal lord and sovereign
+to his vassals and knights, and of them to him: to spiritual reverence
+was opposed personal devotion. But these feelings, too, as they have
+their justification, so they have their moral limitations; they are as
+capable of exaggeration and excess as all others. Enflamed by the
+King's words which seemed to touch the honour of knighthood, four of
+his knights hastened to Canterbury, and sought out the man, who dared
+to bid the King defiance in his own kingdom; as Becket refused to
+recall the excommunication, they murdered him horribly in the
+cathedral. When required to obey the King, Becket was wont to reserve
+the rights of the Church and the priesthood; for this reservation he
+died.
+
+Henry II by calling forth, intentionally or not, this brutal act of
+violence in the ecclesiastical strife, drew on himself the catastrophe
+of his life.
+
+By Becket's murder the ideas of Church independence gained what was
+yet wanting to them, a martyr: his death was more advantageous to them
+than his life could ever have been. The belief that the victim wrought
+miracles, which were ascribed to him in increasing measure, at first
+slight, then more and more surprising ones, viz. cures of incurable
+diseases,--who does not know the resistless nature of this illusion,
+bound up as it is with the nearest needs of man in every form?--made
+him the idol of England. Henry II had to live to see the man who had
+refused him the old accustomed obedience, reverenced among his people
+with almost divine honours as one of the greatest saints that had ever
+lived. The great Hohenstaufen in the unsuccessful struggle with the
+Papacy was at last brought to declare that all he had hitherto done
+rested on an error; and in like manner, but one far more humiliating
+and painful, Henry II had to do penance, and receive the discipline of
+the scourge, at the tomb of the man who had been murdered by his loyal
+subjects. On a hasty glance it seems as though his Constitutions were
+established, but a more accurate inquiry shows that the articles which
+displeased the Pope were left out. The hierarchic ideas gained the day
+in England also.
+
+It was precisely the Church quarrel that fed the discords which broke
+out in the King's own house. His eldest son found a pretence for his
+revolt, and essentially promoted it, by alleging that the murderers of
+the glorious martyr were unpunished; he on his side promised the
+clergy to make good all existing injuries, since what belonged to the
+Church should not serve man's ostentation. The example of the elder
+wrought on the younger sons too, who, to withstand their father,
+recognised the supremacy of the King of France. Henry's last years
+were filled with depression, and even with despair; when dying he was
+believed to have bequeathed his curse to his children. In the
+cloisters his death was ascribed to the intercession and merits of S.
+Thomas.
+
+For with the acceptance of the hierarchic ideas the prestige of their
+martyr grew day by day. In the crusade of 1189 men saw him appear in
+dreams, and declare that he was appointed to protect the fleet, to
+calm the storms.
+
+It was under these auspices that the chivalry of the Plantagenet realm
+took part in the Third Crusade: King Richard (in whom the ideas of
+Church and Chivalry attained their highest splendour) at their head
+gave back to the already lost kingdom of Jerusalem, in despite of a
+very powerful foe, a certain amount of stability: as he served the
+hierarchic views with all his power, there was no question under him
+as to any dispute between Church and State. But this power itself
+could not be increased owing to his absence. Whilst he fought for the
+Church far away, elements of resistance were stirring in his realm
+which had been there long ago, and soon after his death came to the
+most violent outbreak.
+
+
+_John Lackland and Magna Charta._
+
+Despite all the community of interests between the sovereigns of the
+Conquest and their vassals, grounds of hostility between them had
+never been altogether wanting. The Conqueror's sons had to make
+concessions to the great lords, because their succession was not
+secure; they needed a voluntary recognition, the price of which
+consisted in a relaxation of the harsh laws with which the monarchy
+had at first fettered every department of life. But when the great
+nobles had managed, or decided, contests for the throne, Were they
+likely to feel bound unconditionally to obey the man whom they had
+raised? Besides Henry II in his ecclesiastical quarrel needed the
+consent of his vassals; his court-Assemblies were no longer confined
+to proclamations of ordinances from the one side only; consultations
+were held, leading to decisions that concerned them all.
+
+But what is now surprising is the fact, that even the associates in
+the Conquest, and much more their descendants, claimed the rights
+which the Anglo-Saxon magnates had once possessed. They, too, appealed
+incessantly to the _Laga_, the laws of Edward the Confessor, by which
+was meant the collection of old legal customs, the observation of
+which had been promised from the first. Following the precedent of
+their kings, the families that had risen through the Conquest regarded
+themselves as the heirs of the fallen Anglo-Saxon chiefs, into whose
+place they had stepped. The rights of the old Witan and of the vassals
+of the new feudal state became fused together.
+
+We must now lay greater weight than is commonly done on the incidents
+that occurred during King Richard's absence. He had entrusted the
+administration of the realm to a man of low origin, William, bishop of
+Ely, who carried it on with great energy, and not without the pomp and
+splendour, which grace authority, but arouse jealousy. Hence lay and
+spiritual chiefs combined against him: with Earl John, the brother of
+the absent King, at their head, they banished the hated bishop by the
+strong hand, and of their own authority set another in his place. The
+city of London, which had been already allowed the election of its own
+magistrates by Henry II, had then formed a so-called _Communia_ after
+the pattern of the Flemish and North French towns; bishops, earls, and
+barons, swore to support the city in it.[28]
+
+These first attempts at an opposition by the estates obtained fresh
+weight when on Richard's death a contest again arose about the
+succession. Earl John claimed it for himself, but Arthur, an elder
+brother's son, seemed to have a better right, and had been moreover
+recognised at once in the South French provinces. The English nobles
+fortified their castles, and for some time assumed an almost
+threatening position; they only acknowledged John on the assurance
+that each and all should have their rights.[29] John's possession of
+the crown was therefore derived not merely from right of inheritance,
+but also from their election.
+
+A strong territorial confederacy had thus gradually grown up,
+confronting the royal power with a claim to independent rights; events
+now happened that roused it into full life.
+
+King John incurred the suspicion of having murdered Arthur, who had
+fallen into his hands, to rid himself of his claims; he was accused of
+it by the peers of France, and pronounced guilty; on which the
+Plantagenet provinces which were fiefs of the French crown went over
+to the King of France at the first attack. The English nobility would
+at least not fight for a sovereign on whom such a heinous suspicion
+lay: on another pretence it abandoned him.
+
+But then broke out a new quarrel with the Church. The most powerful
+pontiff that ever sat in the Roman See, Innocent III, thought good to
+decide a disputed election at Canterbury by passing over both
+candidates, including the King's, and caused the election of, or
+rather himself named, one of his friends from the great school at
+Paris, Stephen Langton. As King John did not acknowledge him, Innocent
+laid England under an Interdict.
+
+Alike careless and cruel, naturally hasty and untrustworthy, of
+doubtful birthright, and now rejected by the Church, John must have
+rather expected resistance than support from the great men of the
+realm. He tried to assure himself of those he suspected by taking
+hostages from their families; he confiscated the property of the
+ecclesiastics who complied with the Pope's orders, and took it under
+his own management; he employed every means which the still unlimited
+extent of the supreme authority allowed, to obtain money and men;
+powerfully and successfully he used the sword. But in the long run he
+could not maintain himself by these means. When a revolt broke out in
+Wales at the open instigation of the Pope, and the King's vassals were
+summoned to put it down, even among them a general discontent was
+perceptible; John had reason to dread that if he came near the enemy
+with such an army he might be delivered into their hands or killed: he
+did not venture to carry out the campaign. And meanwhile he saw
+himself threatened from abroad also. King Philip Augustus of France
+armed, to attack his old opponent at home (whom he had already driven
+from in those provinces over which he himself was feudal sovereign),
+and to carry out the Pope's excommunication against him. He boasted,
+probably with good grounds, of having the English barons' letters and
+seals, promising that they would join him. He would have restored all
+the fugitives and exiles; the Church element would have raised itself
+all the more strongly, in proportion to its previous depression; a
+general revolt would have accompanied his attack, the English
+government according to all appearance would have been lost.
+
+King John knew this well: to avoid immediate ruin he seized on a means
+of escape which was completely unexpected, but quite decisive--he gave
+over his kingdom in vassalage to the Pope.
+
+What William I had so expressly rejected was now accepted in a moment
+of extreme pressure, from which such a step was the only means of
+escape. The moment the Pope was recognised as feudal lord of England,
+not only must his hostility cease, but he would be bound to take the
+realm under his protection. He now forbade the King of France, whom he
+had before urged on to its conquest, to carry out the invasion, which
+was already prepared.
+
+It appears as if the barons had originally agreed with the King's
+proceeding, although they did not entirely approve its form. They
+maintained that they had risen up for the Church's rights,[30] and saw
+in the Pope a natural ally. They thought to gain their own purpose all
+the more surely now that Stephen Langton received the see of
+Canterbury, a man who, while he represented the Papal authority, at the
+same time zealously made their interests his own. At the very moment
+when the archbishop absolved the King from the excommunication, he made
+him swear that he would restore the good laws, especially those of King
+Edward, and would do all according to the legal decisions of his
+courts. It may be regarded as the first time that a Norman-Plantagenet
+king's administration was acted on by an obligatory engagement, when
+King John, on the point of taking the field against some barons whom he
+regarded as rebels, was hindered by the archbishop who reminded him
+that he would thus be breaking his last oath, which bound him to take
+judicial proceedings. The tradition that a forgotten charter of Henry I
+was produced by the archbishop (who was certainly, as his writings
+show, a scholar of research), and recognised as a legal document which
+gave them a firm footing, may admit of some doubt; there is no doubt
+that it was Stephen Langton who gathered around him the great nobles
+and bound them by a mutual engagement, to defend, even at the risk of
+life, the old liberties and rights which they derived from Anglo-Saxon
+times.
+
+It was, in fact, of considerable importance that the primate, on whose
+co-operation with the King the Norman state originally rested, united
+himself in this matter as closely as possible with the nobles; among
+all alike, without regard to their origin, whether from France or from
+England, had arisen the wish to limit the crown, as it had been
+limited in the Anglo-Saxon period.
+
+Here, however, they had to discover that the Pope was minded to
+protect the King, his vassal, not only against attacks from abroad,
+but also against movements at home. The engagements which the barons
+had formed, when he released them from their oath of fidelity to the
+King, he now declared to be invalid and void. The legate in England
+reported unfavourably on their proceedings, and it was seen that he
+was intimately allied with the King. The war was still raging on the
+continent, and the King had been again defeated, at Bouvines, July 27,
+1214; he had returned disheartened, but not without bodies of
+mercenaries, both horse and foot, which excited anxiety in the allied
+nobles. This feeling was strengthened by the fact that, after the
+death of a chancellor connected with them by family, and on good terms
+with them, he raised a foreigner, Peter des Roches, to that dignity,
+and it was believed that this foreigner would lend a hand to any
+attempt at restoring the previous state of things. Acts of violence of
+the old sort, and the King's lusts, which brought dishonour into their
+families, added to their indignation. In short, the barons, far from
+breaking up their alliance, confirmed it with new oaths. While they
+pressed the King to accept the demands which they laid before him,
+they sent one of the chief of their number, Eustace de Vescy, to Rome,
+to win the Pope to their cause, by reminding him of the gratitude due
+to them for their services in the cause of the Church. As lord of
+England, for they did not hesitate to designate him as such, he might
+admonish King John, and, if necessary, force him to restore unimpaired
+the old rights guaranteed them by the charters of earlier Kings.[31]
+
+But not so did Innocent understand his right of supreme lordship in
+England; he did not side with those who had helped to win the victory
+for him over the King, but with the King himself, to whose sudden
+decision he owed its fruits--the acknowledgment of his feudal
+superiority. He blamed the archbishop for concealing the movements of
+the barons from him, and for having, perhaps, even encouraged them,
+though knowing their pernicious nature: with what view was he stirring
+questions of which no mention had been made either under the King's
+father or brother? He censured the barons for refusing the scutage,
+which had been paid from old times, and for their threat of proceeding
+sword in hand. He repeated his command to them to break up their
+confederacy, under threat of excommunication.
+
+As one step lower the primate and nobles, so in the highest sphere
+Innocent and John were in alliance. The Papacy, then in possession of
+supremacy over the world, made common cause with royalty. Would not
+the nobles, some from reverence for the supreme Pontiff's authority,
+others from a sense of religious obligation, yield to this alliance?
+Such was not their intention.[32]
+
+The King proffered the barons an arbitration, the umpire to be the
+Pope, or else an absolute reference of the whole matter to him, who
+then by his apostolic power could settle what was right and lawful.
+They could not possibly accept either the one or the other, after the
+known declarations of the Pope. As they persevered in their hostile
+attitude, the King called on the archbishop to carry out the
+instructions of a Papal brief, and pronounce the barons
+excommunicated. Stephen Langton answered that he knew better what was
+the true intention of the holy father. The Pope's name this time
+remained quite powerless. Rather it was preached in London that the
+highest spiritual power should not encroach on temporal affairs;
+Peter, in the significant phrase of the time, could not be Constantine
+as well.[33] Only among the lower citizens was there a party
+favourable to the King, but they were put down at a blow by the great
+barons and the rich citizens. The capital threw its whole weight on
+the side of the barons. They rose in arms and formally renounced their
+allegiance to the King; they proclaimed war against him under the name
+of 'the army of God.' Thus confronted by the whole kingdom, in which
+there appeared to be only one opinion, the King had no means of
+resistance remaining, no choice left.
+
+He came down--15th June, 1215--from Windsor to the meadow at
+Runnymede, where the barons lay encamped, and signed the articles laid
+before him, happy enough in getting some of them softened. The Great
+Charter came into being, truly the 'Magna Charta,' which throws not
+merely all earlier, but also the later charters into the shade.
+
+It is a document which, more than any other, links together the
+different epochs of English history. With a renewal of the earliest
+maxims of German personal freedom it combines a settlement of the
+rights of the feudal Estates: on this twofold basis has the proud
+edifice of the English constitution been erected. Before all things
+the lay nobles sought to secure themselves against the misuse of the
+King's authority in his feudal capacity, and as bound up with the
+supreme jurisdiction; but the rights of the Church and of the towns
+were also guaranteed. It was especially by forced collections of
+extraordinary aids that King John had harassed his Estates: since they
+could no longer put up with this, and yet the crown could not dispense
+with extraordinary resources, a solution was found by requiring that
+such aids should not be levied except with the consent of the Great
+Council, which consisted of the lords spiritual and temporal. They
+tried to set limits to the arbitrary imprisonments that had been
+hitherto the order of the day, by definite reference to the law of the
+land and the verdict of sworn men. But these are just the weightiest
+points on which personal freedom and security of property rest; and
+how to combine them with a strong government forms the leading problem
+for all national constitutions.
+
+Two other points in this document deserve notice. In other countries
+also at this epoch emperors and kings made very comprehensive
+concessions to the several Estates: the distinctive point in the case
+of England is, that they were not made to each Estate separately, but
+to all at the same time. While elsewhere each Estate was caring for
+itself, here a common interest of all grew up, which bound them
+together for ever. Further, the Charter was introduced in conscious
+opposition to the supreme spiritual power also; the principles which
+lay at the very root of popular freedom breathed an anti-Romish
+spirit.
+
+Yet it was far from possible to regard them as being fully
+established. There were also conditions contained in the Charter, by
+which the legal and indispensable powers of the King's government were
+impaired: the barons even formed a controlling power as against the
+King. It could not be expected that King John, or any of his
+successors, would let this pass quietly. And besides, was not the Pope
+able to do away with the obligation of which he disapproved? We still
+possess the first draft of the Charter, which presents considerable
+variations from the document in its final form, among others the
+following. According to the draft the King was to give an assurance
+that he would never obtain from the Pope a revocation of the
+arrangements agreed on; the archbishop, the bishops, and the Papal
+plenipotentiary, Master Pandulph, were to guarantee this assurance. We
+see to what quarter the anxieties of the nobles pointed, how they
+wished above all to obtain security against the influences of the
+Papal See. Yet this they were not able to obtain. There was no mention
+in the document either of the bishops or of Master Pandulph; the King
+promised in general, not to obtain such a revocation from any one;
+they avoided naming the Pope.[34]
+
+In reality it made no difference, whatever might be promised or done
+in this respect. Innocent III was not the man to accept quietly what
+had taken place against his declared will, or to yield to accomplished
+facts. On the authority of the words 'I have set thee over the nations
+and over the kingdoms,' which seemed to him a sufficient basis for his
+Paramount Right, he gave sentence rejecting the whole contents of the
+Charter; he suspended Stephen Langton, excommunicated the barons and
+the citizens of London, as the true authors of this perverse act, and
+forbade the King under pain of excommunication to observe the Charter
+which he had put forth.
+
+And even without this King John had already armed, to annul by force
+of arms all that he had promised. A war broke out which took a turn
+especially dangerous to the kingdom, because the barons called the
+heir of France to the English throne and did him homage. So little
+were the feelings of nationality yet developed, that the barons fought
+out the war against their King, supported by the presence and military
+Power of a foreign prince. For the interests of the English crown it
+was perhaps an advantage that King John died in the midst of the
+troubles, and his rights passed to his son Henry, a child to whom his
+father's iniquity could not be imputed.[35] In his name a royalist
+party was formed by the joint action of Pembroke, the Marshal of the
+kingdom and the Papal Legate, which at last won such advantages in the
+field, that the French prince was induced to surrender his claim,
+which he himself hardly held to be a good one--the English were
+designated as traitors by his retinue,--and give back to the barons
+the homage they had pledged him. But he did so only on the condition
+that not merely their possessions, but also the lawful customs and
+liberties of the realm should be secured to them.[36] At a meeting
+between Henry III and the French prince at Merton in Surrey, it was
+agreed to give Magna Charta a form, in which it was deemed compatible
+with the monarchy. In this shape the article on personal freedom
+occurs; on the other hand everything is left out that could imply a
+power of control to be exercised against the King; the need of a grant
+before levying scutage is also no longer mentioned. The barons
+abandoned for the time their chief claims.
+
+It is, properly speaking, this charter which was renewed in the ninth
+year of Henry III as Magna Charta, and was afterwards repeatedly
+confirmed. As we see, it did not include the right of approving taxes
+by a vote.
+
+Whether men's union in a State in general depends on an original
+contract, is a question for political theorists, and to them we leave
+its solution. On the other hand, however, it might well be maintained
+that the English constitution, as it gradually shaped itself, assumed
+the character of a contract. So much is already involved in the first
+promises which William the Conqueror made at his entry into London and
+in his agreement with the partisans of Harold. The same is true of the
+assurances given by his sons, especially the second one: they were the
+price of a very definite equivalent. More than any that had gone
+before however does Magna Charta bear this character. The barons put
+forward their demands: King John negociates about them, and at last
+sees himself forced to accept them. It is true that he soon takes
+arms to free himself from the obligation he has undertaken. It comes
+to a struggle, in which, however, neither side decidedly gains the
+upper hand, and they agree to a compromise. It is true the barons did
+not expressly stipulate for the new charter when they submitted to
+John's son (for with John himself they could certainly have never been
+reconciled), but yet it is undeniable that without it their submission
+would never have taken place, nor would peace have been concluded.
+
+As, however, is generally the case, the agreement had in it the germs
+of a further quarrel. The one side did not forget what it had lost,
+the other what it had aimed at and failed to attain. Magna Charta does
+not contain a final settlement, by which the sovereign's claims to
+obedience were reconciled with the security of the vassals; it is less
+a contract that has attained to full validity, than the outline of a
+contract, to fill up which would yet require the struggles of
+centuries.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[22] He says himself later, 'terror publicae potestatis me intrusit,'
+in Gervasius, 497.
+
+[23] Canones Concilii Turonensis, Article III, 'ut laici ecclesiastica
+non usurpent;' and Article I of those previously omitted in Mansi,
+XXI. 1178 seq.
+
+[24] Concilium Clarendoniae, 8 Cal. Febr. MCLXIV, Article VIII, de
+appellationibus. 'Si archiepiscopus defuerit in justitia exhibenda, ad
+dominum regem perveniendum est postremo; ita quod non debeat ultra
+procedi absque assensu domini regis.' Wilkins, i. 435.
+
+[25] Rogeri de Hoveden Annales ed. Savile, 283. 6. 'Prohibeo vobis ex
+parte omnipotentis dei et sub anathemate, ne faciatis hodie de me
+judicium, quia appellavi ad praesentiam domini papae.' None, however,
+of the accounts we have can be looked on as quite accurate.
+
+[26] 'Ambigua fata formidans.' Knyghton de eventibus Angliae, 2391.
+
+[27] Gervasius 1414 'se ignobiles et ignavos homines nutrivisse,
+quorum nec unus tot sibi illatas injurias voluerit vindicare.'
+
+[28] 'Episcopi comites et barones regni--juraverunt quod ipsi eam
+communiam et dignitatem civitatis Londinensis custodirent.'
+
+[29] Hoveden, p. 450, 'quod redderet unicuique illorum ius suum, si
+ipsi illi fidem servaverint et pacem.'
+
+[30] 'Quod ipsi audacter pro libertate ecclesiae ad mandatum suum se
+opposuerint,--honores quos ei (Papae) et romanae ecclesiae
+exhibuistis, id per eos coactus fecistis.'--Mauclerc, literae ad
+legem, in Rymer, Foedera, i.
+
+[31] Mauclerc, literae de negotio Baronum, in Rymer, Foedera, i. 185:
+'Magnates Angliae--instanter domino Papae supplicant, quod cum ipse
+sit dominus Angliae vos--compellat, antiquas libertates suas--eis
+illaesas conservare.'
+
+[32] Literae Johannis regis, quibus quae sit baronum contumacia
+narrat. Apud Odiham, 29 die Maii.
+
+[33] In Matthew Paris: 'Quod non pertinet ad papam ordinatio rerum
+laicarum.'
+
+[34] Articuli magnae cartae libertatum, § 49. Magna carta regis
+Johannis. In Blackstone, the Great Charter, 9, 23.
+
+[35] Matthew Paris. 'Nobiles universi et castellani ei multo facilius
+adhaeserunt, quia propria patris iniquitas filio non debuit imputari.'
+
+[36] Forma pacis inter Henricum et Ludovicum, in Rymer, i. 221.
+'Coadiutores sui habeant terras suas--et rectas consuetudines et
+libertates regni Angliae.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+FOUNDATION OF THE PARLIAMENTARY CONSTITUTION.
+
+
+There is a very accurate correspondence in this epoch also between the
+general history of the Western world and events in England: these last
+form but a part of the great victory of the hierarchy and its advance
+in power, which marks the first half of the 13th century. By combining
+with the vassals the Popes had overcome the monarchy, and had then in
+turn overcome the vassals by combining with the monarchy and its
+endangered rights. It must not be regarded as a mere title, an empty
+word, if the Pope was acknowledged to be feudal Lord of England: his
+legates, Gualo, Pandulph, Otho, and with them some native prelates,
+devoted to him (above all that Peter des Roches, who, by his conduct
+when Bishop of Winchester, through the mistrust awakened, incurred
+almost the chief responsibility of the earlier troubles), spoke the
+decisive word in the affairs of the kingdom and crushed their
+opponents. It was reported that Innocent IV was heard to say, 'Is not
+the King of England my vassal, my servant? At my nod he will imprison
+and punish.'[37] Under this influence the best benefices in the
+kingdom were given away without regard to the freedom of election or
+the rights of patrons, and in fact mostly to foreigners. The Pope's
+exchequer drew its richest revenues from England; there was no end to
+the exactions of its subordinate agents, Master Martin, Master Marin,
+Peter Rubeo, and all the rest of them. Even the King surrounded
+himself with foreigners. To his own relations and to the relations of
+his Provençal wife fell the most profitable places, and the advantages
+arising from his paramount feudal rights; they too exercised much
+influence on public affairs, and that in the interests of the Papal
+power, with which they were allied. Riotous movements occasionally
+took place against this system, but they were suppressed: men suffered
+in silence as long as it was only the exercise of rights once
+acknowledged. But now it happened that the Popes in their war with the
+last of the Hohenstaufen, whom they had resolved to destroy, proposed
+to employ the resources of England and in a very different manner than
+before. They awoke Henry III's dynastic ambition by promoting the
+elevation of his brother to be King of the Romans, and destining his
+younger son Edmund for the crown of Naples and Sicily. King Henry
+pledged himself in return to the heaviest money-payments. It began to
+appear as if England were no longer a free kingdom, using its
+resources for its own objects: the land and all its riches was at the
+service of the Pope at Rome; the King was little more than a tool of
+the hierarchy.
+
+It was at this crisis that the Parliaments of England, if they did not
+actually begin, yet first attained to a definite form and efficiency.
+
+The opposition of the country to the ecclesiastico-temporal government
+became most conspicuous in the year 1257, when Henry, happy beyond
+measure in his son's being raised to royal rank by the Apostolic See,
+presented his son to the Great Council of the nation, already wearing
+the national costume of Naples, and named the sum, to the payment of
+which he had pledged himself in return. The Estates at once refused
+their consent to his accepting the crown, which they considered could
+not be maintained owing to the untrustworthiness of the Italians, and
+of the Romish See itself, and the distance of the country; the
+money-pledge excited loud displeasure. Since they were required to
+redeem it, they reasonably enough gave it to be understood that they
+ought to have been consulted first. It was precisely the alliance of
+the Pope and the King that they had long felt most bitterly; they said
+truly, England would by such a joint action be as it were ground to
+dust between two millstones. As, however, despite all remonstrances,
+the demands were persevered with,--for the King had taken on himself
+the debts incurred by Pope Alexander IV in the Neapolitan war, and the
+Pope had already referred to England the bankers entrusted with the
+payments,--a storm of opposition broke out, which led to what was
+equivalent to an overthrow of the government. The King had to consent
+to the appointment of a committee for reforming the realm, to be named
+in equal proportions by himself and by the barons; from this, however,
+was selected a council of fifteen members, in which the King's
+opponents had a decisive majority. They put forth Statutes, at Oxford,
+which virtually stripped the King of his power; he had to swear to
+them with a lighted taper in his hand. The Pope without hesitation at
+once condemned these ordinances; King Louis IX of France also, who was
+called in as arbiter, decided against them: and some moderate men drew
+back from them: but among the rest the zeal with which they held to
+them was thus only inflamed to greater violence. They had the King in
+their power, and felt themselves strong enough to impose their will on
+him as law.
+
+Without doubt they had the opinion of the country on their side. For
+the first time since the Conquest the insular spirit of England, which
+was now shared even by the conquerors themselves, manifested itself in
+a natural opposition to all foreign influence. The King's
+half-brothers with their numerous dependents were driven out without
+mercy, their castles occupied, their places given to the foremost
+Englishmen. The Papal legate Guido, one of the most distinguished
+members of the Curia, who himself became Pope at a later time, was
+forbidden to enter England. Most foreigners, it mattered not of what
+station or nationality, were forced to quit the realm: it went hard
+with those who could not speak English. The leader of the barons,
+Simon de Montfort, was solemnly declared Protector of the kingdom and
+people; he had in particular the lower clergy, the natural leaders of
+the masses, on his side. When he was put under the ban of the Church
+his followers retorted by assuming the badge of the cross, since his
+cause appeared to them just and holy.[38]
+
+At this very juncture it was that the attempt was made to form a
+Parliamentary Assembly corresponding to the meaning of that word.
+
+The Statutes or Provisions of Oxford contain the first attempt to
+effect this, by enacting that thrice every year the newly formed royal
+Council should meet together with twelve men elected by the Commonalty
+of England, and consult on the affairs of the kingdom.[39] There is no
+doubt that these twelve belonged to the nobles and were to represent
+them: the decisive point lies in the fact that it was not a number of
+nobles summoned by the King, but a committee of the Estates chosen by
+themselves that was placed by the side of the Council. The Council and
+the twelve persons elected formed for some years an association that
+united the executive and legislative powers.
+
+But this continued only as long as the King acquiesced in it. When he
+had the courage to resist, it is true that in the first encounter
+which ensued, he was himself taken prisoner: but his partisans were
+not crushed by this; and soon after his wife, who had collected about
+her a considerable body of mercenaries, in concert with the Pope and
+the King of France, thought herself strong enough to invade England.
+Simon felt that he needed a greater, in other words, a broader, basis
+of support. And the design he then conceived has secured him an
+imperishable memory. He summoned first of all representatives of the
+knights of the shires, and directly afterwards representatives of the
+towns and the Cinque Ports, to form a Parliament in conjunction with
+the nobles of the realm. This was not an altogether new thing in the
+European world; we know that in the Cortes of Aragon, as early as the
+12th century, by the side of the high nobility and the ecclesiastics
+there appeared also the Hidalgos and the deputies of the Commons; and
+Simon de Montfort might well be aware of this, since his father had
+been in so many ways connected with Aragon. In England itself under
+King John men had come very near it without however carrying it
+through: not till afterwards did the innovation appear a real
+necessity. In opposition to the one-sided power exercised by the
+foreigners, nothing was so much insisted on in daily talk and in the
+popular ballads as the propriety of calling the natives of the land to
+counsel, since to them its laws were best known. This justifiable wish
+met with adequate satisfaction now that the Commons were summoned; the
+public feeling against the foreigners, on which Simon de Montfort
+necessarily relied, thus found expression. The assembly which he
+called together doubtless sympathised with his party views. As he
+invited only those nobles to it who remained true to him (they were
+not more than twenty-three in number), so he appears to have summoned
+those only of the towns which adhered to him unconditionally. But the
+arrangement involved more than was contemplated from his point of
+view.
+
+Amid the storms he had called forth Simon de Montfort perished: the
+King was freed, the royal authority re-established. A new Papal legate
+entered London in the full splendour of his office, Cardinal Ottoboni;
+Guido having meanwhile himself obtained the tiara, and using every
+means to subdue the unbending spirits, from which danger even to the
+Church was dreaded.[40] Yet the old state of things was not restored:
+neither the rule of foreigners, nor the absolute dependence on the
+Papal policy. The later government of Henry III has a different
+character from the earlier: the legate himself confirmed Magna Charta
+in the shape finally accepted. It is not merely at the great national
+festivals that we find representatives of the towns present, whom the
+King has summoned; it is beyond a doubt that one of the most important
+statutes of the time was passed with their consent.[41] Yet
+regulations for the summons of representatives from the towns were as
+little fixed by law as those for voting the taxes. It would by no
+means harmonise with the constitution of Romano-German states, that
+organic institutions should come into full force in mere antagonism to
+the highest authority. They must coincide with the interests of that
+authority, as was the case in England under Henry's warlike son Edward
+I.
+
+Without doubt Edward, who once more revived in the East the reputation
+of the Plantagenet Kings for personal valour, would have preferred to
+fight there for the interests of Christendom, he even speaks of it in
+his will; or else he would have wished to recover from the French
+crown the lands which his father had inherited, and which had passed
+into French possession; but neither the one nor the other was
+possible; another object was assigned to his energy and his ambition,
+one more befitting an English king: he undertook to unite the whole
+island under his sceptre.
+
+In Wales, the conquest of which had been so often attempted and so
+often failed, there lived at this time Prince Llewellyn, whose
+personal beauty, cunning, and high spirit fitted him to be a brilliant
+representative of the old British nationality. The bards, reviving the
+old prophecies, promised him the ancient crown of Brutus; but when he
+ventured out of the mountains, he was overpowered and fell in a
+hand-to-hand conflict. The English crown was not to fall to his lot,
+but Edward transferred the title of Prince of Wales to his own son.
+The great cross of the Welsh, the crown of Arthur, fell into his
+hands: he no longer tolerated the bards: their age passed away with
+the Crusades.
+
+From Wales Edward turned his arms against Scotland. There Columban had
+in former days anointed as king a Scottish prince, who was also of
+Keltic descent; how the German element nevertheless got the upper hand
+not merely in the greatest part of the country, but also in the ruling
+family, is the great problem of early Scottish history: a thoroughly
+Germanic monarchy had arisen, but one which after it had once given a
+home to the Anglo-Saxons who fled before the Normans, thought its
+honour concerned in repelling all English influences. A disputed
+succession gave Edward I an opportunity of reviving the claims of his
+predecessors to the overlordship of Scotland: he gave the Scotch a
+king, whom the Scotch rejected simply because he was the English
+King's nominee. The war, which sometimes seemed ended--there were
+times at which Edward could regard himself as the Lord of all
+Albion,--ever blazed out again; above all, the support the Scotch
+received from the King of France brought about complications which
+filled all Western Europe with trouble and war; but it was in the home
+politics of England that their effect was destined to be greatest.
+
+Compelled to make incessant efforts, which exhausted the resources of
+the crown, Edward appealed to the voluntary assistance of his
+subjects. He laid down to them the principle, that their common perils
+should be met with their united strength, that what concerns all must
+also be borne by all. In the war against Wales he had gathered
+together the representatives of the counties and the towns, to hear
+his demands and to act accordingly; chiefly to vote him subsidies.
+After the victory he had called an assembly of nobles, knights, and
+towns, to take counsel with them about the treatment of the captives
+and the country. Similarly he drew together the representatives of the
+towns in order to decide the affairs of Scotland. With especial
+emphasis did he call for their united help against Philip the Fair of
+France, who thought to destroy the English tongue from off the earth:
+knights and towns were pledged to help in carrying out the resolutions
+thus adopted by common consent.
+
+In spite of all this appealing to free participation in public
+matters, Edward I did not refrain from the arbitrary imposition of
+taxes, and those the most oppressive: the eighth, even the fifth part
+of men's income. For the campaign in Flanders he summoned the
+under-tenants as well as the tenants in chief. We find instances of
+arbitrary seizure of whatever was necessary for the war.
+
+King Edward excused this by his maxim that the interests of the land
+must be defended with the resources of the land,[42] but we can
+conceive how, on the boundary line between two different systems,
+acts of violence, which combined the arbitrariness of the one with the
+principles of the other, caused a general agitation. In the year 1297
+the spiritual lords under their archbishop, as well as the temporal
+ones (who denied the obligation to serve beyond the sea) under the
+Constable and Marshal, set themselves energetically to oppose the
+King. The people, which had the most to suffer from the arbitrary
+exactions, took their side with cordial approval. They set forth all
+the grievances of the country, and insisted on their immediate and
+final redress.
+
+To avoid the pressure, the King had already quitted England, to carry
+on his campaign in Flanders: the demand was laid before the
+Councillors whom he had left behind as assessors to his son, who was
+named Regent. They however were in great perplexity, partly from the
+trouble of this agitation itself, but mainly from the revolt in
+Scotland which had broken out in a formidable manner. William Walays,
+like one of those Heyduck chiefs who rise in Turkey against the
+established order of things, the right of which they do not recognise,
+had come down from the hill country, at the head of the fugitives and
+exiles, a robber-patriot, of gigantic bodily strength and innate
+talent for war. His successes soon increased his band to the size of
+an army; he beat the English in a pitched battle, and then swept over
+the borders into the English territory. If the royal commissioners
+would oppose a strong resistance to this inroad, they must needs
+ratify a provisional concession of the demands brought forward. The
+King, who had meanwhile reached Flanders, which the French had entered
+from two sides, could not possibly yield to the Scottish
+movement--whether he wished to carry on the war or make a truce:
+nothing therefore remained to him but to confirm the concessions made
+by his councillors.
+
+It is not absolutely certain how far these had gone; one word of
+discussion may be allowed on the matter.
+
+The historians of the time have maintained that the right of voting
+the taxes was granted to the Estates, and in fact conjointly to the
+nobles whether spiritual or temporal, and the representatives of the
+counties and towns: the copy of a statute is extant, in which this is
+very expressly stated.[43] But since the statute does not exist in an
+authentic shape, and is not to be found in the Rolls of the Realm, we
+cannot safely base any conclusion on it. As to the date too at which
+it may have been passed, our statements waver between the
+twenty-eighth and the thirty-fourth year of Edward. On the other hand
+we find in the collection of charters an undoubted charter of
+confirmation given at Ghent and dated 5 November 1297, in which not
+merely are the Great Charter of Henry III and the Forest Charter
+confirmed, but also some new arrangements of much importance
+guaranteed, and confirmed by ecclesiastico-judicial regulations.[44]
+According to it the grants of taxes and contributions which had been
+hitherto made to the King for his wars were not to be regarded as
+binding for the future. He reserves only the old customary taxes: to
+the higher clergy, the nobility, and the commons of the land the
+assurance is given, that under no circumstances, however pressing,
+should any tax or contribution or requisition--not even the export
+duty on wool--be levied except by their common consent and for the
+interests of all.[45] In the Latin text all sounds more open and less
+reserved: but even the words of the authentic document include a very
+essential limitation of the prerogative of the crown, which hitherto
+had alone exercised the right of estimating what the state needed and
+of fixing the payments by this standard. The King was averse at heart
+to the limitation even in this form. When he came back from Flanders
+after concluding a truce with France, and army and people were met
+together at York, to carry out a great campaign against Scotland, he
+was pressed to confirm on English soil the concessions which he had
+granted on foreign ground.[46] He held it advisable that the campaign
+should be first carried through; four of his confidential friends
+swore in his stead (since an oath in person was thought unbecoming to
+the King), that, the campaign ended, the confirmation should not be
+wanting. The enterprise was most successful, it led to a great victory
+over the Scots, and it was the leaders of the English aristocracy who
+did the best service there; nevertheless, when they met together next
+Lent (1299) in London, the King strove to avoid an absolute promise:
+he wished to expressly reserve the undefined 'rights of the crown.'
+But this delay aroused a general storm: and as he was quite convinced
+that he could not, under this condition, reckon on further support in
+the war which still continued, he at last submitted to what was
+unavoidable, and allowed his clause to drop.[47]
+
+I do not know whether I am mistaken in ascribing to these concessions
+a different character from that of the earlier ones. It was not a
+sovereign defeated and reduced to the deepest humiliation who made
+them, nor did the barons obtain articles which aimed at securing their
+own direct supremacy: the concessions were the result of the war,
+which could not be carried on with the existing means. When Edward I
+laid stress on the necessity of greater common efforts, the
+counter-demand which was made on him, and to which he yielded, merely
+implied that a common resolution should be previously come to. His
+concessions included a return for service already done, and a
+condition for future service. It did not abase the royal authority; it
+brought into clear view the unity of interests between the crown and
+the nation.
+
+Another great crisis united them for the second time. As Edward led
+the forces of England year by year across the Tweed, to compel the
+Scots to acknowledge his overlordship by the edge of the sword, the
+Pope who assumed himself to be the Suzerain of the kingdoms of the
+world, Boniface VIII, met him with the assertion that Scotland
+belonged to the Church of Rome, the King therefore was violating the
+rights of that Church by his invasions. To confront the Pope, King
+Edward thought it best, as did Philip the Fair of France about the
+same time, to call in his Estates to his aid, since without them no
+answer to the claim was possible. The Estates then in a long letter
+not merely maintain the right of the English crown, but also reject
+the Pope's claim to decide respecting it as arbiter, as incompatible
+with the royal dignity: even if the King wished it, yet they would
+never lend a hand to anything so unseemly and so unheard of.[48] The
+King, without regard to the Pope, continued his campaigns against
+Scotland with unabated energy.
+
+It marks the character of Edward I that he nevertheless did not break
+with the Papacy on this account; so too he still raised taxes that had
+not been voted, and held Parliaments in the old form: when
+representatives of the counties and towns were summoned it is not
+always clear whether they were elected or named.[49] Edward I could
+not free himself from the habits of arbitrary rule and the old ideas
+connected with them. But with all this it is still undeniable that
+under him the monarchy took a far more national position than before;
+it no longer stood in a hostile attitude as against the community of
+the land, but belonged to it.
+
+And his successors soon saw themselves forced to complete still
+further the foundations of a new state of things, which had been thus
+laid.
+
+Under Edward II the old ambition of the barons to take a preponderant
+part in the government reappeared once more with the greatest
+violence. The occasion was afforded by the weakness of this sovereign,
+who allowed his favourite, the Gascon Gaveston, a disastrous influence
+on affairs. Discontented with this, the King's nearest cousin, Thomas
+of Lancaster, placed himself at the head of the great nobles, as
+indeed he was believed to have sworn to his father in law (whose rich
+possessions passed to him, and who feared a return of the foreign
+influences), that he would adhere to the interest of the barons, which
+was also that of the country. In the fourth year of his government
+Edward was obliged to accept all the regulations made by a Committee
+of the Nobles called the 'Ordainers.'
+
+Without advice of the nobles he was forbidden either to begin a war,
+or to fill up high offices of State, or even to leave the country: the
+officers of the crown were to be responsible to them. Gaveston had to
+pay for his short possession of influence by death without mercy.
+
+It was long before the King found men who had the courage to defend
+the lawful authority of the crown. At last the two Hugh Despencers
+undertook it: under their leadership the barons were defeated, and
+Thomas of Lancaster in his turn paid for his enterprises with his
+life. For in England, if anywhere, the assumption of power led
+inevitably to the scaffold.
+
+It is hardly needful to say that the regulations of the Ordainers were
+now revoked. But must not some means be also thought of, to prevent
+similar acts of violence for the future? It was deemed necessary to
+declare even the form, under cover of which they had been ratified,
+invalid for all time. And so an enactment was now made, in which the
+first definite idea of the Parliamentary Monarchy becomes visible. It
+was declared that never for the future should any ordinance affecting
+the King's power and proceeding from his subjects be valid, but only
+that should be law which was discussed, agreed on, and enacted in
+Parliament by the King with the consent of the prelates, the earls and
+barons, and the commonalty of the realm.[50] For it was above all
+things necessary to withdraw the legislative authority for ever from
+the turbulent grandees. The monarchy opposed to them its alliance with
+the commonalty of the realm, as it was expressed by the
+representatives of the knights and the commons. Among the founders of
+the English constitution these Hugh Despencers, through whom the
+legislative power was first transferred to the united body of King
+Lords and Commons, take a very important position.
+
+This thought was however rather one left for the future to carry out,
+than one which swayed or contented the English world at the time.
+Edward II fell before a new attack of the revolted barons, with whom
+even his wife was allied: he had to think it a piece of good fortune
+that, on the ground of his own abdication, his son was acknowledged as
+his successor. The latter however could only obtain real possession of
+the royal power by overthrowing the faction to which his father had
+succumbed. While he restored the memory of the two Despencers, who had
+been condemned and executed by the barons, he also decided to carry on
+a Parliamentary government; it is the first that existed in England.
+
+For the general course of the development it is significant that the
+rights of Parliament in relation to the voting of taxes, and now also
+to legislation as a whole, were acknowledged before an appropriate
+form was found for its consultations. In the first years of Edward III
+its four constituent parts, prelates, barons, knights, and town
+deputies, held their debates in four different assemblies; but
+gradually the two first were fused into an Upper, the two last into a
+Second House, without any definite law being laid down to that effect:
+the nature of things led to the custom, the custom in course of time
+became law.
+
+That which had been already preparing under the first Edward came
+under the third for the first time into complete operation, viz. the
+participation of the Estates in the management of foreign affairs and
+of war.
+
+In the year 1333 the Parliament advised the King to break the peace
+with Scotland, which the barons had concluded of their own authority
+according to their own views, not to put up with any more outrages,
+and not merely to take back the lost border-fortress of Berwick, but
+to force the Scots to acknowledge the supremacy of England.
+
+In the year 1337 and afterwards the Parliament more than once approved
+the King's plan of asserting the claim he had through his mother on
+the French throne by force of arms and through alliances with foreign
+princes,[51] and promised to support him in it with their lives and
+properties; it was all the more ready for this, as France had been
+repeatedly threatening England with a new Conquest. In the year 1344
+the Peers, each in his own name, called on the King to cross the sea
+and not let himself be hindered by any one, not even by the Pope, from
+appealing to the judgment of God by battle. The clergy imposed on
+themselves a three-years' tenth, the counties a fifteenth, the towns
+two tenths; the great nobles followed him in person with their squires
+and horsemen, without even alluding to their old remonstrances. So
+that splendid army made its appearance in France, in which the weapons
+of the yeomen vied with those of the knights, and which, thanks
+chiefly to the former, won the victory of Cressy. Whilst the King made
+conquests over the French, his heroic Queen repelled the Scotch. In
+these wars the now united nation, which put forth all its strength,
+came for the first time to the feeling of its power, to a position of
+its own in the world and to the consciousness of it. The King of
+Scotland at that time, and the King of France some years later, became
+prisoners in England.
+
+A period followed in which England seemed to have obtained the
+supremacy in Western Europe. The Scots purchased their King's freedom
+by a truce which bound them to long and heavy payments, for which
+hostages were given as a security. A peace was made with the French by
+which Guienne, Gascony, Poitou, and such important towns as Rochelle
+and Calais were surrendered to the English. The Prince of Wales, who
+took up his residence at Bordeaux, mixed in the Spanish quarrels with
+the view of uniting Biscay to his territories in South France. As the
+result of these circumstances and of the well-calculated encouragement
+of Edward III, we find that English commerce prospered immensely and,
+in emulous alliance with that of Flanders, began to form another great
+centre for the general commerce of the world. It was still chiefly in
+the hands of foreigners, but the English made great profits by it.
+Their riches gained them almost as much prestige in the world as their
+bravery.[52] The more money-resources the towns possessed, and the
+more they could and did support the King, the greater became their
+influence on the affairs of the realm. No language could be more
+humble than that of these 'poor and simple Commons,' when they address
+themselves to 'their glorious and thrice gracious King and lord.'[53]
+But for all that their representations are exceedingly comprehensive
+and pressing; their grants are not to take effect, unless their
+grievances are redressed; they never leave out of sight the interests
+of their staple; they assail the exactions of the officials or the
+clergy with great zeal. The regard paid to them gives the whole
+government a popular character.
+
+On an attempt of the King to exercise the legislative power in his
+great council, they remonstrated; they had no objection to the
+ordinances themselves, but insisted that valid statutes could only
+proceed from the lawfully assembled Parliament.
+
+Now too the relations to the Papal See came again into consideration.
+Seated at Avignon under the influence of the French crown, the Popes
+were natural opponents of Edward III's claims and enterprises; they
+sometimes thought of directing the censures of the Church against him.
+On the other hand, the complaints in England against the encroachments
+and pecuniary demands of the Curia were louder than ever, without
+however coming to a rupture on these points. But at last Urban V
+renewed the old claim to the vassalage of England; he demanded the
+feudal tribute first paid by King John, and threatened King and
+kingdom, in case they were not willing to pay it, with judicial
+proceedings.[54] We know the earlier kings had seen in the connexion
+with Rome a last resource against the demands of the Estates: on the
+King's side it required some resolution to renounce it. But the very
+nature of the Parliamentary government, as Edward III had settled it,
+involved a disregard of these considerations for the future. It was
+before the Parliament itself that he laid the Papal demands for their
+consent and counsel. The Estates consulted separately: first the
+spiritual and lay lords framed their resolution, then the town
+deputies assented to it. The answer they gave the Pope was that King
+John's submission was destitute of all validity, since it was against
+his coronation-oath, and was made without the consent of the Estates;
+should the Pope try to enforce satisfaction of his demand by legal
+process or in any other manner, they would all--dukes earls barons and
+commons--oppose him with their united force.[55] The clergy only
+assented to the declaration of invalidity; to threaten the holy father
+with their resistance, they considered unbecoming. But the declaration
+of the lay Estates was in itself sufficient for the purpose: the claim
+was never afterwards raised again.
+
+The Estates had often been obliged to contend against the King and the
+Roman See at the same time; now the King was allied with them against
+the Papacy. Now that the Parliamentary constitution was established in
+its first stage, it is clear how much the union of the Crown and the
+Estates in opposition to external influence had contributed to it. It
+was destined however shortly to undergo yet other tests.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[37] Matthew Paris, Historia Major ann. 1253, p. 750.
+
+[38] In Henr. Knyghton, 2445. According to Matthew Paris they swore,
+not to let themselves be held back by anything--'quin regnum, in quo
+sunt nati homines geniales et eorum progenitores, ab ingenerosis et
+alienigenis emundarent.'
+
+[39] 'Les XXIV ont ordene, ke treis parlemens seient par an,--a ces
+treis parlemens vendrunt les cunseillers le rei eslus,--ke le commun
+eslise 12 prodes hommes ke vendrunt as parlemens--pur treter de
+besoigne le rei et del reaume.' On the explanation of this passage,
+the 'Report on the dignity of a peer' 102 contains matter wellweighed
+on all sides.
+
+[40] Letter of Clement IV to Louis IX, in Rainaldus, 1265, p. 167.
+'Quid putas--per talia machinamenta quaeri? Nisi ut de regno illo
+regium nomen aboleatur omnino: nisi ut Christianus populus a devotione
+matris ecclesiae et observantia fidei orthodoxae avertatur.'
+
+[41] 'Convocatis discretioribus regni tam ex majoribus quam
+minoribus.' Statute of Marleberge, 1267.
+
+[42] 'Nostrae voluntatis fuit ut de bonis terrae ipsa terra
+conservaretur.' In Knyghton, ii, 2501.
+
+[43] Statutum de tallagio non concedendo, or Nova additio cartarum; in
+Hemingburgh, articuli inserti in magna charta.
+
+[44] 'Carta confirmationis regis Edwardi I,' in the collection of
+charters prefixed to the collection of the Statutes in the 'Statutes
+of the Realm,' p. 37.
+
+[45] 'Avuns graunte--as Arceevesques etc. e as Countes--e a toute la
+communauté de la terre que mes pur nule busoigne tieu manere des aydes
+mises ne prises de nre Roiaume ne prendrums fors ke par commun assent
+de tout le Roiaume e a commun profist de meismes le Roiaume, sauve les
+auncienes aydes e prises due e acoustumees.' The Articulus insertus in
+Magna Charta, according to the other statements, runs, 'nullum
+Tallagium vel auxilium imponatur seu levetur sine voluntate atque
+assensu communi Archiepiscoporum Episcoporum et aliorum liberorum
+hominum in regno nostro.'
+
+[46] Hemingburgh: eo quod confirmaverat eas in terra aliena.
+
+[47] Matthew of Westminster, 433. 'Procrastinatis quampluribus diebus
+demum videns rex quod non desisterent ab inceptis nec adquiescerent
+sibi in necessitatibus suis, respondit se esse paratum concedere et
+ratificare petita.'
+
+[48] At Lincoln, 21 Feb. 1301. In Rymer, Rainaldus, Spondanus.
+
+[49] Report 183; Hallam, Additional Notes 332.
+
+[50] Revocatio novarum ordinationum, 1323, 29 May, Statutes of the
+Realm I. 189, 'les choses, qui serount à establir--soient tretées
+accordees et establies en parlaments par notre Sr. le Roi et par
+lassent des Prelats Countes et Barouns et la communalté du roialme.'
+
+[51] Speech of W. Shareshall 1351, Parliamentary History (1762) i.
+295.
+
+[52] We know the letter of the Duke of Guelders, in which he praised
+equally 'lanae commoda,--divitias in comparatione ad alios reges
+centuplas,' and the 'probitas militaris, arcuum asperitas,' in Twysden
+ii. 2739.
+
+[53] Report 324.
+
+[54] 'Est en volunté de faire procès devers le roy et son roialme pur
+le dit service et cens recoverir.'
+
+[55] 'Qu'ils resisteront et contre esteront ove toute leur puissance.'
+Edw Coke first published the document, Institutes iv. 13. In Urban V's
+letter to Edward in Rainaldus 1365, 13, the demand is not so clearly
+expressed, but mention is made in it of the Nuncio's overtures; it is
+to these that the resolution of the Parliament referred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+DEPOSITION OF RICHARD II. THE HOUSE OF LANCASTER.
+
+
+England did not long maintain herself in the dominant position she then
+occupied; the plan of extending her rule into Spain proved ruinous to
+the Prince of Wales. Not merely was his protégé overpowered by the
+French 'Free Companies,' which had gathered round his opponent: a
+Castilian war-fleet succeeded in destroying the English one in sight of
+the harbour of Rochelle. On this, their natural inclination towards the
+King of France awoke in the nobles and towns of South France; without
+great battles, merely by the revolt of vassals tired of his rule,
+Edward III again lost all the territories conquered with such great
+glory, except a few coast towns. Then a gloom settled down around the
+aged conqueror. He saw his eldest son, who, though obliged to quit
+France, in England enjoyed the fullest confidence and had every
+prospect of a great future, sicken away and die. And he too
+experienced, what befalls so many others, that misfortune abroad raised
+him up opponents at home. In the increasing weakness of old age, which
+gave rise to many well-grounded grievances, he could not maintain the
+independence of the royal power, with the re-establishment of which he
+had begun his reign. He was forced to receive into his Council men whom
+he did not like. He was still able to effect thus much, that the
+succession to the kingdom came to the son of the Prince of Wales,
+Richard II. But would he, a boy of eleven, be able to take the helm of
+the proud ship? Men saw factions arise that grouped themselves round
+the King's uncles, who were not fully disposed to defend his authority.
+
+The great question for English history now was, whether the
+Parliamentary constitution, whilst it limited the King's prerogative,
+would also give him security. For the Commons had been at last
+admitted into the King's Council chiefly in order that they might
+withstand the violence of the factions. The situation however was not
+without its complications, for with the political movement one of yet
+wider aim was connected.
+
+When the kingdom was at the very height of its power there arose in a
+college at Oxford the man who began that contest against the Papal
+supremacy which has never since ceased. John Wiclif attached himself
+first of all to the political movements of his time. One of his
+earliest writings was directed against the feudal supremacy of the
+Popes over England. He supported the Parliament's complaints of Romish
+Provisions and exactions of money, with great learning and at great
+length. Had his activity confined itself to these subjects, he would
+be hardly more remembered than perhaps Marsilius of Padua. What gave
+him quite a special significance was the fact that he brought into
+clear view the contradiction between the ruling form of the Church and
+the original documents of the Faith. From the claim of the Popes to be
+Christ's representatives, he drew the conclusion that they ought also
+to observe the Gospel which comes from the God-Man, follow His
+example, and give up their worldly power.[56] The leading Church
+dogma, that most closely connected with the hierarchic system, the
+dogma of Transubstantiation, he attacked as being one which equally
+contradicted Scripture and Reason. He urges his proofs with the
+acuteness of a skilful Schoolman, but throughout he shows a deep inner
+religious feeling. We may distinguish in him two separate tendencies.
+His appeal to Scripture, his attempt to make it accessible to the
+people, his treatment of dogmatic and religious questions which he
+will allow to be decided only by Revelation,--all this makes him an
+evangelic man, one of the chief forerunners of the German Reformation.
+But, as he himself felt, his strength lay rather in destruction than
+in construction. In asserting the doctrine that the title to office
+depends for its validity on personal worth, that even the rule of
+temporal lords rests on the favour in which they stand with God, and
+in raising subjects to be the judges over their oppressive masters, he
+entered on a path like that which the Taborites and the leaders of the
+peasants in Germany afterwards took.[57]
+
+And these were precisely the doctrines for which his scholars, who
+traversed the land to make them known, found a well prepared soil in
+the people of England. How could the rise of popular elements fail to
+call forth a kindred effort also among the lower classes? The belief
+arose that Nature intended all men to be equal. The country people
+spoke of their primitive rights, traces of which were found in the
+memorials of the Conqueror's times, and which had then been taken from
+them. When now, instead of seeing these respected, they were subjected
+to new impositions, and this with harshness and insolence, they rose
+in open revolt. So overpowering was the attack which they directed
+against the capital and the King's palace, that Richard II found
+himself forced to grant them a charter which secured them personal
+freedom. Had they contented themselves with this, they might have done
+best for themselves and perhaps for the crown, but when they demanded
+yet further and more extreme concessions, they roused against
+themselves the whole power of the organised State, for which they were
+as yet no match. The Mayor of London himself struck down with his
+dagger the leader of the bands, Wat Tyler, because he seemed to
+threaten the King; the Bishop of Norwich was not hindered by his
+spiritual character from levelling his lance against the
+insurgents;[58] after which he accompanied the leaders, who were taken
+and condemned to death, to the scaffold, with words of comfort; in
+other places the lay nobles did their best. When therefore in the next
+Parliament the King brought forward the proposal to declare the serfs
+free by a united resolution,--for the previous charter that had been
+wrung from him was considered invalid,--both Lords and Commons
+rejected it, as tending to disinherit them and prove pernicious to the
+kingdom.
+
+It is not to be supposed that a movement like this, which the lower
+class of citizens in the towns had joined, just as in the German
+peasant war, and which was mainly directed against the landed gentry,
+could be stifled by one defeat: it continued to ferment
+uninterruptedly in men's hearts.
+
+Still less did the condemnation passed by Convocation on the
+deviations from the teaching of the Church effect their suppression.
+On the basis of Wiclif's doctrines grew up the sect of the Lollards,
+which condemned the worship of images, pilgrimages, and other external
+church ceremonies, designated the union of judicial authority with
+spiritual office as unnatural--'hermaphroditism'--rejected
+excommunication with abhorrence, and made secret and systematic war
+against the whole Church establishment.
+
+But further besides these feuds there was one within the State system
+itself which now became most conspicuous.
+
+In the midst of the general ferment how necessary had a strong and
+resolute hand become! But Richard's government had shown itself
+somewhat weak; by many it was suspected of having meant to turn the
+disturbances to its own advantage. The commons, who mainly represented
+the lower gentry and the upper citizens, abandoned him, and attached
+themselves to the nobles, just as these revived their old jealousy
+against the crown. For the almost inevitable result of success in
+suppressing a popular agitation is to heighten the self-confidence of
+an aristocracy. Impatient at being excluded from all share in the
+government, and strengthened in his ambition by the military disasters
+of the last years, the youngest of Richard's uncles, Thomas of
+Gloucester, put himself at the head of the grandees, whose plans the
+commons, instead of opposing, now on the contrary adopted as their
+own. The great questions arose, which have so often since then
+convulsed the European world, as to the relation of a Parliamentary
+assembly to the Monarchy, and their respective rights.
+
+The first demand of the English Parliament was that the ministers of
+State should be named by it, or at least should be responsible to it.
+Much as this demand itself implies, yet even more extensive views were
+behind. The Peers told the King plainly that if he would not rule
+according to the common law and with their advice, it was competent
+for them to depose him, with consent of the people, and to raise
+another of the royal house to the throne;[59] they threatened him
+openly with the fate of Edward II.
+
+Richard could do nothing but submit. Eleven lords were appointed to
+restore order in the country; Richard had to swear to carry out all
+they should ordain (November 1386). There remained but one way by
+which to oppose this open violence: the King collected the chief
+judges at Nottingham, and laid the question before them, whether the
+Commission now forced upon him did not contravene the royal power and
+his prerogative. The judges were far from so interpreting the
+Constitution of England as to allow that the King is unconditionally
+bound by the commands of Parliament. They affirmed under their hand
+and seal that the appointment of that Commission against the King's
+will contravened his legal prerogative; those by whom he had been
+forced to accept it, and who had revived the recollection of the
+statute against Edward II, they declared to be guilty of high treason.
+But Parliament itself saw in this sentence not a judgment but an
+intolerable outrage. At its next sitting it summoned the judges before
+its tribunal, and in its turn declared them to be themselves guilty of
+high treason. Chief Justice Tresilian died a shameful death at Tyburn.
+The King lived to find yet harsher laws laid upon him: his uncle
+Gloucester was more powerful than he was himself.
+
+He was not however disposed to bear this yoke for ever. He first freed
+himself from the war with France, which tied his hands; by his
+marriage with Charles VI's young daughter he sought to win that king
+over as an ally on his own side; at home too he gained himself
+friends; when all was prepared, he struck a sudden blow (July 1397),
+which no one would have expected from him. He removed his leading
+opponents (above all his uncle Gloucester, and Arundel Archbishop of
+Canterbury), banished them or threw them into prison: then he
+succeeded in getting together a Parliament in which his partisans had
+the upper hand. It moreover completely adopted the ideas of the judges
+as to the Constitution; it revoked the statutes which had been forced
+on the King,[60] and gave effect to the sentence of Nottingham. By
+making the King a very considerable grant for his lifetime, it freed
+him from the necessity of summoning it anew; he rose at once to a high
+pitch of self-confidence: he was believed to have said that the laws
+of England consisted in his word of mouth.
+
+In England, just as in France at the same epoch, political opinions
+and parties ebbed and flowed in ceaseless antagonism. Richard's
+success was only momentary. He too, like so many of his ancestors, had
+incurred a grievous suspicion; the crime laid to his charge was that
+his uncle, who died in prison, had been murdered there by his command.
+Besides his absolute rule was not free from arbitrary acts of many
+kinds; among the great nobles each trembled for his own safety; the
+clergy, never on good terms with Richard, were impatient at being
+deprived of their Primate, who was to them 'the tower in the
+protecting bulwark of the Church.' In the capital too men were against
+a rule which seemed to put an end to popular influence; it needed only
+the return of an exile, the young Henry of Lancaster (whom the King
+would not allow to take possession of his inheritance by deputy, and
+who in conformity with the feeling of the time broke his ban to do
+himself right); all men then deserted the King; the nobles could now
+think of carrying out the threat which they had once hurled against
+him.
+
+Richard was compelled to call a Parliament, and at the moment it met
+to pronounce his own abdication. The Parliament was not contented with
+accepting this; it wished to put an end to all doubt for the future,
+and to establish its own right for ever.
+
+A long list of articles was drawn up, from which it was concluded that
+the King had broken his coronation oath and forfeited his crown; the
+assembled Estates, when severally and conjointly consulted, held them
+sufficient to justify them in proceeding to the King's deposition.
+They named Proctors, two for the clergy, two for the high
+nobility--one for the earls and dukes, the other for the barons and
+bannerets, two for the knights and commons--one for the Northern, the
+other for the Southern counties. They sat as a court of justice before
+the vacant throne, with the Chief Justice in their midst: then the
+first spiritual commissioner, the Bishop of S. Asaph, rose, and in the
+place and name and under the authority of the Estates of the realm
+announced the sentence of deposition against the late King, and
+forbade all men to receive any further commands from him. Some
+opposition was raised; it is said that the Bishop of Carlisle very
+expressly denied the right of subjects to sit in judgment on their
+hereditary sovereign;[61] but how could this have had any effect
+against the Parliament's claim which had been formulated so long?
+
+As the crown was now regarded as vacant, Henry of Lancaster arose,--in
+the name of God, as he said, whilst he made the sign of the cross on
+his forehead and breast,--to claim it for himself, in virtue of his
+birth and the right which accrued to him through God and the help of
+his friends. It was not properly speaking an election that now took
+place: the spiritual and lay lords, as well as the other members of
+the Parliament, were asked what their opinion of his claim was: the
+answer of all was that the Duke should be their King. When, conducted
+by the two archbishops, he ascended the vacant throne, he was greeted
+with the joyous acclaim of those assembled. The Archbishop of
+Canterbury made a speech full of unction, the drift of which was, that
+henceforth it would not be a child, such as the late sovereign had
+been, self-willed and void of understanding, but a Man that would rule
+over them, in the full maturity of his understanding, and resolved to
+do not so much his own will as the will of God.[62]
+
+Thus did the spiritual and lay nobility, in and with the Parliament,
+make good their claim to dispose of the crown. They went to work
+against Richard II with less reserve than against Edward II. In the
+latter case the Queen had taken part in the movement; they had set the
+son in his father's stead. But this time they did not wait for the
+actual consummation of the King's marriage; they raised a prince to
+the throne who had openly opposed him in the field, and was not even
+the next in succession. For there were still the descendants of an
+elder brother left, who according to English usage had a prior right.
+The Parliament held itself competent to settle on its own authority
+even the succession to the crown. It enacted that it should belong to
+the King's eldest son, and after him to his male issue, and on their
+failure to his brothers and their issue. The proposal formally to
+exclude succession in the female line did not pass; but for a long
+while to come the actual practice had that effect.
+
+Besides the motives involved in the extension of the Power of the
+Estates in and for itself there was yet another reason for such a
+proceeding. And this arose out of the growth, and increasing urgency,
+of the religious divisions. The Lollards preached, and taught in
+schools, according to their views: in the year 1396 in a petition to
+Parliament they traced all the moral evils and defects of the world to
+the fact that the clergy were endowed with worldly goods, and showed
+the advantage which would arise from the application of these to the
+service of the state and the prosecution of war.[63] They seem to have
+flattered themselves that by this they would win over the lay lords,
+but they were completely mistaken. For these remarked on the contrary
+that their own property had no better legal foundation than that of
+the clergy,[64] and only attached themselves to the rights of the
+Church all the more zealously.
+
+That which would have been impossible under Richard II's vacillating
+government, the first Lancaster now undertook: in full agreement with
+the Estates he a few days after his accession announced to Convocation
+that he purposed to destroy heretics and heresies to the best of his
+power.[65] In the next Parliament a statute was drawn up in which
+relapsed heretics were condemned to the flames. And still more
+remarkable than this mode of punishment, which was that of the
+Church-law, is the regulation of the procedure in this statute. In
+former times the sentence had been pronounced by the archbishop and
+the collective clergy of the province, and the King's consent had to
+be asked before it was executed. The decision was now committed to the
+bishop and his commissary, and the sheriff was instructed to inflict
+the punishment without further appeal, and to commit the guilty to the
+fire on the high grounds in the country, that terror might strike all
+the bystanders. It is clear how much the power of the bishops was thus
+extended. Soon after, on the proposal of the lay lords, at whose head
+the Prince of Wales is named, a further statute passed, in which to
+spread the rumour that King Richard was yet alive, and to teach that
+the prelates ought to be deprived of their worldly goods, are treated
+as offences of equal magnitude and threatened with a similar
+punishment; the object being alike in both,--to raise a tumult. And in
+fact, when Henry V himself had ascended the throne, an outbreak did
+occur, in which these causes co-operated. The Lollards were
+strengthened in their resistance to the government of the house of
+Lancaster by the rumour that their rightful King was yet alive. Henry
+V was obliged to crush them in open battle, and then force them to
+remain quiet by a new statute, which enacted the confiscation of their
+goods as well.[66] His alliance and friendship with the Emperor
+Sigismund was based on the fact, that he regarded the Hussites as only
+the successors of the Lollards.
+
+This orthodox tendency was now moreover combined with a strict
+Parliamentary government. Under the Lancasters there is no complaint
+as to illegal taxes; they allowed the moneys voted by the Parliament
+to be paid over to treasurers named by itself and accountable to it;
+that which earlier Kings had always rejected as an affront, the claim
+of Parliament to exercise a sort of supervision over the King's
+household, the Lancasters admitted; the royal officers were bound by
+oath to observe the statutes and the common law; the prerogative,
+hitherto exercised by the Kings, of softening the severity of the
+statutes by proclamations contravening their purpose was expressly
+abolished.
+
+The Lancasters owed their rise to their alliance with the clergy and
+the Parliament: a fact which determined the character and manner of
+their government. The most manifold results might be expected, even
+beyond the borders of England, from their having by this very alliance
+won for themselves a great European position.
+
+Nowhere was greater interest taken in Richard's fate than at the
+French court. Louis Duke of Orleans, whose voice was generally
+decisive there, once challenged the first Lancaster to a duel, and
+when he refused it pressed him hard with war. That Owen Glendower
+could once more maintain himself as Prince in Wales was entirely due
+to his French auxiliaries. That we find Henry IV more secure of his
+throne in his later years than in his earlier is a phenomenon the
+explanation of which we seek in vain in English affairs alone: it
+results from the fact that his powerful foe, Louis of Orleans, was
+murdered in the year 1407 at the instigation of John Duke of Burgundy,
+and that then the quarrel of the two parties, which divided France,
+burst out with increased violence, and remained long undecided. From
+the French there was no longer anything to fear: they emulously sought
+the alliance of the highest power in England; there even arose
+circumstances under which the Lancasters could think of renewing the
+claims of Edward III, from whom they too were descended.
+
+At the time that Henry V ascended the English throne, the Orleanists
+had again gained the preponderance in France: they unfurled the
+Oriflamme against the Duke of Burgundy, who was now in fact hard
+pressed. Henry negociated with them both. But while the Orleanists
+made difficulties about granting him the independent possession of the
+old English provinces, Burgundy declared himself ready to acknowledge
+him as King.[67] The common interests moreover of home politics allied
+him with this house.
+
+Henry could reckon on the sympathies of a part of the population of
+France, when he led the power of England across the sea. A successful
+battle in which he destroyed the flower of the French nobility gave
+him an undoubted superiority. The vengeance which the Orleanists
+wreaked even under these circumstances on the Duke of Burgundy, who
+was now murdered in his turn, brought the Burgundian party over
+completely to his side, together with the greater part of the nation.
+Things went so far that Charles VI of France decided to marry his
+daughter to the victorious Lancaster and to acknowledge him, as his
+heir after his death, as his representative during his life.
+
+It was a very extraordinary position which Henry V now occupied. The
+two great kingdoms, each of which by itself has earlier or later
+claimed to sway the world, were (without being fused into one) to
+remain united for ever under him and his successors. Philip the Good
+of Burgundy was bound to him by ties of blood and by hostility to a
+common foe: as heir of France Henry sat in the Parliament by which
+the murderers of the last duke, who were also the chief opponents of
+the new state of things, were prosecuted. Another promising connexion
+was opened to him by the marriage of the youngest of his brothers with
+Jaqueline of Holland and Hainault, who possessed still more extensive
+hereditary claims. Henry recommended the eldest to Queen Johanna of
+Naples to be adopted as her son and heir. The King of Castile and the
+heir of Portugal were descended from his father's sisters. The
+pedigrees of Southern and Western Europe alike met in the house of
+Lancaster, the head of which thus seemed to be the common head of all.
+
+In England Henry did not neglect to guard the rights of the National
+Church; but at the same time no one exerted himself more energetically
+to close the schism: the solemn condemnation of Wiclif's doctrines by
+the General Council of Constance served to vouch for his attitude in
+religious matters: the English Church obtained in it a place among the
+great National Churches.
+
+Henry V found himself in the advantageous position of a potentate
+raised to power by a usurpation for which he was not however
+personally responsible. He could spare and reinstate Richard II's
+memory, as much as in him lay, though he owed the crown to his
+overthrow. That he furthered and advanced also in France the municipal
+and parliamentary interests, which were his mainstay in England,
+procured him the obedience which was there paid him, and a European
+influence. In his moral character Henry ranks above most of the
+Plantagenets. He had no favourites and let no unjust acts be imputed
+to him. He was stern towards the great and careful for the common
+people; at his first word men could tell what they had to expect from
+him. The French were frightened at the keenness of his expression, but
+they reverenced his high spirit, his bravery and truthfulness. 'He
+transacts all his affairs himself; he considers them well before he
+undertakes them; he never does anything fruitlessly. He is free from
+excesses, and truthful: he never makes himself too familiar. On his
+face are visible dignity and supreme power.'[68] He possessed in full
+measure the bold impulses of his ancestors, their attention to the
+general affairs of Western Christendom. In the war with the Lollards
+he was once wounded; that he recovered from his wound was designated
+as the work of divine Providence, which had destined him to be the
+conqueror of the Holy Land. He informed himself about its state as it
+was then constituted under the Mameluke rule: a Chronicle of Jerusalem
+and a History of Godfrey of Bouillon were two of the books he loved
+most to read. And without doubt such an undertaking would have been
+the true means, if any such means were possible, of uniting more
+closely, by common undertakings successes and interests, the realms
+already bound together under one sceptre. The Ottomans had not yet
+extended themselves in the East with their full force: something might
+yet have been effected there; for the King of France and England, who
+was yet young in years, a great future seemed to be at hand.
+
+Sometimes it seems as though fortune were specially making a mock of
+man's frailty. In this fulness of power and of expectations, Henry V
+was attacked by a disease which men did not yet know how to cure and
+to which he succumbed. His heir was a boy, nine months old.
+
+Of the two surviving brothers of the deceased King, the younger ruled
+England under the already established predominance of the Estates of
+the Realm, while the elder governed France with an increased
+participation on the part of the Estates: their efforts could only be
+directed towards preserving these kingdoms for their nephew Henry VI.
+We might almost wonder that this succeeded so well for a time: in the
+long run it was impossible. The feeling of French nationality, which
+had already met the victor himself with secret warnings, found its most
+wonderful expression in the Maid who revived in the French their old
+attachment to their native King and his divine right; the English, when
+she fell into their hands, with ungenerous hate inflicted on her the
+punishment of the Lollards: but the Valois King had already gained a
+firm footing. It was Charles VII who understood how to appease the
+enmity of Burgundy, and in unison with the great men of his kingdom to
+give his power a peculiar organisation corresponding to its character,
+so that he was able to oppose to the English troops better armed than
+their own, and make the restoration of a firm peace even desirable for
+them. But this reacted on England in two ways. The government, which
+was inclined for peace, fell into as bitter a quarrel as any that had
+hitherto taken place with the national bodies politic, which either did
+not recognise this necessity, or attributed the disasters incurred to
+bad management. The man most trusted by the King fell a victim to the
+public hate. But, besides this, there arose--awakened by these events
+and in a certain analogy with what happened in France--the recollection
+of the rights which had been set aside by the accession of the house of
+Lancaster. Their representative, Richard Duke of York, had hitherto
+kept quiet; for he was fully convinced that a right cannot perish
+merely because it lies dormant. Cautiously and step by step, while
+letting others run the first risk, he at last came forward openly with
+his claim to the crown. Great was the astonishment of Henry VI, who as
+far as his memory reached had been regarded as King, to find his right
+to the highest dignity doubted and denied. But such was now the case.
+The nation was split into two parties, one of which held fast to the
+monarchy established by the Parliament, while the other wished to recur
+to the principle of legitimate succession then violated. Not that
+political conviction was the leading motive for their quarrel. First of
+all we find that the opponents of the government--though themselves of
+Parliamentary views--rallied round the banners of the hitherto
+forgotten right of birth. Every man fought, less for the prince whose
+device he bore, the red or the white rose, than for his own share in
+the enjoyment of political power. On both sides there arose chiefs of
+almost independent power, who clad their partisans in their own
+colours, at whose call those partisans were ready any moment to take
+arms: they appointed the sheriffs in the counties and were lords of the
+land. But when blood had once been shed, no reconciliation of the
+parties was possible. Ha, cried the victor to the man who begged for
+mercy, thy father slew mine, thou must die by my hand. In vain did men
+turn to the judges: for the statutes contradicted each other, and they
+could no longer decide where the right lay. From the Parliaments no
+solution of these questions could be expected; each served the
+victorious party, whose summons it obeyed, and condemned its opponent.
+As the resources on each side were tolerably equal, even the battles
+were not decisive: the result depended less upon real superiority than
+on accidental desertions or accessions, and most largely on foreign
+help. After the English had failed, during the antagonism of Valois and
+Burgundy, in establishing their supremacy on the Continent, the
+quarrel--quieted for a moment--which broke out again between Louis XI
+and Charles the Bold in the most violent manner, reacted on them with
+all the more vehemence. King Louis would not endure that a good
+understanding should exist between Edward IV and Duke Charles, to whom
+Edward had married his sister: he drew the man who had hitherto done
+the most for the Yorkist interests, the Earl of Warwick, over to his
+own side; and scarcely had the latter appeared in England when Edward
+IV was forced to fly and Henry VI was reinstated. Louis had prepared
+church-thanksgivings to God for having given the English a king of the
+blood of France and a friend to that country. But meanwhile Edward was
+helped by Charles the Bold, to whom he had fled, though not openly in
+arms, yet with ships which he hired for him, with considerable sums of
+money, and even with troops which he allowed to join him.[69] To these,
+his Flemish and Easterling troops, it was chiefly attributed that
+Edward gained the upper hand in the field and recovered his throne. But
+what a state of things was this! The glorious crown of the
+Plantagenets, who a little while before strove for the supremacy of the
+world, was now--stained with blood and powerless as it was--tossed to
+and fro between the rival parties.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[56] 'I take it as a holesome counsell, that the Pope leeve his
+worldly lordship to worldly lords as Christ gafe him and move all his
+clerks to do so.' Wickleffs Bileve, in Collier i. Rec. 47.
+
+[57] 'Quod nullus est dominus civilis, nullus est episcopus, nullus
+est praelatus, dum est in mortali peccato--quod domini temporales
+possunt auferre bona temporalia ab ecclesia habitualiter delinquente
+vel quod populares possunt ad eorum arbitrium dominos delinquentes
+corrigere.'
+
+[58] Walsingham: 'Antistes belliger velut aper frendens dentibus.'
+
+[59] 'Si rex ex maligno consilio--se alienaverit a populo suo nec
+voluent per jura regni et statuta et laudabiles ordinationes cum
+salubri consilio dominorum et procorum regni gubernare et
+regulari--extunc licitum est eis cum communi assensu et consensu
+populi regem ipsum de regali solio abrogare et propinquiorem aliquem
+de stirpe regia loco ejus sublimare.' In Knyghton ii. 2683.
+
+[60] 'Comme chose fait traitoirousement et encontre sa regalie, sa
+coronne et sa dignitée--le roy de lassent de touts les srs et
+coes ad ordeine et establi que null tiel commission ne autre
+sembleable jammes ne soit purchacez pursue ne faite en temps advenir.'
+Statutes of the Realm II. 98.
+
+[61] Hayward, Life of King Henry IV, gives a detailed copy of this
+speech, which however can possess no more claim to authenticity than
+the words that Shakespeare puts into the Bishop's mouth.
+
+[62] Le record et procès de la renonciation du roi Richard avec la
+deposition. Twysden, ii. 2743.
+
+[63] Conclusiones Lollardorum porrectae pleno parliamento. Wilkins
+iii. 222. From the document in 229 we see that these doctrines had
+penetrated into Oxford.
+
+[64] The temporal possessions with which the prelates are as rightly
+endowed as it has been or might be best advised by the laws and
+customs of our kingdom; and of which they are as surely possessed as
+the lords temporal are of their inheritances.
+
+[65] Convocatio 6 die Oct. 1389 ... modus procedendi contra
+haereticos. Wilkins iii. 238, 254.
+
+[66] He imputes to them, 'l'entent de adnuller la foie chretienne auxi
+a destruer le roi mesme et tous maners estates dicell royaume et auxi
+toute politie et les leies de la terre.'
+
+[67] Treaty of 23rd May 1414. Certainly Duke John in September 1414
+concluded the treaty of Arras which is based on the assumption of his
+having no understanding with England; but he never ratified it.
+
+[68] 'De diligence portoit le gonphanon de ses besoignes.'
+Chastellain, Chronique du duc Philippe, ch. 98.
+
+[69] Chastellain, Chronique des derniers ducs de Bourgogne, ch 191.
+'Le duc cognossoit bien, que ceste mutacion en Angleterre étoit
+pratiquée pour le desfaire et non pour autre fin.'
+
+
+
+
+BOOK II.
+
+ATTEMPTS TO CONSOLIDATE THE KINGDOM INDEPENDENTLY IN ITS TEMPORAL AND
+SPIRITUAL RELATIONS.
+
+
+We may regard it as the chief result of the Norman-Plantagenet rule,
+that England became completely a member of the Romano-German family of
+nations which formed the Western world. In however many ways the
+invading nobility had mingled with the native houses, it yet held fast
+to its ancient language; even now it is part of the ambition of the
+great families to trace their pedigree from the Conquerors. Attempts
+had been made, sometimes of a more political, sometimes of a more
+doctrinal nature, to break loose from the hierarchy, which prevailed
+throughout these nations; but they had only increased its strength;
+the native clergy saw that its safety lay in the strictest adherence
+to the maxims of the Universal Church. Similarly the character of the
+Estates in England was akin to that of those in North France and
+especially in the Netherlands; on this rests the sympathy which the
+enterprises of Edward III and Henry V met with; for it was indeed the
+feeling of these centuries, that the members of any one of the three
+Estates felt themselves quite as closely bound to the members of the
+same Estate in other lands as to their own countrymen of the other
+Estates. There was but one Church, one Science, one Art in Europe: one
+and the same mental horizon enclosed the different peoples: a romance
+and a poetry varying in form yet of closely kindred nature was the
+common possession of all. The common life of Europe flowed also in the
+veins of England: an indestructible foundation for culture and
+progressive civilisation was laid. But we saw to what point matters
+had come notwithstanding, as regards the durability of its internal
+system and its power. The Plantagenets had extended the rule of
+England over Scotland and Ireland: in the latter it still subsisted,
+but only within the narrow limits of the Border Pale; in the former it
+was altogether overthrown. The best result that had been effected in
+home politics, the attempt to unite the Powers of the country in
+Parliament had, after a short and brilliant success, led to the
+deepest disorder by disregarding the rights of birth. The degraded
+crown above all had thus become the prize of battle for Pretenders
+allied with France or Burgundy. But it could not possibly remain thus.
+The time was come to give the English realm an independent position
+and internal order corresponding at once to its insular situation and
+to the degree of culture it had attained.
+
+The first who attempted this with some success was Edward IV, of the
+house of York, who in the war of the Roses had remained master of the
+field.
+
+But everywhere there began once more an era of autocratic princes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+RE-ESTABLISHMENT OF THE SUPREME POWER.
+
+
+Edward IV was a most brilliant figure, the handsomest man of his time,
+at least among the sovereigns, so that the impression he thus made was
+actually a power in politics; we find him incessantly entangled in
+love affairs: he was fond of music and enjoyment of all kinds, the
+pleasures of the table, the uproar of riotous company: his debauched
+habits are thought to have shortened his life, and many a disaster
+sprung from his carelessness; but he had also Sardanapalus' nature in
+him: with quickly awakening activity he always rose again out of his
+disasters; in his battles he appeared the last, but he fought perhaps
+the best; and he won them all. In the history of European Monarchy he
+is not unworthy to be ranked by the side of Ferdinand the Catholic,
+Charles the Bold, Louis XI, and some others who regained prestige for
+their dignity by the energy of their personal character.
+
+In itself we must rate it as important that he made good the
+birthright of the house of York, independent as it was of the maxims
+of Parliament, or rather contradictory to them, and maintained the
+throne. He deemed himself the direct successor of Richard II; the
+three kings who had since worn the crown by virtue of Parliamentary
+enactments were regarded by him as usurpers. We have Fortescue's
+contemporary treatise in praise of the laws of England, which (written
+for a prince who never came to the throne) contains the idea of
+Parliamentary right which the house of Lancaster upheld: but Edward IV
+did not so apprehend it. He allowed the lawfulness of his accession to
+be recognised by Parliament, because this was of use to him: but
+otherwise he paid little regard to its established rights. We find
+under him for five years no meeting of Parliament; then a Parliament
+that had met was prorogued some four or five times without completing
+any business, till it at last agreed to raise the customs duties,
+included under the names of Tonnage and Poundage; a revenue which
+being voted to the Kings for life (and this came gradually to be
+regarded as a mere formality) gave their government a strong financial
+basis. Other Parliaments repaid their summons with considerable
+grants, with large and full subsidies: yet Edward IV was not content
+even with these. Under him began the practice, by which the wealthy
+were drawn into contributions for his service in proportion to their
+property, of which the King knew how to obtain accurate information;
+these contributions were called Benevolences because they were paid
+under the form of personal freewill offerings, though none dared to
+refuse them:[70] we may compare the imposts which in the Italian
+republics the dominant parties were wont to inflict on their
+opponents. Though holding Church views in other points, and at any
+rate a persecutor of the Lollards, he did not however allow the clergy
+to enter on their temporalities without heavy payments: he created
+monopolies in the case of some especially profitable articles of
+trade. In short, he neglected no means to render the administration of
+the supreme power independent of the money-grants of Parliament. He
+made room for the royal prerogative as understood by the old kings, as
+well as for the right of birth.
+
+But yet he had not established a secure position, since the party of
+the enemy was still very powerful, and after his early death a quarrel
+broke out in his own house which could not fail to destroy it.
+
+To the characteristic traits of the Plantagenets, their world-wide
+views, their chivalry abroad, their versatility at home, the ceaseless
+war they waged with each other and with others for power, their
+inextinguishable love of rule, belongs also the way in which those who
+held power rid themselves of foes within their own family. As formerly
+King John had murdered in prison Arthur the lawful heir to the throne,
+so Richard II imprisoned and murdered his uncle Thomas of Gloucester,
+who was dangerous to himself. Richard II, like Edward II, died by the
+hand of a relative who had wrested the crown from him; of the details
+of his death we have not even a legend left. Another Gloucester, who
+had for many years guarded the crown for the infant Henry VI, was, at
+the very moment when he might become dangerous to the new government,
+found dead in his bed. So Henry VI perished in the Tower the day
+before Edward IV made his entry into London. Edward IV preferred to
+have his brother Clarence, though already under sentence of death,
+privately killed. But the most atrocious murder of all was that of the
+two infant sons of Edward IV himself; they were both murdered at once,
+as was fully believed, at the behest of their uncle Richard III, who
+had put himself in possession of the throne. I know not whether the
+actual character of Richard answered to that type of inborn wickedness
+which commits crime because it wills it as crime, such as following
+the hints of the Chronicle[71] a great poet has drawn for us in
+imperishable traits, and linked with his name: or whether it was not
+rather the love of power, that animated the whole family, which in
+Richard III grew step by step into a passion that made him forget all
+laws human and divine: enough, he did such deeds that the world's
+abhorrence weighs justly on him.
+
+But it was owing to the internal discord of the ruling family that
+throughout the course of its history a path was made for political and
+national development, and so it was now: these crimes opened a way out
+of the disorders of the time. For as Richard, while continuing to
+persecute the house of Lancaster, struck still harder blows against
+the chief members of that of York, he gave occasion to the principal
+persons of both parties, who were equally threatened, and had the
+same interest in opposing the usurper, to draw nearer to each other.
+
+The widowed Queen Elizabeth, who was lingering out her life in a
+sanctuary, was brought into secret connexion through the mediation of
+distinguished friends with the mother of the man who now came forward
+as head of the Lancasters, Henry Earl of Richmond, and it was
+determined that Henry and Elizabeth's daughter, in whom the claims of
+both lines were united, should marry each other, a prospect which
+might well prepare the way for the immediate combination of the two
+parties. Henry of Richmond at their head was then to confront the
+usurper and chase him from the throne. The fugitives scattered about
+in the sanctuaries and churches called him to be their captain.[72]
+
+The question arises--it has been often answered in the
+negative--whether Henry was rightfully a Lancaster, and whether he had
+any well-grounded claims on the English crown. He loved to derive his
+family from the hero of the Welsh, the fabulous Arthur. His
+grandfather, Owen Tudor, a Welshman, was brought into connexion with
+the royal house by his marriage with Henry V's widow, Catharine of
+France: for unions of royal ladies with distinguished gentlemen were
+then not rare. And Owen Tudor of course obtained by this a higher
+position, but there could be no question of any claim to the crown.
+This was derived simply from the fact that the son of this marriage,
+Edmund Tudor Earl of Richmond, married a lady of the house of
+Somerset, descended by her father from John of Gaunt, the ancestor of
+the Lancasters, by his third marriage with Catharine Swynford. It has
+been said that this marriage, in itself of an irregular nature, was
+only recognised as legitimate by Richard II on the condition that the
+issue from it should have no claim to the succession--and so it is in
+fact stated in the often printed Patent. But the original of the
+document still exists, and that in two forms, one of which is in the
+Rolls of Parliament, the other on the Patent Rolls. In the first the
+limitation is wanting, in the second it exists, but as an
+interpolation by a later hand. It may be taken as admitted that
+Richard II in legitimising the marriage did not make this condition,
+and that it was first inserted by Henry IV (who took offence at the
+legitimisation of his half-brothers) at the ratification. But the
+legitimisation once effected could not possibly be limited in a
+one-sided manner by a later sovereign. I think no objection can be
+made to the legality of Henry VII's claim, which then passed over to
+his successors.[73] The limitation belonged to those proceedings of
+one-sided caprice by which Henry IV tried to secure for his direct
+descendants the perpetual possession of the crown. It was not from
+him, but from his father, the founder of the family, that the Earls of
+Richmond derived their claim.
+
+Now that the banner of a true Lancaster appeared again in the field,
+and the discontented Yorkists, ill-treated by Richard, joined him, it
+might certainly be hoped that the usurper would be overthrown, and
+that a strong power would emerge from the union of both lines. Yet the
+issue was even then very doubtful.
+
+As in the earlier civil wars, so now too the help of a foreign power
+was necessary. With French help the Earl of Richmond led about 2000
+men, of which not more than perhaps 800 were English, to Wales;[74] in
+his further advance he was joined by proportionately considerable
+reinforcements; yet he did not number more than 5000 men under his
+banners, badly clothed and still worse armed, when Richard with his
+chivalry came upon him in overwhelming numbers. Henry would have been
+lost, had he not found partisans in Richard's ranks. Even before the
+engagement the desertion from Richard began: then in the middle of the
+battle the chief division of his army passed over to Henry. Richard
+found the death he sought: for he was resolved to be King or die: on
+the battlefield itself Henry was proclaimed King.
+
+There is no doubt that he owed to his union with the house of York,
+whose right was then generally regarded as the best, not only his
+victory, but the joyous recognition also which he experienced
+afterwards: yet his whole nature revolted against basing his state on
+this union: he cherished the ambition of ruling only through his own
+right.
+
+At the first meeting of Parliament, which he did not call till he was
+fully in possession and crowned King, he was met by a very genuinely
+English point of law. It arose from the fact that many members of the
+Lower House had been attainted by the late government. How could they
+make laws who were themselves beyond the pale of law? Who could
+cleanse them from the stain that clove to them? This objection could
+be raised against Henry himself. In this perplexity recourse was had
+to the judges: and they decided that the possession of the crown
+supplied all defects, and that the King was already King even without
+the assent of Parliament.[75] In the general disorder things had gone
+so far, that it was necessary to find some power outside the
+continuity of legal forms, from which they might start afresh. The
+actual possession of the throne formed this time the living centre
+round which the legal state could again form itself. By exercising the
+authority inherent in the possession of the crown, the King could
+effect the revocation of the sentences that weighed on his partisans
+and on a large portion of the Parliament. After the legal character of
+that Assembly had been established, it proceeded to recognise Henry's
+rights to the crown in the words used for the first of the Lancastrian
+house.
+
+In the papal bull which ratified Henry's succession, three grounds are
+assigned for it: the right of war, the undoubted nearest right to the
+succession, and the recognition by Parliament. On the first the King
+himself laid great stress: he once designates the issue of the battle
+as the decision of God between him and his foes. He thus avoided any
+mention of the marriage with Edward IV's daughter, which he did not
+complete till he was acknowledged on all sides. The papal bull
+declared that the crown of England was to be hereditary in Henry's
+descendants, even if they did not spring from the Yorkist marriage.
+
+We can easily understand this: Henry would not tolerate by his side in
+the person of his wife a joint ruler of equal, and even better, right
+than his own; but we can understand also that this proceeding drew on
+him new enmities. At the very outset the widowed Queen gave it to be
+understood that her daughter was rather lowered than raised by the
+marriage. The whole party of York moreover felt itself contemned and
+insulted. To the ferment of displeasure and ambition into which it
+fell must be attributed the fact that a pair of adventurers, who acted
+the part of genuine descendants of the house of York, Lambert Simnel
+and Perkin Warbeck, supported from abroad, found the greatest sympathy
+and recognition in England. The first Henry VII had to meet in open
+battle, the second he got into his hands only by a great European
+combination.
+
+But he did not wish to have always to encounter open disturbance. He
+was entirely of the opinion which his chancellor gave, that enmities
+of such a sort could not be extinguished by the sword of war, but only
+by well-planned and stringent laws which would destroy the seed of
+rebellion, and by institutions strong enough to administer those laws.
+Above all he found it intolerable that the great men kept numerous
+dependents attached to them under engagements which were publicly
+paraded by distinctive badges. The lower courts of justice and the
+juries did not do the service expected from them in dealing with the
+transgressions of the law that came before them. Uncertainty as to the
+supreme authority, and the power which the great party-leaders
+exercised, filled the weaker, who had to sit in judgment on them, with
+dread of their sure revenge. To put an end to this disorder Henry VII
+established the Starchamber. With consent of the Parliament, from
+which all hostile party-movements were excluded, he gave his Privy
+Council, which was strengthened by the chief judges, a strong
+organisation with this end in view. It was to punish all those
+personal engagements, the exercise of unlawful influence in the choice
+of sheriffs, all riotous assemblies, lastly to have power to deal with
+the early symptoms of a tumult before it came to an outbreak, and that
+under forms which were not usual in the English administration of
+justice. This powerful instrument in the hands of government might be
+much abused, but then seemed necessary to keep in check unreconciled
+enemies and the spirit of faction that was ever surging up again. We
+see the prevailing state of things from the fact, that the King's
+councillors themselves, to be secured against acts of violence, passed
+a special law, which characterised attacks on them as attacks on the
+King himself. But then, like men who stood in the closest connexion
+with the King and his State, they used their authority with
+unapproachable severity. The internal tranquillity of England has been
+thought to be mainly due to the erection of this court of justice.[76]
+
+Since Henry laid so much stress on his being a Lancaster, it might
+have been expected that he would revive the rights of the Parliament.
+But in this respect he followed the example of the house of York. He
+too imposed Benevolences, like Edward IV, and that to a yet greater
+extent; he made an ordinance that what was voluntarily promised should
+be exacted with as much strictness as if it were an ordinary tax.
+Another source of financial gain, which has brought on him still worse
+reproaches, was his commission against infractions of the law. It was
+inevitable that in the fluctuation of authority and of the statutes
+themselves innumerable illegalities should have taken place. And they
+were still always going on. The King took it especially ill that men
+omitted to pay the dues which belonged to the crown in right of its
+feudal superiority. All these negligences and failures were now
+visited and punished with the severity of the old Norman system, and
+at the same time with the officiousness of party-men of the day, who
+saw their own advantage in it. This proceeding pressed very many
+heavily on private persons and communities, and ruined families, but
+it filled the King's coffers. One of his maxims was that his laws
+should not be broken under any circumstances, another that a sovereign
+who would enjoy consideration must always have money: in this instance
+both worked together.
+
+If we look at the lists of his receipts we find that they consist, as
+in other kingdoms, of the crown's revenue proper, which was
+considerably increased by the escheated possessions of great families
+which had become extinct, the customs duties settled on him for life,
+the tenth from the clergy, and the feudal dues. It was estimated that
+they produced nearly the same revenue as that of the French kings at
+this time, but it was remarked that the King of England only spent
+about two-thirds of his income. He did not need a Parliamentary grant,
+especially as he kept out of dangerous foreign entanglements. In his
+last thirteen years he never once called a Parliament.
+
+This precisely corresponded to the idea of his government. After all
+had become doubtful owing to the alternate fluctuations of parties he
+had established his personal claim by the fortune of arms, and made it
+the central point of his government. Was he to allow it to be again
+endangered by the ceaseless ebb and flow of popular opinion? He
+founded a supreme court independent of popular agitation, a finance
+system independent of the grants of a popular assembly.
+
+But he thus found himself under the disadvantage of having to apply
+compulsion unceasingly: his government bore throughout the bitter and
+hateful character of a party-government. With untiring jealousy he
+watched the secret opponents who still looked out for some movement
+from abroad, as a signal for fresh revolt: he kept diaries of their
+doings and conduct: it was said he availed himself of the confessional
+for this purpose: men whose names were from time to time solemnly
+cursed at S. Paul's on account of past treasons, so that they counted
+for open enemies, became useful to him as spies. If the decision lay
+between services received and suspicious conduct, the latter easily
+weighed down the balance, to the ruin of the victim. William Stanley,
+who had played the most important part in the battle which decided the
+fate of the crown, and was regarded as almost the first man in the
+realm after the King, had at the appearance of Perkin Warbeck (who
+gave himself out as Edward's younger son, Richard of York) let slip
+the words, 'he would take his side, if he were the person he gave
+himself out to be.' He had to atone for these words by his death,
+since he had intimated a doubt as to the King's lawful right, which
+might mislead others into sedition. Gradually the movements ceased:
+the high nobility showed a loyal submission to the King: yet it did
+not attach itself to him, it let him and his government alone. The
+King's principle was, to execute the laws most strictly, yet he was
+not cruel by nature; if men implored his mercy, he was ready to grant
+it. The contracted position of a sovereign, who maintains his
+authority with the utmost strictness, does not however exclude a
+paternal care for the country. Henry clipped his people's wings, to
+accustom them to obedience, and then was glad when they grew again. We
+find even that he made out a sketch of how the land should be
+cultivated so that every man might be able to live. The people did not
+love him, but it did not exactly hate him either: this was quite
+enough for Henry VII.
+
+A slight man, somewhat tall, with thin light-coloured hair, whose
+countenance bore the traces of the storms he had passed through; in
+his appearance he gave the impression of being a high ecclesiastic
+rather than a chivalrous King. He was in this almost the exact
+opposite of Edward IV. He too certainly arranged public festivities
+and spared no expense to make them splendid, since his dignity
+demanded it, but his soul took no pleasure in them, he left them as
+soon as ever he could; he lived only in business. In his council sat
+men of mark, sagacious bishops, experienced generals, magistrates
+learned in the law: he held it to be his duty and his interest to hear
+their advice. And they were not without influence: one or two were
+noted as able to restrain his self-seeking will. But the main affairs
+he kept in his own hands. All that he undertook he conducted with
+great foresight and as a rule he carried it through. Foreigners
+regarded him as cunning and deceitful; to his own people his
+successful prudence seemed to have something supernatural about it. If
+he had personal passions, he knew how to keep them under; he seemed
+always calm and sober, sparing of words and yet affable.
+
+He directed almost his chief energies to this object, to keep off all
+foreign influences from his well-ordered kingdom.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[70] Historiae Croylandensis Continuatio II. 'Concessae sunt decimae
+ac quintodecimae multiplices in coetibus clericorum et laicorum,
+habentibus in faciendis concessionibus hujusmodi interesse. Praeterea
+haereditarii ac possessionati omnes de rebus immobilibus suarum
+possessionum partem libere concedebant. Cumque nec omnia praedicta
+sufficere visa sunt, inducta est nova et inaudita impositio oneris, ut
+per benevolentiam quilibet daret id quod vellet, imo verius quod
+nollet.'
+
+[71] At least Sir Thomas More has not invented the nature and manner
+of the murder; it is derived from a confession of the persons
+concerned in it in Henry VII's time. 'Dightonus traditionis hujus
+principale erat instrumentum' (Bacon 212). Tyrel too seems to have
+known of it.
+
+[72] 'Videntes, quod si novum conquestionis suae capitaneum invenire
+non possent brevi de omnibus actum foret.' Hist. Croyl. 568.
+
+[73] I take this from Nicolas, Observations on the state of historical
+literature, 1830, p. 178. Hume's objection, that the mother's right
+came before the son's, is done away with by the fact that men had in
+general never yet seen reigning Queens.
+
+[74] How the world regarded it then we ascertain from the words of the
+Chroniques de Jean Molinet, ed. Buchon, iii. 151. 'Le Comte de
+Richmond fut couronne et institué Henri VII, par le confort et
+puissant subside du roi de France.'
+
+[75] 'A quo tempore Rex coronam assumpserat, fontem sanguinis fuisse
+expurgatum--ut regi opera parlamentaria non fuisset opus.' So Bacon,
+Henricus VII. 29.
+
+[76] Edw. Coke: 4 Inst. cap. ix. 'It is the most honourable court, our
+Parliament excepted, that is in the Christian world.--In the judges of
+the same are the grandees of the realm: and they judge upon confession
+or deposition or witness.--This court doth keep all England in quiet.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+CHANGES IN THE CONDITION OF EUROPE.
+
+
+For the history of the world the decisive event of the epoch was the
+rapid rise of the French monarchy, which after it had freed itself
+from the English invasions, became master of all the hitherto separate
+territories of the great vassals, and lastly even of Brittany, and
+rapidly began to make its preponderance felt on all sides.
+
+Considered in itself no one would have been more called on to oppose
+this than the King of England, who even still bore the title of King
+of France. In fact Henry did once revive his claim on the French
+crown, on Normandy and Guyenne, and took part in a coalition, which
+was to have forced Charles VIII to give up Brittany; he crossed to
+Calais and threatened Boulogne. But he was not in earnest with these
+comprehensive views in his military enterprise, any more than Edward
+IV had once been in a similar one. Henry VII was contented when a
+considerable money payment year by year was secured to him, as it had
+been to Edward. The English called it a tribute, the French a pension.
+It was acceptable to the King, and advantageous for his home affairs,
+just at that moment--1492--to have a sum of money at his free
+disposal.
+
+And no one could have advised him to attach himself unconditionally to
+the house of Burgundy. Duke Charles' widow was still alive, who found
+it unendurable that the house of York, from which she sprang, should
+be dethroned from its 'triumphant majesty, which shone over the seven
+nations of the world'--for so she expressed herself. With her the
+fugitive partisans of the house of York found refuge and protection:
+by herself and her son-in-law Maximilian of Austria the pretenders
+were fitted out who contested the crown with Henry VII. Henry could
+not really wish Brittany to pass to his sworn foe, so that he might be
+threatened from this quarter also at every moment. For how could he
+delude himself with the hope that a transitory alliance would prevail
+over a dynastic antipathy?
+
+At this crisis Ferdinand the Catholic of Spain offered him an alliance
+and connexion by marriage.
+
+That which induced this sovereign to do so was above all Charles
+VIII's invasion of Italy, and his conquest of Naples, to which the
+crown of Aragon had just claims. His plan was to oppose to the mighty
+consolidated power of France a family alliance with the
+Austro-Burgundian House, with Portugal, above all with England: he
+hoped that this would react on Italy, always wont to adhere to the
+most powerful party. Ferdinand offered the King of England a marriage
+between his youngest daughter Catharine and the Prince of Wales. In
+the English Privy Council many objections were made to this; they did
+not wish to draw the enmity of France on themselves and would have
+rather seen the prince united to a princess of the house of Bourbon,
+as was then proposed. It was on Henry VII's own responsibility that
+the offer was accepted. In September 1496 an agreement was come to
+about the conditions: on 15th August 1497 the ceremony of betrothal
+took place in the palace at Woodstock.[77]
+
+The motive which impelled Henry to his decision is sufficiently clear;
+it was his relation to Scotland, on which the Spaniards already
+exercised influence.
+
+There the second pretender, Perkin Warbeck, had found a warm reception
+from the young and chivalrous James IV: he there married a lady of one
+of the chief houses: accompanied in person by this sovereign he made
+an attempt to invade England, which only failed owing to the
+unfavourable time of the year. The Spanish ambassador Pedro de Ayala
+then out of regard to Henry secured Perkin's withdrawal from Scotland.
+But in 1497 the danger revived in a yet greater degree. Warbeck landed
+in Cornwall where all the inhabitants rallied round him, and a revolt
+already once suppressed broke out again; at this moment James IV,
+urged on by the nobles of the land, crossed the border with a splendid
+army: the co-operation of the two movements might have placed the King
+in a serious difficulty. Again it was the Spanish ambassador who made
+James IV determine not to let himself be urged on further; but rather
+to give him the commission, to adjust his differences with England.
+Henry VII was set free to suppress the revolt in Cornwall; Perkin
+Warbeck was taken in his flight.
+
+As the object of the Spaniards was to sever Scotland from her old
+alliance with France, and that too by means of a family alliance, it
+was an essential point in their mediation that Henry VII, as he
+betrothed his son Arthur to a Spanish Infanta, should similarly
+betroth his daughter Margaret to James IV. The understanding with
+Spain and that with Scotland went hand in hand.
+
+And on another side too the alliance with Spain was very useful to the
+King of England. Ferdinand had married his elder daughter Juana to
+Maximilian's son the Archduke Philip: Philip could not possibly uphold
+the Yorkist interests so zealously as his father or his grandmother.
+It was an event of importance that at Whitsuntide 1500 a meeting took
+place between the English and the Austro-Burgundian Court in the
+neighbourhood of Calais. Henry applied himself to win over those whom
+he knew to be his enemies: but at the same time he wished it to be
+remarked that the Archduke showed him the honour which belongs to a
+lawful King. If there were still Yorkist partisans in England, who
+placed their hopes in the house of Burgundy, they would find that they
+had nothing more to hope from that quarter.
+
+So the Spanish alliance served the prudent and circumspect politician,
+to secure him from any hostile action on the side of Scotland and the
+Netherlands. When Catharine in 1501 came to England for her marriage,
+she was received with additional joy because it was felt that her near
+connexion with the Burgundian house promised good relations with the
+Netherlands.[78]
+
+But never was a more eventful marriage concluded.
+
+We do not know whether the Prince of Wales had really consummated it
+when he died before he was yet sixteen. But the two fathers were so
+well satisfied with an alliance which increased the security of the
+one and gained the other great consideration in the world, that they
+could not bring themselves to give up the family connexion, by which
+it was so much strengthened. The thought occurred to Ferdinand--a very
+unusual one in the rest of the European world, though not indeed in
+Spain--of marrying the Infanta to Henry, brother of the deceased
+prince, who was now recognised as Prince of Wales. With his condolence
+for the loss he united a proposal for the new marriage. In England
+from the beginning men did not hide from themselves that as regarded
+the future succession, which ought not to be contested from any side,
+the matter had its delicate points. The solution which Henry found
+shows clearly enough the natural tactics of the old politician. He
+obtained from the Roman Court a dispensation for the new marriage,
+which expressly included the case of the first marriage having been
+consummated. But it almost appears as though he did not fully trust
+this authorisation. High as the prestige of the supreme Pontiff still
+stood in the world, there were yet cases in which canonists and
+theologians doubted as to his dispensing power; men could not possibly
+have forgotten that, when Richard III wished to marry his niece
+Elizabeth, a number of doctors disapproved of such a marriage, even if
+the Pope should sanction it. At any rate Henry VII instigated, or at
+least did not oppose, his son's solemnly entering a protest, after the
+marriage ceremony between him and Catharine was performed, against its
+validity (on the ground of his being too young), the evening before he
+entered his fifteenth year, in the presence of the Bishop of
+Winchester, his father's chief Secretary of State. Hence all remained
+undecided. Catharine lived on in England: her dowry did not need to be
+given up; the general influence of the political union was saved; it
+could however be dissolved at any moment, and there was therefore no
+quarrel on this account with France, whence from time to time
+proposals proceeded for a marriage in the opposite interest. The
+prince kept himself quite free, to make use of the dispensation or
+not.
+
+For the King himself too, whose wife died in 1503, many negociations
+were entered into on both sides. The French offered him a lady of the
+house of Angoulême; he preferred Maximilian's daughter, Margaret of
+Austria, not indeed for her personal qualities, however praiseworthy
+they might be; he stipulated after his usual fashion for the surrender
+of the fugitive Edmund de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk, who was regarded
+as the chief representative of the house of York, and (as once
+previously in France) had at that time found a refuge in the
+Netherlands. Philip, who after the death of his mother-in-law wished
+to take possession of his wife's kingdoms in Spain, was on his voyage
+from Flanders driven by a storm on the English coasts: he was Henry's
+guest at Windsor, Richmond, and London. Here then the King's marriage
+with Philip's sister was concerted, and with it the surrender of
+Suffolk. Philip strove long against this: when he yielded, he at least
+got a promise that Henry VII would spare the life of the earl, whom he
+accused of treason. He kept his word: the prisoner was not executed
+till after his death.
+
+Margaret had no inclination to wed herself with the harsh and
+self-seeking King, who was growing old: he himself, when Philip
+shortly after his arrival in Castile was snatched away by an early
+death, formed the idea of marrying his widow Juana, though she was no
+longer in her right mind. He opened a negociation about it, which he
+pursued with zeal and apparent earnestness. The Spaniards ascribe to
+him the project of marrying himself to Ferdinand's elder daughter, and
+his son to the younger, and making the latter marriage, which he was
+purposely always putting off, the price of his own. One should hardly
+ascribe such a folly to the prudent and wise sovereign at his years
+and with his failing strength. That he made the proposals admits of
+no doubt: but we must suppose that he wished purposely to oppose to
+the pressure of the Spaniards for the marriage of his son with the
+Infanta a demand which they could never grant. For how could they let
+the King of England share in Juana's immense claims of inheritance?
+Henry wished neither to break off nor to complete his son's marriage;
+for the one course would have made Spain hostile, while the second
+might have produced a quarrel with France. Between these two powers he
+maintained an independent position, without however mixing in earnest
+with their affairs, and only with the view of warding off their enmity
+and linking their interests with his own. His political relations
+were, as he said, to draw a brazen wall round England, within which he
+had gradually become complete lord and master. The crown he had won on
+the battlefield, and maintained as his own in the extremest dangers,
+he bequeathed to his son as an undoubted possession. The son succeeded
+the father without opposition, without a rival--a thing that had not
+happened for centuries. He had only to ascend the throne, in order to
+take the reins of government into his hand.
+
+
+_Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolsey in their earlier years._
+
+But that the political situation should continue as it was could not
+be expected. What has not seldom in the history of great kingdoms and
+states formed a decisive turning point now came to pass: to the father
+who had founded and maintained his power with foresight and by painful
+and continuous labour, succeeded a son full of life and energy, who
+wished to enjoy its possession, and feeling firm ground under his feet
+determined to live in a way more after his own mind. Henry VIII too
+felt the need of being popular, like most princes on their accession:
+he sacrificed the two chiefs of the fiscal commission, Empson and
+Dudley, to the universal hate. In general his father's point of view
+seemed to him too narrow-hearted, his proceedings too cautious.
+
+The first great question which was laid before him concerned his
+marriage: he decided for it without further delay. No doubt that in
+this political reasons came chiefly into account. France had been ever
+growing mightier, it had just then struck down the republic of Venice
+by a great victory; men thought it would one day or another come into
+collision with England, and held it prudent to unite themselves
+beforehand with those who could then be useful as allies. At that time
+this applied to the Spaniards above all others.[79] Yet, unless
+everything deceives us, political considerations only coincided with
+the prince's inclinations. The Infanta was in the full bloom of her
+age; the prince, was even younger than herself and against his will
+had been kept apart from any association with her, might well be
+impressed by her: besides she had known how to conduct herself with
+tact and dignity in her difficult position; with a blameless earnest
+mien she combined gentleness and loveable qualities. The marriage was
+carried out without delay; in the ceremonies of her husband's
+coronation Catharine could actually take part as Queen. How fully did
+these festivities again breathe the ancient character of chivalrous
+splendour. Men saw the King's champion, with his own herald in front,
+in full armour, ride into the hall on his war-steed which carried the
+armorial bearings of England and France; he challenged to single
+combat any one who would dare to say that Henry VIII was not the true
+heir of this realm; then he asked the King for a draught of wine, who
+had it given him in a golden cup: the cup was then his own.
+
+Henry VIII had a double reason for confidence on his throne,--the
+blood of the house of York also flowed in his veins. In European
+affairs he was no longer content with keeping off foreign influences,
+he wished to take part in them like his ancestors with the whole power
+of England. After the dangers which had been overcome had passed out
+of the memory of those living, the old delight in war awoke again.
+
+When France now began to encounter resistance in her career of
+victory, first through Pope Julius II, then through King Ferdinand,
+Henry did not hesitate to make common cause with them. It marks his
+disposition in these first years, that he took arms especially because
+men ought not to allow the supreme Priest of Christendom to be
+oppressed.[80] When King Louis and the Emperor Maximilian tried to
+oppose a Council to the Pope, Henry VIII dissuaded the latter from it
+with a zeal full of unction. He drew him over in fact to his side:
+they undertook a combined campaign against France in which they won a
+battle in the open field, and conquered a great city, Tournay. Aided
+by the English army Ferdinand the Catholic then possessed himself of
+Navarre, which was given up to him by the Pope as being taken when it
+was in league with an enemy of the Church. Louis's other ally, the
+Scottish King James IV, succumbed to the military strength of North
+England at Flodden, and Henry might have raised a claim to Scotland,
+like that of Ferdinand to Navarre: but he preferred, as his sister
+Margaret became regent there, to strengthen the indirect influence of
+England over Scotland. On the whole the advantages of his warlike
+enterprises were for England small, but not unimportant for the
+general relations of Europe. The predominance of France was broken: a
+freer position restored to the Papacy. Henry VIII felt himself
+fortunate in the full weight of the influence which England had won
+over European affairs.
+
+It was no contradiction of the fundamental ideas of English policy,
+when Henry VIII again formed a connexion with Louis XII, who was now
+no longer formidable. He even gave him his younger sister to wife, and
+concluded a treaty with him, by which he secured himself a money
+payment, as his predecessors had so often done before. Yet he did not
+for this break at all with Ferdinand the Catholic, though he had
+reason to complain of him: rather he concluded a new alliance with
+him, only in a less close and binding manner. He would not have
+endured that the successor of Louis XII (who died immediately after
+his marriage), the youthful and warlike Francis I, after he had
+possessed himself of Milan, should have also advanced to Naples. For a
+moment, in consequence of these apprehensions, their relations became
+less close: but when the alarm proved to be unfounded, the alliance
+was renewed, and even Tournay restored for a compensation in money.
+Many personal motives may have contributed to this, but on the whole
+there was sense and system in such a policy. The reconquest of Milan
+did not make the King of France so strong that he would become
+dangerous, particularly as on the other side the monarchy which had
+been prepared by the Spanish-Netherlands' connexions now came into
+existence, and the grandson of Ferdinand and Maximilian united the
+Spanish kingdoms with Naples and the lordship over the Netherlands.
+
+To this position between the two powers it would have lent new weight
+and great splendour if the German princes could have been induced to
+transfer to the King of England the peaceful dignity of a Roman-German
+Emperor. He bestirred himself about this for a moment, but did not
+feel it much when it was refused him.
+
+But now since the empire too was added to the possessions in Spain,
+Italy, and the Netherlands, and hence redoubled jealousy awakened in
+King Francis I, which held out an immediate prospect of war, the old
+question came up again before King Henry, which side England was to
+take between them, and that in a more pressing form than ever. A
+special complication arose from the fact that yet another person with
+separate points of view now took part in the politics of the age.
+
+In another point Henry VIII departed from his father's tactics and
+habits; he no longer sat so regularly with his Privy Council and
+deliberated with them. He had been persuaded that he would best secure
+himself against prejudicial results from the discords that reigned
+among them, by taking affairs more into his own hand. A young
+ecclesiastic, his Almoner Thomas Wolsey, had then gained the greatest
+influence over him; he had been introduced alike into business and
+into intimacy with the King by Fox, Bishop of Winchester, who wished
+to oppose a more youthful ability to his rivals in the Privy Council.
+In both relations Wolsey was completely successful. It stood him in
+good stead that another favourite, Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk,
+who had married Henry's sister (Louis XII's widow), and was the King's
+comrade in knightly exercises and the external show of court-life, for
+a long time remained in intimate friendship with him. Wolsey was
+conversant with the scholastic philosophy, with Saint Thomas Aquinas;
+but that did not hinder him from cooperating also in the revival of
+classical studies, which were just coming into notice at Oxford: he
+had a feeling for the efforts of Art which was then attaining a higher
+estimation, and an inborn talent for architecture, to which we owe
+some wonderful works.[81] The King too loved building; the present of
+a skilfully cut jewel could delight him; and he sought honour in
+defending the scholastic dogmas against Luther's views; in all this
+Wolsey seconded and supported him, he combined state-business with
+conversation. He freed the King from the consultations of the Privy
+Council, in which the intrinsic importance of the matter always weighs
+more than one's own will; Henry VIII first felt himself to be really
+King when business was managed by a favourite thoroughly dependent on
+him, trusted by him, and in fact very capable. Wolsey showed the most
+many-sided activity and an indefatigable power of work. He presided in
+court though he was not strong in law; he mastered the department of
+finance; the King named him Archbishop of York, the Pope
+Cardinal-Legate, so that the whole control of ecclesiastical matters
+fell into his hands; foreign affairs were peculiarly his own
+department. We have a considerable number of his political writings
+and instructions remaining, which give us an idea of the
+characteristics of his mind. Very circumstantially and almost
+wearisomely do they advance--not exactly in a straight line--weighing
+manifold possibilities, multiplied reasons: they are scholastic in
+form, in contents sometimes fantastic even to excess, intricate yet
+acute, flattering to the person to whom they are addressed, but withal
+filled with a surprising self-consciousness of power and talent.
+Wolsey is celebrated by Erasmus for his affability, and to a great
+scholar he may have been accessible, but to others he was not so. When
+he went to walk in the park of Hampton Court, no one would have dared
+to come within a long distance of him. When questions were asked him
+he reserved to himself the option of answering or not. He had a way of
+giving his opinion so that every man yielded to him; especially as the
+possession of the King's favour, which he enjoyed, made it impossible
+to oppose him. If the government was spoken of, he was wont to say,
+'the King and I,' or 'we,' or at last 'I.' Just because he was of
+humble origin, he wished to shine by splendid appearance, costly and
+rare furniture, unwonted expenditure. Early one morning his
+appointment as Cardinal arrived, that same morning at mass he
+displayed the insignia of his new dignity. He required outward tokens
+of reverence, and insisted on being served on bended knee. He had many
+other passions, of which the chief was ecclesiastical ambition
+pervaded by personal vanity.
+
+It gave him high satisfaction that both the great powers emulously
+courted the favour and friendship of his King, of which he seemed to
+have the disposal.
+
+In June 1520 took place within the English possessions on French soil
+the meeting between Henry VIII and Francis I, which is well designated
+as the Field of the Cloth of Gold. It was properly a great tournament,
+proclaimed in both nations, to which the chief lords yet once more
+gathered in all their splendour. With the festivities were mingled
+negociations in which the Cardinal of York played the chief part.
+
+Immediately before this in England, and just afterwards on the
+continent, Henry VIII met Charles V also, with less show but greater
+intimacy; the negociations here took the opposite direction.
+
+In 1521, when war had already broken out between the two great powers,
+the cardinal in his King's name undertook the part of mediator. There
+in Calais he sat to a certain degree in judgment on the European
+powers. The plenipotentiaries of both sovereigns laid their cases
+before him: with apparent zeal and much bustle he tried at least to
+conclude a truce: he complained once of the Emperor, that he
+disregarded his good advice though weighty and to the point: on which
+the latter did come a step nearer him. It was a magnificent position
+if he understood and maintained it. The more powerful both princes
+became, the more dangerous to the world their enmity should be, the
+more need there was of a mediating authority between them. But the
+purity of intention which is required to carry out such a task is
+seldom given to men, and did not exist in Wolsey. His ambition
+suggested plans to him which reached far beyond a peace arbitration.
+
+When he promoted that first interview with Francis I against the will
+of the great men and of the Queen of England, the Emperor's
+ambassadors, who were thrown into consternation by it, remarked that
+the French King must have promised him the Papacy, which however, they
+add, is rather in the Imperial than in the royal gift. It does not
+appear that the Emperor went quite so far at once, he only warned the
+cardinal against the untrustworthy promises of the French, and sought
+to bring him to the conviction--while making him the most advantageous
+offers--that he could expect everything from him.[82] Clear details he
+reserved till they met in person; and then he in fact drew him over
+completely to his side. Under Wolsey's influence King Henry,
+immediately on the outbreak of the war, gave out his intention of
+making common cause with the Emperor. For he had not, he said, so
+little understanding as not to see that the opportunity was thus
+offered him of carrying out his predecessors' claims and his own, and
+he wished to use it. Only he preferred not to commence war at once,
+since he was not yet armed, and since a broader alliance should be
+first formed. The cardinal hoped to be able to draw the Pope, the
+Swiss, and the Duke of Savoy, as well as the Kings of Portugal,
+Denmark, and Hungary, into it. What an impression then it must have
+made on him, when Pope Leo X, without being pressed, at once allied
+himself with the Emperor! Wolsey's attempt at mediation--no room for
+doubt about it is left by the documents that lie before us--was only
+meant as a means of gaining time. At Calais Wolsey had already given
+the imperial ambassadors, in the presence of the Papal Nuncio, the
+most definite assurances as to the resolution of his King to take part
+in the war against France. Before he returned to England to call the
+Parliament together, which was to vote the necessary ways and means,
+he visited the Emperor at Bruges. At the last negociations, being at
+times doubtful about his trustworthiness, Charles V held it doubly
+necessary to bind him by every tie to himself. He then spoke to him of
+the Papacy, and gave him his word that he would advance him to that
+dignity.[83]
+
+The opportunity for this came almost too soon. When Leo X died, just
+at this moment, Wolsey's hopes rose in stormy impatience. When the
+Emperor renewed his assurance to him, he demanded of him in plain
+terms to advance his then victorious troops to Rome, and put down by
+main force any resistance to the choice proposed. Before anything
+could be done, before the ambassador whom Henry VIII despatched at
+once to Italy reached it, the cardinals had already elected, and
+elected moreover the Emperor's former tutor, Hadrian. But was not this
+a proof of his irresistible authority? Hadrian's advanced age made it
+clear that there would be an early vacancy: and to this Wolsey now
+directed his hopes. He gave assurance that he would administer the
+Papacy for the sole advantage of the King and the Emperor: he thought
+then to overpower the French, and after completing this work he
+already saw himself in spirit directing his weapons to the East, to
+put an end to the Turkish rule. At his second visit to England the
+Emperor renewed his promise at Windsor castle; he spoke of it in his
+conferences with the King.[84] Altogether the closest alliance was
+concluded. The Emperor promised to marry Henry's daughter Mary,
+assuming that the Pope would grant him the necessary dispensation.
+Their claims to French territories they would carry out by a combined
+war. Should a difficulty occur between them, Cardinal Wolsey was fixed
+on as umpire.
+
+So did the alliance between the houses of Burgundy and Tudor come to
+pass, the basis of which was to be the annihilation of the power of
+the Valois, and into which the English minister threw his world-wide
+ambition. From England also a declaration of war now reached Francis
+I. Whilst the war in Italy and on the Spanish frontiers made the most
+successful progress, the English, in 1522 under Howard Earl of Surrey,
+in 1523 under Brandon Earl of Suffolk, both times in combination with
+Imperial troops, invaded France on the side of the Netherlands,
+invasions which, to say the least, very much hampered the French.
+Movements also manifested themselves within France itself, which awoke
+hopes in the King that he might make himself master of the French
+crown as easily as his father had once done of the English. Leo X had
+already been persuaded to absolve the subjects of Francis I from their
+oaths to him. It was in connexion with this that the second man in
+France, the Constable of Bourbon, slighted in his station, and
+endangered in his possessions, resolved to help himself by revolting
+from Francis I. He wished then to recognise no other King in France
+but Henry VIII: at a solemn moment, after receiving the sacrament, he
+communicated to the English ambassador, who was with him, his
+resolution to set the French crown on King Henry's head: he reckoned
+on a numerous party declaring for him. And in the autumn of 1523 it
+looked as if this project would be accomplished. Suffolk and Egmont
+pressed on to Montdidier without meeting with any resistance: it was
+thought that the Netherland and English forces would soon occupy the
+capital, and give a new form to the realm. Pope Hadrian was just dead
+at Rome; would not the united efforts of the Emperor and the King of
+England succeed, by their influence on the conclave, especially now
+that they were victorious, in really raising Wolsey to the tiara?
+
+This however did not happen. In Rome not Wolsey but Julius Medici was
+elected Pope; the combined Netherland and English troops retreated
+from Montdidier; Bourbon saw himself discovered and had to fly, no one
+declared for him. This last is doubtless to be ascribed to the
+vigilance and good conduct of King Francis, but in the retreat of the
+troops and in the election of the Pope other causes were at work. In
+the conclave Charles V certainly did not act with as much energy for
+Wolsey as the latter expected: Wolsey never forgave him. But he too
+has been accused of having basely abused the confidence of the two
+sovereigns: he had kept up friendly connexions all along with Francis
+I and his mother, and they likewise had given him pensions and
+presents: he had purposely supported the Earl of Suffolk so ill that
+he was forced to retreat.[85] Of all the complaints raised against
+him, not so much before the world as among those who were behind the
+scenes, this was exactly the most hateful and perhaps the most
+effectual.
+
+In 1524 the English took no active part in the war. Not till February
+1525, when the German and Spanish troops had won the great victory of
+Pavia and King Francis had fallen captive into the Emperor's hands,
+did their ambitious projects and thoughts of war reawaken.
+
+Henry VIII reminded the Emperor of his previous promises, and invited
+him to make a joint attack on France itself from both sides: they
+would join hands in Paris; Henry VIII should then be crowned King of
+France, but resign to the Emperor not merely Burgundy but also
+Provence and Languedoc, and cede to the Duke of Bourbon his old
+possessions and Dauphiné. The motive he alleges is very extraordinary:
+the Emperor would marry his daughter and heiress, and would at some
+future time inherit England and France also and then be monarch of the
+world.[86] Henry declares himself ready to press on with the utmost
+zeal, provided he can do it with some security, and himself undertake
+the conduct of the war in the Netherlands and the support of Bourbon.
+The letter is from Wolsey, full of copious and pressing conclusions;
+but should not the far-reaching nature of its contents have been a
+proof even to him that it could never be taken in earnest?
+
+Charles V could not possibly enter into the plan. He had lent it a
+hearing as long as it lay far away, but when it came actually close to
+view, it was very startling for him. The union of the crowns of France
+and England on the head of Henry VIII would in itself have deranged
+all European relations, above all it would have raised that
+untrustworthy man, who was still all powerful in his Council, to a
+most inconvenient height of power. The Spanish kingdoms too were
+pressing for the settlement of their succession. He was in the full
+maturity of manly youth: he could not wait for Mary of England who had
+barely completed her tenth year: he resolved to break off this
+connexion, and give his hand to a Portuguese princess, who was nearly
+of his own age.
+
+It could not be otherwise but that to the closest union, which was
+broken at the moment when it might well have been able to attain its
+object, the bitterest discord should succeed.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[77] Zurita Anales de Aragon v. 100. The Spanish ambassador who then
+negociated the marriage was Doctor Ruyz Gonzales de Puerta. But the
+idea was much older: in 1492 at the first alliance mention was made of
+it (v. II); in the recently published Journal of an English Embassy to
+Spain, there appears in March 1489, 'donne Katherine al notre princess
+de Angleterre.' Memorial of Henry VII, 180.
+
+[78] Zurita v. 221. 'La princesa fue recibida con tanta alegria
+communemente de todos, que affirmavan aver de ser esta causa, no solo
+de muy grande paz y presperidad de sodo a' quel reyno, pero de la
+union del y de los estados de Flandes.'
+
+[79] Zurita vi. 193. 'Por que el rey Luys cada dia se yva haziendo mas
+poderoso y no teniendo el rey de Inglaterra confederation y adherencia
+con los que avian de ser enemigos forçosos del rey de Francia, quedava
+aquel reyno en grande peligro.'
+
+[80] He accepts the doctrine: 'Christi vicarium nullum in terris
+judicem habere nosque ei debere vel dyscholo auscultare.' Lettres de
+Louys XII, iii. 307.
+
+[81] As it is said in Cavendish, Cardinalis Eboracensis:--
+
+ 'My byldynges somptious, the roffes with gold and byse
+ Craftely entaylled as conning could devise,
+ With images embossed most lively.'
+
+[82] In an opinion given at Corunna it is said that he must be
+persuaded, 'qu'il prende pour agreable et accepte ce que l'empereur
+lui a offert, luy traynant d'une souppe en miel parmy la bouche, que
+n'est le (que du) bien, que l'empereur luy veut (20 April 1520).'
+Monumenta Habsburgica ii. 1. 177, 183.
+
+[83] In a letter to his ambassador, the Bishop of Badajoz, the Emperor
+mentions 'les propos, que luy (au cardinal) avons tenu a Bruges
+touchants la papalité.' Monumenta Habsburgica ii. 1. 501.
+
+[84] Wolsey mentions in his letter to the King 'the conference and
+communications, which he (the Emperor) had with your grace in that
+behalf.' In Burnet iii. Records p. 11.
+
+[85] Du Bellay au Grandmaistre 17 October 1529, in Le Grand, Histoire
+du divorce iii. 374: 'Que il avait toujours en tems de paix et de
+guerre intelligence secrette a Madame, de la quelle la dicte guerre
+durant, il avoit eu des grants presens, qui furent cause, que Suffolc
+estant a Montdidier il ne le secourut d'argent comme il devoit dont
+advint que il ne print Paris.'
+
+[86] The Instructions to Tunstall and Wingfield (30 March 1525),
+hitherto known only from the extract in Fiddes, are now printed in the
+State Papers vi. 333. Compare my German History, Bk. IV. ch. 2, but
+the statement there made needs revision in accordance with the
+newly-found documents.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ORIGIN OF THE DIVORCE QUESTION.
+
+
+Perhaps it is not a matter of such very great weight whether the
+Emperor did his best for Wolsey in the conclave, or Wolsey his best
+for the Emperor in the campaign of 1523. That the result did not
+correspond to the expectations on either side was quite enough to
+bring about an estrangement. What could the Emperor do with an English
+minister who was not in a condition to support warlike enterprises
+properly? what could the English do with an ally who appropriated to
+himself exclusively the advantages of the victory they had won? Henry
+VIII, while trying to win the French crown, had only weakened it, and
+thereby given the house of Burgundy a preponderance in European
+affairs, by which all other powers, and himself as well, felt
+themselves threatened.
+
+After the battle of Pavia a feeling prevailed throughout the world
+that the rule of Spain and Burgundy would be intolerable, if France
+were no longer independent. The ministers of the Pope in Rome first
+came to a consciousness of this: as the best means of restoring the
+balance, they looked to the dissolution of the alliance between Henry
+VIII and Charles V. The Pope's Datary, Giberti, made approaches to the
+English Court, though still with timid caution, in order in the first
+place only to propose a reconciliation between England and France.[87]
+
+To his joy he remarked that Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolsey were more
+inclined to this plan than he had expected. If not before yet
+certainly since his alienation from the Emperor, the cardinal had
+entered into secret negociations with the mother of the King of
+France: the last proposals to the Emperor had been only an attempt to
+turn the success of his arms to the advantage of England also: when he
+rejected them, the cardinal entered into the French connexion with
+increased zeal. Before the end of the summer of 1523 peace between
+England and France was effected with the sympathising co-operation of
+Rome.
+
+In it the Regent Louise accepted the conditions laid down by the
+cardinal: she did not neglect to secure him by a considerable pension.
+From the beginning she had on her side also tried to excite his
+world-wide ambition; for Francis I and Henry VIII, if once they became
+friends, would do noble deeds to their own-undying renown and to the
+glory of God, and the direction of their enterprises would fall to the
+cardinal.[88]
+
+Even after Henry VIII abandoned him, the Emperor still kept the upper
+hand. He extorted the Peace of Madrid; the League of the Italian
+princes with France, by which its execution was to have been hindered,
+and to which England lent her moral support without actually joining
+it, led Charles V to new victories, to the conquest of Rome, and hence
+to a position in the world which now did really threaten the freedom
+of all other nations. The necessary result was that France and England
+drew still more closely together. Cardinal Wolsey appeared in France;
+a close alliance was concluded and (not without considerable English
+help) an army sent into the field, which in fact gained the upper hand
+in Italy and restored to the Pope, who had escaped to Orvieto, some
+feeling of independence. Soon the largest projects were formed on this
+side also, in which the two Kings expected to have the Pope entirely
+with them. The French declared their wish to conquer Naples and never
+restore it to the Emperor, not even under the most favourable
+conditions. Wolsey thought that the Pope might pronounce the
+deposition of the Emperor in Naples and even in the Empire, for which
+certain German electors could be won over; he boasted that he would
+bring about such a revolution as had not been seen for a century.
+
+It was at this crisis in the general situation, and when an attempt
+was being made to direct politics towards the annihilation of the
+Emperor, that the thought occurred of dissolving Henry VIII's marriage
+with the Emperor's aunt, the Infanta Catharine.
+
+It is very possible, as a contemporary tradition informs us, that
+Wolsey was instigated to this by personal feelings. His arrogant and
+wanton proceedings, offensive by their excesses, and withal showing
+all the priestly love of power, were hateful to the inmost soul of the
+pure and earnest Queen. She is said to have once reproached him with
+them, and to have even repelled his unbecoming behaviour with a
+threatening word, and he on his part to have sworn to overthrow
+her.[89] But this personal motive first became permanently important
+when joined with a more general one. The Queen was by no means so
+entirely shut out from the events of the day as has been asserted; in
+moments of difficulty we find her summoning the members of the Privy
+Council before her to discuss the pending questions with them. When
+Wolsey began a life and death struggle with the Emperor, the influence
+of the Queen, whose most lively sympathies were with her nephew, stood
+not a little in his way; it was his chief interest to remove her.
+
+It was indeed the feeling of the time, that family unions and
+political alliances must go hand in hand. At the very first proposal
+for a reconciliation between England and France, Giberti had advised
+the marriage of the English princess Mary, who had been rejected by
+the Emperor, with a French prince, and there had been much negociation
+about it. But owing to the extreme youth of the princess it was soon
+felt that this would not lead to the desired end. If a definitive
+rupture was to take place between England and the Burgundo-Spanish
+power, Henry VIII's marriage with Catharine must be dissolved and room
+thus made for a French princess. This marriage however was itself the
+result of that former state of politics which had led to the first war
+with France. Wolsey formed the plan of marrying his King, in
+Catharine's stead, with the sister or even with the daughter of
+Francis I who was now growing up:[90] then only would the alliance
+between the two powers become indissoluble. When he was in France in
+1527, he said to the Regent, the King's mother, that within a year she
+would live to see two things, the most complete separation of his
+sovereign from Spain, and his indissoluble union with France.[91]
+
+But to these motives of foreign policy was now added an extremely
+important reason of home policy: this lay in the precarious state of
+the Succession.
+
+When the King several years before was congratulated on the birth of
+his daughter, with an intimation that the birth of a son might have
+been still more acceptable, he replied quickly, they were both still
+young, he and his wife, why should they not still have a son? But
+gradually this hope had ceased, and as hitherto no Queen had ever
+reigned in her own right in England, the opinion gained ground that at
+the King's death the throne would fall vacant. It had a little before
+created a party among the people for the Duke of Buckingham, when he
+maintained that he was the nearest heir to the crown, and would not
+let it be taken from him. He had been executed for this: Mary's right
+to the succession met with no further opposition; but even so it was
+still always a doubtful future that lay before the country. People
+wished to marry Mary at one time to the Emperor, at another to the
+King or a prince of France: so that her claim to the inheritance of
+the crown should pass to the house of Burgundy or to that of Valois.
+But how dangerous this was for the independence of the country! Henry
+would surely not have lost himself in Wolsey's intrigues, had he had a
+son and heir, to represent the independent interests of England.
+
+In other times relations of this kind would have probably been
+reckoned as in themselves sufficient reason for a divorce: but not so
+in that age. The very essence of marriage lies in this, that it raises
+the union, on which the family and the order of the world rests, above
+the momentary variations of the will and the inclination; by the
+sanction of the Church it becomes one of that series of religious
+institutions which set limits on every side to individual caprice. No
+one yet dared so far to deny the religious character of marriage, as
+to have avowed mere political views in wishing for a separation,
+either before the world, or even to himself. But now there was no want
+of spiritual reasons which might be brought forward for it. The King's
+own confessor revived the doubts in him which had once been raised
+before his marriage with his brother's widow. And when the King was
+then reminded that such a marriage had been expressly forbidden in the
+books of Moses, and threatened with the punishment of childlessness,
+how could it fail to make an impression on him, when this threat
+seemed to be strictly fulfilled in his case? Two boys had been born to
+him from this marriage, but both had died soon after their birth. Even
+within the Catholic Church it had been always a moot point whether the
+Pope could dispense with a law of Scripture. The divine punishment
+inflicted on the King, as he thought, seemed to prove that the Pope's
+dispensation (encroaching as it did on the region of the divine
+power), on the strength of which the marriage had been concluded, had
+not the validity ascribed to it. Scruples of this sort cannot be said
+to be a mere pretence; they have something of the half belief, half
+superstition, so peculiarly characteristic of the spirit of the age
+and of that of the King. And none could yet foresee what results they
+implicitly involved.
+
+It still appeared possible that the Pope would revoke the dispensation
+given by one of his predecessors, especially as some grounds of
+invalidity could be found in the bull itself. Wolsey's idea was that
+the Pope, in the pressing necessity he was under of ranging England
+and France against the preponderance of the Emperor, could be brought
+to consent to recall the dispensation, and this would make the
+marriage null and void from the beginning. Always full of arrogant
+assumption of an influence to which nothing could be impossible,
+Wolsey assured the King that he would carry the matter through.[92]
+
+When tidings of this proposal first reached Rome, those immediately
+around the Pope took special notice of the political advantages that
+might accrue from it. For hitherto there was a doubt whether Henry
+VIII was really so decidedly in favour of France as was said: a
+project like this, which would make him and the Emperor enemies for
+ever, left no room for doubt about it. When the Pope saw himself
+secure of this support in reserve, his word, in a matter which
+concerned the highest personal and civil interests, acquired new
+weight even with the Emperor.[93]
+
+It is undeniable that the Pope at first expressed himself favourably.
+It appeared to make an especial impression on him, that the want of a
+male heir might cause a civil war in England, and that this must be
+disadvantageous to the Church as well.[94] He only asked not to be
+pressed as long as he was in danger of experiencing the worst
+extremities from the overwhelming power of the Emperor. In the spring
+of 1528, when the French army advanced victoriously into the
+Neapolitan territory and drove back the Emperor's forces to the
+capital, Wolsey's request for full powers to inquire into the affair
+in England was taken into earnest consideration by the Pope. It was at
+Orvieto, in the Pope's working room, which was also his
+sleeping-chamber: a couple of cardinals, the Dean of the Roman Rota,
+and the English plenipotentiaries sat round the Pope, to talk over the
+case thoroughly. One of the cardinals declared himself against the
+Commission demanded by Wolsey, since such a grant contravened the
+usage of the last centuries in the Roman tribunals; the Pope answered,
+that in a matter concerning a King who had done such service to the
+Holy See, they might well deviate from the usual forms; he actually
+delegated this Commission to Cardinal Campeggi, whom the English
+esteemed as their friend, and to Wolsey.
+
+By this nothing was yet effected: it even appears as though Clement
+VII had given tranquillising promises to the Emperor; the Bishop of
+Bayonne declared that the Pope's intention was thus to keep both sides
+dependent on him--but it was at all events one step on the road once
+taken, which aroused hope in England that it would lead to the desired
+end.
+
+But let us picture to ourselves the enormous difficulty of the case.
+It lay above all in the inner significance of the question itself. In
+his first interview with Henry VIII Campeggi remarks that the King was
+completely convinced of the invalidity of the Papal dispensation,
+which could not extend to Scripture precepts. No argument could move
+him from this; he answered like a good theologian and jurist. Campeggi
+says, an angel from heaven would not make him change his opinion. He
+could not but see that Wolsey cherished the same view.
+
+But was it possible for the Roman court to yield in this and to revoke
+a dispensation, which involved the very substance of its spiritual
+omnipotence? It would have thus only strengthened, and in reality
+confessed, the antagonism against its authority which was based on
+Holy Scripture. Campeggi could not yield a hair's breadth.
+
+The only solution lay--and Campeggi was authorised to attempt it--in
+inducing Queen Catharine to renounce her place and dignity. Soon after
+his arrival he represented to her at length how much depended on it
+for her and the world, and promised her that in return not only all
+else should be secured to her that she could desire, but above all
+that the succession of her daughter also should be guaranteed. The
+wish, in which both Pope and King agreed, that she should enter a
+convent, Campeggi at first did not mention to her; he thought she
+would herself seek for some expedient. But she avoided this. Campeggi
+had spoken to her in the name of the Pope: she only said she thought
+to abide till death in obedience to the precepts of God and of the
+Church: she would ask for counsellors from the King, would consult
+with them, and then communicate to the Holy Father what her conscience
+bade her. Her consent still remained possible. This gained, the legate
+would have no need to mention further the validity or invalidity of
+the dispensation. He was still hoping for it, when Wolsey came to him
+one morning early (26 Oct. 1528) and told him the Queen had asked the
+King for leave to make her confession to him (Campeggi), and had
+obtained it. A couple of hours later the Queen appeared before him.
+She told him of her earlier marriage, which was never really
+consummated; that she had remained as unchanged by it as she had been
+from her mother's womb; and this destroyed all grounds for the
+divorce. Campeggi was however far from drawing such a conclusion; he
+advised her in plain terms to make a vow and enter a convent,
+repeating the motives stated before, to which he now added the example
+of a Queen of France. But his words died away without effect. Queen
+Catharine declared positively that she would never act thus; she was
+called by God to her marriage, and resolved to live and die in it. A
+judgment might be pronounced in this matter; if the marriage was
+declared to be invalid, she would submit, she would then be as free as
+the King; but without this she would hold fast to her marriage union.
+She protested, in the strongest terms conceivable, that they might
+kill her, they might tear her limb from limb, yet she would not change
+her mind; had she two lives, she would lay them both down in such a
+cause. It would be better, she said, for the Pope to try to divert the
+King from his design; he would then be able to trust all the more in
+the inclination of her kinsman the Emperor to help in bringing about a
+peace.
+
+In the presence of the counsellors given her at her wish, both legates
+repeated two days later in a formal audience their admonition to the
+Queen not to insist on a definite decision; but already Campeggi had
+little hope left; he was astonished that the lady, usually so prudent,
+should in the midst of peril so obstinately reject judicious
+advice.[95]
+
+The question between King and Queen was, we might say, also of a
+dogmatic nature. Had the Pope the right to dispense with the laws of
+Scripture or had he not? The Queen accepted it as it had been accepted
+in recent times, especially as the presupposed conditions of a
+marriage had not been fulfilled in her case. The King rejected it
+under all circumstances, in agreement with scholars and the rising
+public opinion.
+
+But into this question various other general and personal reasons now
+intruded themselves. If the question were answered in the negative
+Wolsey held firmly to the view of forming an indissoluble union
+between France and England, of securing the succession by the King's
+marriage with a French princess, of restoring universal peace; to this
+he added the project, as he once actually said in confidential
+discourse, of reforming the English laws, doubtless in an
+ecclesiastical and monarchic sense; if he had once accomplished all
+this, he would retire, to serve God during the rest of his life.
+
+But he had already (and a sense of it seems almost to be expressed in
+these last words so unlike his usual mode of thought) ceased to be in
+agreement with his King. Henry VIII wished for the divorce, the
+establishment of his succession by male offspring, friendship with
+France, and Peace: but he did not care for the French marriage. He was
+some years younger than his wife, who inclined to the Spanish forms of
+strict devotion, and regarded as wasted the hours which she spent at
+her dressing table. Henry VIII was addicted to knightly exercises of
+arms, he loved pleasant company, music, and art; we cannot call him a
+gross voluptuary, but he was not faithful to his wife: he already had
+a natural son; he was ever entangled in new connexions of this kind.
+Many letters of his survive, in which a tincture of fancy and even of
+tenderness is coupled with a thorough sensuousness; just in the
+fashion of the romances of chivalry which were then being first
+printed and were much read. At that time Anne Boleyn, a lady who had
+lately returned from France, and appeared from time to time at Court,
+saw him at her feet; she was not exactly of ravishing beauty, but full
+of spirit and grace and with a certain reserve. While she resisted the
+King, she held him all the faster.[96]
+
+The reasons of home and foreign policy mentioned above, and even the
+religious scruples, have their weight; but we cannot shut our eyes to
+the fact that this new passion, nourished on the expectation of the
+divorce which was not unconditionally refused by the spiritual power,
+gave the strongest personal impulse to carry the affair through.
+
+The position of parties in the State also influenced it. Wolsey who
+had diminished the consequence of the great lords, and kept them down,
+and offended them by his pride, was heartily hated by them. Adorned
+though he was with the most brilliant honours of the Church, yet for
+the great men of the realm he was nothing but an upstart: they had
+never quite given up the hope of living to see his fall. But if he
+brought the French marriage to pass, as he designed, he would have won
+lasting support and have become stronger than ever. Besides the great
+men took the Burgundian side, not that they wished to make the Emperor
+lord of the world, but on the other hand they did not want a war with
+him: merchants and farmers saw that a war with the Netherlands, where
+they sold their wool, would be an injury to all. When Wolsey flattered
+the Pope with the hope of an attack on the Netherlands, he was, the
+Bishop of Bayonne assures us, the only man in the country who thought
+of it. He felt keenly the universal antipathy which he had awakened,
+and spoke of the efforts and devices he would have need of, to
+maintain himself.
+
+It was therefore just what the nobles wanted, that Wolsey fell out
+with the King in a matter of such engrossing nature, and that they
+found another means of access to him.
+
+The Boleyns were not of noble origin, but had been for some time
+connected with the leading families. Geoffrey the founder of the house
+had raised himself by success in business and good conduct to the
+dignity of Lord Mayor of London. His son William married the daughter
+of the only Irish peer who had a seat and vote in the English
+Parliament, Sir Thomas Ormond de Rochefort, Earl of Wiltshire. His
+titles passed through his daughter to his grandsons, of whom one,
+Thomas Boleyn, was created Viscount Rochefort, and married the
+daughter of the Duke of Norfolk; his daughter was Anne Boleyn: she
+took high rank and an especially distinguished position in English
+society because her uncle, Thomas Duke of Norfolk, was Henry VIII's
+chief lay minister (he held the place of High Treasurer) and was at
+the same time the leading man of the nobility. He had the reputation
+of being versed in business, cultivated, and shrewd; he was Wolsey's
+natural opponent. That the King showed an inclination to his niece,
+against the cardinal's views, was for him and his friends a great
+point gained.[97] It was soon seen that Anne's influence had obtained
+the recall of an opponent of Wolsey, who had insulted him and was
+banished from the Court.[98] It was of the greatest importance for
+home affairs, that the King was inclined to make Anne Boleyn his wife.
+The English kings in general did not think marriages in their own rank
+essential. Henry's own grandfather, Edward IV, had married a lady of
+by no means distinguished origin. It was seen beforehand that, if this
+happened, Wolsey could not maintain himself, and authority would again
+fall into the hands of the chief families. Even the cardinal's old
+friend, the Earl of Suffolk, now joined this combination: the whole
+of the nobility sided with it.
+
+But besides this the chief foreign affairs took a turn which made it
+impossible to carry out Wolsey's political ideas. In the summer of
+1528 the attacks of the allies on Naples were repulsed, and their
+armies annihilated. In the spring of 1529 the Emperor got the upper
+hand in Lombardy also. How utterly then did the oft-proposed plan, of
+depriving him of the supreme dignity, sink into nothingness: he was
+stronger than ever in Italy. The Pope was fortunate in not having
+joined the allies more closely; the relations of the States of the
+Church with Tuscany made a union with the Emperor necessary; he had a
+horror of a new quarrel with him. And as the Emperor now took up the
+interests of his mother's sister in the most earnest manner, and
+protested against proceeding by a Commission granted for England, the
+Pope could not possibly let the affair go on unchecked. When the
+English ambassadors pressed him, he exclaimed to them (for apart from
+this he would gladly have shown more favour to the King) that he felt
+himself as it were between anvil and hammer. Divers proposals were
+made, one more extraordinary than the other, if only the King would
+give up his demand;[99] but this was no longer possible. The two
+cardinals, Campeggi and Wolsey, had to begin judicial proceedings:
+King and Queen appeared before the Court, Articles were put forward,
+witnesses heard: the Correspondence shows that the King and Anne
+Boleyn expected with much confidence a speedy and favourable
+decision.[100] Wolsey too did not yet abandon this hope. It was
+thought at the time that he did not do all he might have done for it,
+that in fact he no longer favoured it, seeing as he did that it would
+turn out to the advantage of his rivals.[101] But it was in truth his
+fate, that the consequences of the design which originated with him
+recoiled on his own head. If it succeeded, it must be disadvantageous
+to him: if it failed, he was lost. The exhortations he addressed to
+the French Court, to exert yet once more its whole influence with the
+Papal Court for this matter, sound like a cry of distress in extreme
+peril. He had only undertaken it to unite France and England; the
+thing was reasonable and practicable, the Pope would not wish by
+refusing it to offend both crowns at once; he would value it more
+highly than if he himself were raised to the Papacy. But he had now to
+find that King Francis, as well as Pope Clement, was seeking a
+separate peace with the Emperor. Wolsey had given Henry the strongest
+assurances on this point, that such a thing would never happen, France
+would never separate herself from him. But yet this now happened, and
+how could any influence from that quarter on the Roman Court be still
+expected in favour of England, in a matter which was so highly
+offensive to the Emperor! The legates received from Rome distinct
+instructions to proceed slowly, and in no case to pronounce a
+decision.[102] While King Henry and those around him were eagerly
+expecting it, the cardinals (using the holidays of the Roman Rota as a
+pretence) announced the suspension of their proceedings.
+
+It appeared in an instant into what a violent ebullition of wrath,
+which unsettled every thing, the King fell in consequence; it seemed
+as if all his past way of governing had been a mistake. In
+contradiction to many of the older traditions of English history he
+had hitherto ruled chiefly through ecclesiastics to the disgust of the
+lay lords: now he betook himself to the latter, to complain of the
+proceedings of the two cardinals. These were still in the hall where
+they had sat, when Suffolk and some other lords appeared, and bade
+them bring the matter to an end without delay, even if it were by a
+peremptory decree, that might be issued on the next day, on which the
+holidays would not have begun. But the prorogation was in fact only
+the form under which the cardinals fulfilled their orders from Rome;
+they could not possibly recall it. Suffolk broke out into the
+exclamation that cardinals and legates had never brought good to
+England. The two spiritual lords looked at each other with amazement.
+Had they any feeling that his words contained a declaration of war on
+the part of the lay element in the State against ecclesiastical and
+foreign influences in general? Wolsey, at any rate, could not shut his
+eyes to the significance of such a war. He often said that what Henry
+VIII took in hand he could not be brought to give up by any
+representations; he had sometimes tried it, he had fallen at his feet,
+but it had been always in vain.
+
+Henry contained himself yet a while, as hopes had been given him that
+the proceedings might be resumed. But when a Breve came, by which
+Clement VII recalled his Commission and evoked the question of the
+divorce to Rome, he saw clearly that the influence of the Emperor in
+the Pope's Council had quite gained the upper hand over his own on
+this point. He was resolved not to submit to it. Had he not, before
+the mayor and aldermen of London, declared with a certain solemnity
+his resolution to carry through the divorce for the good of the land?
+his passion and his ambition had joined hands for this purpose before
+the eyes of the country. To prevent the need of recoiling, he formed a
+plan of incalculable importance, the plan of separating his nation and
+his kingdom from the spiritual jurisdiction of the Roman See.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[87] 'Giberto al Vescovo di Bajusa. 3 Luglio. Ci sono avisi
+d'Ingliterra de' 14 del passalo che mostrano gli animi di la e
+massimamente Eboracense non dico inclinati ma accesi di desiderio di
+concordia con Francia'.... Lettere di principi I. 168.
+
+[88] 'Le dit Cardinal sera conducteur, moderateur et gouverneur de
+toutes les entreprises.' The Regent's Instructions in Brinon,
+Captivité de François I. 57.
+
+[89] Riccardus Scellejus de prima causa divortii (Bibliotheca
+Magliabecch. at Florence). 'Catharina ita stomachata est, ut de
+Vulseji potentia minuenda cogitationem susciperet, quod ille cum
+sensisset, qui ab astrologo suo accepisset, sibi a muliere exitium
+imminere, de regina de gradu dejicienda consilium inivit.'
+
+[90] Lodovico Falier, Relatione di 1531 'avendo trattato, di dargli a
+sorella del Cristianissimo adesso maritata al re di Navarra, gli
+promese di far tanto con S. Sta che disfacesse le nozze.'
+
+[91] Du Bellay au Grandmaistre 21 October 1528; after Wolsey's own
+narrative in Le Grand, Histoire du divorce de Henri VIII, iii. 186.
+
+[92] He says so himself. Bellay's letter in Le Grand iii. 318.
+
+[93] In Sanga to Gambara, 9 February 1528. L. d. p. ii. 85. 'La cosa
+che V. S. sa, che non potrà seguire senza gran rottura, fa S. S.
+facile a creder che posse essere ciò che dice (Lotrec).
+
+[94] 'Considering the nature of men, being prone into novelties--the
+realm of England would not only enter into their accustomed divisions,
+but also would owe or do small devotion unto the church: wherefore his
+Holiness was right well content and ready to adhibit all remedy that
+in him was possible as in this time would serve.' Knight to the
+Cardinal, 1 Jan. 1528, in Burnet i. Collect. p. 22.
+
+[95] Incorrupta. Campeggi's letters to Sanga, 17, 26, 28 Oct. 1528.
+Laemmer, Monumenta Vaticana, 18 Oct. p. 25 seq. He gives his motive
+for communicating what the Queen said to him in confession as being
+her own wish. The archives too have long kept their secret.
+
+[96] According to Ricc. Scellejus, she prays the King, 'ne pergat suam
+oppugnare castitatem, quae dos erat maxima, quam posset futuro offerre
+marito, quaque violanda reginam etiam dominam proderet,--quoniam se
+illi fidelitatis sacramento obligasset.'
+
+[97] It seemed helpful to their working against the cardinal.
+Particularities of the life of Queen Anne, in Singer's Cavendish ii.
+187.
+
+[98] Du Bellay in Le Grand iii. 296. 'Le duc de Norfolk et sa ande
+commencent deja à parler gros (28 Jan. 1520).'
+
+[99] In a letter of Sanga to Campeggi (Lettere di diversi autori
+eccellenti p. 60), we read the following words: 'In quanto alla
+dispensa di maritar il figliolo con la figliola del re, se con haver
+in questa maniera stabilita la successione S. M. si rimanesse del
+primo pensiero della dissolutions S. Bne inclineria assai Più.' This
+looks as if a marriage between Henry VIII's natural son and Mary was
+spoken of.--So I wrote previously. The thing is quite true. Campeggi
+writes 28 Oct. to Sanga. 'Han pensato si maritar la (la figliola) con
+dispensa di S. Sta al figlio natural del re, a che haveva pensato
+anch'io per stabilimento della successione.' (Monumenta Vaticana p.
+30.)
+
+[100] Sanga to Campeggi 2 Sept. 1528 in the Lettere di diversi autori
+eccellenti, Venetia 1556, p. 40. 'V. Sra. vedra l'esito che ha havuto
+l'impresa del regno.--Bisogna che S. Bne vedendo l'imperatore
+vittorioso non si precipiti a dare all'imperatore causa di nuova
+rottura.... Sia almanco avvertita di non lasciarsi costringere a
+pronuntiare senza nuova et expressa commissione di qua.'
+
+[101] Falier says so very positively.
+
+[102] Sanga 29 May. 'S. Bne ricorda che il procedere sia lento et in
+modo alcuno non si venghi al giudicio.' Of the same date is Bellay's
+letter in which those exhortations of Wolsey to the French Court are
+contained.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE SEPARATION OF THE ENGLISH CHURCH.
+
+
+Already at Orvieto Stephen Gardiner had told the Pope that, if the
+King did not obtain justice from him, he would do himself justice in
+his own kingdom. Later it was plainly declared to the Pope that, if
+they saw the Emperor had the ascendancy in his Council, the nobility
+of England with the King at their head would feel themselves compelled
+to cast off obedience to Rome. It seems as though the Roman Court
+however had no real fear of this. For the King, so they said, would do
+himself most damage by such a step.[103] The Papal Nuncio declared
+himself positively convinced, that it was necessary to deal with the
+English sharply and forcibly, if one would gain their respect.
+
+But these tendencies were more deeply rooted among the English than
+was remembered at Rome. They went back as far as the Articles of
+Clarendon, the projects of King John, the antipapal agitation under
+Edward III; the present question which involved an exceptionable and
+personal motive, exposed to public disapprobation, nevertheless
+touched on the deepest interests of the country. The wish to make the
+succession safe was perfectly justifiable. According to Clement VII's
+own declarations, the English were convinced that he was only hindered
+by regard for the Emperor from coming to a decision which was
+essential to them. His vacillation is very intelligible, very natural:
+but it did not correspond to the idea of the dignity with which he was
+clothed. There was to be an independent supreme Pontiff for this very
+reason, that right might be done in the quarrels of princes, without
+respect of persons, according to the state of the case. It clashed
+with the idea of the Papacy that alterations of political relations
+exercised such a decisive influence as they did in this matter. There
+was indeed something degrading for the English in their being made to
+feel the reaction of the Emperor's Italian victory, and his
+preponderance, in their weightiest affairs.
+
+Henry VIII had now made up his mind to throw off that ecclesiastical
+subjection, which was politically so disadvantageous; the
+circumstances were very favourable. It was the time at which some
+German principalities, and the kingdoms of the North, had given
+themselves a constitution which rested on the exclusion of the
+hierarchic influences of Rome: the King could reckon on many allies in
+his enterprise. Moreover he had no dangerous hostilities to fear, as
+long as the jealousy lasted between the Emperor and King Francis.
+Between them Henry VIII needed only to revert to his natural policy of
+neutrality.
+
+And the accomplishment of the affair was already prepared in the
+country itself, through no one more than through Cardinal Wolsey.
+
+The dignity of legate, which was granted him by Pope Leo, and then
+prolonged for five, for ten years, and at last for life, gave him a
+comprehensive spiritual authority. He obtained by it the right of
+visiting and reforming all ecclesiastical persons and institutions,
+even those which possessed a legal exemption of their own. Some orders
+of monks, which contended against it, were reduced to obedience by new
+bulls. But from the visitation of the monasteries Wolsey proceeded to
+their suppression: he united old convents (such as that one which has
+brought down to recent times the name of an Anglo-Saxon king's
+daughter, Frideswitha, from the eighth century) with the splendid
+colleges which he endowed so richly, for the advancement of learning
+and the renown of his name, at Oxford and at Ipswich. His courts
+included all branches of the ecclesiastical and mixed jurisdiction,
+and the King had no scruple in arming him with all the powers of the
+crown which were necessary for the government of the Church. What
+aspirations then arose are shewn by the compact which Wolsey made with
+King Francis I to counteract the influence which the Emperor might
+exert over the captive Pope. When it was settled in this, that
+whatever the cardinal and the English prelates should enact with the
+King's consent should have the force of law, does not this imply at
+least a temporary schism?
+
+When Clement became free, he named Wolsey his Vicar-General for the
+English Church: his position was again to be what it had been from the
+beginning, the expression of the unity between the Pope and the Crown.
+But now how if this were dissolved? The victorious Emperor exercised a
+still greater influence over the Pope when free than he had ever done
+over him when captive. Under these circumstances Wolsey submitted to
+the supreme spiritual power, the King resolved to withstand it: it was
+exactly on this point that open discord broke out between them. For a
+time the cardinal seemed still to maintain his courage; but when on
+St. Luke's day--the phrase ran that the evangelist had disevangelised
+him--the great seal was taken from him, he lost all self-reliance.
+Wolsey was not a Ximenes or a Richelieu. He had no other support than
+the King's favour; without this he fell back into his nothingness. He
+was heard to wail like a child: the King comforted him by a token of
+favour, probably however less out of personal sympathy than because he
+could not be yet quite dispensed with.[104] The High Treasurer,
+Norfolk, who generally acted as first minister, received the seals,
+and held them till some time afterwards Thomas More was named
+Chancellor. While these administered affairs in London, Suffolk, as
+President of the Privy Council, was to accompany the King in person.
+The chief direction of the administration passed over to the two
+leading lay lords.
+
+Henry VIII's resolution to call the Parliament together was of almost
+greater importance for the progress of events than the alteration in
+the ministry.
+
+During the fourteen years of his administration Wolsey had summoned
+Parliament only once, and that was when, in order to carry on the war
+in alliance with the Emperor against France, he needed an
+extraordinary grant of money. But his opening discourses were received
+with silence and dislike. Never, says a contemporary who was present,
+was the need of money more pressingly represented to a Parliament and
+never was there greater opposition; after a fortnight's consultation
+the proposal only passed at a moment when the members of the King's
+household and court formed the majority of those present.[105] The
+Parliament and the country always murmured at Wolsey's oppressive and
+lavish finance management;[106] a later attempt to raise taxes that
+had not been voted doubled the outcry against him. His fall and the
+convocation of a Parliament seemed a return to parliamentary
+principles in general, which in themselves exactly agreed with the
+view taken by the King in the present questions.
+
+In the first years of Henry VIII the Parliament had wished to do away
+with some of the most startling exemptions of the clergy from the
+temporal jurisdiction, for instance in reference to the crimes of
+felony and murder; the ecclesiastics had on the other hand extended
+their jurisdiction yet further, even to cases that had reference
+solely to questions of property. Hence the antagonism between the two
+jurisdictions had revived at that time with bitter keenness. It is
+noticeable that the temporal claims were upheld by a learned Minorite,
+Henry Standish, who declared it to be quite lawful to limit the
+ecclesiastical privileges for the sake of the public good; especially
+in the case of a crime that did not properly come before any spiritual
+court. Both sides then applied to the King: the ecclesiastics reminded
+him that he ought to uphold the rights of Holy Church, the laymen that
+he should maintain the powers of jurisdiction belonging to the crown.
+The King's declaration was favourable to the laymen; he recommended
+the clergy to acquiesce in some exceptions from their decretals. But
+the contest was rather suspended than decided. Wolsey's government
+followed, in which the spiritual courts extended their powers still
+further, and in reality exercised an offensive control over all the
+relations of private life. Even the ecclesiastics did not love his
+authority: they acquiesced in it because it was ecclesiastical: the
+laity endured it with the utmost impatience.
+
+It was inevitable that at the first fresh assembly of a Parliament
+these contests about jurisdiction should be mentioned. The Lower House
+began its action with a detailed charge against the spiritual courts,
+not merely against their abuses and the oppression that arose from
+them, but against their very existence and their legislation; the
+clergy made laws without the King's foreknowledge, without the
+participation of any laymen, and yet the laity were bound by them. The
+King was called on to reconcile his subjects of the spiritual and
+temporal estate with each other by good laws, since he was their sole
+head, the sovereign, lord and protector of both parties.
+
+It was a slight phrase,[107] 'the sole head of his subjects spiritual
+and temporal,' but one of the weightiest import. The very existence of
+the clergy as an order had hitherto depended precisely on their claim
+to a legislative power independent of the temporal supremacy as being
+their original right: on its universal maintenance rested the Papacy
+and its influence on the several countries. Were the clergy now to
+leave it to the King, who however only represented the temporal power,
+to adjust the differences between their legislation and that of the
+state? Were they, like the laity, virtually to recognise him as their
+Head?
+
+It is clear that they would thus sever themselves from the great union
+under one spiritual Head, from the constitution of the Latin Church.
+Whoever it was that introduced the word 'Head,' no doubt had this in
+view. The King and the laity took it up, they wished only to induce
+the clergy themselves to come to a resolution in this sense.
+
+The chief motive which was to serve this purpose is connected with the
+lordship which the Popes possessed in England in the thirteenth
+century, or rather with the reaction against it which went on
+throughout the fourteenth. This is most distinctly expressed in the
+statutes of 1393, which threatened with the severest penalties all
+participation in any attempt, to the injury of the King's supremacy,
+to obtain a church-benefice from Rome; and this too even where the
+King had given his consent to it. Clergy and laity were thus allied
+against the encroachments of the Roman Curia. Wolsey was now accused
+of having transgressed this statute:[108] he had in virtue of his
+legatine power given away benefices, and established a jurisdiction by
+which that of the King was encroached on; he was found guilty of this
+in regular form. He anticipated the full effect of this sentence by
+submitting without any defence and surrendering all his property to
+the King. It was then that York House in Westminster, with its gardens
+and the land adjoining, the Whitehall of later times, passed into the
+possession of the crown.[109] He still kept his archbishopric; we find
+him soon after at Caywood, the palace belonging to it, and in fact
+even busied once more with his buildings. At times the King again
+thought of his old counsellor, and to many it quite seemed as though
+he might yet recover power. In those days the general belief was, that
+Anne Boleyn had exerted her whole influence against it. But most of
+the other persons of distinction in court and state were also opposed
+to Wolsey. Did he then really, as was imputed to him, try to gain a
+party among the clergy, and move the Pope to pronounce excommunication
+against the King?[110] A pretext at any rate was found for arresting
+him as a traitor: but as he was being brought to the Tower, he died
+on the way. He wished, so far as we know, to starve himself to death;
+it was at that time supposed that in his wish to die he was aided by
+help from others.
+
+Neither for his mental nor for his moral qualities can Wolsey be
+reckoned among men of the first rank; yet his position and the ability
+which he showed in it, his ambition and his political plans, what he
+did and what he suffered, his success and his fall, have won him an
+imperishable name in English history. His attempt to link the royal
+power with the Papacy by the closest ties rent them asunder for ever.
+No sooner was he dead than the clergy became subject to the Crown--a
+subjection which could forebode nothing less than this final rupture.
+
+The whole clergy was so far involved in Wolsey's guilt that it had
+supported his Legatine Powers, and so had shared in the violation of
+the statutes. It shows the English spirit of keeping to the strict
+letter of the law, that the King, though he had for years given his
+consent and help in all this, now came forward to avenge the violation
+of the law. To avert his displeasure the Convocation of Canterbury was
+forced to vote him a very considerable sum of money, yet even this did
+not satisfy him. Rather it seemed to him the fitting and decisive
+moment for forcing the clergy, conformably with the Address of the
+Commons, to accept the Anglican point of view. He demanded from
+Convocation the express acknowledgment that they recognised him as
+_the Protector and the Supreme Head of the Church and Clergy of
+England_; he commanded the judges not to issue the Act of Pardon
+unless this acknowledgment were at once incorporated with the bill for
+the money payment. It is not hard to see what made him choose this
+exact moment for so acting; it was the serious turn which the affair
+of his Divorce had taken at Rome. He had once more made application to
+the Curia to let it be decided in England; the Cardinals discussed the
+point in their Consistory, Dec. 22, 1530, but resolved that the
+question must come of right before the Assessors of the Rota, who
+should afterwards report on it to the Sacred College.[111] What their
+sentence would be was the less doubtful, since the Curia was now
+linked closer than ever with the Emperor, who had just closed the Diet
+of Augsburg in the way they wished, and was now about to carry out its
+decrees. The traces of a new alliance with Rome, which was imputed to
+Wolsey as an act of treason, must have contributed to the same result.
+The King wished to break off this connexion by a Declaration, which
+would serve him as a standing-ground later on, and show the Court of
+Rome that he had nothing to fear from it. On Feb. 7, 1531, the King's
+demand was laid before both Houses of Convocation. Who could avoid
+seeing its decisive significance for the age? The clergy, which had
+without much trouble agreed to the money-vote, nevertheless strove
+long against a Declaration which altered their whole position. But a
+hard necessity lay on them. In default of the Pardon, which, as the
+judges repeatedly assured them, depended on this Declaration, they
+would have found themselves out of the protection of the King and the
+Law. They sent two bishops, to get the King's demand softened by a
+personal appeal; Henry VIII refused to hear them. They proposed that
+some members of both Houses should confer with the Privy Council and
+the judges; the answer was that the King wished for no discussion, he
+wanted a clear answer. Thus much however they ascertained, that the
+King would be content with a mode of statement in which he was
+unconditionally recognised as the protector and sovereign of the
+Church and clergy of England, but as its supreme head only so far as
+religion allows. This was comprehended in the formula _in so far as is
+permitted by the law of Christ_, an expression which men might assent
+to on opposite grounds. Some might accept it from seeing in it only
+the limitation which is set to all power by the laws of God; others
+from thinking that it excluded generally the influence of the secular
+power on what were properly spiritual matters. When the clause was
+laid before them, at the morning sitting of Feb. 11, it was received
+with an ambiguous silence; but on closer consideration, it was so
+evidently their only possible resource, that in the afternoon, first
+the Upper House of Convocation, and then the Lower, gave their
+consent. Then the King accepted the money-bill, and granted them in
+return the Act of Pardon.[112]
+
+The clergy had yet other causes for seeking the King's protection. The
+writings of the Reformers, which attacked good works and vows, the
+Mass and the Priesthood, and all the principles on which the
+ecclesiastical system rested, found their way across the Channel, and
+filled men's minds in England also with similar convictions. The only
+safeguard against them lay in the King's power; his protection was no
+empty word, the clergy was lost if it drew on itself Henry's aversion,
+which was now directed against the Papal See.
+
+The heavy weight of the King's hand and the impulse of
+self-preservation were however not the only reasons why they yielded.
+It is undeniable that the conception of the Universal Church,
+according to which the National Church did but form part of a larger
+whole, was nearly as much lost among the clergy as among the laity. In
+the Parliament of 1532 Convocation had presented a petition in which
+they desired to be released from the payments which had been hitherto
+made to the supreme spiritual authority, especially the annates and
+first-fruits. The National Church was the existing, immediate
+authority--why should they allow taxes to be laid on them for a
+distant Power, a Power moreover of which they had no need? As the
+bishops complained that this injured their families and their
+benefices, Parliament calculated the sums which Rome had drawn out of
+the country on this ground since Henry VII's time, and which it would
+soon draw at the impending vacancies; what losses the country had
+already suffered in this way, and would yet suffer.[113]
+
+The tendency of men's minds in this direction showed itself also in
+the understanding come to on the chief question of all.
+
+Parliament renewed its complaints of the abuses in the ecclesiastical
+legislation, and learned men brought out clearly the want of any
+divine authority to justify it; at last the bishops virtually
+renounced their right of special legislation, and pledged themselves
+for the future not to issue any kind of Ordinance or Constitution
+without the King's knowledge and consent. A revision of the existing
+canons by a mixed commission, under the presidentship of their common
+head, the King, was to restore the unity of legislation.
+
+The clause was then necessarily omitted by which the recognition of
+the Crown's supremacy over the clergy had been hitherto limited. The
+defenders of the secular power put forth the largest claims. They
+said, the King has also the charge of his subjects' souls, the
+Parliament is divinely empowered to make ordinances concerning them
+also.[114]
+
+So a consolidation of public authority grew up in England, unlike
+anything which had yet been seen in the West. One of the great
+statutes that followed begins with the preamble that England is a
+realm to which the Almighty has given all fulness of power, under one
+supreme head, the King, to whom the body politic has to pay natural
+obedience, next after God; that this body consists of clergy and
+laity; to the first belongs the decision in questions of the divine
+law and things spiritual, while temporal affairs devolve on the laity;
+that one jurisdiction aids the other for the due administration of
+justice, no foreign intervention is needed. This is the Act by which,
+for these very reasons, legal appeals to Rome were abolished. It was
+now possible to carry out what in previous centuries had been
+attempted in vain. All encroachments on the prerogative of the
+'Imperial Crown' were to be abolished, the supreme jurisdiction of the
+Roman Curia was to be valid no longer; appeals to Rome were not only
+forbidden but subjected to penalties.
+
+The several powers of the realm united to throw off the foreign
+authority which had hitherto influenced them, and which limited the
+national independence, as being itself a higher power.
+
+As the oaths taken by the bishops were altered to suit these statutes,
+the King set himself to modify his coronation oath also in the same
+sense. He would not swear any longer to uphold the rights of the
+Church in general, but only those guaranteed to the Church of England,
+and not derogatory to his own dignity and jurisdiction; he did not
+pledge himself to maintain the peace of the Church absolutely, but
+only the concord between the clergy and his lay subjects according to
+his conscience; not, unconditionally, to maintain the laws and customs
+of the land, but only those that did not conflict with his crown and
+imperial duties. He promised favour only for the cases in which favour
+ought to find a place.[115]
+
+How predominant is the strong feeling of aggrandisement, of personal
+right, and of kingly independence!
+
+Henry VIII too regarded himself as a successor of Constantine the
+Great, who had given laws to the Church. True, said he, kings are sons
+of the Church, but not the less are they supreme over Christian men.
+Of the doctrines which came from Germany none found greater acceptance
+with him than this--that every man must be obedient to the higher
+powers. We possess Tyndale's book in which these principles are set
+forth; by Anne Boleyn's means it came into Henry's hands. That Pope
+Clement summoned him formally before his judgment-seat, he declared to
+be an offence to the Kingly Majesty. Was a Prince, he exclaims, to
+submit himself to a creature whom God had made subject to him; to
+humble himself before a man who, in opposition to God and Right,
+wished to oppress him? It would be a reversal of the ordinance of
+God.[116]
+
+Whilst we follow the questions which here come into discussion--on the
+relations of Church and State, the rights of nations and
+kings--questions of infinite importance for this as for all other
+states, we almost lose sight of the affair of the Divorce, which had
+been the original cause of quarrel, and which had meanwhile moved on
+in the direction given it once for all. Pope Clement restrained
+himself as much as possible, he still more than once made advances to
+the King and offered him conciliatory terms; but the King had already
+gone too far in his separation from Rome to be able to accept them. At
+the beginning of 1533 he celebrated his marriage with Anne Boleyn
+privately. He had once, when he was still waiting for the Pope's
+decision, tried to influence it by favourable opinions of learned
+theologians.[117] With this view he had applied to the most
+distinguished universities in Italy and Germany, in France and in
+England itself; and managed to obtain a large number of decisions, by
+which the Pope's right of dispensation was denied; and this in spite
+of the constant efforts in various ways of the Imperial agents; even
+the two mother-universities, Bologna and Paris, had declared in his
+favour. He protested that he had been thereby enabled in his
+conscience to free himself from the yoke of an unlawful union,
+bordering on incest, and to proceed to another marriage. But all the
+more urgent was it that the legality of this marriage should be
+recognised according to the forms at that time lawfully valid. He no
+longer wished for a recognition from the Pope; he laid the question
+before the two Convocations of the English Church-provinces. For the
+general course of Church history we must admit it to be an event of
+the highest significance, that they dared to pronounce the
+dispensation of Pope Julius II invalid according to God's law. The
+authority hitherto regarded as the expression of God's will on earth
+was found guilty, by the representatives of the Church of one
+particular country, of transgressing that will. It now followed that
+the King's marriage, concluded on the strength of that dispensation,
+was declared by the Archbishop's court at Canterbury null and void,
+and invalid from the beginning. Catharine was henceforth to be
+treated no longer as Queen but only as still Princess-dowager.
+
+She was unable to realise the things that were happening around her.
+That she was expected to renounce her rank as Queen awoke in her quite
+as much astonishment as anger. 'For she had not come to England,' she
+said, 'on mercantile business at a venture, but according to the will
+of the two venerated kings now dead: she had married King Henry
+according to the decision of the Holy Father at Rome: she was the
+anointed and crowned Queen of England; were she to give up her title,
+she would have been a concubine these twenty-four years, and her
+daughter a bastard; she would be false to her conscience, to her own
+soul, her confessor would not be able to absolve her.' She became more
+and more absorbed in strict Catholic religious observances. She rose
+soon after midnight, to be present at the mass; under her dress she
+wore the habit of the third order of S. Francis; she confessed twice
+and fasted twice a week; her reading consisted of the legends of the
+saints. So she lived on for two years more, undisturbed by the
+ecclesiastico-political statutes which passed in the English
+Parliament. Till the very end she regarded herself as the true Queen
+of England.
+
+Immediately after the sentence on Catharine followed Anne's
+coronation, which was performed with all the ancient ceremonial, all
+the more carefully attended to because she was not born a princess. On
+the Thursday before Whitsuntide she was escorted from Greenwich by the
+Mayor and the Trades of London, in splendidly adorned barges, with
+musical instruments playing, till she was greeted by the cannon of the
+Tower. The Saturday after she went in procession through the City to
+Westminster. The King had created eighteen knights of the Order of the
+Bath. These in their new decorations, and a great part of the
+nobility, which felt itself honoured in Anne's elevation, accompanied
+her:[118] she sat on a splendid seat, supported by and slung between
+horses: the canopy over her was borne by the barons of the Cinque
+Ports; her hair was uncovered, she was charming as always, and (it
+appears) not without a sense of high good fortune. On Sunday she was
+escorted to Westminster Abbey by the Archbishop of Canterbury and six
+bishops, the Abbot of Westminster and twelve other abbots in full
+canonicals: she was in purple, her ladies in scarlet, for so old
+custom required; the Duke of Suffolk bore the crown before her, which
+was placed on her head by the hands of the archbishop. Nobles and
+commons greeted her with emulous devotion, the ecclesiastics joined
+in; they expected from her an heir to England.--Not a son, but a
+daughter, Elizabeth, did she then bear beneath her heart.
+
+Anne's coronation was at the same time the complete expression of the
+revolt of the nation collectively from the Roman See: it is noteworthy
+that Pope Clement VII, in his all-calculating and temporising policy,
+even then reserved to himself the last word. As he had once yielded to
+the Emperor, to conclude his peace with him, so now again--for he did
+not wish to be entirely dependent on him--he had entered into close
+relations with King Francis, who on his side saw in the continuance of
+his union with England one of the conditions of his position in
+Europe. The political weight of England reacted indirectly on the
+Pope: he indeed annulled Archbishop Cranmer's decision, but he could
+not yet bring himself to take a further step, often as he had promised
+the Emperor and pledged himself in his agreements to do so.[119]
+Charles V supplied his ambassador at Rome with yet another means to
+advance (as he expressed himself) the decision of the proceedings with
+the Pope and with the Holy See--for he made a distinction between
+them. The Pope inquired of him what, after this had ensued, would then
+be done to carry it out. The Emperor answered, his Holiness should do
+what justice pledged him to do, what he could not omit if he would
+fulfil his duty to God and the world, and maintain his own importance;
+this must come first, the Church must use all its own means before it
+called in the temporal arm: but if the matter came to that point, he
+would not fail to do his part; to declare himself explicitly
+beforehand might excite religious scruples.[120] And however much the
+policy of the Pope might waver, there could be no doubt about the
+decision of the Rota. On the 23 March 1534 one of the auditors,
+Simonetta, bishop of Pesaro, made a statement on the subject in the
+consistory of the cardinals: there were only three among them who
+demanded a further delay: all the rest joined without any more
+consideration in the decision that Henry's marriage with Catharine was
+perfectly lawful, and their children legitimate and possessed of full
+rights. The Imperialists held this to be a great victory, they made
+the city ring with their cries of 'the Empire and Spain':[121] yet
+even then the French did not give up the hope of bringing the Pope to
+another mind. But meanwhile in England the last steps were already
+taken.
+
+King Henry reckons it as honourable to himself that he had not yielded
+to the offer of the Roman Court, made to him indirectly, to decide in
+his favour, but had set himself against its usurped jurisdiction,
+without being influenced by the proposal,[122] not for himself alone
+but in the interest of all kings. Yet once more had he laid the
+question before learned ecclesiastics, whether the Pope of Rome had
+any authority in England by divine right; as the University of Oxford
+declares, their theologians had searched for this through the books of
+Holy Scripture and its most approved interpreters; they had compared
+the places, conferred with each other on them and come at last to the
+conclusion, to answer the King's question unreservedly in the
+negative. The Cambridge scholars and both Convocations declared
+themselves in the same sense. On this the Parliament had no scruple in
+abrogating piece by piece the hierarchic-Romish order of things; it
+was nothing but a revocable right which they had hitherto borne with.
+The Annates were transferred to the crown; never more was an English
+bishop to receive his pallium from Rome. It was made penal to apply
+for dispensing faculties; with their abolition the fees usually paid
+for them also ceased. The oldest token of the devotion of the
+Anglo-Saxon race to the Roman See, the Peter's penny, was definitely
+abolished. Care was taken that for the appeal in the last resort,
+hitherto made to the Roman courts, there should be a similar court at
+home. On the other hand the King granted a greater freedom in the
+election of bishops, at least in its outward forms. The existing laws
+against heretics were confirmed, though those independent proceedings
+of the bishops which had been usual in the times of the Lancasters
+received some limitation. For the episcopal constitution and the old
+doctrine were to be retained: the wish was to establish an
+Anglo-Catholic Church under the supremacy of the crown. The King added
+to his titles the designation of 'Supreme Head on earth of the Church
+of England immediately under God.' The Parliament awarded him the
+right of Visitation over the Church in reference to abuses and even to
+errors, as well as the right of reforming them. For the exercise
+moreover of the Papal authority, which so far passed over to him, he
+had an example before him which he had only to follow. Wolsey for a
+series of years, as Legate of the Pope and then as his Vicar General,
+had administered the English Church by means of English courts: the
+unity of the English common-weal had been represented in his twofold
+power as legate and first minister; practically it was no violent
+change when the King himself now appointed a Vicar General who,
+empowered by him, exercised this authority without any reference to
+the Pope. It was an assistant of Wolsey, Thomas Cromwell, who was at
+the same time Keeper of the Great Seal, who regulated the management
+of these affairs in a way not altogether new to him. From this point
+of view Wolsey represents exactly the man of the transition, who
+occupied the intermediate position in nationalising the English
+Church.
+
+Though Henry VIII did not always follow in his father's footsteps, he
+was yet his genuine successor in the work he began. What the first
+Tudor achieved in the temporal domain, viz. the exclusion of foreign
+influence, that the second extended to spiritual affairs. The great
+question now was, whether the conflicting elements, in themselves
+independent but ceaselessly agitated by their connexion with the rest
+of Europe, would continue loyal to the idea of the common-weal; then
+even their opposition might become a new impulse and help to perfect
+the power of the State and the Constitution.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[103] 'Quasi che quello, che minacciano, non fosse prima a danno
+loro.' So it is said in a letter of Sanga, April 1529, Lettere di
+diversi autori p. 69.
+
+[104] 'Pour ce qu'il n'est encoires temps qu'il meure que premierement
+l'on n'ayt entendu et veriffié plusieurs choses.' Chapuis to Charles
+V, 25 Oct. 1529, in Bradford, Correspondence of the Emperor Charles V,
+p. 291.
+
+[105] A letter printed in Fiddes (Life of Wolsey, Records II. p. 115,
+no 58), adds to the laconic parliamentary notices the desirable
+explanation: 'the knights being of the King's council, the King's
+servants and gentlemen ... were long time spoken with and made to see
+(a misprint for "say") yea, it may fortune, contrary to their heart.'
+
+[106] Giustiniani: Four Years, I. 162. 'They see that their treasure
+is spent in vain, and consequently loud murmurs and discontent prevail
+through the kingdom.'
+
+[107] 'The only head sovereign lord and protector of both the said
+parties, your subjects spiritual and temporal.' Petition of the
+Commons 1529, in Froude, History of England i. 200.
+
+[108] Indictment in Fiddes, Life of Wolsey p. 504.
+
+[109] 'Pro domino rege, de recuperatione.' Ibid. Collections no. 103.
+
+[110] Falier: 'cominciò a machinar contra la corona con S. Sta.'
+
+[111] Pallavicino, Concilio di Trento III, XIV, V, from a Roman diary.
+
+[112] Original accounts in Burnet iii. 52, 53.
+
+[113] Proceedings in Burnet, History of the Reformation i. 117. Strype
+had already remarked its difference from the original demands.
+
+[114] Matters to be proposed in Convocation (in Strype, Ecclesiastical
+Memorials i. 215.) 'That the King's Majesty hath as well the care of
+the souls of his subjects as their bodies, and may by the law of God
+by his Parliament make laws touching and concerning as well the one as
+the other.'
+
+[115] Facsimile in Ellis's Original Letters, Ser. ii. vol i. But this
+alteration cannot have taken place at the beginning of his government.
+This would presuppose all the results won by so much effort. The
+handwriting too is not that of a boy, but of a grown man.
+
+[116] Instruction for Rochefort, State Papers vii. 427.
+
+[117] Jean Joachim au roi (de France) 15 Feb. 1510, afinche questa
+opinion (della Faculta di Parigi) insieme con altre opinion delle
+universita di Angliterra et d'altrove per Mr. Winschier [father of
+Anne Boleyn] al papa si possino monstrar o presentar.
+
+[118] 'The moste part of the nobles of the realm.' Cranmer's letter to
+Hawkyns. Archaeologia xviii. 79.
+
+[119] In the treaty of Bologna (1 Feb. 1533) is an article, 'pro
+administranda justitia super divortio Anglicano et--amputando omnem
+superfluam dilationem'
+
+[120] Instruccion para el Conde de Cifuentes y Rodrigo Avalos. Papiers
+d'état de Granvelle ii. 45
+
+[121] In a later report to the Emperor it is said, that the rights of
+the Queen and Princess were recognised, 'a l'instante poursuite de S.
+Me. Imperiale.' Ibid. ii. 210.
+
+[122] In Halliwell, Letters of the Kings of England i. 337.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE OPPOSING TENDENCIES WITHIN THE SCHISMATIC STATE.
+
+
+Among the results of these transactions in England that which most
+directly concerned the higher interests of the nation was the
+abolition, by a formal decision of Parliament, on religious grounds,
+of the hereditary title of the King's daughter by his Spanish Queen,
+and the recognition of the succession of Queen Anne's issue to the
+throne, even in the case of her having only the one daughter who had
+been meanwhile born. This does not depend so much on the actual
+measures taken as on the fact, that now, according to Wolsey's plan,
+the government had broken with the political system which had
+prevailed hitherto, and indeed in a sense that went far beyond his
+views. Not merely was a French alliance avoided; the separation from
+the Church of Rome was to become the basis of the whole dynastic
+settlement of England.
+
+At home men felt most the harshness and violence of basing a political
+rule on Church ideas. The statute contains threats of the sharpest
+punishments against all who should do or write or even say anything
+against it: a commission was appointed, in which we find the Dukes of
+Norfolk and Suffolk, which could require every one to take an oath of
+conformity to it. It was to be carried out with the full weight of
+English adherence to the law.
+
+It was to this very statute that Bishop Fisher of Rochester and Sir
+Thomas More fell victims. They did not refuse to acknowledge the order
+of succession itself thus enacted, for this was within the competence
+of Parliament, but they would not confirm with their oath the reason
+laid down in the statute, that Henry's marriage with Catharine was
+against Scripture and invalid from the beginning. More ranks among the
+original minds of this great century: he is the first who learnt how
+to write English prose; but in the great currents of the literary
+movement he shrank back from the foremost place: after he had aided
+them by writings in the style of Erasmus, he set himself as Lord
+Chancellor of England to oppose their onward sweep with much rigour:
+he would not have the Church community itself touched. Of the last
+statute he said, it killed either the body if one opposed it, or the
+soul if one obeyed: he preferred to save his soul. He met his death
+with so lively a realisation of the future life, in which the troubles
+of this life would cease, that he looked on his departure out of it
+with all the irony which was in general characteristic of him. The
+fact that the Pope at this moment had named Bishop Fisher cardinal of
+the Roman Church seems to have still more hastened his execution. They
+both died as martyrs to the ideas by which England had been hitherto
+linked to the Church community of the West and to the authority of the
+Papacy.
+
+If we turn our eyes abroad, the succession statute above all must have
+made a most disagreeable impression on the Emperor Charles V. He saw
+in it a political loss, an injury to his house, and indeed to all
+sovereign families, and a danger to the Church. With a view to
+opposing it, he formed the plan of drawing the King of France into an
+enterprise against England. He proposed to him the marriage of his
+third son, the Duke of Angoulême, with the Princess Mary, who was
+recognised as the only lawful heiress of England by the Apostolic See,
+and whose claims would then accrue to this prince.[123] And they would
+not be difficult, so he said, to establish, as a great part of the
+English abhorred the King's proceedings, his second marriage, and his
+divergence from the Church. At the same time the Emperor proposed the
+closest dynastic union of the two houses by a double marriage of his
+two children with a son and a daughter of Francis I. What in the whole
+world would he not have attained, if he had won over France to
+himself! His combination embraced as usual West and East, Church and
+State, Italian German and Northern affairs.
+
+Perhaps the success of such a scheme was not probable; but
+independently of this, Henry VIII had good cause to prepare himself to
+meet the superior power of the Emperor, with whom he had so decidedly
+broken. As we have already hinted, he could have no want of allies in
+this struggle. It was under these circumstances that he entered into
+relations with the powerful demagogues who were then from their
+central position at Lubeck labouring to transform the North, and to
+sever it from all Netherlandish-Burgundian influence. But it was of
+still more importance to him to form an alliance with the Protestant
+princes and estates of Germany proper, who had gradually become a
+power in opposition to Pope and Emperor. In the autumn of 1535 we find
+English ambassadors in Germany, who attended the meeting of the League
+at Schmalkald, and the most serious negociations were entered on. Both
+sides were agreed not to recognise the Council which was then
+announced by the Pope, for the very reason that the Pope announced it,
+who had no right to do so. The German princes demanded an engagement
+that if one of the two parties was attacked, the other should lend no
+support to its enemy; for the King this was not enough; he wished, in
+case he was attacked, to be able to reckon on support from Germany in
+cavalry, infantry, and ships, in return for which he was ready to give
+a very considerable contribution to the chest of the League. It was
+even proposed that he should undertake the protection of the
+League.[124]
+
+All this however was based on a presupposition, which could not but
+lead the English to further ecclesiastical changes. It was not a
+schism affecting the constitution and administration of justice, but a
+complete system of dissentient Church doctrines, with which Henry VIII
+came in contact. The German Protestants made it a condition of their
+alliance with England, that there should be full agreement between
+them as to doctrine.
+
+We may ask whether this was altogether possible.
+
+If we compare the Church movements and events that had taken place
+during the last years in Germany and in England, their great
+difference is visible at a glance. In Germany the movement was
+theological and popular, corresponding to the wants and needs of the
+territorial state; in England it was juridico-canonical, not connected
+with appeals to the people or with free preaching, but based on the
+unity of the nation. Though the German Diet had for a moment inclined
+to the Reform and had once even given it a legal sanction, it
+afterwards by a majority set itself against it: to carry it through
+became now the part of the minority, the Protesting party. In England
+on the contrary all proceeded from the plan of the sovereign and the
+resolutions of Parliament, in which the bishops themselves with few
+exceptions took part. Perhaps a more deep-seated ground of difference
+may be that the German bishops were more independent than the English,
+and that an Emperor was then ruling who, being at the same time King
+of Spain and Naples, troubled himself little about the unity of
+Germany in particular; while in England a newly-formed strong
+political power existed which made the national interests its own and
+upheld them on all sides.
+
+Despite all this the English Schism had nevertheless a deep inner
+analogy with the German Reformation.
+
+From the beginning the dispute as to jurisdiction was based on the
+historical point of view, on which Luther too laid much stress.
+Standish, who has been already mentioned, derived the right to limit
+the ecclesiastical prerogatives, from this among other grounds, that
+there were Christian churches in which they were altogether rejected,
+for instance the rule as to the celibacy of the clergy was not
+accepted by the Greeks. He inferred too, that, as no one disputed the
+claim of the Greek Church to be Christian, the conception of the
+universal Church must be different from that which Romanism asserts.
+Both countries also found the groundwork of the true church-community
+in Scripture. In the chief instance before them, that of the divorce,
+the German theologians were not of the same mind as the English; but
+both sides agreed in this, that there was a revealed will of God,
+which the ecclesiastical power might not contravene: the conviction
+took root that the Papacy did not represent the highest communion of
+men with divine things, but that this rested on the divine record
+alone. The use of Scripture had at last influenced various questions
+in England also. For abolishing the Annates it was argued that such an
+impost contradicts a maxim of the Apostle Paul; for doing away the
+Papal jurisdiction, that no place of Scripture justifies it. This is
+what was meant when the assertion that the Papacy is of divine right
+was denied. This becomes quite clear when Henry VIII instead of the
+previous prohibitions against distributing the Bible in the vernacular
+gave his licence for it. As he once declared with great animation, the
+advancement of God's word and of his own authority were one and the
+same thing.[125] The engraved title-page of the translation which
+appeared with his _privilegium_ puts into his mouth the expression
+'Thy word is a light to my feet.' The order soon followed to place a
+copy of the Book of books in every church: there every man might look
+into the disputed places, and convince himself, by this highest of
+codes, as to the rightfulness of the procedure that had been chosen.
+
+But then it was impossible to stop at mere divergences of
+jurisdiction. The German interpretation of Scripture gained ground in
+every direction: a theological school grew up, though only here and
+there, which adhered to it more or less openly.
+
+It must needs have had the greatest effect, that the followers of this
+view obtained a great number of bishoprics. The archbishopric of
+Canterbury had already fallen to the lot of a man who had completed
+his theological training in Germany: this very man, Thomas Cranmer,
+had carried through the divorce; his was one of those natures which
+must have the support of the supreme power to help them to follow out
+their own views; as they then appear enterprising and courageous, so
+do they become pliant and yielding when this favour fails them; they
+do not shine through moral greatness, but they are well suited to
+preserve, under difficult circumstances, what they have once embraced,
+for better times. Hugh Latimer was cast in a sterner mould; he
+actually dared, in the midst of the persecutions, to admonish the
+King, whose chaplain he was, of the welfare of his soul and his duty
+as King. However little this act effected for the moment, yet he may
+have thus contributed to enlighten the King (who now and then showed
+him personal goodwill) as to his title of 'Defender of the Faith.'
+Latimer was a fervent and effective preacher: he was made bishop of
+Worcester. Nicolas Shaxton, Bishop of Salisbury, Hilsey of Rochester,
+Bisham of S. Asaph's and then S. David's, Goodrich of Ely, were all
+disposed to Protestantism. Edward Fox who had been named Bishop of
+Hereford, had at Schmalkald openly declared the Pope to be Antichrist,
+and assured the Protestants in the strongest manner of his sovereign's
+inclination to attach himself to their Confession. It was the grand
+union of these biblical scholars among the bishops, which in the
+Convocation of 1536 undertook to carry through the work of drawing
+their church nearer that of Germany. Latimer opened the war by a
+fervent sermon against image-worship, indulgences, purgatory, and
+other doctrines or rites which were at variance with the Bible.
+Cranmer proved that Holy Scripture contains all that is necessary for
+man to know for the salvation of his soul, and that tradition is not
+needed. The Bishop of Hereford communicated it, as an experience of
+his journey, that the laity everywhere would now be instructed only
+out of the Revelation. Thomas Cromwell, who took part in the sittings
+as the King's representative, lent them much support, and once brought
+with him a Scottish scholar who had just returned from Wittenberg, to
+combat the received doctrine of the Sacrament.[126] On the other side
+also stood men of weight and consideration, Lee archbishop of York who
+had expressly opposed himself, together with his clergy, to the
+adoption of the King's new title, Stokesley of London who broke a
+lance for the seven sacraments, Gardiner of Winchester and Longland of
+Lincoln who after contributing materially to the King's divorce
+nevertheless rejected any alteration in doctrine, Tonstall of Durham,
+Nix of Norwich.
+
+It seems as though the King, who was still busied in the Parliament
+itself with the confirmation of his church regulations, thought he
+detected in this party too much predilection for the Papacy. He found
+another motive in the necessity of having allies for the coming
+Council; he decisively took the side of Reform. Ten articles were laid
+before the Convocation in his name, the first five of which are taken
+from the Augsburg Confession or from the commentaries on it; as to
+these the Bishop of Hereford agreed with the theologians of
+Wittenberg. In them the faithful were referred exclusively to the
+contents of the Bible, and the three oldest creeds; only three
+sacraments were still recognised, Baptism, Penance, and the Lord's
+Supper. The real presence was maintained in them, in the words of
+those commentaries, and entirely in Luther's original sense.[127] But
+still this tendency was not yet so strong as to be able to make itself
+exclusively felt. In the following articles, the veneration, even the
+invocation, of saints, and no small part of the existing ceremonies,
+were allowed--though in terms which with all their moderation cannot
+disguise the rejection of them in principle. Despite these limitations
+the document contains a clear adoption of the principles of religious
+reform as they were carried out in Germany. It was subscribed by 18
+bishops, 40 abbots and priors, 50 members of the lower house of
+Convocation: the King, as the Head of the Church, promulgated it for
+general observance. His vicegerent in Church affairs commanded all the
+clergy entrusted with a cure of souls to explain the articles, and
+also at certain times to lay before the people the rightfulness of the
+abrogation of Papal authority. He required them to give warnings
+against image-worship, belief in modern miracles, and pilgrimages.
+Children were henceforth to learn the Lord's Prayer, the articles of
+the Creed, and the Ten Commandments in English.[128] It was the
+beginning of the Church service in the vernacular, which was rightly
+regarded as the chief means of withdrawing the national Church from
+Romish influence.
+
+But Cromwell was also engaged in another enterprise, not less hostile
+and injurious to the Papacy.
+
+As many of the great men in State and Church thought, so thought also
+the pious members of the monasteries and cloistered convents; they
+opposed the Supremacy, not as they said from inclination to
+disobedience, but because Holy Mother Church ordered otherwise than
+King and Parliament ordained.[129] The apology merely served to
+condemn them. In the rules they followed, in the Orders to which they
+belonged, the intercommunion of Latin Christianity had its most living
+expression; but it was exactly this which King and Parliament wished
+to sever. Wolsey had already, as we know, and with the help of
+Cromwell himself, taken in hand to suppress many of them: but in the
+new order of things there was absolutely no more place for the
+monastic system; it was necessarily sacrificed to the unity of the
+country, and at the same time to the greed of the great men.
+
+But it cannot be imagined that innovations which struck so deep could
+be carried through without opposition. After all the efforts of the
+old kings to establish Christianity in agreement with Rome, after the
+victories of the Papacy when the kings quarrelled with it, and the
+violent suppression of all dissent, it was inevitable that the belief
+of the hierarchic ages, which is besides so peculiarly adapted to this
+end, had in England as elsewhere sunk deep into men's minds, and in
+great measure still swayed them. Was what had been always held for
+heresy no longer to merit this name because it was avowed by the
+ruling powers? In the northern counties neither the clergy nor the
+people would hear of the King's supremacy; they continued to pray for
+the Pope; Cromwell's injunctions were disregarded. It may be that
+horrible abuses and vices were prevalent in the cloisters, but all did
+not labour under such reproaches; many were objects of reverence in
+their own districts, and centres of hospitality and charity. It would
+have been wonderful if their violent destruction had not excited
+popular discontent. And this temper was shared by those who enjoyed
+the chief consideration in the provinces. Among the nobles there were
+still men like Lord Darcy of Templehurst, who had borne arms against
+the Moors in the service of Isabella and Ferdinand: how offensive to
+them must innovations be which ran counter to all their reminiscences!
+The lords in these provinces were believed to have pledged their word
+to each other to suppress the heresies, as they called the Protestant
+opinions, together with their authors and abettors. The country
+people, who apprehended yet further encroachments, were easily stirred
+up to commotion; collections of money were made from house to house,
+and the strongest men of each parish provided with the necessary
+weapons: in the autumn of 1536 open revolt broke out. A lawyer, Robert
+Aske, placed himself at its head; he set before the people all the
+damage that the suppression of the monasteries did to the country
+around, by diverting their revenues and abstracting their treasures.
+In a short time he had gained over the whole of the North. The city of
+York joined him; Darcy admitted him into the strong castle of Pomfret:
+in that broad county only one single castle still held out in its
+obedience to the government: then the neighbouring districts also were
+carried away by the movement: Aske saw an army of thirty thousand men
+around him. He took the road to London to, as he said, drive base-born
+men out of the King's council, and restore the Christian church in
+England: he called his march a 'Pilgrimage of Grace.' But when he came
+into contact with royal troops at Doncaster he paused; for it was not
+a war, which would cost the country too dear, but only a great armed
+remonstrance in favour of the old system that he contemplated. He
+contented himself with presenting his demands--suppression of
+heresies, restitution of the supreme charge of souls to the Pope,
+restoration of the monasteries, and in particular the punishment of
+Cromwell with his abettors, and the calling of a Parliament.[130]
+
+When we consider that Ireland was in revolt, Cornwall in a state of
+ferment, men's Catholic sympathies stirred up by foreign princes, it
+is easy to understand how some voices in the King's Privy Council were
+raised in favour of concession. Henry VIII, a true Tudor, was not the
+man to give in on such a point. He upbraided the rebels in haughty
+words with their ignorance and presumption, and repeated that all he
+did and ordered was in conformity with God's law and for the interests
+of the country; but it was mainly by promising to call a Parliament at
+York that he really laid the gathering storm. But at the first breach
+of the law that occurred he revoked this promise;[131] if he had
+relaxed the maintenance of his prerogative for a moment, he exercised
+it immediately after all the more relentlessly. He at last got all the
+leaders of the revolt into his hands, and appeared to the world to be
+conqueror. But we cannot for this reason hold that the movement did
+not react upon him. His plan was not, and in fact could not be, to
+incur the hostility of his people or endanger the crown for the sake
+of dogmatic opinions. True, he held to his order that the Bible should
+be promulgated in the English tongue, for his revolt from the
+hierarchy, and demand of obedience from all estates, rested on God's
+written word: nor did he allow himself to swerve from the legally
+enacted suppression of the monasteries; but he abandoned further
+innovations, and an altered tendency displayed itself in all his
+proclamations. Even during the troubles he called on the bishops to
+observe the usual church ceremonies: he put forth an edict against the
+marriage of priests (although he had been inclined to allow it) from
+regard to popular opinion. The importation of books printed abroad,
+and any publication of a work in England itself without a previous
+censorship, were again prohibited. Processions, genuflexions, and
+other pious usages, in church and domestic life, were once more
+recommended. The sharpest edicts went forth against any dissent from
+the strict doctrine of the Sacrament and against any extreme
+variations in doctrine. The King actually appeared in person to take
+part in confuting the misbelievers. He would prove to the world that
+he was no heretic.
+
+It had also already become evident that no invasion by the Emperor was
+at present impending. Soon after his overtures to the King of France,
+Charles V perceived that he could not win him over to his side. In the
+Spanish Council of State they took it into consideration that Henry
+VIII, if anything was undertaken against him, would at all times have
+the King of France on his side, and in his passionate temperament
+might be easily instigated to take steps which they would rather
+avoid.[132] After Catharine's death they made mutual advances, which
+it is true did not bring about a good understanding, but yet excluded
+actual hostilities. It would only disturb our view if we were here to
+follow one by one the manifold fluctuations in the course of these
+political relations and negociations. One motive in favour of peace
+under all circumstances was supplied by the ever-growing commerce
+between England and the Netherlands, on which the prosperity of both
+countries depended, and the destruction of which would have been
+injurious to the sovereigns themselves. When, some time after, the
+prospect of an alliance with France against England was presented to
+him by the interposition of the new Pope, Paul III, Charles declined
+it. He remarked that the German Protestants, to whom his attention
+must be mainly directed, would be strengthened by it.[133] At the most
+an interruption of this system could only be expected in case civil
+disturbances in England invited the Emperor to make a sudden attack.
+Once it even appeared as if a Yorkist movement might be combined with
+the religious agitation. A descendant of Edward IV, the Marquis of
+Exeter, formed the plan of marrying the Princess Mary, and undertaking
+the restoration of the old church system. He found much sympathy in
+the country for this plan; the co-operation of the Emperor with him
+might have been very dangerous.
+
+Henry lost no time in fortifying the harbours and coasts against such
+an attack.
+
+But the chief means of preventing all dangers of this kind lay in
+cutting from under them the ground on which they rested. Henry VIII
+was not minded to yield a jot of the full power he had inherited: on
+the contrary his supremacy in church matters was confirmed in 1539 by
+a new act of Parliament: another finally ordained the suppression of
+the greater abbeys also, whose revenues served to endow some new
+bishoprics, but mainly passed into the possession of the Crown and the
+Lords: the unity of the Church and the exclusive independence of the
+country were still more firmly established. But the more Henry was
+resolved to abide by his constitutional innovations, the more
+necessary it seemed to him, in reference to doctrine, to avoid any
+deviation that could be designated as heretical. And though he some
+years before made advances to the Protestants because he needed their
+support against the Emperor and the Pope, things were now on the
+contrary in such a state that he could feel himself all the safer, the
+less connexion he had with the Germans. Under quite different auspices
+of home and foreign politics was the religious debate, that had led in
+1536 to the Ten Articles, resumed three years later. The bishops who
+held to the old belief were as steady as ever and, so far as we know,
+bound together still more closely by a special agreement. They knew
+how to get rid of the old suspicion of their having thought of
+restoring the Papal supremacy and jurisdiction, by showing complete
+devotion to the King. On the other hand the Protestants had suffered a
+very sensible loss in Bishop Fox of Hereford, who had always possessed
+much influence over the King, but had died lately. An understanding
+between the two parties on questions which were dividing the whole
+world was not to be thought of; they confronted each other as
+irreconcilable antagonists. The debates were transferred on Norfolk's
+proposal to Parliament and Convocation; at last it was thought best
+that each of the two parties should bring in the outline of a bill
+expressing its own views. This was done: but first both bills were
+delivered to the King, on whose word, according to the prevailing
+point of view, the decision mainly depended. We may as it were imagine
+him with the two religious schemes in his hand. On the one side lay
+progressive innovation, increasing ferment in the land, and alliance
+with the Protestants: on the other, change confined to the advantages
+already gained by the crown, the contentment of the great majority of
+the people, who adhered to the old belief, peace and friendship with
+the Emperor. The King himself too had a liking for the doctrines he
+had acknowledged from his youth. The balance inclined in favour of the
+bishops of the old belief: Henry gave their bill the preference. It
+was the bloody bill of the Six Articles, mainly, so far as we know,
+the work of Bishop Gardiner of Winchester.
+
+The doctrine of transubstantiation and all the usages connected with
+it, private masses and auricular confession, and the binding force of
+vows, were sanctioned anew; the marriage of priests and the giving the
+cup to the laity were prohibited; all under the severest penalties.
+The whole of the high nobility to a man agreed to it: the Lower House
+raised the resolutions of the clergy into law.
+
+How completely did the German ambassadors, who had come over with the
+expectation of seeing the victory in England of the theologians who
+were friendly to them, find themselves deceived! They still however
+cherished the hope that these resolutions would never be carried out.
+Their ground for hope lay in the King's marriage with a German
+Protestant princess, which was just then being arranged.
+
+Some years before Anne Boleyn had fallen a victim to a dreadful fate.
+How had the King extolled her shortly before his marriage as a mirror
+of purity, modesty and maidenliness! hardly two years afterwards he
+accused her of adultery under circumstances which, if they were true,
+would make her one of the most depraved creatures under the sun. If
+we go through the statements that led to her condemnation, it is
+difficult to think them complete fictions: they have been upheld quite
+recently. If on the other hand we read the letter, so full of high
+feeling and inward truthfulness, in which Anne protests her innocence
+to the King, we cannot believe in the possibility of the
+transgressions for which she had to die. I can add nothing further to
+what has been long known, except that the King, soon after her
+coronation, in November 1533, already showed a certain discontent with
+her.[134] Was it after all not right in the eyes of the jealous
+autocrat that his former wife's lady in waiting now as Queen wore the
+crown as well as himself? Anne Boleyn too might not be without blame
+in her demeanour which was not troubled by any strict rule. Or did it
+seem to the King a token of the divine displeasure against this
+marriage also, that Anne Boleyn in her second confinement brought a
+stillborn son into the world? It has been always said that the lively
+interest she took in the progress of the outspoken Protestantism,
+whose champions were almost all her personal friends, contributed most
+to her fall. For the house from which she sprung she certainly in this
+respect went too far. In the midst of religious and political parties,
+pursued by suspicion and slander, and in herself too tormented by
+jealousy, endangered rather than guarded by the possession of the
+highest dignity, she fell into a state of excitement bordering on
+madness.
+
+On the day after her execution the King married one of her maids of
+honour, the very same who had awakened her jealousy, Jane Seymour. She
+indeed brought him the son for whom his soul longed, but she died in
+her confinement.
+
+In the rivalry of parties Cromwell after some time formed the plan of
+strengthening his own side by the King's marriage with a German
+princess; he chose for this purpose Anne of Cleves, a lady nearly
+related to the Elector of Saxony, and whose brother as possessor of
+Guelders was a powerful opponent of the Emperor. This was at the time
+when the Emperor on his way to the Netherlands paid a visit to King
+Francis, and an alliance of these sovereigns was again feared. But by
+the time his new wife arrived all anxiety had already gone by, and
+with it the motive for a Protestant alliance for the King had ceased.
+Anne had not quite such disadvantages of nature as has been asserted:
+she was accounted amiable:[135] but she could not enchain a man like
+Henry; he had no scruple in dissolving the marriage already concluded;
+Anne made no opposition: the King preferred to her a Catholic lady of
+the house of Howard. But the consequent alteration was not limited to
+the change of a wife. The hopes the Protestants had cherished now
+completely dwindled away: it was the hardest blow they could receive.
+Cromwell, the person who had been the main instrument in carrying out
+the schism by law, and who had then placed himself at the head of the
+reformers, was devoted to destruction by the now dominant party. He
+was even more violently overthrown than Wolsey had been. In the middle
+of business one day at a meeting of the Privy Council he was informed
+that he was a prisoner; two of his colleagues there tore the orders
+which he wore from his person, since he was no longer worthy of
+them;[136] that which had been the ruin of so many under his rule, a
+careless word, was now his own.
+
+Now began the persecution of those who infringed the Six Articles, on
+very slight grounds of fact, and with an absence of legal form in
+proving the cases, that held a drawn sword over innocent and guilty
+alike. Bishops like Latimer and Shaxton had to go to the Tower. But
+how many others atoned for their faith with their life! Robert Barnes,
+one of the founders of the higher studies at Cambridge, well known and
+universally beloved in Germany, who avowed the doctrines imbibed there
+without reserve, lost his life at the stake. For what the peasants
+had once demanded now again came to pass;--the heretics perished by
+fire according to the old statutes.
+
+After some time a check was given to extreme acts of violence. Legal
+forms were supplied for the bloody laws, which softened their
+severity. To Archbishop Cranmer, who was likewise attacked, the King
+himself stretched out a protecting hand. When he once more made common
+cause with the Emperor against France, and undertook a war on the
+Continent, he previously ordered the introduction of an English
+Litany, which was to be sung in processions. The fact that the Bible
+was read in the vernacular, and popular devotional exercises retained
+in use, saved the Protestant ideas and efforts, despite all
+persecution, from extinction.
+
+It gives a disagreeably grotesque colouring to the government of Henry
+VIII to see how his matrimonial affairs are mixed up with those of
+politics and religion. Queen Catharine Howard, whose marriage with him
+marked also the preponderance of the Catholic principle, was without
+any doubt guilty of offences like those which were imputed to her
+predecessor Anne: at her fall her relations, the leaders of the
+anti-Protestant party, lost their position and influence at court. The
+King then married Catharine Parr, who had good conduct and womanly
+prudence enough to keep him in good temper and contentment. But she
+openly cherished Protestant sympathies; and she was once seriously
+attacked on their account. Henry however let her influence prevail, as
+it did not clash with his own policy.
+
+Now that once the sanctity of marriage had been violated, the place of
+King's wife became as it were revocable; the antagonistic factions
+sought to overthrow the Queen who was inconvenient to them; that which
+has been at various times demanded of other members of the household,
+that they should be in complete agreement with the ruling system, was
+then required with respect to their wives, and indeed to the wife of
+the sovereign himself; the importance of marriage was now shown only
+by the violence with which it was dissolved.
+
+This self-willed energetic sovereign however by no means so completely
+followed merely his own judgment as has been assumed. We saw how after
+Wolsey's fall he at first inclined to the protestant doctrines, and
+then again persecuted them with extreme energy. He sacrificed, as
+formerly Empson and Dudley, so Wolsey and now Cromwell to the public
+opinion roused against them. He recognised with quick penetration
+successive political necessities and followed their guidance. The most
+characteristic thing is that he always seemed to belong body and soul
+to these tendencies, however much they differed from each other: he
+let them be established by laws contradictory to each other, and
+insisted with relentless severity on the execution of those laws.
+
+Under him, if ever, England appears as a commonwealth with a common
+will, from which no deviation is allowed, but which moves forward
+inclining now to the one side now to the other. It was no part of
+Henry VIII's Tudor principles and inclinations to call the Parliament
+together; but for his Church-enterprise it was indispensable. He gave
+its tendencies their way and respected the opinion which it
+represented: but at the same time he knew how to keep it at all times
+under the sway of his influence. Never has any other sovereign seen
+such devoted Parliaments gathered round him; they gave his
+proclamations the force of law, and allowed him to settle the
+succession according to his own views; they then gave effect to what
+he determined.
+
+In this way it was possible for Henry VIII to carry through a
+political plan that has no parallel. He allowed the spiritual
+tendencies of the century to gain influence, and then contrived to
+confine them within the narrowest limits. He would be neither
+Protestant nor Catholic, and yet again both; an unimaginable thing, if
+it had only concerned these opinions: but he retained his hold on the
+nation because his plan of separating the country from the Papal
+hierarchic system, without taking a step further than was absolutely
+necessary, suited the people's views.
+
+In the earlier years it appeared as though he would alienate Ireland
+by his religious innovations, since there Catholicism and national
+feeling were at one. And there really were moments when the insurgent
+chiefs in alliance with Pope and Emperor boasted that with French and
+Scotch help they would attack the English on all sides and drive them
+into the sea. But there too it proved of infinite service to him that
+he defended dogma while he abandoned the old constitution. In Ireland
+the monasteries and great abbeys were likewise suppressed; the
+O'Briens, Desmonds, O'Donnels, and other families were as much
+gratified as the English lords and gentlemen with the property almost
+gratuitously offered them. Under these circumstances they recognised
+Henry VIII as King of Ireland, almost as if they had a feeling of the
+change of position as regards public law into which they thus came:
+they received their baronies from him as fiefs and appeared in
+Parliament.
+
+Towards the end of his life Henry once more drew the sword against
+France in alliance with the Emperor. What urged him to this however
+was not the Emperor's interest in itself, but the support which the
+party hostile to him in Scotland received from the French. Moreover he
+did not trouble himself to bring about a decisive result between the
+two great powers: he was content with the conquest of Boulogne. He had
+reverted to his father's policy and resolved not to let himself be
+drawn over by any of his neighbours to their own interests, but to use
+their rivalry for his own profit and security.[137]
+
+And he was able to do yet more than his father to increase England's
+power of defence against the one or the other. We hear of fifty places
+on the coast which he fortified, not without the help of foreign
+master-workmen: the two great harbours of Dover and Calais he put into
+good condition and filled them with serviceable ships. For a long time
+past he had been building the first vessels of a large size (such as
+the Harry and Mary Rose) which then did service in the wars.[138] It
+may be that the property of the monasteries was partly squandered and
+ought to have been better husbanded: a great part of their revenues
+however was applied to this purpose, and conferred much benefit on the
+country so far as its own peculiar interests were concerned.
+
+The characteristic of his government consists in the mixture of
+spiritual and temporal interests, the union of violence with fostering
+care. The family enmities, which Henry VII had to contend with, are
+combined with the religious under Henry VIII, for instance in the
+Suffolk family: as William Stanley under the father, so Fisher and
+More under the son, perished because they threw doubt on the grounds
+for the established right, and still more because they challenged that
+right itself. It raised a cry of horror when it was seen how under
+Henry VIII Papists and Protestants were bound together and drawn to
+the place of execution together, since they had both broken the laws.
+Who would not have been sensible of this? Who would not have felt
+himself distressed and threatened? Yet at the opening of the Session
+of 1542, after the Chancellor had stated in detail the King's services
+(who had taken his place on the throne), Lords and Commons rose and
+bowed to the sovereign in token of their acknowledgment and gratitude.
+In the Session of 1545 he himself once more took up the word. In
+fatherly language he exhorted both the religious parties to peace; a
+feeling pervaded the assembly that this address was the last they
+would listen to from him; many were seen to burst into tears.
+
+For his was the strong power that kept in check the fermenting
+elements and set them a law that might not be broken. On their
+antagonism, by favouring or restraining them, he established his
+strong system of public order. In Henry VIII we remark no free
+self-abandonment and no inward enthusiasm, no real sympathy with any
+living man: men are to him only instruments which he uses and then
+breaks to pieces; but he has an incomparable practical intelligence, a
+vigorous energy devoted to the general interest; he combines
+versatility of view with a will of unvarying firmness. We follow the
+course of his government with a mingled sense of aversion and
+admiration.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[123] Papiers d'état du Cl. de Granvelle ii. 147, 210.
+
+[124] Documents in the Corpus Reformatorum ii. 1032, iii. 42.
+
+[125] Henry VIII to the judges--in Halliwell i. 342 (25 June 1535).
+
+[126] Burnet, History of the Reformation i. 213. Soames, History of
+the Reformation ii. 157.
+
+[127] Seckendorf, Historia Lutheranismi iii. 13, xxxix. p. 112: my
+German History iv. 46.
+
+[128] Injunctions given by the authority of the King. Burnet's
+Collection p. 160.
+
+[129] Prior of Charterhouse (Houghton), Speech, in Strype i. 313.
+
+[130] Froude, History of England iii. 104.
+
+[131] 'The people were unsatisfyed that the parliament was not held at
+York; but our King alledged that since they had not restaured all the
+religious houses [as they had promised] he was not bound strictly to
+hold promise with them.' Herbert, Henry VIII, p. 428.
+
+[132] Los impedimentos en que esta S. M. por la malignidad del dicho
+rey de Francia que haze gran fundamento en la adherencia del dicho rey
+de Inglaterra, y la obstinacion ceguedad y pertinacia en que esta.
+(Report in the State Archives at Paris.)
+
+[133] As it is said in the Emperor's letter of refusal to his
+ambassador at Rome. 'Los desviados de Germania se juntarian mas
+estrechamente con el rey de Inglaterra.' (Document in the Archives at
+Paris.)
+
+[134] In a letter of the Emperor, 2 November, is mentioned 'le
+descontentement, que le roi d'Ingleterre prenoit de Anna de Bolans.'
+Papiers d'état ii. 224.
+
+[135] Marillac au roi, 8 Juillet 1540. 'Le peuple l'aymoit et estimoit
+bien fort, comme la plus douce gracieuse humaine Reyne, qu'ils eurent
+onque.'
+
+[136] A description of the scene, which deserves to be known, is
+contained in the letter of the French ambassador, Marillac, to the
+Constable Montmorency, 23 June 1540.
+
+[137] Froude iv. 104.
+
+[138] Marillac assures us that there were not more than eight vessels
+in England over 500 tons, that then the King built in 1540 fourteen
+larger ones, among them 'le grand Henri,' over 1800 tons; he had
+however 'peu de maistres que entendent a l'ouvrage. Les naufs
+(navires) du roi sont fournies d'artillerie et de munition beaucoup
+mieux que de bons pilots et de mariniers dont la plus part sont
+estrangers.' (Letter of 1 Oct. 1540.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+RELIGIOUS REFORM IN THE ENGLISH CHURCH.
+
+
+The question arises, whether it was possible permanently to hold to
+Henry's stand-point, to his rejection of Papal influence and to his
+maintenance of the Catholic doctrines as they then were. I venture to
+say, it was impossible: the idea involves an historical contradiction.
+For the doctrine too had been moulded into shape under the influence
+of the supreme head of the hierarchy while ascending to his height of
+power: they were both the product of the same times, events,
+tendencies: they could not be severed from each other. Perhaps they
+might have been both modified together, doctrine and constitution, if
+a form had been found under which to do it, but to reject the latter
+and maintain the former in its completed shape--this was
+impracticable.
+
+When it was seen that Henry could not live much longer, two parties
+became visible in the country as well as at court, one of which,
+however much it disguised it, was without doubt aiming at the
+restoration of the Pope's supremacy, while the other was aiming at a
+fuller development of the Protestant principle. Henry had settled the
+succession so that first his son Edward, then his elder daughter (by
+his Spanish wife), then the younger (by Anne Boleyn), were to succeed.
+As the first, the sovereign who should succeed next, was a boy of
+nine, it was of infinite importance to settle who during the time of
+his minority should stand at the helm. The nearest claim was possessed
+by the boy's uncle on the mother's side, Edward Seymour, Earl of
+Hertford, who had begun to play a leading part in Henry's court and
+army, was in close alliance with Queen Catharine Parr, and like her
+cherished Protestant sympathies. But the Norfolks with their Catholic
+sympathies who had previously so long exercised a leading influence on
+the government, would not give way to him. Norfolk's son, the Earl of
+Surrey, adopted the immoral plan of ensnaring the King, who though
+dying was yet supposed to be still susceptible to woman's charms, by
+means of his sister, in order to draw him back to the side of his
+family and the strict Catholics: a plot which failed at once when his
+sister refused to play such a part. The ambitious announcements into
+which he allowed himself to be hurried away could only bring about the
+opposite result: he himself was executed, his father thrown into
+prison, and the man who could have done most in the Catholic
+direction, Bishop Gardiner, was struck out of the list of those who,
+after the King's death, were to form the Privy Council.[139]
+Immediately afterwards, January 1547, Henry died. He had composed the
+Privy Council of men of both tendencies in the hope, as it appears,
+that in this way his system would be most surely upheld. But men were
+too much accustomed to see the highest power represented in one
+leading personage, for it to continue long in the hands of a Board of
+Councillors. From the first sittings of the Privy Council Edward VI's
+uncle, the Earl of Hertford, came forth as Duke of Somerset and
+Protector of the realm. In him the reforming tendency won the upper
+hand.
+
+It appeared at once with full force at the Coronation, which was not
+celebrated at all after the form traced out by Henry VIII, since even
+this would have tied them far too much to the existing system;
+Cranmer, in the discourse which he there addressed to the young King,
+departed in the most decided manner from all the ideas hitherto
+attached to a coronation. Whither had the times of the first Lancaster
+departed, in which a special hierarchic sacredness was given to the
+Anointing through its connexion with Thomas Becket? Becket's shrine
+had been destroyed. The present Archbishop of Canterbury went back to
+the earliest times of human history: he brought forward the example of
+Josias, who likewise came to the government in tender years and
+extirpated the worship of idols: so might Edward VI also completely
+destroy image-worship, plant God's true service, and free the land
+from the tyranny of the Bishop of Rome; it was not the oil that made
+him God's anointed, but the power given him from on high, in virtue of
+which he was God's representative in his realm. His duty to the Church
+was changed into his duty to religion: instead of upholding the
+existing state of things, it at once pledges and empowers him to
+reform the Church.[140]
+
+The great question now was, how an alteration could be prepared in a
+legal manner, and how far it would be possible to maintain in this the
+constitution of the realm in its relation to the states of Europe. On
+the ground of the supremacy and of a precedent of Henry VIII, they
+began with a resolution to despatch commissions throughout the realm,
+to revive the suppressed Protestant sympathies; the precedent was
+found in the ordinances that had once proceeded from Thomas Cromwell,
+just as if they had not in the least been annulled by what had
+happened since, but simply set aside by party feeling and neglect.
+They were to enquire whether, as therein ordered, the bishops had
+preached against the Pope's usurpation, the parish priests had taught
+men to regard not outward observances but fulfilment of duty as the
+real 'good works,' and had laboured to diminish feast-days and
+pilgrimages. Above all, images to which superstitious reverence was
+paid were at last to be actually removed: the young were to be really
+taught the chief points of the faith in English, a chapter of the
+Bible should be read every Sunday, and Erasmus' Paraphrase employed to
+explain it. In place of the sermon was to come one of the Homilies
+which had been published under the authority of the Archbishop and
+King. For this last ordinance also authority was found in an
+injunction of Henry VIII. Archbishop Cranmer, whose work they are,
+establishes in them the two principles, on which he had already
+proceeded in 1536, one that Holy Scripture contains all that it is
+necessary for men to know, the other that forgiveness of sins depends
+only on the merits of the Redeemer and on faith in Him. On this
+depends absolutely the possibility of rooting out of men's minds the
+belief in the binding force of Tradition, and the hierarchic views as
+to the merit of good works. The Archbishop's views were promoted by
+eloquent and zealous preachers such as Matthew Parker, John Knox, Hugh
+Latimer; more than all by the last, who had been released from the
+Tower, weak in body but with unimpaired vigour of spirit. The fact of
+his having maintained these doctrines in the time of persecution, his
+earnest way and manner, and his venerable old age doubled the effect
+of his discourses.
+
+No direct alteration could be thought of so long as the Six Articles
+still existed with their severe threats of punishment. In the
+Parliament elected under the influence of the new government it needed
+little persuasion to procure their repeal. The Protector assured the
+members that he had been urgently entreated to effect this, since
+every man felt himself endangered.[141]
+
+One of those popular beliefs gained ground, which are often more
+effective in great assemblies than elaborate proofs: the conviction
+that doctrine and authority were too closely akin for the separation
+from Rome to be maintained without deviation in doctrine; the breach
+must be made wider if it was to continue, and the hierarchic doctrines
+give way.
+
+So it came about that by a unanimous resolution of Convocation, which
+Parliament confirmed, the alteration was approved, which almost more
+than any other characterises those Church formularies that deviate
+from the Romish, the administration of the communion in both kinds.
+
+Now it was exactly from this that the transformation of the whole
+divine worship in England proceeded. The very next Easter (1548) a new
+form for the communion office was published in English. This was
+followed, according to a wish expressed by the young King, by a
+Liturgy for home and church use, in which the revised Litany of Henry
+VIII was also included. In this 'Common Prayerbook' they everywhere
+kept to what was before in use, but everywhere also made changes. The
+Reforming tendencies obtained the upper hand in reference to its
+doctrinal contents; thus even one of the rubrics previously in favour
+by which auricular confession was declared to be indispensable was now
+omitted; it was left to every man's judgment to avail himself of it or
+not. At times they again sought out what had been disused in later
+ages: they recurred to Anglo-Saxon usages. The Common Prayer-book is a
+genuine monument of the religious feeling of this age, of its learning
+and subtlety, its forbearance and decision. In the Parliament of 1549
+it was received with admiration: men even said it was drawn up under
+the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. The order went forth for its
+adoption in all churches of the land, no other liturgy was to be used;
+it has nourished and edified the national piety of the English
+people.[142]
+
+And just as it was now asserted that in all this they were only
+carrying out the views of the deceased King, as he had set them forth
+many years before and had at the last again proclaimed them, so now
+Somerset undertook to carry through another of his intentions as well,
+which was closely connected with his religious plans.
+
+In 1542 Henry VIII had agreed with some of the most powerful nobles of
+Scotland that in that country too the Church should be reformed, all
+relations with France broken off, and the young Queen brought to
+England in order if possible to marry his son Edward at some future
+day. The scheme broke down owing to all kinds of opposition, but the
+idea of uniting England and Scotland in one great Protestant kingdom
+had thus made its appearance in the world and could never again be set
+aside. The ambition to realise it filled the soul of Somerset. When,
+before the end of the summer of 1547, he took up arms, he hoped to
+bring about an acknowledgment of England's old supremacy over
+Scotland, to prepare the way for the future union of both countries by
+the marriage, and to annihilate the party there which opposed the
+progress of Protestantism. A vision floated before him of fusing both
+nations into one by a union of dynasty and of creed. It was mainly
+from the religious point of view that his ward regarded the matter.
+'They fight for the Pope,' wrote Edward to the Protector when he was
+already in the field, 'we strike for the cause of God, without doubt
+we shall win.[143]'
+
+Somerset had already penetrated far into the land when he offered the
+Scots to retreat and make peace on the one condition that Mary should
+marry Edward VI. But the ruling party did not so much as allow his
+offer to be known. A battle took place at Pinkie, in which Somerset
+won a brilliant victory. Not a little did this victory contribute to
+establish his consequence in the world: even in Scotland some
+districts on the borders took the oath of fidelity to King Edward. But
+in general the antipathies of the Scotch to the English were all the
+more roused by it; they would hear nothing of a wooing, carried on
+with arms in the hand: the young Queen was after some time (August
+1548) carried off to France, to be there married to the Dauphin. The
+Catholic interests once more maintained their ascendancy in Scotland
+over those of the English and the Protestants.
+
+And how could Somerset's plans and enterprises fail to meet with
+resistance in England itself? All the elements were still in existence
+that had once set themselves in opposition to King Henry with such
+energy. When an attempt was made in earnest to carry out the
+innovations at home, in the summer of 1549, the revolt burst into
+flame once more.
+
+In Cornwall a tumult arose at the removal of an image, and the King's
+commissary was stabbed by a priest. The troubles extended to
+Devonshire, where men forced the priests to celebrate the mass after
+the old ritual, and then took the field with crosses and tapers, and
+carrying the Host before them. When their numbers became so large as
+to embolden them to put forth a manifesto, they demanded before
+all--incredible as it may seem--the restoration of the Six Articles
+and the Latin Mass, the customary reverence to the Sacrament and to
+images. They did not go so far as to demand the restoration of the
+authority of the Roman See, like the rebels under Henry VIII; but they
+pressed for a fresh recognition of the General Councils, and of the
+old church laws as a whole. At least half of the confiscated church
+property was to be given back, two abbeys at least were to remain in
+each county. But this movement owed its peculiar character to yet
+another motive. The enclosures of the arable land for purposes of
+pasture, of which the peasantry had been long complaining, did not
+merely continue; the nobility, which took part in the secularisation
+of the church-lands in an increasing degree, extended its grasp also
+to the newly-gained estates. So it came to pass that a rising of the
+peasants against the nobles was now united with tendencies towards
+church restoration, as in previous times with ideas of quite a
+different kind. East and West were in revolt at one and the same time
+and for different reasons. On a hill near Norwich, the chief leader, a
+tanner by trade, called Ket, took his seat under a great oak which he
+called the Oak of Reformation; he had the mass read daily after the
+old use: but he also planned a remodeling of the realm to suit the
+views of the people. The wildest expectations were aroused. A prophecy
+found belief according to which monarchy and nobility were to be
+destroyed simultaneously, and a new government set up under four
+Governors elected by the common people. And woe to him who wished to
+reason with the peasants against their design. They were already
+bending their bows against a preacher who attempted to do so, he was
+only saved with difficulty. But they were still less capable this
+time of withstanding the organised power of the State than they had
+been under Henry VIII. In Devonshire they were beaten by Lord Russel,
+the ancestor of the Dukes of Bedford; in Norfolk, where they had risen
+in the greatest force, by John Dudley Earl of Warwick. Under his
+banners we find German troops as well, who were untouched by the
+national sympathies, and in the rebels combated only the enemies of
+Protestantism. The government obtained a complete victory.
+
+The insurrectionary movement was suppressed, but it once more produced
+a violent reaction in home affairs, by which this time the head of the
+government was himself struck down.[144] Among English statesmen there
+is none who had a more vivid idea of the monarchical power than the
+Protector Somerset. He started from the view that religious and
+political authority were united in the hand of the anointed King in
+virtue of his divine right. The prayer which he daily addressed to God
+is still extant; it is full of the feeling that to himself, as the
+representative and guardian of the King, not only his guidance but
+also the direction of all affairs is entrusted. Such was also the view
+of the young sovereign himself. In one of his letters he thanks the
+Protector for taking this employment on him, and for trying to bring
+his State to its lawful obedience, the country to acknowledge the true
+religion, and the Scots to submission. Somerset did not think himself
+bound by the opinion of the Privy Council, since with him, and with no
+other, lay the responsibility for the administration of the State. He
+held it to be within his competence to remove at pleasure those of its
+members who showed themselves adverse to him. He too had that jealousy
+of power, which always directs itself against those who stand nearest
+to it. There is no doubt that his brother, Thomas Lord Seymour,
+impelled by a restless ambition, hoped to overthrow the existing
+government and put himself in possession of the highest place, and
+committed manifold illegal acts; he--the Lord Admiral of the
+realm--even entered into alliance with the pirates in the
+Channel.[145] But despite this it was thought at the time very severe
+when the Protector gave his word that the vengeance of the law should
+be executed on his brother. His reason was that Lord Seymour would not
+submit to sue in person for mercy to him the injured party and
+possessor of power. Such were these men, these brothers. The one died
+rather than pray for mercy: the other made the bestowal of it depend
+on this prayer, this confession of his supreme authority.[146] The
+Protector took all affairs, home and foreign, exclusively into his own
+hand. Without asking any one, he filled up the ministerial and civil
+posts: to the foreign ambassadors he gave audience alone. He erected
+in his house a Court of Requests,[147] which encroached not a little
+on the business of Chancery. The palace in the Strand, which still
+bears his name, was to be a memorial of his power; not merely houses
+and gardens, but also churches which occupied the ground, or from
+which he wished to collect his building materials, were destroyed with
+reckless arbitrary power. Great historical associations are
+indissolubly linked with this house. For it was Somerset after all,
+who through personal zeal opened a free path for the Protestant
+tendency which had originated under Henry VIII but had been repressed,
+and gave the English government a Protestant character. He connected
+with this not merely the Union of Scotland and England, but a yet
+further idea of great importance for England itself. He wished to free
+the change of religion from the antipathy of the peasantry which was
+at that time so prominent. In the above-mentioned dissensions he took
+open part for the demands of the commons: he condemned the progress of
+the enclosures and gave his opinion that the people could not be
+blamed so heavily for their rebellion, as their choice lay only
+between death by hunger and insurrection. It seemed as though he
+wished in the next Parliament by means of his influence to carry
+through a legal measure in favour of the commons.
+
+But by this he necessarily awakened the ill will of the aristocracy.
+He was charged with having instigated the troubles themselves by
+proclamations which he issued in opposition to the Privy Council; and
+with not merely having done nothing to suppress them but with having
+on the contrary supported the ringleaders and taken them under his
+protection.[148] No doubt this was the reason why the campaign against
+the rebels in Norfolk was not entrusted to him, as he wished, but
+(after some vacillation) to his rival, John Dudley, Earl of Warwick.
+The victory gained by him, with the active sympathy of the nobility,
+which was defending its own interests, was a defeat for Somerset. Even
+those who did not believe that he had any personal share in the
+movement, nevertheless reproached him with having allowed conditions
+to be prescribed to himself and his government by the people; the
+common man would be King. Financial difficulties arising from an
+alteration in the coinage, and ill success in the war against France,
+contributed to give his opponents the ascendancy in the Privy Council.
+Somerset once entertained the idea of setting the masses in movement
+on his own behalf: one day he collected numerous bands of people at
+Hampton Court, under cover of summoning them to defend the King, by
+whose side his enemies wished to set up a regency. But this pretext
+had little foundation, it was only himself whom his rivals would no
+longer see at the head of affairs: after a short fluctuation in the
+relations between the main personages he was forced to submit. He
+saved his life for that time: after an interval he was released from
+prison and again entered the Privy Council: then he once more made an
+attempt to recover the supreme power by help of the people, but thus
+drew his fate on himself. The masses who regarded him as their
+champion showed him loud and heartfelt sympathy at his execution.
+
+On Somerset's first fall it was said that the Emperor Charles V had a
+share in bringing it about, and this is very conceivable; for what
+result could be more displeasing to this sovereign than that
+Protestantism, which he was putting down in Germany, should have
+gained at the same moment a strong position in England: it is certain
+that the change of administration was greeted with joy by the court at
+Brussels.[149]
+
+But it brought the Emperor no advantage. At the moment the new
+government assumed a hostile attitude towards France: but soon
+afterwards the Earl of Warwick, who now took the lead of affairs as
+Duke of Northumberland, found himself driven to the necessity of
+making a peace with that power, by which Boulogne was given up and
+Scotland abandoned to French influence. One article of the treaty
+contains indirectly a renunciation of the proposed marriage between
+the King of England and the Queen of Scotland. And this treaty was
+greatly to the Emperor's disadvantage, since it now set the French
+free to renew the hostility against him which had been broken off some
+years before by an agreement all in his favour. They allied themselves
+for this purpose with the German princes who found the Emperor's yoke
+intolerable. These princes had even applied to the English government:
+and Edward would personally have been much inclined to lend an ear to
+their proposals. If the fear of being involved in war with the Emperor
+on this account withheld him from open sympathy, yet it is certain
+that his general political attitude essentially contributed to enable
+them to take up arms and break the Emperor's ascendancy.
+
+Among the determining causes of a movement which is part of the
+history of the world must be specially reckoned the personal
+disposition of this prince, young as he was even at the close of his
+reign. Somerset had kept him rather close: the Duke of Northumberland
+gave him greater freedom, allowed him to manage his own money, and was
+pleased when he made presents and showed himself as King; he was
+careful to see that immediate obedience was paid him.[150] Whilst
+Edward had been hitherto almost exclusively busied with his studies,
+he now turned to knightly exercises for which he also showed aptitude:
+he sat well on horseback, drew his bow and broke his lance as well as
+any other young man of his age. But with all this his learning was not
+neglected.[151] Edward VI not merely possessed for his years
+extraordinary and manifold attainments; the written remains which are
+extant from his hand display a rare mental growth. What he has written
+for instance on his connexion with the two Seymours, his uncles,
+indicates a clear and almost a judicial conception of existing
+relations, which is very uncommon. On his tutor's advice, to prevent
+his passing thoughts from getting confused, he regularly noted them
+down, and composed a diary which has the same characteristics and may
+be regarded as a valuable historical monument. But studies and
+religion coincide in him: he is Protestant to the core; his chief
+ambition is by means of his rank and power to place himself at the
+head of the Protestant world. The duke could not have ventured to
+oppose the progress of the Reformation.
+
+In the days of distress, after the defeat in the Schmalkaldic war,
+England was regarded as the refuge of the gospel: men welcomed the
+scholars who fled thither, whose co-operation in the conflict with
+Catholicism, still so powerful, was very desirable. In Cranmer's
+palace at Lambeth were assembled Italians, French, Poles, Swiss, South
+Germans and North Germans; the Secretary of State, William Cecil, who
+had been trained in the service of the Protector, but had kept his
+place after his fall, obtained them the King's support. Martin Bucer
+and Paulus Fagius received promotion at Cambridge, Peter Martyr at
+Oxford: he there maintained the Calvinistic views on the communion in
+a great disputation. There were Walloon and French churches in the old
+centres of Catholic worship, Canterbury and Glastonbury; John a Lasco
+preached in the church of the Augustines in London. With no less
+vigour than these foreigners did natives, sometimes returned exiles,
+maintain the views then prevailing on the Continent. Under these
+influences it was impossible, in conformity with the view taken up in
+1536, to abide by the dogmas, which had been put forth by the school
+of Wittenberg, now completely overthrown. The difference comes out
+very remarkably when we compare the Common Prayer-book of 1549 with
+the revised edition of 1552. Originally men had held fast to the real
+presence in England also: Cranmer in his catechism expressly declared
+for it: in the formula of the first book, which was compiled out of
+Ambrose and Gregory, this view was retained:[152] but men in England
+had since convinced themselves that this doctrine had not prevailed so
+exclusively in Christian antiquity as had been hitherto thought:
+following the example of Ridley, the most learned of the Protestant
+bishops, the majority had given up the real presence: in the new
+Common Prayer-book a controversial passage was even inserted against
+it. First on their own impulse, and then with the help of the Privy
+Council, the zealous Protestant-minded bishops removed the high altars
+from the churches and had wooden tables for the communion put in their
+place: since with the word Altar was associated the idea of Sacrifice.
+
+It was now inevitable that the question from which all had started in
+England, as to the relation between State and Church, should be
+decided completely in favour of the secular principle. It is very true
+that Cranmer held fast to the objective view of the visible church. If
+the ceremonies were altered with which the Romish church imparts the
+spiritual consecration, yet in this respect only the mystical usages
+introduced in recent centuries were abandoned, and the ritual restored
+to the form used in more primitive times, especially in the African
+church. But it was surely a violent change, when those who wished to
+receive consecration were now previously asked, whether their inward
+call agreed both with the will of the Redeemer and the law of the
+land; they were required to assent to the principle that Scripture
+contains all which it is necessary for man to know, and to pledge
+themselves to guard against any doctrine not in conformity with
+Scripture. It is generally believed, and the fact is of lasting
+importance, that the Convocation of the clergy, a commission of the
+spiritualty, the Primate-Archbishop and a number of bishops, took part
+in the change; but yet the decisive decrees went forth from the
+Parliament, to which the spiritual power had been irrevocably attached
+since Henry VIII, and sometimes from the Privy Council alone. To
+establish a normal form of doctrine, men set to work to compose a
+Confession, which was completed at that time in forty-two Articles.
+There had been a wish that Melanchthon should have come over in person
+to aid in composing it; at any rate his labours had much influence in
+deciding the shape it took. The Articles belong to the class of
+Confessions, as they were then framed in Saxony by Melanchthon, in
+Swabia by Brenz, to be laid before the coming Council. And it is just
+in this that their value lies, that by them England attached herself
+most closely to the Protestant community on the Continent. They are
+the work of Cranmer, who was entrusted with their composition by the
+King and Privy Council, and communicated his labours first to the
+King's tutor, Cheke, and the Secretary of State, Cecil: in conjunction
+with them he next laid them before the King; with the assistance of
+some chaplains their final form was given them; then the Privy Council
+ordered them to be subscribed. The influence of the government on the
+nominations to the office of bishop was now still more open: the
+bishops were to hold office as long as they conducted themselves
+well,--in other words, as long as the ruling powers were content with
+them: the church jurisdiction was no longer administered in the name
+of the bishopric, but, like the temporal jurisdiction, in the King's
+name and under the King's seal; when they proceeded to revise the
+church laws, the primary maxim was, not to admit anything that
+contravened the temporal laws.[153] The use of the power of the keys
+was also derived by Cranmer from the permission of the sovereign.
+Against this ever-increasing dependence some bishops of the old views
+made a struggle; to avoid coming into direct conflict with the
+supremacy, which they had acknowledged, they put forth the assertion
+that it could not be exercised by a King under age; they connived at
+the mass being read in side-chapels of their cathedrals, or refused to
+allow the change of the altars into communion-tables, or kept alive
+the controversy as to the doctrine of faith. The government on their
+side persisted in enforcing uniformity. They brought all opponents
+before a commission consisting of secular as well as ecclesiastical
+dignities, which had no scruple in pronouncing the deprivation of the
+bishops: a fate which befell Gardiner of Winchester, Bonner of London,
+Day of Chichester, Heath of Worcester. In vain did they plead that the
+court before which they were brought was not a canonical one; the
+government appealed to the general rights of the temporal power as it
+had once been exercised by the Roman Emperors. In the conflict of
+church opinions the Protestant-minded prelates now had the upper hand.
+Many who did not conform bought toleration from the government by
+sacrifices of money and goods. Elsewhere the newly-appointed bishops
+assented to concessions which did not always profit even the crown,
+but sometimes, as at Lichfield, private persons.[154] Already the
+further question was discussed whether there is in fact any essential
+distinction between bishops and presbyters: a church of foreigners was
+set up in London, to present a pattern of the pure apostolic
+constitution as an example to the country. The government which had
+acquired such a thorough mastery over the clergy developed an open
+disinclination to the old forms of constitution in the church. Who
+could have said, so long as things remained in the path thus once
+entered upon, whither this would lead?
+
+NOTES:
+
+[139] Froude iv. 515 (extracts from the documents).
+
+[140] Collier ii. 220 (Records lii).
+
+[141] Proclamation of 8 July 1549 in Tytler, England under Edward VI
+and Mary I, p. 180.
+
+[142] The point of view under which it was drawn up appears in a
+declaration inserted in the edition of 1549: 'the most weighty cause
+of the abolishment of certain ceremonies was, that they were abused
+partly by the superstitious blindness of the unlearned, and partly by
+unsatiable avarice.--Where the old (ceremonies) may be well used there
+they [their opponents] cannot reprove the old only for their age. They
+ought rather to have reverence unto them for their antiquity, if they
+will declare themselves to be more studious of unity and concord, than
+of innovations and newfangleness which--is always to be eschewed.'
+
+[143] 12 Sept. 1547 in Halliwell ii. 31. Cranmer appointed a prayer in
+church for the marriage of Edward and Mary, 'to confound all those,
+which labour to the lett and interruption of so godly a quiet and
+amity.' In Somerset's prayer printed, since the first edition of this
+book, in Froude v. 47, it is said: 'Look upon the small portion of the
+earth, which professeth thy holy name; especially have an eye to thy
+small isle of Britain;--that the Scotismen and we might thereafter
+live in one love and amity, knit into one nation by the marriage of
+the King's Majesty and the young Scotish Queen.'
+
+[144] Godwin, Rerum Anglicarum Annales 315.
+
+[145] Proofs in Froude v. 136.
+
+[146] So Queen Elizabeth tells us. Ellis, Letters ii. ii. 257.
+
+[147] Cecil however was not the first Master of Requests: Thomas More
+already appears under this title; Nares, Life of Burghley i. 179.
+
+[148] 'You have suffered the rebels to lie in camp and armour against
+the King his nobles and gentlemen; you did comfort divers of the said
+rebels.' Articles against the Lord Protector, in Strype, Memorials of
+Cranmer ii. 342.
+
+[149] Marillac 26 Oct. 1549. 'Ceux-ci (at the Emperor's court) font
+une merveilleuse demonstration de joye de ce que le protecteur est
+abattu.' In Turnbull, Calendar of State Papers 1861 p. 47 an
+Instruction of the Council is mentioned, 'to acquaint the Emperor with
+the proceeding taken against the Duke of Somerset.' We should like to
+be better informed about this Instruction, in which too the Emperor
+was asked for aid.
+
+[150] Soranzo, Relatione d'Inghilterra 1554. 'Per posseder la sua
+grazia ben amplamente, non solo faceva qualche spettacolo, per dargli
+piacere, ma gli diede liberta di danari.' Florentine Collection viii.
+37.
+
+[151] As he advises a friend: 'Apply yourself to riding shooting or
+tennis--not forgetting sometimes when you have leisure, your learning,
+chiefly reading the Scripture.' Halliwell ii. 49.
+
+[152] Wheatly in Soames, History of the Reformation iii. 604.
+
+[153] In the commission of 32 members (bishops, divines, civilians,
+lawyers) we find the names of Will. Cecil, Will Peters, Thomas Smith.
+
+[154] Compare Heylin, History of the Reformation 50, 101.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+TRANSFER OF THE GOVERNMENT TO A CATHOLIC QUEEN.
+
+
+We can easily see how the power of the crown, founded by the first
+Tudor, and developed by the second through the emancipation from the
+Papacy, was further strengthened under the third. From Edward VI we
+have essays, in which he speaks about the spiritual and temporal
+government with the consciousness of a sovereign, whose actions depend
+only on himself. In the Homilies, which obtained legal sanction, there
+is found an express condemnation of resistance to the King, 'for Godes
+sake, from whom Kings are, and for orders sake.'
+
+Whilst men were now expecting that Edward VI would arrive at manhood,
+and take the government completely into his own hands, and conduct it
+in the sense he had hitherto foreshadowed--not merely carrying out the
+Reformation thoroughly at home, but assuming the leadership of the
+Protestant world, symptoms appeared in him of the malady to which his
+half-brother Richmond had succumbed at an early age. But how then if
+the same fate befell him? According to Henry VIII's arrangement Mary
+was then to ascend the throne who, through her descent from Queen
+Catharine and from an inborn disposition which had become all the more
+confirmed by her opposition to her father and brother, represented the
+Catholic and Spanish interest. Nothing else could be expected but that
+she would employ the whole power of the State in support of her own
+views, would, so far as it could possibly be done, bring back the
+church to its earlier form, would depress the men who had hitherto
+played a great part by the side of the King and subject them to the
+opposite faction. But were they quietly to acquiesce in their fate?
+
+The ambition of the Duke of Northumberland associated itself with the
+great interests of religion, to prevent the threatening ruin. He
+persuaded the young King that it lay in his power to alter his
+father's settlement of the succession, as in itself not conformable to
+law, neither Mary nor the younger sister Elizabeth being entitled to
+the throne, as the two marriages from which they sprang had been
+declared illegal, and a bastard could not be made capable of wearing
+the English crown by any act of Parliament. Henry VIII had in his
+settlement of the succession passed over the descendants of his elder
+sister, married in Scotland, as foreigners, but acknowledged those of
+the younger, Mary of Suffolk, as the next heirs after his own
+children. Mary's elder daughter Frances had married Henry Grey of
+Dorset, who had already obtained the title of Suffolk, and had three
+daughters, the eldest of whom was Jane Grey. It was to her, whom the
+Duke of Northumberland married to one of his sons, that he now
+directed the King's attention, and induced him to prefer her to his
+sisters. Yet it was not so much to herself in person as to her male
+issue that Edward's attention was originally directed. Never yet had a
+Queen ruled in England in her own right, and even now there was a wish
+to avoid it. Edward arranged that, if he himself died without male
+heirs, the male heirs of Lady Frances, and if she too left none, then
+those of Lady Jane, should succeed. He hoped still to live till such
+an heir should be eighteen years old, in which case he could enter on
+the government immediately after himself. If his death occurred
+earlier, Jane was to conduct the administration during the interval,
+not as Queen but as Regent, and conjointly with a Council of
+government still to be named by him.[155] This Council of executors
+was to avoid all war, all other change, and especially not to alter
+the established religion in any point: rather it was to devote itself
+to completing the ecclesiastical legislation in conformity with that
+religion, and to the abolition of the Papal claims.[156] We see that
+Edward's view was, like that of many other sovereigns, to secure the
+continuance of his political and religious system of government for
+long years after his own death. The members of the Privy Council,
+before whom these arrangements were laid in the King's handwriting,
+promised on their oath and their honour to carry them out in every
+article, and to defend them with all their power.[157]
+
+And if the affair had been undertaken in this manner, who could say
+that it might not have succeeded? Northumberland did not neglect to
+form a strong family interest in favour of the new combination that he
+designed. He married his own daughter to Lord Hastings, who was
+descended from the house of York, and one of Jane's sisters with the
+son of the powerful Earl of Pembroke. He could reckon on the support
+of the King of France, to whom the succession of a niece of the
+Emperor was odious, and on the consent of the Privy Council, which was
+in great part dependent on him; how could the Protestant feeling have
+failed to gain him a large party in the country, especially since
+something might be said for the plan itself.
+
+But Edward VI's malady developed quicker than was expected. At the
+last moment he was further induced to award the succession not to the
+male heirs of Lady Jane, but to herself and her male heirs.[158] He
+died with the prayer that God would guard England from the Papacy.
+
+Lady Jane Grey had hitherto devoted her days to study. For father and
+mother were severe and found much in her to blame: on the other hand
+quiet hours of inward satisfaction were given her by the instructions
+of a teacher, always alike kindly disposed, who initiated her into
+learning and an acquaintance with literature: bending over her Plato,
+she did not miss the amusement of the chase which others were
+enjoying in the Park. After her marriage too, which did not make her
+exactly happy, she still lived thus with her thoughts withdrawn from
+the world, when she was one day summoned to Sion-House where she found
+a great and brilliant assembly. She still knew nothing of the King's
+death. What were her feelings, when she was told that Edward VI was
+dead; that to secure the kingdom from the Popish faith and the
+government of his two sisters who were not legitimate, he had declared
+her, Lady Jane, his heiress, and when the great dignitaries of the
+realm bent their knees and reverenced her as their Queen! At times
+they had already talked to her of her claim to the throne, but she had
+never thought much of it. When it now thus became a reality, her whole
+soul was overcome by it: she fell to the ground and burst into a flood
+of tears. Whether she had a full right to the throne, she could not
+judge: what she felt was her incapacity to rule. But whilst she
+uttered this, a different feeling passed through her, as she has told
+us herself: she prayed in the depths of her soul that, if the highest
+office belonged to her legally, God might give her the grace to
+administer it to his honour. The next day she betook herself by water
+to the Tower, and received the homage offered her. The heralds
+proclaimed her accession in the capital.
+
+But here this proclamation was received in silence and even with
+murmurs. The succession had been settled by Henry VIII on the basis of
+an act of Parliament: nothing else was expected but that this would be
+adhered to, and Mary succeed her brother: that Edward without any
+legal authorisation of a similar kind had now put a distant relative
+in his sister's place, seemed an open robbery of the lawful heir. It
+made no impression, that at the proclamation men were reminded of the
+Popery of the Princess Mary and her intention to restore the Papal
+power. Religious discord had not yet become so strong in England as to
+make men forget the fundamental principles of right on its account.
+The man who brought the princess the first news of Edward's death
+(which was still kept secret) remarks expressly in telling it, that he
+did not love her religion but abhorred the attempt to set aside lawful
+heirs. Mary prudently betook herself to Norfolk, where she had the
+most determined friends, to a castle on the sea; so as to be able, if
+her opponent should maintain the upper hand, to escape to the Emperor.
+But every one declared for her, the Catholics who saw in her the born
+champion of their religion and were strongest in those very districts,
+and the Protestants to whom the princess made some, though not
+binding, promises; she was proclaimed Queen in Norwich. If the Duke of
+Northumberland wished to carry out his projects, it was necessary for
+him to suppress this movement by force. He at once took the field for
+this purpose, with a fine body of artillery and two thousand infantry,
+and occupied a position in the neighbourhood of Cambridge.
+
+It seemed as though the crown would once more be fought for in open
+field just as it had been a century before, and that in fact, just as
+then, the neighbouring powers would interfere. On Northumberland's
+side French help was expected; on the other hand application was
+already made to the Emperor to send armed troops over the sea to his
+cousin.[159] It was not however this time to reach such a point: while
+the combination attempted in favour of Jane Grey met with strong
+popular resistance, it was shattered to pieces by internal discord. If
+the new Queen had such a good right as they told her, she would share
+it with none, not even with her husband; she would not appear as a
+creature of the Dudleys and a tool of their ambition: she would only
+name him a duke and would not allow him to be crowned with her as
+King. We recognise in this her high idea of the kingly power and its
+divine right; but we can also easily conceive that the discord which
+broke out on this point in the family could not but act on the members
+of the Privy Council, of whom only a section were in complete
+understanding with Northumberland, while the rest had merely yielded
+to the ascendancy of his power. While the duke was expecting armed
+reinforcements from London, a complete revolution took place there:
+under the management of the Privy Council Mary was proclaimed Queen,
+and a summons sent to Northumberland to submit to her. The fleet which
+was destined to prevent Mary's flight had already declared for her;
+the troops which were called out in the counties to fight against her
+crossed over to her side; in Northumberland's camp the same opinion
+gained the upper hand: the duke felt himself incapable of withstanding
+it: he allowed himself to be carried along by it like the rest. Men
+saw the extraordinary spectacle of the man who had marched out to
+destroy Mary now ordering her accession to be proclaimed in his
+encampment, he accompanied the herald and himself cried out Mary's
+name.[160] These English nobles have boundless ambition, they grasp
+with bold hand at the highest prizes: but they have no inner power of
+resistance, as against the course of events and public opinion they
+have no will of their own. However the duke might behave, he could not
+save either his freedom or his life. Soon afterwards Mary entered
+London amid the joyous shouts of the people. She was still united as
+closely as possible with her sister Elizabeth: they appeared together
+hand in hand. Jane Grey remained as a prisoner in the Tower, which she
+had entered as Queen. Never did the natural right of succession, as it
+was established by the testator of the inheritance and the Parliament,
+obtain a greater triumph.
+
+After the succession was decided, the great questions of government
+came into the foreground, above all the question what position Mary
+should take up with regard to religious matters.
+
+Among the Protestants the opinion prevailed that it could not yet be
+known whether she would not let religion remain in the state in which
+she found it. Towns where the Protestant feeling was strongest
+joyfully attached themselves to her in this expectation.
+
+Her cousin, the Emperor Charles, who justly regarded her accession as
+a victory, and who from the first moment exercised the greatest
+influence on her resolutions, advised her before all things to
+moderate her Catholic zeal. She should reflect that many of the lords
+by whom she was now supported, a part of the Privy Council, and the
+people of London, were Protestants, and guard against estranging them.
+She should at once call a Parliament to show that she meant to rule in
+the accustomed manner, and take care that the Northern counties, as
+well as Cornwall, where men still held the most firmly to Catholicism,
+were represented in it.
+
+This good advice was not without influence on the Queen. In a tumult
+which arose two days after her arrival in the city, she had the Lord
+Mayor summoned in order to tell him that she would force no man's
+conscience, she hoped that the people would through good instruction
+come back to the religion which she herself professed with full
+conviction. When she repeated this soon after in a proclamation, she
+added that these things must shortly be ordered by common consent. But
+of what kind this order would be, there could be already no doubt
+after these words: she desired a change, but intended to bring it
+about in a legal manner.
+
+In all the steps taken by her government her Catholic sympathies
+predominated. She felt no scruple in using the spiritual rights, which
+the constitution gave her, in favour of Catholicism. As 'Head of the
+Church next under God,' Mary forbade all preaching and interpretation
+of Scripture without special permission. But she entrusted the power
+of giving this permission to the same Bishop Gardiner who had offered
+the most persevering resistance to the Protestant tendencies of the
+previous government. The antagonism between the bishops entered again
+on an entirely new phase: the Catholics rose, the Protestants were
+depressed to the uttermost. Tonstal, Heath, and Day were, like
+Gardiner, restored to their sees on the ground of the protests lodged
+against the proceedings taken with reference to them at their
+deprivation, protests which were regarded as valid. Ridley had to give
+up the see of London again to Bonner: the Bishops of Gloucester and
+Exeter experienced the royal displeasure; not merely Latimer but also
+Cranmer were imprisoned in the Tower. Everywhere the images were
+replaced, in many churches the celebration of the mass was revived.
+Those preachers who declared themselves against it had to follow their
+bishops to prison. The Calvinistic model-congregation was dissolved.
+The foreign scholars quitted the country; and their most zealous
+followers also fled to the continent before the coming storm of
+persecution.
+
+At the beginning of October the Queen's coronation took place with the
+old customary ceremonies, for which the Emperor's leading minister,
+Granvella, Bishop of Arras, sent over a vase of consecrated oil, on
+the mystical meaning of which great stress was again laid. The Queen
+had some scruples about the coronation, as she wished previously to
+get rid of her title, 'Head of the Church': but the Emperor saw danger
+in delay; he thought the declaration she had in the deepest secrecy
+made to the Roman See, that she meant to re-establish its authority,
+removed any religious scruple. He fully approved of the coronation
+preceding the Parliament, and recommended the Queen, in virtue of her
+constitutional right, without any delay to name bishops and prelates,
+who might be useful to her at its impending meeting.
+
+But the supreme power once constituted, as formerly in the civil wars,
+so also in the times of the Reformation movement, had always exercised
+a decisive influence on the composition of the Parliamentary
+assemblies; would not this then be the case when it had declared
+itself again Catholic? No doubt the government, at the head of which
+Gardiner appeared as Lord Chancellor, used all the means at its
+disposal to guide the elections according to its views. It appears to
+have been with the same motive that the Queen in a proclamation, which
+generally breathed nothing but benevolence, remitted payment of the
+subsidies last voted under her brother. Yet we can hardly attribute
+the result wholly to this. Parliamentary elections are wont to receive
+their impulse from the mistakes of the last administration and the
+evils that have come to light: and much had undeniably been done under
+Edward VI which could not but call forth discontent. The ferment at
+home was increased by financial disorder: church property had suffered
+enormous losses. But above all the supreme power had taken a sudden
+start in breaking through its ancient bounds. And, last of all, the
+Protestant tendencies had allied themselves with an undertaking which
+ran directly counter to the customary law and to previous
+Parliamentary enactments. And so it might come to pass that the same
+feelings swayed the elections which had mainly brought about Mary's
+accession.
+
+But, after all, the result of these elections was not such as to make
+a complete return to the Papal authority probable. The Emperor
+Charles, who mainly guided the Queen's steps, warned her from
+attempting it. She had prayed him to communicate to her the Pope's
+declarations issued in favour of her hereditary right: he sent them to
+her, but with the advice to make no use of them, since they might
+involve her in difficulties without end. It seemed to him sufficient
+if the Parliament simply repealed the enactments which had formerly
+been passed respecting the invalidity of her mother's marriage with
+her father. In the bill which was drawn up on this point in the Upper
+House it was merely stated that the marriage, in itself valid and
+approved by the wisest persons of the realm, had been made displeasing
+to the King through evil influences and annulled by a sentence of
+Archbishop Cranmer, on whom the greatest blame fell. To many men this
+seemed already going too far, since together with the dispensation the
+old church authority was again recognised: but as there was not a word
+about the Pope in it, this was less apparent: the bill was passed
+unanimously. The act might be regarded as a political one. On the
+other hand religion was very directly affected by the proposal to
+repeal the alterations in the church service which had been introduced
+under Edward VI, and to abolish the Common Prayer-book. On this ensued
+the hottest conflict. Once the proposal had to be laid aside: when it
+was resumed, the debate on it lasted six days: a third of the members
+were steadily against it. But in the majority the opinion again
+prevailed that Henry VIII's church constitution--retention of the
+Catholic doctrines and emancipation from the Papacy--was the most
+suitable for England: a resolution was carried to the effect that only
+such books as were in use under Henry VIII should be henceforth used
+in the church. The new forms of divine service, which contained a
+clearly marked body of doctrine, were abolished and the old ones
+restored.
+
+The position which the Parliament took up in relation to another
+scarcely less important question coincided with this sense of national
+independence.
+
+It was a very widespread wish in England that the Queen should give
+her hand to young Courtenay, son of that Marquis of Exeter who had
+himself once thought of marrying Mary against her father's wishes. He
+was a young man of suitable age, handsome figure, and mental activity;
+Mary had not merely freed him from the prison in which her brother had
+kept him, but also endowed him with the Earldom of Devon, one of his
+father's possessions; in this act many saw a token of personal
+inclination. Bishop Gardiner was decidedly in his favour, and we can
+conceive how a great ecclesiastic, who had the power of the state in
+his hands, wished to altogether exclude every foreign influence; he of
+course knew that Courtenay would also conform in church matters.
+
+Gardiner spoke once with the Queen about it and was very pressing: she
+was absolutely against it. The old chronicle is entirely in error when
+it repeats the then widespread rumour of Mary's inclination for
+Courtenay. Mary told the Imperial ambassador that she was altogether
+ignorant of what love was; she had never seen Courtenay but once in
+her life, at the moment when she released him. She intended to marry,
+since she was assured that the welfare of the realm required it, but
+not an Englishman, not one who was a subject. As in other things, so
+in this, she requested the Emperor to give her his advice.
+
+Charles V would not have been absolutely against the plan of his
+cousin giving her hand to an English lord, whom England might obey
+more easily than a stranger: but, when she showed such an aversion to
+it, he did not hesitate for a moment as to what advice to give her.
+One of his brother's sons was taken into consideration, but rejected
+by him on the ground that there was already much ill-will against
+Spain stirring in the Netherlands, and a union of the German line with
+England might some day make it difficult for his own son to maintain
+those provinces: he therefore proposed him to the Queen. Don Philip,
+not yet thirty but already a widower for the second time, was just
+then negociating for a marriage with a Portuguese princess. These
+negociations were broken off and counter ones opened with England.
+Mary showed a joyful inclination to it at the first word: it was to
+this that her secret thoughts had turned.
+
+It looked as if the dynastic union of the Burgundian-Spanish house
+with the English, which was also a political alliance and had been
+violently broken off at the same time with that alliance, would now be
+restored more closely than before, and this time for ever. Men took up
+the idea that Philip's eldest son was to continue the Spanish line, as
+Ferdinand and his sons the German, but that from the new marriage, if
+it should be blest with offspring, an English line of the house of
+Burgundy was to proceed: a prospect of the extension of the power of
+England and of her influence on the continent, which it was expected
+would set aside all opposition.
+
+In England however every voice was against it, among nobles and
+commons, people and Parliament, high and low. The imperial court fully
+believed that it was Gardiner who brought the matter forward in
+Parliament. The House resolved to send a deputation to the Queen with
+the request that she would marry an Englishman. Mary, who had as high
+an idea of her prerogative as any of her predecessors or successors,
+felt herself almost insulted; she interrupted the speech as soon as
+she understood its purport, and declared that Parliament was taking
+too much on itself in wishing to give her advice in this matter: only
+with God, from whom she derived her crown, would she take counsel
+thereon.[161] When the Parliament, not satisfied with this, prepared a
+fresh application to her, it was dissolved.
+
+But if this happened among men who adhered to her views in other
+points, what would those say who saw themselves, contrary to their
+expectation, oppressed and endangered by the Queen's measures in
+religious matters?
+
+The agitation was so general that men caught at the hope of putting an
+end to all that was begun by a sudden rising. We find a statement
+which must not be lightly rejected, that the English nobility, which
+had taken great part in the Reformation movement and put itself in
+possession of much church property, came to an understanding at
+Christmas 1553, and decided on a general rising on the next Palm
+Sunday, 18th March:[162] thus doing as the French, German,
+Netherlandish and Scotch nobility had done, who took the initiative in
+this matter. In Cornwall Peter Carew was to have the lead, in the
+Midland Counties the Duke of Suffolk, in Kent Thomas Wyatt. As the
+Queen's Privy Council was even now not unanimous, they hoped to bring
+about an overthrow of the government before it was yet firmly
+established: and either to compel the Queen to dismiss her evil
+counsellors and give up the Spanish marriage, or if she remained
+obstinate to put her sister Elizabeth in her place, who would then
+marry Courtenay. The French, who saw in the Queen's marriage with the
+prince of Spain a danger for themselves, urged on the movement, and
+had a secret understanding with the rebels; their plan was to support
+it by an incursion from Scotland where they were then the masters, and
+an attack on Calais.[163] But as often happens with such comprehensive
+plans, the government detected them; the attempt to carry them out had
+to be made before the preparations were complete; in most of the
+places where an effort was made it was suppressed without much
+trouble. Carew fled to France; Suffolk, who in vain tried to draw
+Coventry over to his side, was captured. On the other hand Sir Thomas
+Wyatt's rising in Kent was formidable. He collected a couple of
+thousand men, defeated the royal troops, some of whom joined him, and
+as he had the sympathies of a great part of the inhabitants of London
+with him, he attempted forthwith an attack on the capital. But the new
+order of things had too firm a legal foundation to be so easily
+overthrown. The Queen betook herself to the Guildhall and addressed
+the assembled people, decided as she was and confident in the goodness
+of her cause; the general feeling was in favour of supporting her. All
+armed for defence. For a couple of days, during which Wyatt lay before
+the city, every one was under arms, mayor, aldermen and people; the
+lawyers went to the courts with armour under their robes: priests were
+seen celebrating mass with mail under their church vestments. The
+Queen had some trustworthy troops, whose leader, the Earl of Pembroke,
+told her he would never show his face to her again if he did not free
+her from these rebels. When Wyatt at last appeared in Hyde Park with
+exhausted and badly fed men, he was met and beaten by an overwhelming
+body of Pembroke's troops; with a part of his followers he was driven
+into the city, and there made prisoner without much bloodshed.
+
+It has always been reckoned to the Queen's credit that amid the alarm
+of these days she never quitted the unfortified palace. She had now an
+opportunity to rid herself completely of Northumberland's faction.
+Jane Grey, whose name at least had been mentioned, her father Suffolk,
+her uncle Thomas Grey, were executed; Wyatt also and a great number of
+the prisoners paid for their rebellion with their lives.[164]
+
+NOTES:
+
+[155] King Edward: My devise for the succession: in 'Chronicle of
+Queen Anna, with illustrative documents and notes' by Nicholls, 89.
+
+[156] King Edward's Minutes for his last will. In 'Chronicle of Queen
+Anna, with illustrative documents and notes' by Nicholls, 101.
+
+[157] Engagement of the council, the signatures all autograph. Ibid.
+90.
+
+[158] This was done by a correction. The original text was 'to the
+Lady Jane's heires masle;' instead of 'Jane's,' the King now wrote 'to
+the Lady Jane and her h. m. (Nares' Burghley i. 452. Nicholls, 87.)
+
+[159] Lettre écrite à l'empereur par ses ambassadeurs en Angleterre 19
+Juill. Luy (au roi de France) sera facile, d'envoyer 2 ou 3 m.
+Français et quelques gens de chevaux. Plusieurs de ce royaume sont
+d'opinion, si V. M. assistoit ma dite dame (Mary) de gens et de
+secours contre le dit duc, la dite dame ne diminueroit en rien
+l'affection du peuple.
+
+[160] Proclama avec le dict herault Mm. Marie à haute voix. Lettre des
+ambassadeurs a l'empereur. Papiers d'état de Granvelle iv. 58.
+
+[161] To the reports of the French and Spanish ambassadors (compare
+Ambassades de Mss. de Noailles en Angleterre ii. 269, Turner ii. 204,
+Froude vi. 124) may be added that of the Venetian: 'ch'ella si
+consiglierebbe con dio e non con altri.' I combine this with Noailles'
+account; for these ambassadors were immediately informed by their
+friends of the deputation and have noted down that part of the Queen's
+speech which made most impression on the bystanders.
+
+[162] Soranzo Relatione 79, a testimony worth consideration, as
+Soranzo stood in a certain connexion with the rebels.
+
+[163] So Simon Renard reports 24th Feb. 1553-4 to the Emperor after
+Wyatt's confession. 'Le roy feroit emprinse de coustel d'Escosse et de
+coustel de Guyenne (it should without doubt be Guisnes) et Calais': in
+Tytler ii. 207. Wyatt's statements in the 'State Trials' refer to a
+confession which is not given there, and from which the ambassador may
+have taken his account.
+
+[164] Renard à l'empereur, 8 Feb. The communications in Tytler, which
+come from Brussels, and the Papiers d'état de Granvelle, which come
+from Besançon, supplement each other, yet even when taken both
+together they are still not quite complete.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE CATHOLIC-SPANISH GOVERNMENT.
+
+
+The effort to overthrow Mary's throne had strengthened it: for the
+second time she had rallied around it the preponderant majority of the
+nation. And this was all the more surprising, since no one could doubt
+any longer in what direction the Queen's exclusive religious views
+would lead her. In her victory she saw a divine providence, by which
+it was made doubly her duty to persevere, without looking back, in the
+path she had once taken. In full understanding with her Gardiner
+proceeded without further scruple, in the Parliament which met in
+April 1554, to attempt to carry through the two points on which all
+else depended, the abrogation of the Queen's spiritual title, which
+implied restoration of the Pope's authority, and the revival of the
+old laws against heretics. These views and proposals however met with
+unexpected opposition, both in the nation, and no less in the Privy
+Council and Parliament, especially in the Upper House. The lay lords
+did not wish to make the bishops so powerful again as they had once
+been, and rejected the restoration of the Pope's authority unless they
+previously had security for their possession of the confiscated church
+property. The first proposition could not, so far as can be seen, even
+be properly brought forward:[165] the second, the revival of the
+heresy laws, was accepted by the Commons over whom Gardiner exercised
+great influence, but the Peers threw it out. It was especially Lords
+Paget and Arundel who opposed Gardiner's proposals in the Privy
+Council and the Lords and caused their rejection.
+
+Only in one thing were the two parties united, in recognising the
+marriage contract concluded with Spain: it was passed unanimously by
+Parliament.
+
+In July 1554 Don Philip reached England with a numerous fleet, divided
+into three squadrons, with a brilliant suite on board. At Southampton
+the leader of one of the two parties, the Earl of Arundel, received
+him; Bishop Gardiner, the leader of the other, gave the blessing of
+the church to the marriage in Winchester cathedral. The day before the
+Emperor had resigned the crown of Naples to his son, to make him equal
+with the Queen in rank. How grand it sounded, when the king-at-arms
+proclaimed the united titles: Philip and Mary, King and Queen of
+England, France, Naples, Jerusalem, Ireland! A title with an almost
+Plantagenet sound, but which now however only denoted the closest
+union between the Spanish monarchy and the Catholics of England.
+Philip was solicitous to gain over the different parties and classes
+of England: for he had been told that England was a popular monarchy.
+He belied his Spanish gravity and showed himself, despite the
+stiffness that was his natural characteristic, affable to every man:
+he tried to make the impression, and successfully, that he desired the
+prosperity of England. One of the chief resources of the time, that of
+securing the most considerable persons by means of pensions, he made
+use of to a great extent. Both parties were provided for by annual
+payments and presents, Pembroke and Arundel as well as Derby and
+Rochester. We are assured that this liberality exercised a very
+advantageous influence on the disposition of the country.[166]
+Gardiner looked on it as a slight, that he was passed over in the
+list, for these pensions were considered at that time an honour, but
+this did not prevent him from praising the marriage in his sermons as
+ordained by heaven for the restoration of religion.
+
+All now depended on whether the King's influence would be sufficient
+to carry at the next meeting of Parliament in November, the proposals
+which had been rejected in the last session.
+
+But for this, according to the view not merely of the English lords,
+but of the imperial ambassador and of the Emperor himself, a previous
+condition was indispensable. The English nobles must be relieved from
+all apprehension lest the confiscated ecclesiastical property should
+ever again be wrested from them. Cardinal Pole had been already for
+some time residing in the Netherlands: but he was told that his
+arrival in England would be not merely fruitless but detrimental
+unless he brought with him a sufficient dispensation with regard to
+this. In Rome the concession was opposed on the ground that it would
+be setting a bad precedent. But when it was pointed out that the
+English confiscations did not touch any church lands, but only
+monastic property, and still more that without this concession the
+restoration of obedience to the church could not be attained, Pope
+Julius III yielded to the request. Two less comprehensive forms were
+rejected by the Emperor: at last one was granted which would satisfy
+the English. The form of the absolution which the Pope was to bestow
+after their submission was previously arranged: it was agreed to avoid
+everything that could remind men of the old pretensions and awaken the
+national antipathies.
+
+Meanwhile the elections to Parliament were completed. The proclamation
+issued gives the ruling points of view without reserve. An invitation
+to elect Catholic members of merit was coupled with the assurance that
+there was no intention of disturbing any kind of property. The means
+lately used for preventing any hostile influence were not yet
+sufficient: the advice was given from Brussels to go back to the older
+and stricter forms.
+
+The leading men of the Upper House were won over: there could be no
+doubt about the tone of the Lower. At their first sitting a resolution
+to release Cardinal Pole from the attainder that weighed on him, and
+invite him to return to England, passed without opposition. Now the
+Emperor had no longer any scruple in letting him go. He said as to
+this very matter, that what is undertaken at the wrong time hinders
+the result which might else have been expected; everything has its
+time: the time for this appeared to him now come. From Philip we have
+a letter to his sister Juana in which he extols himself with much
+satisfaction for the share he had taken in recalling the cardinal and
+restoring the Papal authority. 'I and the most illustrious Queen,' he
+says in it, 'commanded the Parliament of the three Estates of the
+realm to recall him; we especially used our efforts with the chief
+among them to induce them to consent to the cardinal's return: at our
+order prelates and knights escorted him to our Court, where he has
+delivered to us the Breve of his Holiness.'--'We then through the
+Chancellor of the realm informed the Estates of what seemed to us
+becoming, above all how much it concerned themselves to come to a
+conclusion that would give peace to their conscience.'[167]
+
+The Parliament declared itself ready to return to the obedience of the
+Roman See, and repeal all the statutes against it, provided that the
+cardinal pronounced a general dispensation, that every man might keep
+without scruple the ecclesiastical property which had fallen to his
+share.[168] On this understanding Cardinal Pole was allowed to
+exercise his legatine power, and the King and Queen were entreated to
+intercede that the absolution might be bestowed.
+
+With heartfelt joy Cardinal Pole pronounced it without delay, first at
+a meeting of the Parliament in the palace, then with greater solemnity
+at S. Paul's at a high mass attended by the Court with a brilliant
+suite; among those present were the knights who wore the Burgundian
+order of the Golden Fleece, and those who wore the English Order of
+the Garter. The King stood by the Chancellor when from the outer
+corridor of the church he announced the event and its motives to the
+great crowds there assembled. It made an impression on the imperial
+ambassadors that no outward sign of discontent was heard.
+
+The agreement that now followed bears more of a juridical than of a
+religious character. The jurisdiction was given back to the Pope which
+he possessed before the twentieth year of Henry VIII (1529): the
+statutes by which it was abolished were severally enumerated and
+repealed: on the other hand the Pope's legate in his name consented
+that the owners of church property should not be disturbed in their
+possession, either now or at any future time, either by church
+councils or by Papal decrees. Such property was henceforth to be quite
+as exclusively subject to the jurisdiction of the crown as any other;
+whoever dared to call in question the validity of the title in any
+spiritual court whatever, within or without the realm, was to be
+punished as an enemy of the Queen. The cardinal legate strove long to
+prevent the two enactments, as to the restoration of obedience and the
+title to the ecclesiastical property, from being combined together in
+one Act, since it might look as if the Pope's concession was the price
+of this obedience to him; he once said, he would rather let all remain
+as it was and go back to Rome than yield on this point. But the
+English nobility adhered immoveably to its demand; it wished to
+prevent all danger of the restoration of obedience becoming in any way
+detrimental to its acquisitions, an object which was clearly best
+secured by combining both enactments in a single statute, so that they
+must stand or fall together; even the King's representations effected
+no alteration in this; the cardinal had to comply.
+
+On the other hand the King's influence, if we believe himself, had all
+possible success in the other affair, which was at any rate not less
+weighty. 'With the intervention of the Parliament,' he continues in
+the above-mentioned letter, 'we have made a law, I and the most
+illustrious Queen, for the punishment of heretics and all enemies of
+holy church; we have revived the old ordinances of the realm, which
+will serve this purpose very well.' It was more especially the
+statute against the Lollards, by which Henry V had entered into the
+closest alliance with the hierarchy, that was to be re-enacted by
+Parliament. Gardiner had not been able to carry it through in the
+previous session, though it was known that the Queen wished it. Under
+the King's influence, who was accustomed to the execution of heretics
+in Spain, the Lords after some deliberation let their objections drop
+and accepted the bill.
+
+If we put together these four great Acts, the abolition of the Common
+Prayer-book, the Spanish marriage, the restoration of obedience to
+Rome, and the revival of the heresy laws, we could hardly doubt the
+intention of the members of the government, and of the Parliament, to
+return completely to the ancient political and religious state of
+things. With some members such an intention may have been the
+predominant one: to assume it in all, or even in the majority, would
+be an error.[169]
+
+The agreement then legalised as to ecclesiastical property, and the
+abolition of the monastic system, already formed such an anomaly in
+the Roman Catholic church, that the ecclesiastical condition of
+England would have always retained a very abnormal character. And the
+obedience expressed was by no means complete. For it should have
+included above all a recognition of that right of dispensation, about
+which the original quarrel had broken out, and the revocation of the
+order of succession which was based on its rejection. In fact
+Gardiner's intention was to bring matters to this; being besides a
+great enemy and even persecutor of Elizabeth, he wished to see her
+illegitimacy pronounced in due form;[170] the resolutions passed
+seemed necessarily to lead to it. Men however did not proceed this
+time so logically in England. They did not wish to base the future
+state of the realm on Papal decrees, but on the ordinances once
+enacted by King and Parliament. They could not deceive themselves as
+to the fact that Elizabeth, though she conformed outwardly, yet
+remained true at heart to the Protestant faith; but not on that
+account would the Parliament deny her right to the English throne. It
+also by no means entertained exactly Spanish sentiments. The Emperor
+expressed the wish that his son might be crowned: his ambassador's
+advice however was against proposing it in Parliament; since, with the
+high ideas entertained in England of the rights implied in the
+coronation, this would never be allowed. In the event of the Queen's
+dying before Philip, and leaving children, the guardianship was
+reserved to him: but even for this object conditions had been
+originally proposed which would have been much more advantageous to
+him: these the Upper House threw out. So little was even then the
+policy of the Queen and King at the same time the policy of the nation
+and Parliament. In the Privy Council the old discords continued. The
+government obtained a greater unity by the fact that Gardiner, who now
+followed the Queen's lead in every respect, carried most of the
+members with him by the authority which her favour gave him. As Paget
+and Arundel, since they could effect nothing, refused to appear any
+more, there always remained a secret support for the discontent that
+was stirring. In the beginning of 1555 traces of a conspiracy in
+favour of Courtenay were again detected: if the inquiry into it led to
+no discovery, it was because--so it was thought--the commission
+entrusted with it did not wish to make any.
+
+At this moment the revived heresy-laws began to be put into execution.
+Prosecutions were instituted for statements that under another order
+of things would have been considered as fully authorised. Still more
+than to single offences was attention directed to any variations in
+doctrine. In these proceedings we can remark the points which were
+then chiefly in question.
+
+The first of the accused, one of the earliest and most influential of
+the martyrs, John Rogers, was reminded of the article which speaks of
+the faith in one holy catholic church; he replied that by it was meant
+the universal church of all lands and times, not the Romish, which on
+the contrary had deviated in many points from the main foundation of
+all churches, Holy Scripture. Rowland Taylor, who gloried in a
+marriage blest with children, which Gardiner would not acknowledge to
+be a marriage at all, maintained that Christian antiquity had allowed
+the marriage of priests. Gardiner accused him of ignorance. 'But,'
+said Taylor, 'I have read the Holy Scripture, the Latin and the Greek
+fathers;' a canon of the Nicene council, which was cited on the point,
+he interpreted far more correctly than the bishop. John Hooper was
+called in question because he held divorce to be permissible on the
+ground given in Scripture, and because he found that the view of the
+real presence had no foundation in Scripture.[171] Their offence was
+the conception of church-communion as resting on the foundation of
+Scripture and extending therefore far beyond Romanism: the most
+telling defence could not save them here, for only the carrying out of
+old laws was concerned, and these unconditionally condemned such
+opinions. As the condemned were being taken back by night to their
+prison, many householders came out of their doors with lights in their
+hands, to greet them with their prayers and thank them for their
+steadfastness: a deep and sorrowful sympathy, but one which scarcely
+dared to utter itself, and thus renounced the attempt to effect
+anything. Rogers suffered death in London, Hooper at his episcopal see
+of Gloucester, Taylor (who on the way showed as much good wit as Sir
+Thomas More had formerly done) in his parish, Saunders at Coventry,
+Ferrar in the market-place at Caermarthen. Their punishment, in every
+place where they had taught, was intended to confirm the doctrines
+they had rejected. There have been more bloody persecutions elsewhere:
+this was distinguished by the fact that many of the more eminent men
+of the nation became its victims. Among them, besides those we have
+named, were Ridley, who was looked on as the most learned scholar in
+England, the eloquent Latimer, Bradford a man of deep piety, Philpot
+who united learning and religion. How could Archbishop Cranmer, who
+had contributed almost more than any one to carry through the
+Reformation, who had pronounced the divorce of the Queen's mother,
+possibly find mercy? He persuaded himself of it once; and, yielding as
+he was, allowed himself to be tempted into a recantation, in despite
+of which he was condemned to death. But then there awoke in him also
+the whole consciousness of the truth of his belief. The hand with
+which he had signed the recantation he held firm, and let it burn in
+unutterable agony, as an expiation which he imposed on himself, before
+the flame of the faggots closed over him. The executions extended
+themselves over the whole country and even over the neighbouring
+islands; the diaries show that they continued till 1558. Many could
+have fled, but wished to testify to the firmness of their belief by
+dying for it, and thus to strengthen in their faith the people from
+whom they were taken away. Most of them showed a sublime contempt of
+death, which inflamed others to imitate them. How many would have been
+prepared to throw themselves with their friends into the flames! And
+no one could say that here there was any question of tendencies to
+revolt. The Protestants had on the whole kept themselves far from it:
+they did not contest the Queen's right to the throne; they died as her
+obedient subjects.
+
+But now what an impression must these executions produce, combined
+with what preceded and followed them.
+
+Gardiner appears in all this imperious, proud, and with that confident
+tone which the possessors of power assume, implying that they regard
+themselves as being also mentally superior; Bonner Bishop of London
+fanatical, without any power of discernment, and almost bloodthirsty.
+His attention was once drawn to the ill effects of his rough acts of
+violence; he replied that he must do God's work without fear of men.
+Under the last government they had both had much to endure: they had
+been deprived by their enemies and thrown into prison: now they
+employed the temporal arm in their own favour; they felt no scruple in
+sentencing their old opponents to death in accordance with the
+severity of the laws which they had again brought into active
+operation. Such was the issue of the contest between the bishops
+under the changing systems of government.
+
+As Queen Mary is designated 'The Bloody,' we are astonished when we
+read the authentic descriptions, still extant, of her personal
+appearance. She was a little, slim, delicate, sickly woman, with hair
+already turning grey. She played on the lute, and had even given
+instruction in music; she had a skilful hand; on personal acquaintance
+she made the impression of goodness and mildness. But yet there was
+something in her eyes that could even rouse fear; her voice, which
+could be heard at a great distance, told of something unwomanly in
+her. She was a good speaker in public; never did she show a trace of
+timidity in danger. The troubles she had experienced from her youth,
+her constant antagonism to the authority under which she lived, had
+especially hardened in her the self-will which is recognisable in all
+the Tudors. A peculiarity found elsewhere also in gifted women, that
+they are weary of all which surrounds them at home, and give to what
+is foreign a sympathy above its worth, had become to her a second
+nature. She rejected with aversion the idea of marrying Courtenay, for
+this reason among others that he was an Englishman. She, the Queen of
+England, had no sympathy for the life, the interests, the struggles of
+her people: she hated them from her childhood. All her sympathies were
+for the nation from which her mother came, for its views and manners:
+her husband was her ideal of a man: we are assured that she even
+overlooked his infidelities to her because he did not enter into
+permanent relations with any other woman. Besides this he was the only
+man who could support her in the great project for which she thought
+herself marked out by God, the restoration of Catholicism.[172] This
+is the meaning of her pledging herself in her bedchamber before a
+crucifix, when she had not yet seen him, to give her hand to him and
+to no other. For with him and his fortunes were linked the hopes of a
+restoration of Catholicism. Mary was absolutely determined to do all
+she could to strengthen it in England. Gardiner assures us, and we may
+believe him in this, that it was not he who prompted the revival of
+the old laws against the Lollards; the chief impulse to it came on the
+contrary from the Queen. And as those laws ordered the punishment of
+heretics by fire, and Parliament had consented, and the orthodox
+bishops offered their aid, it would have seemed to her a blameable
+weakness, if out of feelings of compassion she had stood in the way of
+the execution of those laws, to the suspension of which the bishops
+ascribed the spread of heretical opinions. Many of the horrors which
+accompanied their execution may have remained concealed from her;
+still it cannot be doubted, that the persecutions would never have
+begun without her. No excuse can free her memory from the dark shade
+which rests on it. For that which is done in a sovereign's name, with
+his will and consent, determines his character in history.
+
+The conduct of the Queen and her government, without whose help
+ecclesiastical authority would have been null and void, had a result
+that extended far beyond her time: men began to inquire into the
+claims of the temporal power. John Knox, who had now to fly from
+England before a Queen, as he had previously from Scotland before a
+Queen-regent, and whose word was of weight, poured forth his feelings
+in a piercing call, which he himself named 'a blast of the trumpet,'
+against the right of women to the government of a country, which ought
+to be exercised only by men. And while Knox went no further than the
+immediate case, others examined into the powers of all State
+authority: above all, to prevent its taking part in religious
+persecution, they brought forward the principles according to which
+sovereignty issues originally from the people. Mary's government had
+awakened in Protestantism, and that not merely in England, the
+hostility of political theory.
+
+But besides no man could hide from himself, that discontent, even
+without theory, had grown in England in an alarming manner. The French
+and Imperial ambassadors both gave their courts information of it,
+the former with a kind of satisfaction, the latter with apprehension
+and pain. He laments the bad effect which the religious persecution
+produces, makes pressing objections to it and demands that the bloody
+zeal of the bishops shall be moderated; but the matter was regularly
+proceeding in a kind of legal way; we do not find that he effected
+anything.
+
+The Queen had hitherto flattered herself and her partisans with the
+hope that she would give the country an heir to the throne. When this
+expectation proved fallacious in the summer of 1555 it produced an
+impression which, as the imperial ambassador says, no pen could
+describe. The appearance had been caused by an unhealthy condition of
+body, which was now looked on rather as a prognostic of her fast
+approaching death. It is already clear, remarks the ambassador, that
+least confidence can be placed in those who have been hitherto most
+trusted: many a man still wears a mask: others even show their
+ill-will quite openly. For so badly is the succession at present
+arranged that my lady Elizabeth will without doubt ascend the throne
+on Mary's death and will restore heresy.
+
+While things were in this state, Philip II was led to resolve on going
+to the Netherlands by the vicissitudes of the French war and his
+father's state of health; he wished either to bring about peace, or to
+push the war with energy.
+
+He had hitherto exercised a moderating influence on the government.
+Not to let all fall back into the previous party-strife, he thought it
+best to give the eight leading members of the Privy Council a
+pre-eminent place in the management of business. He could not avoid
+admitting men of both parties even among these; but he had already
+found a man whom he could set over the others and trust with the
+supreme rule of affairs in complete confidence. This was Cardinal
+Pole, who after Cranmer's death received the Archbishopric of
+Canterbury, long ago bestowed on him at Rome, and was released from
+the duty of again returning to the Roman court. He was descended from
+the house of the Yorkist Suffolks, persecuted by the earlier Tudors
+with great severity; but how completely did this family difference
+recede before the world-wide interests of religion! He served with the
+most entire devotion a queen of the house of Lancaster-Tudor who on
+her side reposed in him unlimited reliance: she wished to have him
+about her for hours every day. Reginald Pole was a man of European and
+general ecclesiastical culture; he shared in a tendency existing
+within Catholicism itself, which approached very nearly to
+Protestantism on one dogmatic question: we also hear that he would
+gladly have moderated the persecution;[173] but when it is said, that
+the obstinacy of the Protestants hindered him in this, all that can be
+implied is, that they held fast to a confession which was now
+absolutely condemned by the hierarchic laws, while he was bound and
+resolved to carry these laws into effect. His chief care was above all
+not to be involved in English party-divisions: he therefore usually
+worked with a couple of Italian assistants who shared his sentiments
+and his plans. The union of the ecclesiastical and temporal authority
+is seen once more in Pole, as it had been in Wolsey: he combined the
+powers of a legate with the position of a first minister. His
+distinguished birth, his high ecclesiastical rank, the confidence of
+the King and Queen, enhanced by completely blameless personal
+conduct,[174] procured him an authority in the country which seemed
+almost that of the sovereign.
+
+A singular government this, composed of an absent king, who however
+had to be consulted in all weighty matters, a cardinal, and a dying
+queen who lived exclusively in church ideas. Difficulties could not be
+wanting: they arose first in church matters themselves.
+
+We know how much the recognition of the alienation of the church
+property, to which Julius III was brought to consent by the Emperor,
+contributed to the restoration of church obedience; among the English
+nobility it formed the main ground of its submission. But in May 1555
+Pope Paul IV ascended the Papal throne, in whom dislike of the
+Austro-Spanish house was almost a passion, and who wished to base his
+ecclesiastical reputation on the recovery of the alienated church
+property. His third Bull orders its restoration, including the
+possessions of monastic foundations, and the revenues hitherto
+received from them. The English ambassadors who had been sent to Rome
+under wholly different conditions, to announce the restoration of
+obedience, found this Pope there on their arrival. When they mentioned
+the confirmation of the alienation of the monastic property, he
+answered them in plain terms: for himself he would be ready to
+consent, but it lay beyond his power; the property of the church was
+sacred and inviolable, all that belonged to it must be restored to the
+uttermost farthing. And so ecclesiastically minded was Queen Mary that
+she in her heart agreed with the Pope. The monasteries in particular
+she held to be an indispensable part of the church-system, and wished
+for their restoration. Already the fugitive monks were seen returning:
+a number of Benedictines who had remained in the country resumed the
+dress of their Order; the Queen made no secret of her wish to restore
+the monastery of Westminster in particular. Another side of church
+life was affected by the fact that, owing to the suppression of the
+great abbeys, a number of benefices, which were dependent on them, had
+lost their incomes and had fallen into decay. That Henry VIII should
+have appropriated to the crown the tenths and first-fruits, which
+belonged to the church, seemed to Queen Mary unjustifiable; she felt
+herself straitened in her conscience by retaining these revenues, and
+was prepared to give them back, whatever might be the loss to the
+crown. But she could not by herself repeal what had been done under
+authority of Parliament: in November 1555 she attempted to gain over
+that assembly to her view. A number of influential members were
+summoned to the palace, where first Cardinal Pole explained to them
+that the receipt of the first-fruits was connected with the State's
+claim of supremacy over the church, but that, after obedience was
+restored, it had no longer any real justification. He put forward some
+further reasons, and then the Queen herself took up the word. She
+laid the greatest stress on her personal wish. She asked the
+Parliament, after having shown obedience to her in so many ways, to
+prove to her that the peace of her soul lay near their hearts, and to
+take this burden from her. But the conception of the crown and its
+property had in England already ceased to be so merely personal. The
+most universally intelligible motive in the whole church-movement was
+the feeling, that the resources of the nation ought to be devoted to
+national purposes, and every one felt that the diminution of the royal
+revenues would have to be made up by Parliamentary grants. In addition
+to this, it appeared to be only the first step to such an universal
+restitution, as Pope Paul IV clearly contemplated and directed. Was
+there not much more to be said for the recovery of the church revenues
+from private hands than for their withdrawal from the crown which used
+them for public purposes?--A member of the Lower House wished to
+answer the Queen at once after her address: but, as he was not the
+Speaker, he was not allowed to do so.
+
+When the proposal came under discussion in the Lower House, it met
+with lively opposition. A commission was then appointed, to which the
+Upper House sent two earls, two barons, and two bishops, and to which
+some lawyers were added; by these the proposed articles were revised
+and then laid before them again. The decisive sitting was on the 3rd
+December 1555. The doors were closed: no stranger was allowed to enter
+nor any member to leave the House. After they had sat in hot debate
+from early morning till three in the afternoon--just one of those
+debates, of which we have to regret that no detailed account has
+survived--the proposal was, it is true, accepted, but against such a
+large minority as was hitherto unheard of in the English Parliament,
+120 votes to 183. Queen and cardinal regarded it as a great victory,
+for they had carried their view: but the tone of the country was still
+against them. However strong the stress which the cardinal laid on the
+statement that the concession of the crown was not to react in any way
+on private men's ownership of church property, the apprehension was
+nevertheless universal,[175] that with the Queen's zeal for the
+monasteries, and a consistent carrying out of the Pope's principles,
+things would yet come to this. But the interests which would be thus
+injured were very widespread. It was calculated that there were 40,000
+families which in one way or another owned part of the church
+property: they would neither relinquish it nor allow their title to be
+called in question. Powerful lords were heard to exclaim that they
+would keep the abbey-lands as long as they had a sword by their side.
+The popular disposition was reflected in the widespread rumour, which
+gained credence, that Edward VI was still alive and would soon come
+back.
+
+From time to time seditious movements showed the insecurity of the
+situation. At the beginning of 1556 traces were detected of a plan for
+plundering the treasury in order to levy troops with the money.[176]
+The Western counties were discontented because Courtenay was removed
+from among them: he died subsequently in Italy. Sir Henry Dudley, the
+Duke of Northumberland's cousin, rallied around him some zealous and
+enterprising malcontents, who planned a complete revolution: he found
+secret support in France, whither he fled.[177] In April 1557 a
+grandson of the Duke of Buckingham, Thomas Stafford, also coming from
+France, landed and made himself master of Scarborough castle. He had
+only a handful of followers, but he ventured to proclaim himself
+Protector of the realm, which he promised to secure against the
+tyranny of foreigners, and 'the satanic designs of an unlawful Queen.'
+He was crushed without difficulty. But in the general ferment which
+this aroused, it was observed how universal was the wish for a
+change.[178]
+
+Meanwhile foreign affairs took a turn which threatened to involve
+England in a dangerous complication. The peace between the great
+powers had not been concluded: the truce they had made was broken off
+at the instigation of the Pope; hostilities began again, and Philip II
+returned to England for a couple of months to induce her to join in
+the war against France. The diplomatic correspondence shows that the
+imperial court from the beginning valued their near relation to
+England chiefly as the basis of an alliance against France. We can
+easily understand how this early object was now attained. Besides many
+other previous wrongs, Stafford's enterprise, which was ascribed to
+the intrigues of France, was a motive for declaring war against that
+Power. And a French war still retained its old charm for the English:
+their share in it surpassed all expectation. The English land forces
+co-operated with decisive effect in the great victory of S. Quintin,
+and similarly the appearance of the English fleet on the French coasts
+ensured Philip's predominance on the ocean. But it is very doubtful
+whether this was the part the English power should have played at this
+moment. By his father's abdication and retirement into the cloister
+Philip had become lord and master of the Spanish monarchy. Could it be
+the mission of the English to help in consolidating it in his hands?
+On the foundation then laid, and mainly through the peace which France
+saw herself compelled to make, its greatness was built up. For the
+Spanish monarchy the union with England, which rested on the able use
+to which the existing troubles and the personal position of the Queen
+were turned--and which, strictly speaking, was still a result of the
+policy of Ferdinand the Catholic--was of indescribable advantage: to
+the English it brought a loss which was severely felt. They had
+neglected to put Calais in a proper state of defence; at the first
+attack it fell into the hands of the French. The greatest value was
+still laid in England on a possession across the sea, which seemed
+indispensable for the command of the Channel; its extension was the
+main object of Henry VIII's last war: that now it was on the contrary
+utterly lost was felt to be a national disaster; the population of the
+town, which consisted of English, was expelled together with the
+garrison.
+
+And as Pope Paul IV was now allied with the King of France, the result
+was that he found himself at war with Philip II (whom he tried to
+chase from Naples), and hence with England as well. His hatred to the
+house of Austria, his aversion to the concessions made in England with
+reference to church property, and to the religious position which
+Cardinal Pole had hitherto taken up in the questions at issue within
+the Catholic Church, determined the Pope to interfere in the home
+affairs of England with a strong hand. For these Cardinal Pole was the
+one indispensable man, on whose shoulders the burden of affairs
+rested. But it was this very man whom Paul IV now deprived of his
+legatine power, on which much of his consequence rested, and
+transferred it to a Franciscan monk.
+
+But what now was the consequent situation of affairs in England! The
+Queen, who recognised no higher authority than that of the Papal See,
+was obliged to have Paul IV's messages intercepted, lest they should
+become known. While the ashes of the reputed heretics were still
+smoking on their Calvaries, the man who represented the Catholic form
+of religion, and was working effectively for its progress, was accused
+of falling away from the orthodox faith, and summoned to Rome to
+answer for it.
+
+Meanwhile England did not feel herself strong enough, even with the
+help that Philip offered, to attempt the reconquest of Calais. The
+finances were completely disordered by the war; and the Parliament
+showed little zeal in restoring the balance: just before this the
+Queen had found herself obliged even to diminish the amount of a
+subsidy already as good as voted. However unwilling she might be to
+take the step after her previous experiences, she had to decide once
+more in the autumn of 1558 on calling a Parliament. Circumstances wore
+an appearance all the more dangerous, as the Scotch were allied with
+the victorious French: the Queen represented to the Commons the need
+of extraordinary means of defence. A number of the leading lords
+appeared in the Lower House to give additional weight to the demand of
+the Crown by their presence. The Commons, though not quite willingly,
+were proceeding to deliberate on the subsidies demanded, when an event
+happened which relieved them from the necessity of coming to any
+resolution.
+
+A tertian or quartan fever was then prevalent in the Netherlands and
+in England, which was very fatal, especially to elderly persons of
+enfeebled health.[179] The Queen, who had been for some time visited
+by her usual attacks of illness, could not resist this disease, when
+suffering besides, as she was, from deep affliction at the
+disappointment of all her hopes, and from heart-rending anticipations
+of the future: once more she heard mass in her chamber--she died
+before it was ended, on the 17 November 1558. Cardinal Pole also was
+suffering: completely crushed by this news he expired the following
+night. It was calculated that thirteen bishops died a little before or
+after the Queen. As if by some predetermined fate the combination of
+English affairs which had been attempted during her government came at
+once to an end.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[165] The Queen imputed the chief blame to Paget 'Quand l'on a parlé
+de la peyne des heretiques, il a sollicité les Seigneurs pour non y
+consentir ny donner lieu à peyne de mort' Renard à l'empereur, in
+Tytler ii. 386.
+
+[166] Les seigneurs quils ont pension du roy font tels et si bons
+offices es contrées et provinces du roy ou ils ont charge que l'on ne
+oye dire si non que le peuple est content de l'alliance; ce que
+divertit les mauvais.' Renard à l'empereur, 13 Oct. Papiers d'état iv.
+348.
+
+[167] Carta del rey Don Felipe a la princesa de Portugal Donna Juana
+su hermana, in Ribadeneyra, Historia del Scisma 381.
+
+[168] Renard informs King Ferdinand that this resolution would be
+adopted the 29 Nov (Papiers d'état iv. 344), 'Confiant que la dispense
+soit generale, pour sans scrupule confirmer la possession des biens
+ecclesiastiques es mains de ceux qui les tiennent.'
+
+[169] 'La chambre haulte y faict difficulté pour ce, que l'autorité et
+jurisdiction des évesques est autorizee et que la peine semble trop
+griefve.' Renard à l'empereur, Papiers d'état iv. 347.
+
+[170] Renard, ibid. 341. 'Le chancellier insistoit, que l'on declaira
+Mme. Elizabeth bastarde en ce parlement' They feared 'l'evidente et
+congnue contrariété qui seroit en tout le royaume.'
+
+[171] Condemnatio Johannis Hooper, in Burnet Coll. iii. 246. Compare
+Foxe, Martyrs vol. iii; Soames iv.
+
+[172] According to a despatch of Micheli (25 Nov. 1555) she says to
+the Parliament: 'che non ad altro fine dalla Maesta di dio era
+predestinata e riservata alla successione del regno, se non per
+servirsi di lei principalmente nella riduttione alla fede cattolica.'
+
+[173] Erat tanta in plerisque animorum obstinatio ac pertinacia, ut
+benignitati et clementiae nullum plane locum relinquerent.' Vita Poli,
+in Quirini i. 42.
+
+[174] Micheli, Relatione, 'Incontaminatissimo da ogni sorte di
+passione et interessi humani, non prevalendo in lui ni l'autorità de
+principi ni rispetto di sangue ni d'amicizia.'
+
+[175] 'Assicurando e levando il sospetto, che per quello che
+privatamente ciascuno possedeva, non sarebbe mai molestato ni
+travagliato.' Micheli, despatch 25 Nov., from whose reports I draw my
+notices of these proceedings in general.
+
+[176] Micheli, despatch 1556, 7 April, notes 'la maggior parte dei
+gentilhuomini del contado di Dansur (Devonshire) come conscii et
+partecipi della congiura.' 5 Magg. 'Tutta la parte occidentale è in
+sospetto.'
+
+[177] The Constable to Noailles, Amb. v. 310. 'Le roy a advisé
+d'entretenir doulcement Dudelay et secrettement toute fois, pour s'en
+servir s'il en est de besoing luy donnant moyen d'entretenir aussi par
+de là des intelligences, qu'il faut retenir.'
+
+[178] Suriano, despatch 29 April 1557. 'Si è scoperto l'animo di
+molti, che non si sono potuti contener di mostrarsi desiderosi di
+veder alteration del stato presente.'
+
+[179] Godwin 470 'Innumeri perierunt, sed aetate fere provectiores et
+inter eos sacerdotum ingens numerus.'
+
+
+
+
+BOOK III.
+
+QUEEN ELIZABETH. CLOSE CONNEXION OF ENGLISH AND SCOTCH AFFAIRS.
+
+
+To appreciate the motives which led Henry VIII to attach such
+importance to a male heir, and to exclude his daughter by the Spanish
+marriage from the succession, we need only cast our eyes on what
+happened under her, when in spite of all she had become Queen. The
+idea with which the Tudors had ascended the throne, and administered
+the realm, that of founding a political power strong in itself and
+alike independent of home factions and foreign influence, was
+sacrificed by Mary to her preference for the nation from which her
+mother came and from which she chose her husband. The military power
+of England served to support the Spanish monarchy at a dangerous and
+doubtful moment in the course of its formation. And while Mary's
+father and brother had made it the object of their policy to deprive
+the hierarchy of all influence over England, she on the contrary
+reinstated it: she put the power and all the resources of the State at
+its disposal. Though historically deeply rooted, the Catholic tendency
+showed itself, through the reactionary rule which it brought about and
+through its alliance with the policy of Spain, pernicious to the
+country. We have seen what losses England suffered by it, not merely
+in its foreign possessions, but--what was really irreparable--in men
+of talent and learning, of feeling and greatness of soul; and into
+what a state of weakness abroad and dissolution at home it thereby
+fell. A new order of things must arise, if the national element, the
+creation of which had been the labour of centuries, was not to be
+crushed, and the mighty efforts of later ages were not to succumb to
+religious and political reaction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ELIZABETH'S ACCESSION. TRIUMPH OF THE REFORMATION.
+
+
+During Mary's government, which had been endurable only because men
+foresaw its speedy end, all eyes were directed to her younger sister
+Elizabeth. She was the daughter of Anne Boleyn, who bore her under her
+heart when she was crowned as Queen. After many changes, Henry VIII,
+in agreement with Parliament, had recognised her right of inheritance;
+the people had risen against the enterprise of the Duke of
+Northumberland for her as well as for Mary. And it had also been
+maintained against Mary herself. Once, in Wyatt's conspiracy, letters
+were found, which pointed at Elizabeth's having a share in it: she was
+designated in them as the future Queen. The predominant
+Spanish-Catholic party had her examined and would have much wished to
+find her guilty, in order to rid themselves of her for ever. But
+Elizabeth was not so imprudent as to lend her hand to a movement,
+which if unsuccessful--a result not hard to foresee--must destroy her
+own good title. And moreover she, with her innate pride, could not
+possibly have carried out the wishes of the French by marrying
+Courtenay, whom her sister had rejected. The letter, which she wrote
+to Mary at this crisis, is full of unfeignedly loyal submission to her
+Queen, before whom she only wishes to bend her knee, to pray her not
+to let herself be prejudiced by false charges against her sister; and
+yet at the same time it is highminded and great in the consciousness
+of innocence. Mary, who was now no longer her friend, did not
+vouchsafe her a hearing, but sent her to the Tower and subjected her
+to a criminal examination. But however zealously they sought for
+proofs against her, yet they found none: and they dared not touch her
+life unless she were first publicly found guilty. She was clearly the
+heiress to the throne appointed under the authorisation of Parliament:
+the people would not give up the prospects of the future which were
+linked with her. When she appeared in London at this moment of peril,
+surrounded by numerous attendants, in an open litter, with an
+expression in which hopeful buoyant youth mingled with the feeling of
+innocence and distress, pale and proud, she swayed the masses that
+crowded round her with no doubtful sympathy.[180] When she passed
+through the streets after her liberation, she was received with an
+enthusiasm which made the Queen jealous on her throne.
+
+Yet Elizabeth was not merely the head of the popular opposition to her
+sister's policy: from the first moment onwards she was in collision
+with another female foe, whose pretensions would determine the
+relations of her life. If Henry VIII formerly in settling the
+succession passed over in silence the rights of his married sister in
+Scotland, which had now come to her granddaughter Mary Stuart, the
+memory of them was now all the more vividly revived by the Catholic
+party in the country. For with the religious reverence which men
+devoted to the Papacy it was not at all possible to reconcile the
+recognition of Elizabeth, whose very existence was as it were at
+variance with it. Nor was a political motive for preferring Mary
+Stuart wanting. That for which Henry VIII and Somerset had striven so
+zealously, the union of England and Scotland, would be thus attained
+at once. They were not afraid that Scotland might thus become
+predominant; Henry VII at the conclusion of the marriage, having his
+attention drawn to this possible risk, replied with the maxim, that
+the larger and more powerful part always draws the smaller after it.
+The indispensable condition for the development of the English power
+lay in the union of the whole island: this would have ensued in a
+Catholic, not in a Protestant, sense. Was not this union of political
+advantage and religious concord likely to influence the Privy Council
+of England, which under Mary was again zealously Catholic, and also to
+influence Queen Mary Tudor herself?
+
+Great political questions however do not usually present themselves to
+men in such perfect clearness, but are seen under the modifying
+circumstances of the moment. It was at that time all important that
+Mary Stuart had married the Dauphin: she would have united England not
+merely with Scotland, but at the same time with France, thus bringing
+it for ever under the influence of that country. How revolting must
+such a prospect have been to all English feeling! England would have
+become a transmarine province of France, it would in time have been
+absorbed like Brittany. Above all, French policy would have completely
+gained the upper hand in Europe. This apprehension induced the Spanish
+statesmen--Elizabeth's eager enemies as long as they expected their
+King to have issue of Mary Tudor--when this hope failed, to give the
+princess sympathy and attention. Philip II, when her troubles revived
+(for both Gardiner and Pole were her enemies), informed her through
+secret messengers, that he was her good friend and would not abandon
+her. Now that Mary was failing before all men's eyes, and every one
+was looking forward to her death, it was his evident interest to
+further Elizabeth's accession. In this sense spoke his ambassador
+Feria, whom he sent at this moment to England, before the assembled
+Privy Council;[181] even Mary was urged to declare herself to the same
+effect. From an advice written for Elizabeth during the first moments
+of her reign we see that all still looked very dangerous: she was
+urged in it to possess herself of the Tower and there to receive the
+allegiance of the high officers of State, to allow no departure from
+the English ports, and so on. Men expected turbulent movements at
+home, and were not without apprehension of an attempt at invasion
+from France. The decision however followed without any commotion and
+on the spot. Though most of its members were Catholic, the Privy
+Council did not hesitate. A few hours after Mary's decease the Commons
+were summoned to the Upper House, to receive a communication there: it
+was, that Mary was dead, and that God had given them another Queen, My
+lady Elizabeth. The Parliament dissolved; the new Queen was proclaimed
+in Westminster and in London. Some days afterwards she made her entry
+into the capital amidst the indescribable rejoicings of the people,
+who greeted her accession as their deliverance and their salvation.
+
+But if this, as we see, involved in its very essence a hostile
+attitude towards France and Scotland, on the other hand the question
+was at once laid before the Queen, and in the most personal way
+imaginable, how far she would unite herself with Spain, the great
+Power which was now on her side. Philip resolved, inasmuch as
+propriety in some measure allowed it, to ask for her hand--not indeed
+from personal inclination, of which there is no trace, but from policy
+and perhaps from religion: he hoped by this means to keep England firm
+to the Spanish alliance and to Catholicism.[182] And on the English
+side also much might be said for it. An ally was needed against
+France, even to obtain a tolerable peace: there was some danger that
+Philip, if rejected by the Queen, might perhaps marry a French
+princess; to be secure against the French claims the Queen seemed to
+need the support of Spain. Her first answer was not in the negative.
+She declared she must consult with Parliament as to the King's
+proposal: but he might be assured that, if she ever married, she would
+not give any one else the preference over him.
+
+Well considered, these words announce at once her resolution not to
+marry. Between Mary Tudor who thought to bring the crown to the heir
+of Spain, and Mary Stuart similarly pledged to the heir of France,
+nothing was left for her--since she would not wish the husband of her
+choice to be of inferior rank--but to remain unmarried. From
+listening to Philip's wooing she was kept back by her sister's
+example, whose marriage had destroyed her popularity. And for
+Elizabeth there would have been yet another danger in this alliance.
+Was not her legitimacy dependent on the invalidity of her father's
+marriage with his brother's widow? It would be a very similar case if
+she were to marry her sister's husband. Besides she would have needed
+the Pope's dispensation for such a union--as Philip had already
+explained to her--while her birth and crown were the results of a
+Papal dispensation being declared a nullity. She would thus have
+fallen into a self-contradiction, to which she must have succumbed in
+course of time. When told that Philip II had done her some service,
+she acknowledged it: but when she meditated on it further, she found
+that neither this sovereign nor any other influence whatever would
+have protected her from her enemies, had not the people shown her an
+unlimited devotion.[183] This devotion, on which her whole existence
+depended, she would not forfeit. After a little delay she let Philip
+know that she felt some scruples as to the Papal dispensation. She
+gave weight to the point which had been under discussion, but added
+that she was altogether disinclined to marry. We may doubt whether
+this was her immoveably formed resolution, considering how often
+afterwards she negociated about her marriage. It might seem to her
+allowable, as an instrument of policy, to excite hopes which she did
+not mean to fulfil: or her views may in fact have again wavered: but
+these oscillations in her statements can mean nothing when set over
+against a great necessity: her actual conduct shows that she had a
+vivid insight into it and held firm to it with tenacious resolution.
+She was Henry's daughter, but she knew how to keep herself as
+independent as he had thought that only a son could possibly do. There
+is a deep truth in her phrase, that she is wedded to her people:
+regard to their interests kept her back from any other union.
+
+But if she resolved to give up the relation of close union in which
+England had hitherto stood with Spain, it was indispensable to make
+peace with France. It was impossible to attain this if she insisted on
+the restoration of Calais; she resolved to give it up, at first for a
+term of years. Of almost the same date as her answer of refusal to
+Philip's ambassador is her instruction empowering her ambassador to
+let Calais go, as soon as he saw that the Spaniards would conclude
+their peace with France without stipulating for its restoration. She
+was able to venture this, for however deeply the nation felt the loss
+of the place, the blame for it could not be imputed to her. Without
+repeating what was then asserted, that her distinct aim was to turn
+the hatred of the nation against the late government and its alliance
+with Spain, we may still allow that this must have been the actual
+result, as it really proved to be. It was indeed said that Philip II,
+who not merely concluded peace with France but actually married a
+daughter of Henry II, would make common cause with him against
+England: but Elizabeth no more allowed herself to be misled by this
+possibility, which also had much against it, than Henry VIII had been
+under similar circumstances. Like him and like the founder of her
+family, she took up an independent position between the two powers,
+equally ready according to circumstances for war or peace with one or
+the other.
+
+Meanwhile she had already proceeded to measures which could never have
+been reconciled with the Spanish alliance, and to ecclesiastical
+changes which first gave her position its true character.
+
+Her earliest intimation of again deviating from the Church was given
+by restoring, like a devoted daughter, her father's monument, which
+Mary had levelled with the ground. A second soon followed, which at
+once touched on the chief doctrine in dispute. Before attending a
+solemn high mass she required the officiating bishop to omit the
+elevation of the host. As he refused, she left the church at the
+moment the ceremony was being consummated. To check the religious
+strife which began to fill the pulpits she forbade preaching, like her
+predecessors; but she allowed the Sunday Lessons, the Litany, and the
+Creed to be read in English. Elizabeth had hitherto conformed to the
+restored Catholic ritual: it could not be quite said that she
+belonged to either of the existing confessions. She always declared
+that she had read no controversial writings. But she had occupied
+herself with the documents of the early Church, with the Greek and
+Latin Fathers, and was thoroughly convinced that the Romanism of the
+later centuries had gone far astray from this pattern. She had made up
+her mind, not as to every point of doctrine, but as to its general
+direction: she believed too that she was upheld and guarded by God, to
+carry out this change. 'How wonderful are God's ordinances,' she
+exclaimed, when she heard that the crown had fallen to her.
+
+What course however was now to be taken was a question which, owing to
+the antagonism of the factions and the close connexion of all
+ecclesiastical and political matters, required the most mature
+consideration.
+
+The Queen was advised simply to revert to Edward VI's regulations, and
+to declare all things null and void that had been enacted under Mary,
+mainly on the ground that they had been enacted in violation of legal
+forms. A speech was laid before her, in which the validity of the last
+elections was disputed, since qualified members had been excluded from
+the sittings of both houses, although they were good Englishmen: the
+later proclamations of summons were held to be null, because in them
+the formula 'Supreme Head of the English Church' had been arbitrarily
+omitted, without a previous resolution of Parliament, though on this
+title so much depended for the commonwealth and people: but no one
+could give up a right which concerned a third person or the public
+interest; through these errors, which Mary had committed in her
+blindness, all that had then been determined lost its force and
+authority.[184] But the Queen and her counsellors did not wish to go
+so far. They remarked that to declare a Parliament invalid for some
+errors of form was a step of such consequence as to make the whole
+government of the nation insecure. But even without this it was not
+the Queen's purpose merely to revert to the forms which had been
+adopted under her brother. She did not share all the opinions and
+doctrines which had then obtained the upper hand: she held far more to
+ceremonies and outward forms than Edward VI or his counsellors: she
+wished to avoid a rude antagonism which would have called forth the
+resistance of the Catholics.
+
+In the Parliament that met immediately after the coronation (which was
+still celebrated by a Catholic bishop), they began with the question
+which had most occupied the late assembly, namely, should the Church
+revenues that had been attached to the crown be restored to it. The
+Queen's proposal, that they should be left to the crown, was quite the
+view of the assembly and obtained their full consent.
+
+The Parliamentary form of government however had also the greatest
+influence on religious affairs. Having risen originally in opposition
+to Rome, the Parliament, after the vicissitudes of the civil wars,
+first recovered its full importance when it took the side of the crown
+in its struggle with the Papacy. It did not so much concern itself
+with Dogma for its own sake: it had thought it possible to unite the
+retention of Catholicism with national independence. Under Mary every
+man had become conscious that this would be impossible. It was just
+then that the Parliament passed from its previous compliant mood into
+opposition, which was not yet successful because it was only that of
+the minority, but which prepared the way for the coming change of
+tone. It attached itself joyfully to the new Queen, whose birth
+necessarily made her adopt a policy which took away all apprehensions
+of a union with the Romish See injurious to the country.
+
+The complete antagonism between the Papal and the Parliamentary
+powers, of which one had swayed past centuries and the other was to
+sway the future, is shown by the conduct of the Pope, when Elizabeth
+announced her accession to him. In his answer he reproached her with
+it as presumption, reverted to the decision of his predecessors by
+which she was declared illegitimate, required that the whole matter
+should be referred to him, and even mentioned England's feudal
+relation to the Papacy:[185] but Parliament, which had rejected this
+claim centuries before, acknowledged Elizabeth as legitimately sprung
+from the royal blood, and as Queen by the law of God and of the land;
+they pledged themselves to defend her title and right with their lives
+and property.
+
+Owing to this the tendencies towards separation from Rome were already
+sure to gain the superiority: the Catholic members of the Privy
+Council, to whom Elizabeth owed her first recognition, could not
+contend effectively against them. But besides this, Elizabeth had
+joined with them a number of men of her own choice and her own views,
+who like herself had not openly opposed the existing system, but
+disapproved it; they were mainly her personal friends, who now took
+the direction of affairs into their hands; the change which they
+prepared looked moderate but was decided.
+
+Elizabeth rejected the title of 'Supreme Head of the Church,' because
+it not merely aroused the aversion of the Catholics, but also gave
+offence to many zealous Protestants; it made however no essential
+difference when she replaced it by the formula 'in all causes as well
+ecclesiastical as civil, supreme.' Parliament declared that the right
+of visiting and reforming the Church was attached to the crown and
+could be exercised by it through ecclesiastical commissioners. The
+clergy, high and low, were to swear to the ecclesiastical supremacy,
+and abjure all foreign authority and jurisdiction. The punishment for
+refusing the oath was defined: it was not to be punished with death as
+under Henry VIII, but with the loss of office and property. All Mary's
+acts in favour of an independent legislation and jurisdiction of the
+spiritualty were repealed. The crown appropriated to itself, with
+consent of Parliament, complete supremacy over the clergy of the land.
+
+The Parliament allowed indeed that it did not belong to it to
+determine concerning matters really ecclesiastical; but it held itself
+authorised, much like the Great-Councils of Switzerland, to order a
+conference of both parties, before which the most pressing questions
+of the moment, on the power of national Churches, and the nature of
+the Mass, should be laid.
+
+The Catholic bishops disliked the whole proceeding, as may be
+imagined, since these points had been so long settled; and they
+disliked no less the interference of the temporal power, and lastly
+the presidency of a royal minister, Nicolas Bacon. They had no mind to
+commit themselves to an interchange of writings: their declarations by
+word of mouth were more peremptory than convincing. In general they
+were not well represented since the deaths of Pole and Gardiner. On
+the other hand the Protestants, of whom many had become masters of the
+controverted questions during the exile from which they had now
+returned, put forward explicit statements which were completely to the
+point. They laid stress chiefly on the distinction between the
+universal, truly Catholic, Church and the Romish: they sought to reach
+firm ground in Christian antiquity prior to the hierarchic centuries.
+While they claimed a more comprehensive communion than that of
+Romanism, as that in which true Catholicity exists, they sought at the
+same time to establish a narrower, national, body which should have
+the right of independent decision as to ritual. Nearly all depended on
+the question, how far a country, which forms a separate community and
+thus has a separate Church, has the right to alter established
+ceremonies and usages; they deduced such an authority from this fact
+among others, that the Church in the first centuries was ruled by
+provincial councils. The project of calling a national council was
+proposed in Germany but never carried out: in England men considered
+the idea of a national decree, mainly in reference to ritual, as
+superior to all others. But we know how much the conception of ritual
+covered. The question whether Edward VI's Prayer-book should be
+restored or not, was at the same time decisive as to what doctrinal
+view should be henceforth followed.[186]
+
+The Catholic bishops set themselves in vain against the progress of
+these discussions. They withdrew from the conference: but the
+Parliament did not let itself be misled by this: it adopted the
+popular opinion, that they did not know what to answer. At the
+division in the Upper House they held obstinately fast to their
+opinion: they were left however, though only by a few votes, in the
+minority.[187] The Act of Uniformity passed, by which the Prayer-book,
+in the form which should be given it by a new revision, was to be
+universally received from the following Midsummer. The bishops raised
+an opposition yet once more, at a sitting of the Privy Council, on the
+ground that the change was against the promises made by Mary to the
+See of Rome in the name of the crown. Elizabeth answered, her sister
+had in this exceeded her powers: she herself was free to revert to the
+example of her earlier predecessors by whom the Papal power was looked
+on as an usurpation. 'My crown,' she exclaimed, 'is subject only to
+the King of Kings, and to no one else:' she made use of the words,
+'But as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.' The Protestant
+bishops had perished at the stake, but the victory was theirs even in
+their graves.
+
+The committee of revision consisted of men, who had then saved
+themselves by flight or by the obscurity of a secluded life. As under
+Edward men came back to the original tendencies prevalent under Henry
+VIII, so they now reverted to the settlement under Edward; yet they
+allowed themselves some alterations, chiefly with the view of making
+the book acceptable to the Catholics as well. Prayers in which the
+hostility of decided Protestantism came forward with especial
+sharpness, for instance that 'against the tyranny of the Bishop of
+Rome,' were left out. The chief alteration was in the formula of the
+Lord's Supper. Elizabeth and her divines were not inclined to let this
+stand as it was read in the second edition of Edward's time, since the
+mystical act there appeared almost as a mere commemorative
+repast.[188] They reverted to a form composed from the monuments of
+Latin antiquity, from Ambrose and Gregory, in which the real presence
+was maintained; this which already existed in the first edition they
+united with the view of the second. As formerly in the Augsburg
+confession in Germany, so in England at the last recension of the
+Common Prayer-book an attempt was made to keep as near as possible to
+the traditional system. For the Queen this had also a political value:
+when Philip II sent her a warning, she explained that she was only
+kept back from joining in the mass by a few points: she too believed
+in God's presence in the Sacrament.[189]
+
+She was of a similar mind in reference to other matters also. If at
+first, under pressure from zealous Protestants who saw in images an
+occasion for superstition, she ordered their removal, we perceive that
+in a short time she regretted it, especially as it made a bad
+impression in Wales and the Northern counties; in her chapel men again
+saw the cross and the lighted tapers, as before. The marriages entered
+into by priests had given much offence, and not unjustly, as they were
+often inferior unions, little honourable to them, and lowering the
+dignity of their order. Elizabeth would have gladly forbidden them
+altogether: she contented herself with setting limits to them by
+ordering that a previous permission should be requisite, but she
+always disliked them. She felt a natural pleasure in the splendour and
+order of the existing church service. For the future also the
+spiritualty were to be bound to appear--in the customary dress--in a
+manner worthy of God's service, with bent knees and with ceremonious
+devotion. When they proceeded to revise the confession drawn up by
+Cranmer, which two years afterwards was raised to a law in the shape
+of the 'Thirty-nine Articles,' they struck out the places that leant
+to Zwingli's special view; on the other hand they added some new
+propositions, which stated the right of the higher powers, and the
+authority of each kingdom to determine religious usages for
+itself.[190]
+
+For in this consisted the essence of the alteration, that the Civil
+Authority, as it was then composed, decided the church-questions that
+arose, and raised its decision into law.
+
+The Statute was, that no person should hold a public office, whether
+spiritual or temporal, who did not conform to this law. Thirteen
+bishops, four-and-twenty deans, eighty rectors of parishes, and most
+of the heads of colleges resigned. It has been said that this number,
+about two hundred, is not very considerable, since the English clergy
+held 9000 benefices and offices; but it comprehended all those who
+held the government of the church and represented the prevalent
+opinion in it. The difficulty arose how to replace the bishops in
+conformity with the principles of the English church constitution as
+then retained: perhaps the difficulty was intentional. There were
+however two conforming bishops who had received the laying on of hands
+according to the Roman ritual, and two others according to the
+Reformed: these consecrated the new Archbishop of Canterbury. It was
+objected to this act that none of them was in actual possession of a
+bishop's see: the Queen declared every defect, whether as to the
+statutes of the realm or church-usages, since time and circumstances
+demanded it, to be nullified or supplied. It was enough that,
+generally speaking, the mystery of the episcopal succession went on
+without interruption. What was less essential she supplied by the
+prerogative of the crown, as her grandfather had done once before. The
+archbishop consecrated was Dr. Parker, formerly chaplain to Anne
+Boleyn: a thoroughly worthy man, the father of learned studies on
+English antiquities, especially on the Anglo-Saxon times. By him the
+laying on of hands and consecration was bestowed on the other bishops
+who were now elected: they were called on to uphold at the same time
+the idea of episcopacy in its primitive import, and the doctrines of
+the Reformation.
+
+In regard to the election of bishops also Elizabeth went back one step
+from her brother's system; she gave up the right of appointment, and
+restored her father's regulations, by which it is true a strong
+influence was still reserved for the Civil Power. Under her supreme
+authority she wished to see the spiritual principle recognised as
+such, and to give it a representation corresponding to its high
+destiny.
+
+Thus it must needs be. The principle which comes forward for the first
+time, however strong it may appear, has yet to secure its future: it
+must struggle with the other elements of the world around it. It will
+be pressed back, perhaps beaten down: but in the vicissitude of the
+strife it will develop its inborn strength and establish itself for
+ever.
+
+An Anglican church,--nationally independent, without giving up its
+connexion with the reformed churches of the continent, and reformed,
+without however letting fall the ancient forms of episcopacy,--in
+accordance with the ideal, as it was originally understood, was at
+length, after a hard schooling of trials, struggles, and disasters,
+really set on foot.
+
+But now it is clear how closely such a thoroughgoing alteration
+affected the political position. Reckoning on the antipathies, which
+could not but hence arise against Elizabeth in the catholic world, and
+above all on the consent of the Roman See, the French did not hesitate
+to openly recognise the claims of the Dauphiness Mary Stuart to the
+English throne. She was hailed as Queen, when she appeared in public:
+the Dauphin's heralds bore the united arms of England, Ireland, and
+Scotland.[191] And this claim became still more important after the
+unexpected death of Henry II, when the Dauphin ascended the French
+throne as Francis II. The Guises, uncles of Mary the new Queen, who
+saw their own greatness in her success and were the very closest
+adherents of the church, got into their hands all the powers of
+government. The danger of their hostility lay above all in this, that
+the French already exercised a predominant influence over Scotch
+affairs, and hoped in a short time to become complete masters of that
+country in the Queen's right. She moreover had already by a formal
+document transferred to the French royal house an eventual right of
+inheritance to her crown. But if matters came to this, the old war of
+England and France would be transferred from the fields of Boulogne
+and Calais to the Scotch border. An invasion of the English territory
+from that side was the more dangerous, as the French would have
+brought thither, according to their custom, German and Swiss troops as
+well. England had neither fortresses, nor disciplined troops, nor even
+generals of name, who could face such an invasion. It was truly said,
+there was not a wall in England strong enough to stand a cannon
+shot.[192] How then if a defeat was sustained in the open field? The
+sympathies of the Catholics would have been aroused for France, and
+general ruin would have ensued.
+
+It was a fortunate thing for Elizabeth that the King of Spain, after
+she had taken up a line of conduct so completely counter to his wishes
+and ideas, did not make common cause with the French as they requested
+him. But she could not promise herself any help from him. Granvella
+told the English as emphatically as possible, that they must provide
+for themselves. Another Spanish statesman expressed his doubt to them
+whether they were able to do so: he really thought England would one
+day become an apple of discord between Spain and France, as Milan then
+was. It was almost a scoff, to compare the Island that had the power
+of the sea with an Italian duchy. But from this very moment she was to
+take a new upward flight. England was again to take her place as a
+third Power between the two great Powers; the opportunity presented
+itself to her to begin open war with one of them, without breaking
+with the other or even being exactly allied with it.
+
+At first it was France that threatened and challenged her.
+
+And to oppose the French, at the point where they might be dangerous,
+a ready means presented itself; England had but to form an alliance
+with those who opposed the French interests in Scotland. As these
+likewise were in opposition to their Queen, it was objected that one
+sovereign ought not to combine with the subjects of another.
+Elizabeth's leading statesman, William Cecil, who stood ever by her
+side with his counsel in the difficulties of her earlier years, and
+had guided her steps hitherto, made answer that 'the duty of
+self-preservation required it in this case, since Scotland would else
+be serviceable to France for war against England.'
+
+Cecil took into his view alike the past and the future. It was France
+alone, he said, that had prevented the English crown from realising
+its suzerainty over Scotland: whereas the true interest of Scotland
+herself lay in her being united with England as one kingdom. This
+point of view was all the more important, since the religious interest
+coincided with the political. The Scots, with whom they wished to
+unite themselves, were Protestants of the most decided kind.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[180] 'Ayant visage pale fier haultain et superbe pour desguyser le
+regret qu'elle a.' Renard to the Emperor 24 Feb. 1554, in Tytler ii.
+311. He adds, 'si pendant l'occasion s'adonne, elle (la reine) ne la
+punyt et Cortenay, elle ne sera jamais assurée.'
+
+[181] 'Manifestò el contentamiento grande que tendria el rey de saber
+que se declaba la sucesion en favor de ella (Isabel), cosa que S. M.
+habia descado sempre.' In Gonzalez, Apuntamientos para la historia del
+rey Don Felipe II. Memorias de la real academia de historia, Madrid,
+vii. 253.
+
+[182] One of the documents which Mackintosh (History of England iii.
+25) missed, the commission for the proposal to Elizabeth, which gives
+its contents, was soon after printed in Gonzalez, Documentos I. 405.
+
+[183] Feria: 'Dando a entender, que el pueblo la ha puesto en el
+estado que esta, y de esto no reconoce nada ni a V. M., ni a la
+nobleza del reino.'
+
+[184] An oration of John Hales to the Queen delivered by a certain
+nobleman, in Foxe, Martyrs iii. 978. 'It most manifestly appeareth,
+that all their doings from the beginning to the end were and be of
+none effect force or autority.'
+
+[185] P Sarpi, Concilio di Trento, lib. v. p. 420, confirmed by
+Pallavicino lib. xiv.
+
+[186] Horne's Papers for the reformed, in Collier ii. 416.
+
+[187] Ribadeneyra: 'No fueron sino tres votos mas, los que
+determinaron en las cortes, que se mudasse la religion catolica, que
+los que pretendian que se conservasse.' Ribadeneyra says the Queen
+gained Arundel's vote by allowing him to hope for her hand, and then
+laughed at him; but Feria's despatches show that she mocked at his
+pretensions even before her entry on the government.
+
+[188] Soames iv. 675. Liturgiae Britannicae 417.
+
+[189] From Feria's despatches, Apuntamientos 270.
+
+[190] In Heylin there is a comparison of the original forty-two with
+the later thirty-nine Articles; but he did not venture at last to do
+what he proposed at first, give his opinion as to the reason and
+nature of the variations.
+
+[191] Leslaeus de rebus gestis Scotorum: Henricus Mariam Reginam
+Angliae Scotiae et Hiberniae declarandam curavit,--Angliae et Scotiae
+insignia in ipsius vasis aliisque utensilibus simul pingi fingique ac
+adeo tapetibus pulvinis intexi jussit. (In Jebb i. 206.)
+
+[192] From one of Cecil's first notes, 'if they offered battle with
+Almains, there was great doubt, how England would be able to sustain
+it.' In Nares ii. 27.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+OUTLINES OF THE REFORMATION IN SCOTLAND.
+
+
+In its earliest period church reform was everywhere introduced or
+promoted by the temporal governments; in Germany by the government of
+the Empire, and by the Princes and towns which did not allow the
+authorisation, once given them through the Empire, to be again
+withdrawn; in the North by the new dynasties which took the place of
+the Union-Princes; in Switzerland itself by the Great-Councils which
+possessed the substance of the republican authority. After manifold
+struggles and vicissitudes this tendency had at last yet once more
+established itself in its full force under Queen Elizabeth in England.
+
+But another tendency was also very powerful in the world. In South
+Europe, France, the Netherlands, and a part of the German territory,
+the state attached itself to the principles of the old Church. At this
+very time in Italy and Spain this led to the complete destruction of
+what was there analogous to the Reformation; it has had more influence
+on the later circumstances of these countries than it had then. But
+where the religious change had already obtained a more durable
+footing, as in France and the Netherlands, politico-religious
+variances of the most thoroughgoing nature arose almost of necessity:
+the Protestantism of Western Europe was pervaded by anti-monarchical
+ideas. We noticed how much everything was preparing for this under
+Queen Mary in England also: that it did not so happen was owing to the
+arrangements made by Elizabeth. But this tendency appeared in full
+force in Scotland, and in fact more strongly there than anywhere else.
+
+In Scotland the efforts made by all the monarchic powers of this
+period in common were not so successful as in the rest of Europe. The
+kings of the house of Stuart, who had themselves proceeded from the
+ranks of the nobility, never succeeded in reducing the powerful lords
+to real obedience. The clannish national feeling, closely bordering on
+the old Keltic principle, procured the nobles at all times numerous
+and devoted followers: they fought out their feuds among themselves,
+and then combined anew in free confederacies. They held fast to the
+view that their sovereigns were not lords of the land (for they
+regarded their possessions as independent properties), not kings of
+Scotland but kings of the Scots, above all, kings of the great
+vassals, who had to pay them an obedience defined by laws. It gave the
+kings not a little superiority that they had obtained a decisive
+influence over the appointment to the high dignities in the Church,
+but this proved advantageous neither to the Church nor at last to
+themselves. Sometimes two vassals actually fought with each other for
+a rich benefice. The French abuses came into vogue here also:
+ecclesiastical benefices fell to the dependents of the court, to the
+younger sons of leading houses, often to their bastards: they were
+given or sold _in commendam_, and then served only for pleasure and
+gain: the Scotch Church fell into an exceedingly scandalous and
+corrupt state.
+
+It was not so much disputed questions of doctrine as in Germany, nor
+again the attempt to keep out Papal influence as in England, but
+mainly aversion to the moral corruption of the spiritualty which gave
+the first impulse to the efforts at reformation in Scotland. We find
+Lollard societies among the Scots much later than in England: their
+tendencies spread through wide circles owing to the anticlerical
+spirit of the century, and received fresh support from the doctrinal
+writings that came over from Germany. But the Scotch clergy was
+resolved to defend itself with all its might. Sometimes it had to sit
+in judgment on invectives against its disorderly and luxurious life,
+sometimes on refusals to pay established dues: or Lutheran doctrines
+had been preached: it persecuted all with equal severity as tending to
+injure the stability of holy Church, and awarded the most extreme
+penalties. To put suspected heretics to death by fire was the order of
+the day; happy the man who escaped the unrelenting persecution by
+flight, which was only possible amid great peril.
+
+These two causes, an undeniably corrupt condition and relentless
+punishment of those who blamed it as it well deserved, gave the Reform
+movement in Scotland, which was repressed but not stifled, a peculiar
+character of exasperation and thirst for vengeance.
+
+Nor was it without a political bearing in Scotland as elsewhere. In
+particular Henry VIII proposed to his nephew, King James V, to remodel
+the Church after his example: and a part of the nobility, which was
+already favourably disposed towards England, would have gladly seen
+this done. But James preferred the French pattern to the English: he
+was kept firm in his Catholic and French sympathies by his wife, Mary
+of Guise, and by the energetic Archbishop Beaton. Hence he became
+involved in the war with England in which he fell, and after this it
+occasionally seemed, especially at the time of the invasions by the
+Duke of Somerset, as if the English, and in connexion with them the
+Protestant, sympathies would gain the ascendancy. But national
+feelings were still stronger than the religious. Exactly because
+England defended and recommended the religious change it failed to
+make way in Scotland. Under the regency of the Queen dowager, with
+some passing fluctuations, the clerical interests on the whole kept
+the upper hand. In spite of a general sympathy the prospects of Reform
+were slender. It could not reckon on any quarrel between the
+government and the higher clergy: foreign affairs rather exercised a
+hostile influence. It is remarkable how under these unfavourable
+circumstances the foundation of the Scotch Church was laid.
+
+Most of the Scots who had fled from the country were content to
+provide for their subsistence in a foreign land and improve their own
+culture. But there was one among them who did not reconcile himself
+for one moment to this fate. John Knox was the first who formed a
+Protestant congregation in the besieged fortress of S. Andrew's; when
+the French took the place in 1547 he was made prisoner and condemned
+to serve in the galleys. But while his feet were in fetters, he
+uttered his conviction in the fiery preface to a work on
+Justification, that this doctrine would yet again be preached in his
+fatherland.[193] After he was released, he took a zealous share in the
+labours of the English Reformers under Edward VI, but was not
+altogether content with the result; after the King's death he had to
+fly to the continent. He went to Geneva, where he became a student
+once more and tried to fill up the gaps in his studies, but above all
+he imbibed, or confirmed his knowledge of, the views which prevailed
+in that Church. 'Like the first Reformers of French Switzerland, Knox
+also lived in the opinion that the Romish service was an idolatry
+which should be destroyed from off the earth. And he was fully
+convinced of the doctrine of the independence of the spiritual
+principle side by side with the State, and believed that the new
+spiritualty also was authorised to exclude men from the Church, views
+for which Calvin was at that very time contending. Thus he was equally
+armed for the struggle against the Papacy and against the temporal
+power allied with it, when a transient relaxation of ecclesiastical
+control in Scotland made it possible for him to return thither. In the
+war between France and Spain the Regent took the side of France: she
+lighted bonfires to announce the capture of Calais; out of antipathy
+to Mary Tudor and her Spanish government she allowed the English
+fugitives to be received in Scotland. Knox himself ventured to return
+towards the end of 1555: without delay he set his hand to form a
+church-union, according to his ideas of religious independence, which
+was not to be again destroyed by any State power.
+
+Among the devout Protestants who gathered together in secret the
+leading question was, whether it was consistent with conscience to go
+to mass, as most then did. Knox was not merely against any one doing
+wrong that good might come of it, but he went on further to restore
+the interrupted Protestant service of God. Sometimes in one and
+sometimes in another of the places of refuge which he found he
+administered the Communion to little congregations according to the
+Reformed rite; this was done with greater solemnity at Easter 1556 in
+the house of Lord Erskine of Dun, one of those Scottish noblemen who
+had ever promoted literary studies and the religious movement as far
+as lay in his power. A number of people of consequence from the Mearns
+(Mearnshire) were present. But they were not content with partaking
+the Communion; following the mind of their preacher they pledged
+themselves to avoid every other religious community, and to uphold
+with all their power the preaching of the Gospel.[194] In this union
+we may see the origin of the Scotch Church properly so called. Knox
+had no doubt that it was perfectly lawful. From the power which the
+lords possessed in Scotland he concluded that this duty was incumbent
+on them. For they were not lords for themselves, but in order to
+protect their subjects and dependents against every violence. From a
+distance he called on his friends--for he had once more to leave
+Scotland, since the government recurred to its earlier severity--not
+again to prefer their own ease to the glory of God, but for very
+conscience' sake to venture their lives for their oppressed brethren.
+At Erskine's house met together also Lord Lorn, afterwards Earl of
+Argyle, and the Prior of S. Andrews, subsequently Earl of Murray; in
+December 1557 Erskine, Lorn, Murray, Glencairn (also a friend of
+Knox), and Morton, united in a solemn engagement, to support God's
+word and defend his congregation against every evil and tyrannical
+power even unto death.[195] When in spite of this another execution
+took place which excited universal aversion, they proceeded to an
+express declaration, that they would not suffer any man to be punished
+for transgressing a clerical law based on human ordinances.
+
+What the influence of England had not been able to effect, was now
+produced by antipathy to France. The opinion prevailed that the King
+of France wished to add Scotland to his territories, and that the
+Regent gave him aid thereto. When she gathered the feudal array on the
+borders in 1557 (for the Scots had refused to contribute towards
+enlisting mercenaries) to invade England according to an understanding
+with the French, the barons held a consultation on the Tweed, in
+consequence of which they refused their co-operation for this purpose.
+The matrimonial crown was indeed even afterwards granted to the
+Dauphin, when he married Mary Stuart;[196] but thereupon
+misunderstandings arose with all the more bitterness. Meetings were
+everywhere held in a spirit hostile to the government.
+
+It was this quarrel of the Regent with the great men of the country
+that gave an opportunity to the lords who were combined for the
+support of religion to advance with increasing resolution. Among their
+proposals there is none weightier than that which they laid before her
+in March 1559, just when the Regent had gathered around her a numerous
+ecclesiastical assembly. They demanded that the bishops should be
+elected for the future by the nobility and gentry of each diocese, the
+parish clergy by the parishioners, and only those were to be elected
+who were of esteemed life and possessed the requisite capacity: divine
+service was to be henceforth held in the language of the country. The
+assembled clergy rejected both demands. They remarked that to set
+aside the influence of the crown on the elections involved a
+diminution of its authority which could not be defended, especially
+during the minority of the sovereign. Only in the customary forms
+would they allow of any amendments.
+
+But this assembly was not content with rejecting the proposals: they
+confirmed the usages and services stigmatised by their opponents as
+superstitious, and forbade the celebration of the sacraments in any
+other form than that sanctioned by the Church. The royal court at
+Stirling called a number of preachers to its bar for unauthorised
+assumption of priestly functions.
+
+The preachers were ready to come: the lords in whose houses they
+sojourned were security for them. And already they had the popular
+sympathy as well as aristocratic protection. It was an old custom of
+the country that, in especially important judicial proceedings, the
+accused appeared accompanied by his friends. Now therefore the friends
+of the Reformation assembled in great numbers at Perth from the
+Mearns, Dundee, and Angus, that, by jointly avowing the doctrines on
+account of which their spiritual leaders were called to account, their
+condemnation might be rendered impossible.
+
+As to the Regent we are assured that she was not in general firmer in
+her leaning towards the hierarchy than other Princes of the time, and
+had once even entertained the thought that the supreme ecclesiastical
+power belonged to her;[197] but, perhaps alarmed by the vehemence of
+the preachers, she had done nothing to obtain such a power. It now
+appeared to her that it would be a good plan to check the flow of the
+masses to the place of trial by some friendly words which she
+addressed to Erskine of Dun.[198] The Protestants saw in them the
+assurance of an interposition in the direction of lenity, and stayed
+away; but without regard to this and without delay the Justiciary at
+Stirling, Henry Levingstoune, proceeded to business on the day
+appointed, 20 May 1559. As the preachers did not appear, those who had
+become security for them were condemned to a money-fine, while they
+themselves were denounced as rebels,[199] as having withdrawn
+themselves from the royal jurisdiction; an edict followed which
+pronounced them exiled, and in the severest terms forbade any to give
+them protection or favour.
+
+The news fell like a spark of fire among the inflammable masses of
+Protestants assembled at Perth. The sentence promulgated was an open
+act of hostility against the lords, who felt themselves bound by their
+word which they had given to the preachers and by their vow to each
+other. They considered that the Regent's promise had given them a
+right against her; Lord Erskine, whom the others had warned, declared
+that he had been deceived by her. While the Regent had prevented a
+collision between the two parties at Stirling, she had occasioned in
+one of them, at Perth, the outbreak of a popular storm against the
+hierarchy of the land, their representatives, and the monuments of
+their religion. John Knox, who had come, as he said, to be where men
+were striving against Satan, called on them in a fiery sermon to
+destroy the images which were the instruments of idolatry. The attempt
+of a priest, after the sermon, to proceed to high mass and open the
+tabernacle of the altar, was all that was needed to cause a tumult
+even in the church itself, in which the images of the saints were
+destroyed; and the outbreak spreading through the city directed itself
+against the monasteries and laid them too in ruins. How entirely
+different is Knox from Luther! The German reformer made all outward
+change depend on the gradual influence of doctrine, and did not wish
+to set himself in rebellious opposition to the public order under
+which he lived. The Scot called on men to destroy whatever contravened
+his religious ideas. The Lords of the Congregation, who became ever
+more numerous, declared themselves resolved to do all that God
+commands in Scripture, and destroy all that tended to dishonour his
+name. With these objects, and with their co-operation and connivance,
+the stormy movement once raised surged everywhere further over the
+country. The monasteries were also destroyed in Stirling, Glasgow, and
+S. Andrews; the abbeys of Melrose, Dunfermline, and Cambuskenneth
+fell: and the proud abbey of Scone, an incomparable monument of the
+hierarchic feeling of earlier ages, was, together with the bishop's
+palace, levelled to the ground. It may be that the popular fury went
+far beyond the original intentions of the leaders, but without doubt
+it was also part of their purpose, to make an end above all of the
+monasteries and abbeys, from which nothing but resistance could be
+expected.[200] It has been regarded even in our days as a measure of
+prudence, dictated by the circumstances, that they destroyed these
+monuments, which by their imposing size and the splendour of the
+service performed in them would have always produced an impression
+adverse to the Reformation. On the other hand the cathedrals and
+parish churches were to be preserved, and after being cleansed from
+images were to be devoted to Protestant worship. Everywhere the
+church-unions, which were at once formed and organised on Protestant
+principles, gained the upper hand. The Mass ceased: the Prayer-book of
+King Edward VI took its place.
+
+So the reformed Scotch Church put itself in possession, in a moment,
+of the greatest part of the country. It was from the beginning a
+self-governed establishment: it found support in the union of some
+lords, whose power likewise rested on independent rights: but it first
+gained free play when the French policy of the Regent alienated the
+nobility and the nation from her. On the one side now stood the
+princess and the clergy, on the other the lords and the preachers. As
+their proposals were rejected and preparations made to defend the
+hierarchic system with the power of the State, the opposition also
+similarly arose, claiming to have an original right: revolt broke out;
+the church system of the Romish hierarchy was overthrown and a
+Protestant one put in its place. In the history of Protestantism at
+large the year 1559 is among the most important. During the very days
+in which the revised Common Prayer-book was restored in England (so
+definitely putting an end to the Catholic religion of the realm), the
+monuments of Roman Catholicism in Scotland were broken in pieces, and
+the unrevised Common Prayer-book introduced into the churches. But
+yet how great was the difference! In the one country all was done
+under the guidance of a Queen to whom the nation adhered, in
+consequence of Parliamentary enactments, the ancient forms being
+preserved as far as possible: here the whole transaction was completed
+in opposition to the Regent, under the guidance of an aristocracy
+engaged in conflict with her, amidst very great tumult, while all that
+was ancient was set aside.
+
+At the beginning of July the Scotch lords had become masters of the
+capital as well, and had reformed it according to their own views,
+with the most lively sympathy of the citizens. They were resolved to
+uphold the change of religion now effected, cost what it would, and
+hoped to do so in a peaceful manner. When Perth again opened her gates
+to the Regent after the first tumult, under the condition that she
+should punish no one, she promised at the same time to put off the
+adjustment of all questions in dispute to the next Parliament. There
+they intended to carry at once the recognition of the Reformation in
+its whole breadth, and the removal of the French. We perceive that it
+was their plan in that case to obey the Regent as before, and to unite
+the abbey-lands to the possessions of the crown. 'But if your Grace
+does not agree to this,' so runs the letter of a confederate, 'they
+are resolved to reject all union with you.'
+
+It was soon shown that the last was the only alternative. The regent
+collected so many French and Scotch troops that the lords did not
+venture to stop her return to Edinburgh. They came to an agreement
+instead, in which she promised to prosecute no member of the
+Congregation, and especially no preacher, and not to allow the clergy
+on the ground of their jurisdiction to undertake any annoying
+proceedings: in return for which the lords on their side pledged
+themselves not to disturb any of the clergy or destroy any more of the
+church buildings. It was a truce in which each party, sword in hand,
+reserved to itself the power of defending its partisans against the
+other. The two parties encountered in Edinburgh. The inhabitants had
+called Knox to be their preacher, and when he thought it unsafe to
+stay in the city after the Congregation withdrew, another champion of
+the Reformation, Willok, filled his place with hardly less zeal and
+success. But on the other side the bishop of Amiens appeared with some
+doctors of the Sorbonne at the Regent's court. Here and there the
+Protestant service was again discarded; the Paris theologians defended
+the old dogma among the Scotch scholars, and made even now some
+impression; the mass and the preaching contended with each other. As
+to the Regent's views there can be no doubt. She drew the attention of
+the French court to the frequent intercourse between the nobles of
+Protestant views in France and Scotland, and to the encouragement the
+Scots had from the French; but she gave the assurance that she would
+soon finish with the Scots if she received support. Some French
+companies had just landed at Leith, they had brought with them
+munitions of war and money: the Regent demanded four companies more,
+to make up twenty, and perhaps 100 hommes d'armes; if only four French
+ships were stationed at Leith to keep off foreign assistance, she
+pledged herself to put down the movement everywhere.[201]
+
+Then the Scots also decided that they must employ their utmost means
+of resistance. They had framed politico-religious theories, in virtue
+of which they believed in their right to do so. The substance of the
+whole is that they acknowledged indeed an obligation on the conscience
+which required obedience to the sovereign, but at the same time they
+held that the obligation came to an end as soon as the sovereign
+contravened the known will of God: an idolatrous sovereign, so said
+the preachers, could be deposed and punished:--should the supreme Head
+put off the reform which was required by God's law, the right and the
+duty of executing it falls on the subordinate authorities.
+
+But the lords claimed also an authority based on the laws of the land.
+When the French troops began to fortify Leith, they held themselves
+justified in raising remonstrances against it: they demanded that the
+Regent should desist from the design. As she replied with a
+proclamation which sounded very offensive to themselves, they had no
+scruple in taking up arms. Each noble collected his men round him and
+appeared at their head in the field. Relying on the fine army which
+was thus brought together, they repeated their demand, with the
+remark, that in receiving foreign troops into the harbour-town there
+was involved a manifest attempt to enslave the land by force: if the
+Regent would not lend an ear to their remonstrances, they being the
+hereditary councillors of the crown, they would remember their oath
+which bound them to provide for the general welfare. The Regent
+expressed her astonishment to the lords through a herald that there
+should be any other authority in the realm than that of her daughter,
+the Queen. She already felt herself strong enough to order them and
+their troops to disperse, on pain of the punishment appointed for high
+treason. On this the great men met in the old council-house at
+Edinburgh, to consider the question whether it was obligatory to pay
+obedience to a princess, who was but regent, and who disregarded the
+opinion of the hereditary councillors of the crown. The consultation,
+at which some preachers supported the views of the lords with similar
+arguments, ended in the declaration that the Regent no longer
+possessed an authority which she was using to the damage of the realm.
+In the name of the King and Queen they announced to her that the
+commission she had received from them was at an end. 'And as your
+Grace,' so they continued, 'will not acknowledge us as your
+councillors, we also will no longer acknowledge you as our
+regent.'[202]
+
+To this pass matters had now come. The combined interests, on the one
+side of the crown and the clergy, on the other of the lords and the
+Protestants, came into open and avowed conflict. The Act of Suspension
+is but the proclamation of war in a form which would enable them to
+avoid directly breaking with their duties towards their born prince.
+
+The lords' first enterprise was directed against the French troops
+which held Leith in their possession, and which were now first of all
+to be driven out of the country: but the hastily-constructed
+fortifications there proved stronger than was expected. And not merely
+were their assaults on Leith repelled, but the Lords soon saw
+themselves driven from their strongest positions, for instance from
+Stirling; their possessions were wasted far and wide; the war, which
+was transferred to Fife, took an unfortunate turn for them; to all
+appearance they were lost if they did not obtain help from abroad.
+
+But to whom could they apply for it if not to their neighbour, just
+now rising in power, Elizabeth Queen of England?
+
+They might have hesitated, as they had indeed repelled the influence
+of Henry VIII and of Somerset, even when it was united with reforming
+tendencies. But how entirely different were matters now from what they
+had been then! With their own hands they had already given themselves
+a Protestant church-system, which was national in a high degree, and
+somewhat opposite to the English one. So long as it existed, the
+influence England would gain by giving them help could never become
+the supremacy, at which it is certain attempts had previously been
+made.
+
+We know too the objections which were made in England against a union
+with the Scots. To these were added the Queen's decided antipathies to
+the new form of church government and to its leaders: she could not
+bear the mention of Knox's name. But all these considerations
+disappeared before the pressing danger and the political necessity. In
+opposition to France, Protestant England and Protestant Scotland,
+however different the religious and even the political tendencies
+prevailing in each of them, held out their hands to each other.
+
+Elizabeth had already at an earlier time privately given the Scots
+some support: the moment at which she gave them decisive assistance is
+worth noticing.
+
+The Regent's French and Scotch troops were planning an attack on S.
+Andrews, and had made themselves masters of Dysarts; the lords, again
+retreating, marched along the coast, and the French were in pursuit
+when a fleet hove in sight in the distance. The French welcomed it
+with salvos of cannon, for they had no doubt that it was their own
+fleet, bringing them help from France, long expected, and now in fact
+known to be ready. But it soon appeared that they were English
+vessels, in advance of the larger fleet which had put to sea under
+Vice-admiral Winter. Nothing remained for the French, when thus
+undeceived, but to give up their project and withdraw. But the whole
+state of things was thus altered. Soon after this the Scots, to whose
+assistance English troops had also come by land, were able to advance
+against Leith and resume the suspended siege.
+
+Everything that is to come to pass in the world has its right time and
+hour. Incredible as it may seem, the champion of the strictest
+Catholicism, the King of Spain, was at this moment not merely for help
+being given to the Scots, but pressing for it; his ministers
+complained not that the Queen interfered, but that she did not do so
+more quickly. For in the union of Scotland and France, which was
+already complete in a military sense, they saw a danger for
+themselves. The enthusiastic Knox, who only lived and moved in
+religious ideas, was, more than he foresaw, a link in the chain of
+European affairs. Without the impulse which he gave to the minds of
+men, that resistance to the Regent, by which a complete union with
+France was hindered, would have been impossible.
+
+A treaty was made in Berwick between Queen Elizabeth and the Scotch
+lords, by which they bound themselves to drive the French out of
+Scotland with their united strength. The lords promised to remain
+obedient to their Queen, but Elizabeth assented to the additional
+words, that this was not to be in such cases as might lead to the
+overthrow of the old Scottish rights and liberties. This was a very
+comprehensive clause, which placed the further attempts of the Scotch
+lords against the monarchical power under English protection.
+
+While the siege of Leith was being carried on by land and sea,
+commissioners from France appeared on the part of Queen Mary Stuart
+and her husband, as they had now assumed the place of the Regent (who
+had died in the midst of these troubles), to attempt to bring about an
+agreement. The chief among them was Monluc, bishop of Valence, a
+well-meaning and moderate man even in religious matters, who,
+convinced of the impossibility of carrying on the war any further with
+success, gave way step by step before the inflexible purpose of the
+English plenipotentiary, William Cecil. He put his hand to the treaty
+of Edinburgh, in which the withdrawal of the French troops from
+Scotland and the destruction of the fortifications of Leith were
+stipulated for. This satisfied the chief demand of the lords, and at
+the same time agreed with the wish of the neighbouring Power. The King
+and Queen of France and Scotland were no longer to bear the title and
+arms of England and Ireland. For Scotland a provisional government was
+arranged on the basis of election by the Estates; it was settled that
+for the future also the Queen and King should decide on war and peace
+only by their advice. It is easy to see how much a limitation of the
+Scotch crown was connected with the interests of the Power that was
+injured by its union with the crown of France.
+
+Religion was not expressly mentioned; Queen Elizabeth had purposely
+avoided it. But when the Scotch Parliament, to which the adjustment of
+the matters in dispute was once more referred in the treaty of
+Edinburgh, now met, nothing else could be expected than what in fact
+happened. The Protestant Confession was accepted almost without
+opposition, the bishops' jurisdiction declared to be abolished
+according to the view of the confederate lords, the celebration of the
+Mass not only forbidden, but, after the example of Geneva, prohibited
+under the severest penalties.
+
+How mightily had the self-governing church-society, founded three
+years and a half before in the castle at Dun, secured its foothold! By
+its union with the claims of the aristocracy it had broken up the
+existing government not merely of the Church but also of the State. It
+was of unspeakable importance for the subsequent fortunes of England
+that this vigorous living element had been taken under the protection
+of the Queen of that country and supported by her.
+
+But at the same time, if we may so say, it complicated her personal
+relations inextricably.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[193] Extract in M'Crie, Life of John Knox 36.
+
+[194] Knox, History of the Reformation,--a work which some later
+insertions have not deprived of its credit for trustworthiness, which
+it otherwise deserves,--p. 92. 'That they refussit all society with
+idolatri and band them selfes to the uttermost of their powery to
+manetein the trew preiching of the evangille, as God should offer unto
+thame preichers and opportunity.'
+
+[195] 'That we sall--apply our haill power substance and our verie
+lyves, to mantein set forward and establish the most blissit word of
+God, and his congregatioun sall labour--to have faithful ministeris,
+puirlie and trewlie to minister Christis evangell and sacramentis to
+his pepyll.'
+
+[196] According to Leslaeus 205, in this the promise was specially
+emphatic, that everything should be done, 'Ne regina nostra Angliae
+sceptro excluderetur.' This was during Mary Tudor's lifetime.
+
+[197] So King James said at the Conference of Hampton Court, State
+Trials ii. 85; negociations must have taken place of which we know
+nothing.
+
+[198] Knox: 'That she wald tak sume better order:' and so in
+Calderwood. Buchanan xvi. 590: 'Se interea nihil adversus quemquam
+illius sectae molituram.' Spottiswood i. 271: That the diet should
+desert and nothing be done to the prejudice of the ministres.'
+
+[199] Praefati Paulus Methven, Joannes Cristesoun, Willielmus Harlaw
+et Joannes Willok denunciati sunt rebelles S. D. N. regis et reginae.
+From the Justiciary records in M'Crie, Note GG. 360.
+
+[200] Kirkaldy of Grange, one of the leaders of the Protestants, to
+Sir Henry Percy, Edinburgh, 1 July, in Tytler vi. 107. 'The manner of
+their proceeding in reformation is this. They pull down all manner of
+friaries and some abbeys, which willingly receive not the reformation:
+as to parish churches they cleanse them of images and other monuments
+of idolatry and command that no masses be said in them.' Even now
+M'Crie says: 'I look upon the destruction of those monuments as a
+piece of good policy.' Life of Knox 130.
+
+[201] I find this only in Lesley 215, who is in general the best
+informed as to the relations of the Regent with the French court.
+
+[202] 'As your grace will not acknowledge us, our soverane lords and
+ladyis liegis for your subjectis and counssail, na mair will we
+acknowledge you for our regent.' Declaration of 23 Oct. 1559.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+MARY STUART IN SCOTLAND. RELATION OF THE TWO QUEENS TO EACH OTHER.
+
+
+People were now fully satisfied that they had obtained something
+great, and had laid a firm foundation for secure relations throughout
+all future time: but it became clear at once that this was not the
+case. Francis II and his wife seemed to have forgotten that they had
+promised on their royal word, in the instructions to their
+ambassadors, to accept whatever they should arrange: they refused to
+ratify the treaty of Edinburgh. For it was really concluded by the
+Queen of England with men in rebellion against them, by whom it was
+chiefly subscribed. They regarded it as an insult that the Scots
+deputed an embassy of great lords to England, whilst the request to
+confirm all that was arranged in Scotland was laid before them, their
+Queen and their King, by a gentleman of less distinguished birth. They
+felt themselves highly injured by a Parliament being called even
+before they had ratified the treaty, without any authorisation on
+their side. How were they to accept its resolutions? Francis II on the
+contrary said, he would prove to the Scots that they had no power to
+meet together in their own name, just as if they were a republic.[203]
+And as little was he inclined to give up the title and arms of England
+according to the treaty: he said he had hitherto borne them with good
+right, and saw no reason to give satisfaction to others, before he had
+received any himself.
+
+Those were the days in which the French government, guided by the
+Queen's uncles, including the Cardinal of Lorraine, had considerably
+repressed the Protestant movements which were stirring in France, had
+brought the insurgent princes into its power, and was occupied in
+establishing a strict system of obedience in ecclesiastical and
+political matters; with kindred aims it sought in Scotland also to
+revert to its earlier policy; all concessions made to the contrary it
+ignored. I see here, says the English ambassador Throckmorton, more
+intention of vengeance than inclination to peace.
+
+At this juncture occurred the unexpected event which gave French
+affairs another shape. King Francis II died at the beginning of
+December 1559 without issue; and the Guises could not maintain the
+authority they had hitherto possessed. The kingdom which, by the
+extent and unity of its power, was wont to exercise a dominant
+influence over all others, fell into religious and political troubles
+which engrossed and broke up its force.
+
+Elizabeth took some part also in these movements within France itself:
+it was her natural policy to support the opponents of the Guises, who
+likewise stood so near her in their religious confession. With their
+consent she once occupied Havre, but allowed it without much
+hesitation to fall again into the hands of the French government which
+was then guided by Catharine Medici, who for some time even made
+common cause with the leaders of the Huguenots. We cannot here follow
+out these relations any further, for to understand them fully would
+require us to go into the details of the changeful dissensions in
+France: for English history these are only so far important as they
+made it impossible for the French to act upon England.
+
+On the other hand the entire sequel of English history turns on the
+relation to Scotland: Scotch affairs already form a constituent part
+of the English, and demand our whole attention.
+
+At first sight it would not have seemed so impossible to bring about
+peace and even friendship between the Queen of Scotland and the Queen
+of England: for the former was of course no longer bound to the
+interests of the French crown. But this expectation also proved
+deceitful. A primary condition would have been the acceptance of the
+treaty of Edinburgh; Elizabeth demanded this expressly and as if it
+were obligatory on Mary, who would as little consent to it after, as
+before, the death of her husband. She ceased to bear the arms of
+England: all else she deferred till her arrival in Scotland.
+Immediately on this, at the first step, the mutual antipathy broke
+out.[204] In consequence of the refusal to ratify the treaty,
+Elizabeth declined Mary's request to be allowed to return home through
+England. Mary regarded this as an insult: it is worth while to hear
+her words. 'I was once,' so she said, 'brought to France in spite of
+all the opposition of her brother: I will return to Scotland without
+her leave. She has combined with my rebellious subjects: but there are
+also malcontents in England who would listen to a proposal from my
+side with delight: I am a Queen as well as she, and not altogether
+friendless, and perhaps I have as great a soul too.'
+
+Few words, but they contain motives of jealousy rising out of the
+depths of her inmost heart and announce a stormy future. But at first
+Mary could not give effect to them.
+
+Some Catholic lords did indeed request her to come to them in the
+northern counties, whence they would escort her to her capital with an
+armed force. But who could advise her to begin her government with a
+civil war? She would then have herself driven the Protestant lords
+over to the side of her foe. But she had connexions with them as well.
+Their leader, her half-brother James, Prior of S. Andrews, whom she
+now created Earl of Murray, a man of spirit, energy, and comprehensive
+views, appeared before her in France; his experience and caution and
+even the inner tie of blood-relationship always gave him a great
+influence over her resolutions. He showed her how it was possible to
+rule Scotland even under existing circumstances, so as to have a
+tolerable understanding with Elizabeth, but reserving all else for the
+future. These counsels she followed. Not with Elizabeth's help, but
+yet without hindrance from her, she arrived at Holyrood in August
+1561. Murray succeeded in obtaining, though not without great
+opposition, and almost by personally keeping off opponents, that she
+should be allowed to have mass celebrated before her. He took affairs
+into his own hands; the Protestants had the ascendancy in the country
+and in the royal council.
+
+Not that Queen Mary by this fully acquiesced in what had happened, or
+recognised the state of affairs in Scotland. She even now confirmed
+neither the treaty of Edinburgh, nor the resolutions of Parliament
+based on it: but in the first place took possession of her throne,
+reserving her dynastic rights.
+
+A sight without a parallel, these two Queens in Albion, haughty and
+wondrous creatures of nature and circumstances!
+
+They were both of high mental culture. From Mary we have French poems,
+of a truth of feeling and a simplicity of language, which were then
+rare in literature. Her letters are fresh and eloquent effusions of
+momentary moods and wishes: they impress us even if we know that they
+are not exactly true. She has pleasure in lively discussion, in which
+she willingly takes a playful, sometimes a familiar, tone; but always
+shows herself equal to the subject. From Elizabeth also we have some
+lines in verse, not exactly of a poetic strain, not very harmonious in
+expression, but full of high thoughts and resolves. Her letters are
+skilful but, owing to their allusions and antitheses, far from
+perspicuous products of reflection, although succinct and rich in
+matter. She was acquainted with the learned languages, had studied the
+ancient classics and translated one or two, had read much of the
+church-fathers: in her expressions there sometimes appears an insight
+into the inner connexion between history and ideas, which fills us
+with astonishment. In conversation she tried above all things to
+produce a sense of her gifts and accomplishments. She shone through a
+combination of grandeur and condescension which appeared like grace
+and sweetness, and sometimes awakened a personal homage, for which in
+the depths of her soul she cherished a longing. She did but toy with
+such feelings, to Mary they were a reality. Mary possessed that
+natural power of womanly charm which awakens strong, even if not
+lasting, passion. Her personal life fluctuates between the wish to
+find a husband who could advance her interests and those passionate
+ebullitions by which she is also herself overpowered. This however
+does not hinder her from devoting all her attention to the business of
+government. Both Queens work with like zeal in their Privy Council:
+and they only deliberate with men of intimate trust; the resolutions
+which are adopted are always their own. Elizabeth yields more to the
+wisdom of tried councillors, though even these are not sure of her
+favour for a moment, and have a hard place of it with her. Mary
+fluctuates between full devotion and passionate hate: she is almost
+always swayed by an unlimited confidence in the man who meets her
+wishes. Elizabeth lets things come to her: Mary is ever restless and
+enterprising.[205] Elizabeth appeared once in the field, to animate
+the courage of her troops in a great peril. Mary took a personal share
+in the local Scottish feuds: she was seen riding at the head of a
+small feudal army against the enemy, with pistols at her saddle-bow.
+
+But we here discontinue this representation of the antitheses of
+character between them, which first acquired historical import through
+the differences of position in which the two sovereigns found
+themselves.
+
+Elizabeth was mistress of her State, as well in its religious as its
+political constitution. She had revived the obedience once paid to her
+father; and remodelled the Church in the decidedly Protestant spirit
+which corresponded to her personal position; at first every man
+submitted to the new order of things, though many looked on its growth
+only with aversion. Mary on the contrary had to accommodate herself to
+a form of Church, and even of State, government, which was founded in
+opposition to the right of her predecessors, and above all to her own
+views. If she ever thought of making her own religion predominant, or
+of oppressing that which was newly established, open resistance was
+announced to her in threatening terms by its leader John Knox.
+However much this reaction against her religious belief straitened her
+on the one side, yet on another side it opened out to her a wider
+prospect. She already had numerous personally devoted partisans in
+Great Britain, both in Scotland where she could yet once more call
+them together, and in England where she was secretly regarded by not a
+few as the lawful Queen; but, besides this, she had many in Catholic
+Europe, which had become reunited during these years (the times when
+the Council of Trent was drawing to a close) around the Papal
+authority, and was preparing to bring back those who had fallen away.
+This great confederacy gave Mary a position which made her capable of
+confronting a neighbour in herself so much more powerful.
+
+Elizabeth once touched on the old claims of England to supremacy over
+Scotland: the ambition of all the Scotch kings, to prove to the
+English that they were independent of them, still lived in Mary: when
+queen was set over against queen, it took a more sharply-expressed
+shape; any whisper of subjection seemed to her an outrage.
+
+For the moment Mary had, as before mentioned, given up the title of
+'Queen of England': but all her thoughts were directed towards the
+point of getting her presumptive hereditary right to that kingdom
+recognised, and of preparing for its realisation at a later time.
+
+But now there were two ways by which she might gain her end. She might
+either get her claim to the English throne recognised by an agreement
+with its present possessor, which did not appear so unattainable, as
+Elizabeth was unmarried, and such a settlement would have been legally
+valid in England; or she might enter into a dynastic alliance with a
+neighbouring great power, so as to be enabled to carry her claims into
+effect one day through its military strength.[206]
+
+With this last view negociations were during several years carried on
+for a marriage with Don Carlos the son of the Spanish King. For in
+the same proportion that the union of Scotch and French interests
+dissolved, did the opposite alliance between Spain and England become
+looser. The most varied reasons made Philip II wish to enter into
+direct and close relations with Scotland. Immediately after the death
+of Francis II, a negociation was set on foot with a view to this
+alliance, on Mary's giving an audience to the Spanish ambassador, to
+the vexation of Queen Catharine of France, who wished to see this
+richest of princes, and the one who seemed destined to the greatest
+power, reserved for her own youngest daughter. After Mary returned to
+Scotland similar rumours were renewed, and from time to time we meet
+with a negociation for this object. When her minister Lethington was
+in London in the spring of 1563, he agreed with the Spanish ambassador
+that this marriage was the only desirable one: it was longed for by
+all Scotch and English Catholics. Soon afterwards the ambassador sent
+a young member of the embassy to Scotland, in the deepest secrecy, by
+a long circuit through Ireland; not without difficulty he obtained an
+interview with Mary Stuart, in which he assured himself of her
+inclination for the marriage. In the autumn of 1563 Catharine Medici
+showed herself well informed about this negociation and much
+disquieted by it.[207] It appeared to depend only on Philip's decision
+whether the marriage was concluded or not.[208] After some time the
+Scotch Privy Council sent the bishop of Ross to Spain, to bring the
+matter about. The Queen herself corresponded on it with Cardinal
+Granvella and the Duchess of Arschot.
+
+Don Carlos was too weak, too morbidly excited, to be married when
+young. King Philip, who did not wish to feed his ambition, at last
+gave the plan up, and recommended, instead of his son, his nephew the
+Archduke Charles of Austria.
+
+But the one was as disagreeable to the English court as the other.
+Elizabeth had announced eternal enmity to Queen Mary if she married a
+prince of the house of Austria. Besides, the Spanish influence in
+England troubled her: she now saw herself already under the necessity
+of demanding and enforcing the recall of the Spanish ambassador,
+because he drew the Catholic party round him and incited them to
+oppose the laws of England. What might have come of it, if a prince of
+this house should now obtain rule over a part of the island itself?
+
+But while Mary through these secret negociations tried to obtain the
+support of a great Catholic house for her claims, she neglected
+nothing that could contribute at the same time to make a good and
+friendly understanding with Queen Elizabeth possible, and to bring it
+about. In the company of her half-brother Murray, who held the reins
+of government with a firm hand, supported by his religious and
+political friends, she undertook a campaign into the Northern counties
+(which inclined to Catholicism), to make them submit to the universal
+law of the land. Only one priest was allowed at court, from whom she
+heard mass; some of those who read the mass elsewhere were
+occasionally punished for it; clergymen who complained of the hardship
+they experienced were referred to Murray. This proceeding too was only
+temporary, it was intended to incline the Queen of England to her
+wishes. All quarrel was carefully avoided: on solemn festivals she
+drank to the English ambassador, to the health of his mistress.
+Besides, there were negociations for a meeting of the two Queens in
+person at York, where Mary hoped to be solemnly recognised as
+presumptive heiress of England.[209] However much it otherwise lies
+beyond the mental horizon of this epoch of firm and mutually opposed
+convictions, Mary was then thought capable of willingly adopting the
+forms of the English Church; to this even the Cardinal of Lorraine had
+assented. She herself unceasingly declared that she wished to honour
+Elizabeth as a mother, as an elder sister. But the Queen of England,
+after all sorts of promises, preparations, and delays, declined the
+interview. She would hear absolutely nothing of any recognition of
+the claim of inheritance. With naive plainness she inferred that such
+a declaration would not lead 'to concord with her sister, the Queen of
+Scotland,' since naturally a sovereign does not love his heir;--how
+indeed could that be possible, since every one is wont to make the
+heir the object of his aim and hopes;--she might increase Mary's
+importance by the recognition, but at the same time she would
+undermine her own;--whether Mary had a right to the English throne,
+she did not know and did not even wish to know: for she was (and as
+she said this, she pointed to the ring on her finger in proof) married
+to the people of England; if the Queen of Scotland had a right to the
+English throne, that should be left to her unimpaired.
+
+And none could deny that such a declaration as Mary required had its
+hazardous side for Elizabeth. Henry VIII's settlement of the
+succession, on which Elizabeth's own accession rested, excluded the
+Scotch line: in virtue of it the descendants of the younger sister,
+who were natives of England, possessed a greater right. And how if the
+Queen of Scots, when recognised as heir to England, afterwards gave
+her hand to a Catholic prince hostile to Elizabeth? The dangers
+indicated above would then be doubled, the followers of the ancient
+Church would have attached themselves to the royal couple, and formed
+a compact party in opposition to Elizabeth's arrangements, which would
+never have attained stability.
+
+To meet this very objection, it was suggested that Mary might marry a
+Protestant, in fact Robert Dudley Earl of Leicester, who was looked
+upon as the favourite of the Queen of England herself. Elizabeth could
+have been quite secure of him: she herself recommended him. Mary was
+at the first moment unpleasantly affected by the idea that she was
+expected to take as a husband one who was a born subject of England;
+but she was by no means decidedly against it, always supposing that in
+that case Elizabeth would recognise her right of inheritance in a
+valid form for herself and her issue by this marriage. Above all men
+Murray was in favour of this. He said, although his power must be
+diminished by the Queen's union with Leicester, yet he wished for it,
+in so far as it was bound up with the confirmation of the heirship;
+for that was the hope by which he had kept Mary firm to the existing
+system, and separated her from her old friends all these years past.
+Such was without doubt the case: it is this point of view that renders
+Mary's policy and conduct during the last years intelligible. If he,
+so Murray continued, could not make his promise good, Mary would think
+he had deceived her: should she afterwards marry a Catholic prince,
+what would be their position?[210] Once more was the request brought
+before Queen Elizabeth. But even under these circumstances she could
+not be induced to grant it. She said, if Mary trusted her and married
+Leicester, she should never repent it: but these words, which
+contained no definite engagement, had rather an opposite effect on
+Mary. In the hope of the recognition of her heirship she had hitherto
+endured the absolute constraint of her position: she would even have
+agreed to the choice of a husband by which she feared to be disparaged
+and controlled: for how could she have concealed from herself, that by
+it she would have fallen into a permanent dependence on the policy of
+England? With all her compliances and advances she had nevertheless
+gained nothing. Her vexation relieved itself by a violent outburst of
+tears: but during this inward storm she decided at the same time to
+drop her union with Elizabeth, and thus leave herself free for an
+opposite policy.
+
+She had refused the Archduke because his possessions were too small to
+secure her ends, too distant for him to be able to help her. Then
+another suitor presented himself for her hand, who would not indeed
+bring her any increase of power, but would strengthen her claims,
+which seemed to her very desirable. This was the young Henry Lord
+Darnley, through his mother likewise a descendant of Henry VII's
+daughter who had married in Scotland, and through his father Matthew
+Earl of Lennox related to that family of the Stuarts which was
+descended from Alexander, a younger son of James Stuart the ancestor
+of the Scotch kings. In his descent there lay a double recommendation
+for him. It was remarked also that he had in his favour in Scotland
+itself the numerous and important Stuarts (Lord Athol too belonged to
+them); but mainly that a scion of this marriage would not find in
+England any rival of similar claims, which might be easily the case if
+young Darnley should marry into a family of the English nobility and
+bring it his rights.[211] Darnley was a youth remarkable for his fine
+figure, tall and well built; he made a great impression on the Queen
+at his very first appearance. In July 1565 the marriage was celebrated
+and Henry Darnley proclaimed King: the heralds named his name first,
+when they delivered the royal proclamations.
+
+He had hitherto, at least publicly, held to the Protestant faith: even
+now he occasionally attended the preaching: but after a little
+wavering he avowed himself a Catholic and drew over a number of lords
+with him by his example. The Catholic interest thus obtained a
+complete ascendancy at court.
+
+And now Mary did not delay a moment longer in making decisive advances
+to the Catholic powers. She had in fact no need to fear that the King
+of Spain would be offended at her refusing his nephew, if she attached
+herself to him in other matters. When she announced her marriage to
+him, she not merely requested him to interest himself for her and her
+husband's claims in England; she designated him as the man whom God
+had raised up above all others to defend the holy Catholic religion,
+and asked for his help to enable her to withstand the apostates in her
+kingdom: as long as she lived, she would join him against all and
+every enemy.[212] This quite fell in with the ideas which Philip
+himself cherished. From the park of Segovia in October 1565 he
+commissioned Cardinal Pacheco to reassure the Pope with the
+declaration that he meant to support the Queen of Scots not less than
+the Pope himself. In this they must, he remarked, keep three points in
+view: first the subjugation of her rebellious subjects, which he
+thought not difficult, as Elizabeth would not support them; then the
+restoration of the Catholic Church in Scotland, than which nothing
+would give him greater satisfaction; lastly, the most difficult of
+all, the obtaining the recognition of her right to the English throne:
+in all this he would support the Queen with his counsel and with
+money: he could not however come forward himself, it could only be
+done in the Pope's name.[213]
+
+The ordinary accounts of the conferences at Bayonne have proved
+erroneous, as the proposals which were certainly made there by the
+Spaniards were not accepted. But Philip II's resolutions seem not less
+comprehensive in this case; these were his hostility to Queen
+Elizabeth, still concealed from the world but fully clear to his own
+consciousness, and his resolve to do everything in his power to place
+Mary, if not now, yet at a future time on the English throne. The
+great movement he was designing was to begin from Scotland. Like the
+Guises at a later time, so now Mary and her partisans in England and
+Scotland, if he supported her, were to be instruments in his hand.
+
+Mary had the good fortune to break up the seditious combination of
+some lords who opposed her marriage. Strengthened by this she prepared
+for quite a different state of things. She received money from Spain:
+Pope Pius V had promised to support her as long as he had a single
+chalice to dispose of. She expected disciplined Italian troops from
+him: artillery and other munitions of war were brought together for
+her in the Netherlands. Leaning on Rome and Spain the spirited Queen
+hoped to become capable of any great enterprise.[214]
+
+It was clearly to be expected that she would unite a political
+tendency with the religious one. In the letter quoted above Philip
+reminds her how dangerous to monarchy were the doctrines of the
+pretended Gospellers:[215] opinions like those which Knox, regardless
+of all else, put before her personally, as to the limitations of royal
+power justified by religion, she as a matter of course would not
+endure. It is more surprising to find that she also called in question
+the rights which the nobility claimed as against the royal government,
+assigning a sort of theoretic ground for her view. The nobles base
+them, so she said, on the services of their ancestors; but if the
+children have renounced their virtue, neglect honour, care only for
+their families, despise the King and his laws and commit treason, must
+the sovereign even then still let his power be limited by theirs? How
+vast were the plans which this Queen entertained--to restore
+Catholicism in Scotland, to resume the war against the nobility in
+which her ancestors had failed, to overthrow the Protestant opinions,
+and therewith to become one day Queen of England!
+
+Among those around her was an Italian, David Riccio of Poncalieri in
+Piedmont, who had previously been secretary to the Archbishop of
+Turin, and then in the same capacity accompanied his brother-in-law,
+the Conte di Moretta, who went to Scotland as ambassador of the Duke
+of Savoy. He knew how to express himself well in Italian and French,
+and was besides skilful in music.[216] As he exactly supplied a voice
+which was wanting in the Queen's chapel, she asked the ambassador to
+let him enter her service. Riccio was not a blooming handsome man;
+though still young, he gave the impression of advanced years: he had
+something morose and repellent about him; but he showed himself
+endlessly useful and zealous, and won greater influence from day to
+day. He not merely conducted the foreign correspondence, on which all
+now depended and for which he was indispensable,--it became his office
+to lay everything before the Queen that needed her signature, and
+through this he attained the incalculable actual power of a
+confidential cabinet-secretary; he saw the Queen, who took pleasure
+in his company, as often as he wished, and ate at her table. James
+Melvil, whom she had commissioned to warn her, if he saw her
+committing faults, did not neglect doing it in this case; he
+represented to her the ill effects which favouring a foreigner drew
+after it: but she thought she could not let her royal prerogative be
+so narrowly limited.[217] Riccio had promoted the marriage with
+Darnley: the latter seemed to depend on him;[218] it was even said
+that the secretary used at pleasure a signet bearing the King's
+initials. It was no wonder indeed if this influence created him
+enemies, especially as he took presents which streamed in on him
+abundantly: yet the real hostility came from quite another quarter.
+
+The English Council of State did not fail to notice the danger which
+lay in a policy of estrangement on the part of Scotland. It was
+proposed to put an end to its progress once for all by an invasion of
+Scotland: or at least the wish was expressed to arm for defence, e.g.
+to fortify Berwick, and above all to renew the understanding with the
+Scotch lords; Murray, whom Mary had in vain tried to gain over by
+reminding him of the interest of their family and the views of their
+father, would most gladly have delivered Darnley at once into the
+hands of the English. By thus openly choosing his side he had been
+forced, together with his chief friends, Chatellerault, Glencairn,
+Rothes, and some others, to leave Scotland: the Queen, refused with
+violent words the demand of the English court that she should receive
+them again; she called a Parliament instead for the beginning of
+March, in which their banishment was to be confirmed and an attempt
+made to restore Catholicism. This was not so difficult, as the
+resolutions of 1560 had never yet been ratified. There appeared at
+court the Catholic lords, Huntley, Athol, and Bothwell who was ever
+ready for fighting (he had returned from banishment); they came to an
+understanding with Riccio. But now it happened that the personal
+union (on which all rested) between the King, the Queen, and the
+powerful secretary changed to discord. Darnley, who wished not merely
+to be called King but to be King, demanded that the matrimonial crown
+should be conferred on him by the Parliament; this would have given
+him independent rights. The Queen on her side wished to keep the
+supreme power undiminished in her hands: and Riccio may well have
+confirmed her in this, as his own importance depended thereon: Darnley
+ascribed the opposition he met with from his wife not so much to her
+own decision as to the low-born foreigner against whom he now
+conceived a violent hatred. His father, Lennox, who cared little for
+the restoration of Catholicism in itself, entirely agreed with him as
+to this. They held it allowable to put out of the way the intruder who
+dared to hinder their house from mounting to the highest honours, and
+who by the confidential intimacy in which he stood with the Queen gave
+rise to all kinds of offensive rumours. With this object they--for the
+instigation came from them--joined in a union with the Protestant
+nobles. These regarded Riccio as their most thoroughgoing opponent:
+they too wished him to be got rid of; but his death alone could not
+content them. A Parliament was to meet at once, from which they
+expected nothing but a complete condemnation of their former friends,
+and absolutely ruinous resolutions against themselves. They made the
+overthrow of this system a condition of their taking a share in
+getting rid of Riccio. The King consented that Murray should be again
+placed at the head of the government, in return for which the
+matrimonial crown was promised him.
+
+On the 7th March the Queen went to the old council-house of Edinburgh
+to make the necessary arrangements for the Parliament. The insignia of
+the realm, sword crown and sceptre, were borne before her by the
+Catholic lords, Huntley, Athol, and Crawford, the heads of those
+houses which had once already, in France, offered her their alliance.
+The King had refused to take part in the ceremony. She named the Lords
+of Articles, who from of old exercised a decisive influence in the
+Scotch Parliaments, and restored the bishops to their place among
+them. As the Queen declares, her object was to promote the restoration
+of the old religion and to have the rebels sentenced by the assembled
+Estates. In Holyrood, besides Huntley and Athol, Bothwell, Fleming,
+Levingstoun, and James Balfour had also found favour, all men who had
+taken an active part for the restoration of Catholicism or for the
+re-establishment of the power of the crown: how much it must have
+surprised men to find that the Queen granted Huntley and Bothwell, who
+had been declared traitors, admittance into the Privy Council. If the
+Parliament adopted resolutions in accordance with these preliminaries,
+it was to be expected that the work of political and religious
+reaction would begin at once, with the active participation not only
+of the Pope from whom some money had already come, but also of other
+Catholic powers with whom Riccio kept the Queen in communication.
+
+A serious danger assuredly for the lords and for Protestantism; there
+was not a moment to lose if they wished to avert it; but the attempt
+to do so assumed, through the wild habits of the time and the country,
+that character of violence which has made it the romance of centuries.
+The event had such far-reaching results that we too must devote a
+discussion to it.
+
+In the low, narrow, and gloomy rooms of Holyrood House there is a
+little chamber to which the Queen retired when she would be alone: it
+was connected by an inner staircase with the King's lodgings. Here
+Mary was sitting at supper on Saturday the 9th March 1566, with her
+natural sister the Countess of Argyle, her natural brother the Laird
+of Creich, who commanded the guard at the palace, and some other
+members of her household, among whom was also Riccio; when the King,
+who had been expected somewhat earlier, appeared and seated himself
+familiarly by his wife. But at the same moment other unexpected guests
+also entered. These were Lord Ruthven, who had undertaken to execute
+the vengeance of King and country on Riccio, and his companions; under
+his fur-fringed mantle were seen weapons and armour: the Queen asked
+in affright what brought him there at that unwonted hour. He did not
+leave her long in doubt. 'I see a man here,' said Ruthven, 'who takes
+a place that does not become him; by a servant like this we in
+Scotland will not let ourselves be ruled,'[219] and so prepared to lay
+hands on him.
+
+Riccio took refuge near her; the Queen declared that she would punish
+an attack on him as high treason, but swords were bared before her
+eyes, Riccio was wounded by a thrust over her shoulder, and dragged
+away: on the floor and on the steps he received more than fifty
+wounds: the King's own dagger was said to have been seen in the body
+of the murdered man. This may be doubted, as his jealousy was by no
+means so real; yet he said soon after that he was responsible for the
+honour of his wife. In the turmoil he had only just stretched out his
+hand, to guard her person from any accident. For the nobles, who
+though acting with the utmost violence yet did not wish to risk their
+whole future, it was enough that he was there: his presence would
+authorise their act and give it impunity. When the murder was done
+Ruthven returned to the Queen and declared to her that the influence
+she had given Riccio had been unendurable to them, as had been also
+his counsels for the restoration of the old religion, his enmities
+against the great men of the land, his connexions with foreign
+princes; he announced to her plainly the return of the banished lords,
+with whom the others would unite in an opposite policy. For they had
+not merely aimed at Riccio: at the same time the Lords Morton and
+Lindsay, who had collected a number of trustworthy men, had advanced
+with them and beset the approaches to the palace-yard. Their plan was
+to get into their hands all their enemies who had gathered round the
+Queen. But while their attention was fastened on Riccio's murder, most
+of the threatened persons succeeded in escaping. All the rest who did
+not belong to the household, and were taken in the palace, were
+removed without distinction: the Queen was treated like a
+prisoner.[220] She still possessed a certain popularity, as being
+hereditary sovereign: a movement arose in the city in her favour, but
+this was counterbalanced by the antipathies of the Protestants, and a
+declaration of the King sufficed to still it. The next day a
+proclamation appeared in his name which directed the members of the
+Parliament, who had already arrived, to depart again.
+
+It was at any rate secured that a restoration of Catholicism or a
+legal prosecution of the banished lords was not to be thought of; the
+original plan however was not completely carried out. As it appears,
+the temper of the country had not been so far prepared beforehand as
+to make it possible to deprive the Queen of her power. And the
+spirited princess did not let herself be so easily subdued. Above all
+she succeeded in gaining over her husband again, to whom the
+predominance of the lords was itself derogatory; he helped her to
+escape and accompanied her in her flight. When they were once safe in
+a strong place, her partisans gathered round her; she placed herself
+at the head of a force, small though it was, and occupied the capital;
+the chief accomplices in the attack of Holyrood, Morton and Ruthven,
+fled from the country. She did not however revert to her old plans:
+she resumed her earlier connexions instead, her half-brother Murray
+again obtained influence, the old members of the Privy Council stood
+by his side, after some time Morton was able to return. Foreigners
+found that Scotland was as quiet as before.
+
+But this apparent quiet concealed a discord destined to produce still
+greater complications. The Queen had only learnt afterwards the share
+which Darnley had taken in Riccio's murder: it was her husband who had
+instigated this insult to her royal honour: how could she ever again
+repose confidence in him? And he no longer found support in the lords
+whom he had deserted at the moment of the crisis. He was very far now
+from obtaining the matrimonial crown or even any real influence: he
+saw himself excluded from affairs more than ever, and despised. When
+his son was baptised at Stirling, the father could not appear, though
+he was in the palace: he was afraid of being insulted in public. His
+condition filled him with shame: he often thought of leaving the
+kingdom, and made preparations for doing so. But he was not able to
+state and prove his grievances: he had to acknowledge before the
+assembled Privy Council that he had no complaints worth mentioning.
+
+The Queen on her side had sometimes let drop her wish to be rid of
+such a husband. She could not however think seriously of having her
+marriage with him dissolved, as this could only be done by declaring
+it null and void, and by that step her son, of whom she had just been
+delivered, and who was to inherit all her rights, would have been at
+the same time declared illegitimate. She was told that means would be
+found to carry the matter through without prejudice to her son. She
+warned her friends not to undertake anything which, though meant to
+help her, might prepare yet more trouble.
+
+How men stood to each other is clear from the fact that on the one
+side Darnley and his father linked themselves with the Catholic
+party--they were said to have adopted a plan of seizing the
+government, in the Queen's despite, in the name of her new-born
+son[221]--while on the other side the rest of the barons pledged
+themselves not to recognise him but only the Queen. A league was
+already concluded between some of them, originating with Sir James
+Balfour (who had been marked out for death by the halter in Holyrood),
+to rid the world by force of a tyrant and enemy of the nobility,
+against whom men must secure their lives.
+
+Thus all was in preparation for a fresh catastrophe; a new personal
+relation of the Queen brought it to pass.
+
+Among the nobles of Scotland James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell, was
+especially distinguished for a fine figure, for youthful strength,
+intrepid manly courage, proved in a thousand adventures, and decided
+character. Though professedly a Protestant, he had attached himself to
+the Regent without wavering, and assured the Queen of his assistance
+while she was still in France. Can we wonder if Mary, under the
+pressure of the party combinations around, needing before all things
+a friend personally devoted to her, sought for support in this tried
+and energetic man? As she in general prized nothing more highly than
+bold and valiant deeds, she had often told him how much she admired
+him; but yet more than this,--we cannot doubt that she let herself be
+drawn into a passionate connexion with him. Who does not know the
+sonnets and the love-intoxicated letters she is believed to have
+addressed to him? I would not say that every word of the latter is
+genuine; through the several translations--from the French original
+(which is lost) into the Scotch idiom, from this into Latin, and then
+back into French as we now have them--they may have suffered much
+alteration: we have no right to lay stress on every expression, and
+interpret it by the light of later events: but in the main they are
+without doubt genuine: they contain circumstances which no one else
+could then know and which have since been proved to be true; no human
+being could have invented them.[222] It does not seem as if Mary's
+fondness for Bothwell was returned by him in the same degree: in her
+letters and poems she is constantly combating a rival, to whom his
+heart seems to give the preference. This was Bothwell's own wife whom
+he had only shortly before married: she stayed with him for a time in
+the neighbourhood of the court, but he took care that the Queen knew
+nothing of her being there. As he was before all things ambitious and
+desirous of power, he only cared for the Queen's love and the
+possession of her person so far as it would enable him to share her
+authority and to obtain the supreme power in Scotland. But for this
+another thing was necessary; the King must be removed out of the way.
+As Darnley had once joined Riccio's political enemies in the Holyrood
+assassination, so Bothwell now united himself with Darnley's enemies
+with a view to his murder, for which they were already quite prepared.
+Morton was asked to join the enterprise this time also: but he
+demanded a declaration from the Queen that she was not against it:
+and this Bothwell could not obtain.
+
+But, it may be said, was not the Queen in collusion with him? Did she
+not purposely bring back her husband, who had fallen sick at Glasgow,
+to Edinburgh, and did she not lodge him in a lonely house there not
+far from the palace under the pretence that the purer air would
+contribute to his recovery, but in fact to deliver him over all the
+more surely to destruction? Such has been always the general belief:
+even her partisans, the zealous Catholics, at that time inclined to
+believe that the Queen at least connived in the plot.[223] But there
+was yet another view taken at the time, according to which the better
+relations that had begun between husband and wife were not due to
+hypocrisy but were genuine, and a complete reconciliation and reunion
+was to have been expected: the returning inclination towards her
+husband was contending in the Queen with her passion for Bothwell; and
+he was driven on, by the apprehension that his prey and the prize of
+his ambition would escape him, to hasten the execution of his
+scheme.[224] And psychologically the event might be best explained in
+this way. But the statement has not sufficiently good evidence for it
+to be maintained historically. A poet might, I think, so apprehend it:
+for it is one of the advantages of poetic representation, that it can
+take up even a slightly supported tradition, and following it can
+infer the depths of the heart, those abysmal depths in which the
+storms of passion rage, and those actions are begotten which laugh
+laws and morality to scorn, and yet are deeply rooted in the souls of
+men. The informations on which our historical representation must be
+based do not reach so far: on a scrupulous examination they do not
+allow us to attain a definite conviction as to the degree of
+complicity. Only there can be no doubt as to the fact that this time
+too ambition and the lust of power played a great part. If Bothwell
+once said he would prevent Darnley from setting his foot on the necks
+of the Scotch, he thereby only expressed the feeling of the other
+nobles. Yet he executed his murderous plot without their joining in it
+and by means of his own servants.[225] In the house before mentioned
+he caused a quantity of gunpowder to be laid under the chamber in
+which Darnley slept, in order to blow him into the air: alarmed at the
+noise made by opening the door, the young sovereign sprang from his
+bed; while trying to save himself, he was strangled together with the
+page who was with him: the powder was then fired and the house laid in
+ruins.[226]
+
+So the dreadful deed was done: the news of it filled men at first with
+that curiosity which always attaches to dark events that touch the
+highest circles; they then busied themselves with the question as to
+who would ascend the Scottish throne and give the Queen his
+hand,--among the other suitors Leicester now thought the time come for
+him, and for renewing good relations between England and
+Scotland:--but meanwhile to every man's astonishment and horror a
+rumour spread that the Queen would unite herself with the man to whom
+the murder of her husband was ascribed. Men fell on their knees before
+her, to represent the dishonour she would thus draw on herself, and
+even the danger into which she would bring her child. Letters from
+England were shown her in which the ruin of all her prospects as to
+the English throne was intimated, if she took this step: for it would
+strengthen the suspicion, which had arisen on the spot, that she had
+been an accomplice in her husband's murder. But she was already no
+longer her own mistress. Bothwell now did altogether what he would. He
+obtained from the lords, who feared him, a declaration that he was
+guiltless of any share in the King's murder, and even their consent to
+his marriage with the Queen. He said publicly he would marry the
+Queen, whoever might be against it, whether she would or not. And if
+Mary wished ever again to govern the country, and make the lords feel
+her vengeance, Bothwell might appear to her the only man who could
+assist her in this. Half of her free will, half by force, she fell
+into his power and thus into the necessity of giving him her hand. An
+archiepiscopal matrimonial court found in a near relationship between
+Bothwell and his wife a pretext for dissolving his previous
+marriage.[227] Bothwell was created Duke of Orkney: he began to
+exercise the royal power for his own objects; his friends, even the
+accomplices in the murder, were promoted.[228]
+
+But how could it be expected that the Lords would tolerate in the much
+more dangerous hands of Bothwell a power they would not have endured
+in Darnley's? Against him they had the full support of the people;
+filled with moral aversion to the Queen for the guilt she had
+incurred, or which was attributed to her, they expressed their loyalty
+only in hostility to her; a general uneasiness showed itself as to the
+safety of her son who was likewise threatened by his father's
+murderers.
+
+Under a banner on which were depicted the murdered King and his child
+the latter praying for help, a great army marched against the castle
+where the newly-married pair dwelt. Bothwell merely regarded the
+hostile lords as his rivals, who envied him the great position to
+which he had raised himself, and thought to rout them all with the
+feudal array which gathered round him at the Queen's summons. But at
+the decisive moment the feeling of the country infected his own people
+as well; instead of being able to fight he had to fly. He was forced
+to live as a pirate in the Northern Seas; for he could no longer
+remain in the country. The Queen fell into the power of the Lords, who
+placed her in the strong castle which the Douglas had built in the
+middle of Loch Leven, and detained her as a prisoner.
+
+In France it was not wholly forgotten that she had once been the Queen
+of that realm; a fiery champion of the Catholics boasted that, if they
+would give him a couple of thousand arquebusiers, he would free her
+from custody in despite of the Scots; but Catharine Medici, who
+besides was no friend of hers, rejected this absolutely, as they had
+already so many irons in the fire.[229] On the other hand Elizabeth
+concerned herself for the interests of her endangered neighbour with a
+certain emphasis. But the Scots were already discontented with the
+conduct of England, and complained loudly that since the treaty of
+Leith nothing good had come to them from thence;[230] they were
+resolved to pay their neighbour no more attention, but to manage their
+own affairs for themselves.
+
+Their path was clearly marked out for them. They had murdered Riccio,
+conspired against Darnley, driven Bothwell away, and all for the
+special reason that they had tried to create a strong supreme power
+over them: they could not possibly allow the Queen, irritated and
+insulted as she was, to again obtain the exercise of her power. Mary
+therefore was forced to resign the Scotch crown in favour of her son,
+and to name her brother Murray regent during his minority. Immediately
+on this the ceremony of anointing and crowning the child was performed
+in an almost grotesque manner.[231] Two superintendents and a bishop
+set the crown on his head, which the Lords there present touched in
+token of their consent; two of them, Morton and Hume, then swore in
+the name of the new King, James VI, that he would uphold the religion
+now prevailing in Scotland, and combat all its enemies.
+
+When after this Murray, who had exiled himself to France, and had
+taken no share in the last catastrophe (which he foresaw), returned,
+he was in a position once more to conduct the government according to
+his old policy, only with greater independence. A Parliament was
+called which now for the first time confirmed the statutes made in
+1560 in favour of the Kirk, and also came to such an arrangement about
+the confiscated church-property as made it possible for it to exist.
+
+So ruinous for Mary were the results of her attempt to break through
+the combination which formed the condition of her government in
+Scotland, and to effect a restoration of the old ecclesiastical and
+political forms. Before the power which she wished to overthrow her
+own had gone down.
+
+But she was not yet minded to submit to it. And mainly through a
+personal relation which she had entered into with the young George
+Douglas, who conceived hopes of her hand, she succeeded in escaping
+out of her prison and over the lake, bold and venturous as she always
+was. In the country there were many who thought themselves to stand so
+high above the bastard Earl of Murray, that they held it a disgrace to
+obey him: all these gathered round her; and as she then, the very day
+after her escape, revoked her abdication, they bound themselves
+together to replace her on the throne. In the league, at the head of
+which stood the Hamiltons, we find eight bishops and twelve
+abbots,--for the re-establishment of the Catholic Church was part of
+the plan: a considerable army was brought into the field with this
+object. Murray and his party were however the stronger of the two,
+they represented the organised power of the State, and their soldiers
+were the best disciplined. The Queen, who, at Langsyde, from a
+neighbouring eminence, looked on at the battle between the two armies,
+had to witness her own men being scattered without having done the
+enemy any damage,--Murray is said to have lost only one man. He
+himself put a stop to the slaughter of the fugitives. Still even now
+her affairs did not seem to those around her utterly lost, for all her
+friends had not yet appeared in the field, and there were still strong
+places to which she could retreat. But she aimed not merely at
+defence, but at overpowering her enemies. As what she had just seen
+left her no hope of this in Scotland, she adopted the idea of
+demanding help from the Queen of England. For the latter had in the
+strongest terms made known to the Scotch barons her displeasure at the
+treatment of their Queen, which was not in harmony with the laws of
+God or man, and had threatened to punish them for the wound thus
+inflicted on the royal dignity. She had once sent Mary herself a jewel
+as a pledge of her friendship. Mary was warned by those around her not
+to put full trust in these assurances. But she was quite accustomed to
+take her resolutions under passionate emotion, and could not then be
+dissuaded from her views. Through forests and woods, over stock and
+stone, without a single woman attendant, without any other food than
+the Scotch oatcake, day and night she kept on her way to the coast,
+from which she betook herself in a small boat to Carlisle. Her soul
+was thirsting to subdue the rebels: her firm trust was to draw Queen
+Elizabeth into the war against them: she came, not to seek a refuge,
+but to gain troops and assistance.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[203] Throckmorton to Chamberlain, 21 Nov. 1560, in Wright, Elizabeth
+i. 52.
+
+[204] Throckmorton, in Tytler, History of Scotland vi. 194. In a
+memoir of Cecil, 'a note of indignities and wrongs done by the Queen
+of Scots to the Queen's Majesty,' in Murdin 582, the greatest stress
+is justly laid on this refusal.
+
+[205] Castelnau, Mémoires iii. 13. 'Cette jeune princesse avoit un
+esprit grand et inquiète, comme celui du feu Cardinal de Lorraine son
+oncle, auxquels ont succedé la pluspart des choses contraires à leurs
+délibérations.'
+
+[206] As it is once expressed in one of her letters: 'pour
+l'advanchement de mes affaires tant en ce pays (Scotland) qu'en celuy
+là, ou je pretends quelque droit (England).' In Labanoff, Lettres et
+Mémoires de Marie Stuart i. 247.
+
+[207] 'Que la conveniencia publica, en especial la de la religion
+aconsejaba que la reina su ama, se casase con el principe Don Carlos.'
+From the ambassador's reports in Gonzalez 299.
+
+[208] 'Qu'il ne tiendra, qu'au dit Espagne qu'il (ce mariage) se ne
+fasse.' Additions à Castelnau.
+
+[209] Compare Conaeus, Vita Mariae, in Jebb i. 24.
+
+[210] Conversation with Randolph, in Tytler vi. 316. Murray says to
+him: 'the Queen would dislike and suspect him, because he had deceived
+her with promises which he could not realise: he was the counsellor
+and devizer of that line of policy, which for the last five years had
+been pursued towards England; he it was that had induced her to defer
+to Elizabeth.'
+
+[211] Spottiswood, History of the Church of Scotland ii. 25. 'If it
+should fall him to marry with one of the great families of England, it
+was to be feared that some impediment might be made to her in the
+right of succession.'
+
+[212] Lislebourc (Edinburgh), 24 July 1565, in Labanoff vii. 430.
+
+[213] Compare Apuntamientos 312. The letter itself in Mignet ii. App.
+E.
+
+[214] Sacchinus, Historia societatis Jesu, pp. iii, xiii, no. 166.
+
+[215] Fragment d'un Mémoire de Marie Stuart sur la noblesse. Labanoff
+vii. 297.
+
+[216] Mémoire adressé à Cosme I, from the Archivio Mediceo at
+Florence, in Labanoff vii. 65.
+
+[217] James Melvil, Memoirs 59.
+
+[218] From a despatch of Randolph's in Mackintosh, History of England
+iii. 73. 'David is he that worketh all, chief secretary of the Queen
+of Scotland, only governor to her good man.' Can the date be right?
+
+[219] 'Volemo quel galante la e non volemo esser governati per un
+servitor.' Letter to Cosimo I, in Tuscany, in Labanoff vii. 92.
+
+[220] Queen Mary to the Archbishop of Glasgow, 2 April 1566, in Keith
+and Labanoff. Of all the reports on this event the most important and
+trustworthy.
+
+[221] 'That the king ... suld take the prince our son and crown him
+and being crownit as his father suld tak upon him the government.'
+Mary to the Archbishop of Glasgow, in Labanoff i. 396.
+
+[222] Compare Robertson, Dissertation on King Henry's murder, Works
+i., History of Scotland 243. From a letter of Thuanus to Camden (1606)
+it is clear how much trouble it already cost him to arrive at a
+decided opinion.
+
+[223] 'Monsenor de Moreta ... anadio (to his narrative of the event)
+algunas particularidades, que en juicio del embajador probaban o
+inducian mucha sospecha que la reina avia sabido y aun permetido el
+suceso.' Apuntamientos 320. The affair has been very wrongly drawn
+into the sphere of religious controversy.
+
+[224] Account in the collection for the history of the times of the
+Emperor Maximilian II, which Simon Schardius embodied in the tomus
+rerum Germanicarum iv, not authentic, yet based on what was then held
+in Scotland to be true. It runs: 'Rex cum illa se accedente ita
+suaviter sermones commutat, ut reconciliatae annulum daret, hoc pacto,
+ut illa se in lectum conjugalem intra duos dies admitteret. Erant in
+aula, qui hanc offensionem placari minime vellent, unde, priusquam rex
+voti compos fieret, eum e medio tollere constituerunt.'
+
+[225] Trial of James Earl Bothwell. State trials.
+
+[226] Report of the Nuncio, which agrees fairly with the statements in
+Schardius.
+
+[227] Mary's confessor told the Spanish ambassador in answer to his
+questions: 'Que el caso se habia consultado con los obispos catolicos
+y que unanimemente havian dicho que lo podia hacer (casarse) por que
+la muger de Bodwell era pariente sua en quarto grado.'
+
+[228] Memorandum of Cecil. 'She committed all autority to him and his
+compagnons, who exercised such cruelty as none of the nobility that
+were counsel of the realm durst abide about the Queen.'
+
+[229] Norris to Elizabeth 23 July 1567, in Wright i. 260.
+
+[230] Throckmorton to Cecil: 'upon other accidents [since Leith] they
+have observed such things in H. My's doings, as have tended to the
+danger of such as she had dealt withall.' Wright 251.
+
+[231] Calderwood ii. 384: 'Modo cha ha usato la regina di Scotia per
+liberarsi,' from the Florentine archives, in Labanoff vii. 135.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+INTERDEPENDENCE OF THE EUROPEAN DISSENSIONS IN POLITICS AND RELIGION.
+
+
+If we inquire into the reason why Philip II gave up his previous
+relations with England and sided with the Queen of Scots, we shall
+find it mainly in the fact that the victory of Protestant ideas in
+England exercised a counter-action which was insupportable for the
+government he had established in the Netherlands. But that he gave
+Mary no help in her troubles, though information was once collected as
+to how it might be done, may also be traceable to the disturbances
+that had broken out in the Netherlands, the suppression of which
+occupied all his attention and resources.
+
+In 1568 the Duke of Alva was master of the Netherlands: he was already
+able to send a considerable force to help the French government, which
+had once more broken an agreement forced upon it by the Huguenots; the
+stress of the religious war was transferred to France, and there too
+the Catholic military force by degrees gained the upper hand.
+
+It was under these circumstances that Mary Stuart appeared in England
+with a demand for help. If in the Netherlands the attempts of the
+nobles and the Protestant tendencies had been alike defeated, they had
+on the other hand, by a similar union, achieved a decisive victory in
+Scotland. Was Elizabeth to join Mary in combating them?
+
+Elizabeth disliked the proceedings of the Scotch nobles towards their
+lawful Queen; the adherents of the Scotch church-system were already
+troublesome to her in England: but, however much she found to blame in
+them, in the great contest of the world they were her allies. Mary on
+the other hand held to that great system of life and thought with
+which the English Queen and her ministers had broken. Whatever
+Elizabeth might have previously promised, she did not mean to be bound
+by it under circumstances so completely altered.[232] Had she chosen
+to restore Mary, she would have opened the island to all the
+influences which she desired to exclude. Nor did she wish to let her
+retire to France, for while Mary had resided there previously, England
+had not had a single quiet day: without doubt the Catholic zeal
+prevailing there would have been at once excited in support of her
+claims to the English throne. An attempt was again made to reconcile
+the Scotch nobles with their Queen: but as this led to an enquiry
+respecting her share in the guilt of the King's murder--those letters
+of Mary to Bothwell now first came to the knowledge of the public--the
+dissension became rather greater and quite irreconcilable.
+
+One now begins to feel sympathy with the Queen of Scots, especially as
+her share in the crime imputed to her is not quite clear. Of her own
+free will she had come to England to seek for assistance on which she
+thought she could reckon: but high considerations of policy not merely
+prevented its being given but also made it seem prudent to detain her
+in England.[233] Elizabeth and her ministers brought themselves to
+prefer the interests of the crown to what was in itself right and fit.
+Mary did not however on this account vanish from the stage of the
+world: rather she obtained an exceedingly important position by her
+presence in England, where one party acknowledged her immediate claim
+to the throne, the other at least her claim to the succession; and
+hence arose not merely inconveniences but very serious dangers for the
+English government. Even in 1569, at a moment when the Catholic
+military power had the superiority in France and the Netherlands,
+Mary's uncle, the Cardinal of Lorraine, proposed to the King of Spain
+an offensive alliance against Queen Elizabeth.[234] In the civil wars
+of France they had just won the victory in two great battles. Who
+could say what the result would have been if in the still very
+unprepared condition of England an invasion had been undertaken by the
+combined Catholic powers?
+
+But the life and the destiny of Europe depend on the fact that the
+great general antagonisms are perpetually crossed by the special ones
+of the several states. Philip did not wish for an alliance with the
+French; it seemed to him untrustworthy, too extensive and, even if it
+led to victory, dangerous. He declared with the greatest distinctness,
+that he thought of nothing but of putting down his rebels (including
+at the time the Moriscoes), and the complete pacification of the
+Netherlands; he would not hear of a declaration of war against
+England. The difficulty of this sovereign's position on all sides and
+his natural temperament were the determining element in the history of
+the second half of the sixteenth century. His great object, the
+re-establishment and extension of the Catholic religion, he never
+leaves out of sight for a moment; but yet he pursues it only in
+combination with his own special interests. He is accustomed to weigh
+all the chances, to proceed slowly, to pause when the situation
+becomes critical, to avoid dangerous enterprises. Open war is not to
+his taste, he loves secret influences.
+
+In November 1569 a rebellion broke out in England, not without the
+connivance of the Spanish ambassador, but mainly under the impression
+made by the Catholic victories in France, as to which Mary Stuart also
+had let it be known that they rejoiced her inmost soul. It was mainly
+the Northern counties that rose, as had before been the case in 1536
+and 1549. Where the revolt gained the upper hand, the Common
+Prayer-book and sometimes the English translation of the Bible as well
+were burnt, and the mass re-established. Many nobles, above all in the
+North itself, still held Catholic opinions. At the head of the present
+insurrection stood the Percies of Northumberland, the Nevilles of
+Westmoreland, the Cliffords of Cumberland; Richard Norton, who rose
+for the Nevilles, venerable for his grey hair, and surrounded by a
+troop of sons in their prime, carried the Cross as a banner in front
+of his men. The nobility did not exactly want to overthrow the Queen,
+but it wished to force her to alter her government, to dismiss her
+present ministers, and above all to recognise Mary Stuart's claim to
+the succession--which would have given her an exceedingly numerous
+body of supporters in England and thus have seriously hampered the
+Queen. But now the government possessed a still more decided
+ascendancy than even in 1549. It had come upon the traces of the
+enterprise in time to quell it at its first outbreak, and had at once
+removed the Queen of Scots out of reach of the movement. The commander
+in the North, Thomas Ratcliffe, Earl of Sussex, one of the Queen's
+heroes, who bore himself bravely and blamelessly in other spheres of
+action as well as in this, and has left behind him one of the purest
+of names, encountered the rebels with a considerable force, composed
+entirely of his own men; these the rebels were the less able to
+withstand, as they knew that still more troops were on the march. As
+the ballad of a northern minstrel says, the gold-horned bull of the
+Nevilles, the silver crescent of the Percies, vanished from the field:
+the chiefs themselves fled over the Scotch border, their troops
+dispersed, their declared partisans underwent the severest
+punishments. Many who knew themselves guilty passed over to the
+Queen's party in order to escape.
+
+But at the very time of this victory the war against the Queen at home
+and abroad first received its most vivid impulse through the supreme
+head of the Catholic faith. Pope Pius V, who saw in Elizabeth the
+protectress of all the enemies of Catholicism, had issued the long
+prepared and hitherto withheld excommunication against her. In the
+name of Him who had raised him to the supreme throne of Right, he
+declared Elizabeth to have forfeited the realm of which she claimed to
+be Queen: he not merely released her subjects from the oath they had
+taken to her: 'we likewise forbid,' he added, 'her barons and peoples
+henceforth to obey this woman's commands and laws, under pain of
+excommunication.'[235] It was a proclamation of war in the style of
+Innocent III: rebellion was therein almost treated as a proof of
+faith.
+
+The way in which the Queen opened her Parliament in 1571 forms as it
+were a conscious contrast to the Papal bull, and its declaration that
+she was deposed. She appeared in the robes of state, the golden
+coronal on her head. At her right sat the dignitaries of the English
+Church, at her left the lay lords, on the woolsack in the centre the
+members of the Privy Council, by the sides stood the knights and
+burgesses of the lower house. The keeper of the great seal reminded
+the Houses of the late years of peace, in which--a thing without
+example in England--no blood had been shed; but now peace seemed
+likely to perish through the machinations of Rome. All were of one
+accord that they must confront this attempt with the full force of the
+law. It was declared high treason to designate the Queen as heretical
+or schismatic, to deny her right to the throne, or to ascribe such a
+right to any one else. To proselytise to Catholicism, or to bring into
+England sacred objects consecrated by the Pope, or absolutions from
+him, was forbidden and treated as an offence against the State. What a
+decidedly antipapal character did the Church, which retained most of
+the hierarchic usages, nevertheless assume! The oath of supremacy
+became indispensable even for places at court and in the country
+districts, in which it had not hitherto been required. Men deemed the
+Queen's ecclesiastical power the palladium of the realm.
+
+In this form the war of religion appeared in England. The Protestant
+exiles from the Netherlands and France sought and found a refuge here
+in large bodies; it has been calculated that they then composed
+one-twentieth of the inhabitants of London, and they were settled in
+many other places. But the fiery passions, which on the Continent led
+to the re-establishment of Catholicism, reacted on the old English
+families of the Catholic faith as well, and produced, under the
+influence of Spanish or Italian agitators, ever new attempts at
+overthrowing the government.
+
+It was just then, there cannot be any doubt of it, that Thomas duke of
+Norfolk, who might be regarded as almost the chief noble of the realm,
+became concerned in such an attempt. Somewhat earlier the idea had
+been entertained that his marriage with Mary Stuart might contribute
+to restore general quiet in both kingdoms: but Queen Elizabeth had
+abandoned this plan, and he had pledged himself to her under his hand
+and seal not to enter into any negociation about it without her
+previous knowledge. Nevertheless he had allowed himself to be drawn by
+an Italian money-changer, Roberto Ridolfi, who had lived long in
+England, not merely into a new agreement with this object in view but
+into treasonable designs. Norfolk possessed an immense following among
+the nobility of both religious parties: and, as he would not declare
+himself a Catholic at once, he thought to have the Protestant lords
+also on his side, if he married Mary Stuart, whom many of them
+regarded as the lawful heiress of the realm. He applied for the Pope's
+approval of his proceedings, and promised to come forward without
+reserve if a Spanish force landed in England: he affirmed that his
+views were not directed to his own advancement, but only to the
+purpose of uniting the island under one sovereign, and re-establishing
+the old laws and the Catholic religion. These thoughts hardly
+originated with the duke, they were suggested to him by Ridolfi, who
+himself drew up the instructions with which Norfolk and Mary
+despatched him to the Pope and the King of Spain.[236] Ridolfi had
+been sent to Mary with full powers from the Pope, and also well
+provided with money. When he now appeared again in Rome with his
+instructions, which really contained simply the acceptance of his
+proposals, he was, as may be imagined, received with joy: the Pope,
+who expected the salvation of the world from these enterprises,
+recommended them to King Philip. In Spain also they met with a good
+reception. We are astonished at the naiveté with which the Council of
+State proceeded to deliberate on the proposal of a sudden stroke by
+which an Italian partisan undertook to seize the Queen and her
+councillors at one of her country-houses. The King at last left the
+decision to the Duke of Alva. Alva would have been in favour of the
+plan itself, but he took into consideration that an unsuccessful
+attempt would provoke a general attack from all sides on the
+Netherlands, which were only just subdued and still full of ferment.
+He thought the King should not declare himself until the conspirators
+had succeeded in getting the Queen into their hands, alive or dead. If
+Norfolk made his rising contingent on the landing of a Spanish force
+in England, Alva on the other hand required that he should already
+have got the Queen into his power before his own master made his
+participation in the scheme known.[237]
+
+But while letters and messages were being exchanged in this way (for
+Ridolfi held it necessary to be in communication with his friends in
+England and Scotland), Elizabeth's watchful ministers had already
+discovered all. Even before Ridolfi reached Spain, Elizabeth gave the
+French ambassador an intimation of the commission with which the Queen
+of Scots had entrusted him.[238] The latter had not yet received any
+kind of answer from Spain when the Earl of Shrewsbury, in whose
+custody she then was at Sheffield, reproached her with the schemes in
+which she was implicated, and announced to her a closer restriction of
+her liberty as a punishment for them: further Elizabeth would not at
+that time as yet proceed against her. In Spain and Italy they were
+still expecting the Duke of Norfolk to take up arms, when he was
+already a prisoner. Elizabeth struggled long against giving him over
+to the arm of the law, but her friends held an execution absolutely
+necessary for her personal security. On the scaffold in the Tower
+Norfolk said he was the first to die on that spot under Queen
+Elizabeth and trusted he would be the last. All people said Amen.
+
+The scheme of this revolt proceeded more from Italy and Rome than from
+Spain: King Philip had taken no active part in it, the Duke of Alva
+had rather set himself against it: but we need only glance at their
+correspondence to perceive how completely nevertheless they were
+implicated in the matter. To carry on the war against Elizabeth not in
+his own name but in the name, and for the restoration of the rights,
+of the Queen of Scotland, would have exactly suited the policy of
+Philip II: he thought such an opportunity would never present itself
+again; they must avail themselves of it and finish the affair as
+quickly as possible, that France might not take part in it. If Alva
+counts up the difficulties which manifestly stood in the way of the
+scheme, yet he promises to execute the King's wishes with all the
+means in his power, with person and property: 'God will still send the
+King other favourable opportunities as a reward for his religious
+zeal.'[239]
+
+Queen Elizabeth expelled the Spanish ambassador, Gueran de Espes, who
+had undeniably taken part in Ridolfi's schemes as well as in the last
+rising, from England; as soon as he reached Brussels, the English and
+Scotch fugitives gathered round him, and communicated to him many new
+schemes of invasion, to which his ear was more open than that of the
+Duke of Alva. An attack was to be tried, now on Scotland, now on
+Ireland, now on England itself.
+
+We cannot suppose that in England they knew every word that was
+uttered about these plans, or that everything they did believe there
+was well grounded. But from year to year men's minds were more and
+more filled with the idea that Philip II was the great enemy of their
+religion and of their country. In the sphere of classical literature
+the translation of Demosthenes in 1570 is noteworthy in this respect.
+What Demosthenes says against Philip of Macedon, in regard to the
+Athenians, the translator finds applicable to Philip II; he calls the
+English to open war in the words of the ancient orator, 'for as it was
+then, so is it now, and ever will be.'
+
+But for this Elizabeth on her side did not feel inclined or prepared.
+Many acts of hostility took place at sea in a piratical war, in
+politics they stood sharply opposed to each other: but they were not
+inclined on either side for an open contest, front to front.
+
+Above all the English held it necessary now to come to a good
+understanding with the other of the two great neighbouring powers. It
+stood them in good stead that a tendency to moderate measures gained
+sway in France; the English ambassadors took a very vivid interest in
+the project of a marriage between Henry of Navarre and Margaret of
+Valois. While the victory of Lepanto filled the hearts of the
+partisans of Spain with fresh hopes, the jealousy it awakened in the
+French contributed largely to their withdrawal from Spain and the
+Pope, and their readiness for an alliance with England. The two powers
+promised each other mutual support against any attack, on whatever
+ground it might at any time be undertaken. A later explanation of the
+treaty expressly confirmed its including the case of religion.[240]
+
+Thus secured on this side the Queen proceeded to carry out an idea
+which had immense consequences. It is not a mere suspicion, partially
+derived from the result, to suppose that she thought King Philip's
+combining with her rebels gave her a right to combine with the King's
+revolted subjects: she herself said so once to the French ambassador:
+while talking with him, she one day dropped her voice, and said that
+as Philip kept her state disturbed, she did not hold herself any
+longer bound to treat him with the regard she had hitherto shewn him
+in the quarrels of the Netherlands.
+
+It is not quite true that she supported with her own power the Gueux
+('Beggars'), who had fled to the sea from Alva's persecutions, in the
+decisive attacks they now made on Brielle and Vliessingen (Brill and
+Flushing): but this was hardly needed, it was quite enough that her
+feeling was known, she merely let things take their way, she did not
+prevent the attack of the rebels against Philip II (powerful at sea as
+they were) being supported by the fugitive Walloons residing in
+England, and by Englishmen also. It was estimated that there were then
+in Vliessingen 400 Walloons and 400 English: 1500 English lay before
+the town, to keep off the attacks of the Spaniards. French troops gave
+aid in corresponding numbers. They were all recalled at a later time;
+but meanwhile the insurrection had gained a consistency which made it
+impossible for the Spaniards to subdue the Netherlands.
+
+As formerly Elizabeth had joined the Scotch lords against the Regent
+and the Queen of Scotland, so now she helped the insurgents of the
+Netherlands against the King of Spain. In the first case she had
+Philip II himself on her side, in the second case France.
+
+By this policy she found the means of securing herself at home, from
+the Spanish attacks. It was more than ever necessary for Philip to
+concentrate on the war in the Netherlands all the forces of which he
+could dispose. The Queen did not yet take direct part in it, and
+Philip had to avoid everything that could induce her to do so. It was
+not her object to bring about the independence of the Provinces: but
+she insisted on the departure of the Spanish troops, the observance of
+the provincial constitutions, and above all assured liberty for the
+Protestant faith. In 1575 she offered the King her mediation, not
+however without including one special English matter, namely the
+mitigation of the severe religious laws in reference to English
+merchants in the Spanish countries: the King took the opinion of the
+Grand Inquisitor on it. As if he could ever have been in its favour
+himself! The Pacification of Ghent in 1576 was quite in accordance
+with the Queen's views, since it established the supremacy of the
+Estates, and freedom of religion for the chief Northern provinces. To
+maintain this, she had no hesitation in concluding an alliance with
+the States, and in consequence despatching a body of English troops to
+the Netherlands. She informed the King himself of this, and requested
+him to recall the Stadtholder Don John, his half-brother (who was
+trying to break the peace), and to receive the Estates into his
+favour: she did not by this think to come to a breach with him.
+
+The idea of entrusting Don John of Austria, the victor of Lepanto,
+with the restoration of Catholicism in West Europe had been at that
+time adopted in Rome. His was a fiery nature pervaded by Catholic
+principles, and seized with the most vivid ambition to be something in
+the world and to effect something. The Irish wished him to be their
+king; he was to free Mary Stuart from prison, vindicate her rights
+alike in Scotland and in England, and at her side ascend the throne of
+the British kingdoms now united in Catholicism. Mary gladly acceded to
+this, as she had already long wished for a marriage with the Spanish
+house. It was probably to give this combination a firmer basis that
+she proposed, in case her son did not prove to be a Catholic, to
+transfer her claims on the throne of England to the King of Spain, or
+to any of his relatives whom he should name in conjunction with the
+Pope.[241] But whom could she mean by these last words but Don John
+himself, who then stood in close connexion with the Guises, whom she
+also recommended most pressingly to the King. But she had at the same
+time directed her aim towards Scotland. There her enemies Murray and
+Lennox had perished by assassination; under the following regents, Mar
+and Morton, Mary had still nevertheless so many partisans, that they
+never could have ventured, as they were requested to do from England,
+to allow Mary to come to Scotland and be put on her trial: their own
+power would have been endangered by it. Mary too believed herself to
+have prepared everything there so well for an enterprise by Don John
+that, as she says, an overthrow of the Scotch government would
+infallibly have ensued if Philip II had only put his hand to the work.
+And how closely were his interests bound up with it! Without a
+conquest of the island-kingdom, as his brother represented to him, the
+Netherlands could never be subdued. But even now he shunned an open
+rupture. Besides this his brother's restlessness and thirst for
+action, and his political intrigues which were already reacting on
+Spain, were disagreeable to him; he could not make up his mind to take
+a decisive step.
+
+He had again and again been vainly entreated to interest himself in
+the population of Ireland, in which national and religious antagonism
+contended against the supremacy of England. One of the confidential
+agents secretly sent thither assured him that he was implored by
+nine-tenths of the inhabitants to take them under his protection and
+save their souls, that is restore them the mass, which they could no
+longer celebrate publicly: they appealed to their primeval
+relationship with the Iberian people, to ancient prophecies which
+looked forward to this, and to the great political interests at stake.
+Philip was not disinclined to attempt the enterprise; but he required
+the co-operation of France, without doubt to break the opposition of
+this power in the affairs of the Netherlands; a condition which could
+not be made acceptable to the French by any interposition of Rome.
+
+And so, if Pope Gregory XIII wished to undertake anything against
+Ireland, he had to do it himself. Men witnessed the singular spectacle
+of an expedition against Ireland being fitted out on the coasts of the
+States of the Church. A papal general from Bologna came to the
+assistance of the powerful Irish chief, Fitzmaurice. They commanded
+the Irish districts far and wide, and made inroads into the English:
+for a long time they were very troublesome, although not really
+dangerous.
+
+King Philip was then busied in an undertaking which interested him
+still more closely than even that of the Netherlands: he made good his
+hereditary claim to Portugal, without being obstructed in it either by
+the opposition of a native claimant or by the counter-working of the
+European powers.
+
+In the face of this success, by which the Spanish monarchy became
+master of the whole Pyrenean peninsula and its many colonies in East
+and West, it was all the more necessary for the other two powers to
+hold together. Many causes of quarrel indeed arose between them. How
+could the shocking event of the night of St. Bartholomew fail to
+awaken all the antipathies of the English, and indeed of Protestantism
+in general! Elizabeth did not let herself be prevented by her treaty
+from supporting the French Protestants in the manner she liked, that
+is without its being possible to prove it against her. Under Charles
+IX she contributed to prevent them from succumbing, under Henry III
+she helped them in recovering a certain political position: for this
+very object the Palsgrave Casimir led into France German troops paid
+with English money. Catharine Medici often reproached her with
+observing a policy like that of Louis XI. But the common interest of
+the two kingdoms was always more powerful than these differences;
+frequent and long negociations were carried on for even a closer
+union. The marriage of Queen Elizabeth with Catharine's youngest son
+was once held to be as good as certain: he actually appeared
+personally in England. We refrain from following the course of these
+negociations. The interest they awaken constantly ends in
+disappointment, for they are always moving towards their object
+without attaining it. But perhaps it will repay our trouble to
+consider the reasons which came into consideration for and against the
+proposed connexion.
+
+The main reason for it was that England must hinder an alliance
+between Spain and France, especially one in favour of the Queen of
+Scots. And certainly nothing had stood the English policy in Scotland
+in such stead as the good understanding with France. But much more
+seemed attainable if France and England were united for ever. They
+would then be able to compel the King of Spain to conclude a peace
+with the Netherlands which would secure them their liberties; and, if
+he did not observe it, they would have grounds for a common occupation
+of a part of the Provinces. If there should be any issue of the
+marriage, this would put an end to all attacks on Elizabeth's life,
+and greatly strengthen the attachment of her subjects.
+
+But against it was the fact that this marriage would bring the Queen
+into disagreeable personal relations; and the country would be as
+unwilling to see a French king as it had once a Spanish one. And how
+would it be, if a son sprung from the marriage, to inherit both the
+French and the English throne? was England to be ruled by a viceroy?
+What an opposition the world would raise to the union of these mighty
+kingdoms, into what complications might it not lead! Scotland would
+again attach itself to the French: the Netherlands and the German
+princes would be alienated.
+
+The members of the Privy Council, after they had weighed all these
+considerations, at last pronounced themselves on the whole against it.
+They recommended the continuance of the present system,--the support
+of the Protestants, especially in France, a good understanding with
+the King of Scotland, and the maintenance of religion and justice in
+England: thus they would be a match for every threat of the King of
+Spain.[242]
+
+But that sovereign had one ally against whom these precautions could
+not suffice, the Order of Jesuits and the seminaries of English
+priests under its guidance.
+
+Young exiles from England, who were studying in the Universities of
+the Netherlands, to prevent the Catholic priesthood from perishing
+among the English at home, had been already in Alva's time brought
+together in a college at Douay, which was then removed to Rheims as
+the revolt spread in the Netherlands. Pope Gregory XIII was not
+content with supporting this institution by a monthly subsidy; he was
+ambitious of imitating Gregory the Great and exercising a direct
+influence on England: he founded in Rome itself a seminary for the
+reconversion of that country. He made over for this purpose the old
+English hospital which was also connected with the memory of Thomas
+Becket. The first students however fell out with each other, and there
+was seen in Rome the old antagonism of the 'Welsh' and the 'Saxons';
+in the end the latter gained the upper hand, it was mainly their doing
+that the institution was given over to the Jesuits. Not long after its
+activity began. Each student on his reception was bound to devote his
+powers to spreading the Catholic doctrines in England; by April 1580 a
+company of thirteen priests was ready, after receiving the Pope's
+blessing, to set out with this object. The chief among them were
+Robert Parsons, who passed into England disguised as a soldier, and
+Edmund Campion as a merchant. The first went to Gloucester and
+Hereford, the other to Oxford and Northampton: they and the friends
+who followed them found everywhere a rich harvest.[243] It was
+arranged so that they arrived in the evening at the appointed houses
+of their friends: there they heard confessions and gave advice to the
+faithful. Early in the morning they preached, and then broke up again;
+it was customary to provide them an armed escort to guard them from
+any mischance.
+
+Withal the forms of the church-service in England had been so arranged
+that it might remain practicable for the Catholics also to take part
+in it. How many had done so hitherto, perhaps with a rosary or a
+Catholic book of prayers in their hands! The chief effort of the
+seminarist priests, on their return to the country, was to put an end
+to this: they dissuaded intercourse with the Protestants even on
+indifferent matters. The Queen's statesmen were astonished to find how
+much the number of recusants increased all at once; from secret
+presses proceeded writings of an aggressive, and exceedingly
+malignant, character; in many places Elizabeth was again designated as
+illegitimate, a usurper, no longer as Queen. On this the repressive
+system, which had been already set in motion in consequence of Pope
+Pius V's bull, was made more stringent; this is what has brought on
+the Queen's government the charge of cruelty. The Catholics too began
+to compose their martyrologies. One of the first priests whose
+execution they describe, Cuthbert Mayne, was condemned by the jury for
+bringing the Bull with him into other people's houses together with
+some _Agnus Dei_.[244] Young people were condemned for trying to make
+their way to the foreign seminaries. On the wish of the missionaries
+Pope Gregory XIII explained the bull so far, that the excommunication
+pronounced in it against all who should obey the Queen's commands was
+meant to be in suspense till it was possible to execute it against the
+Queen herself on whom it continued to weigh.[245] This limitation
+however rather increased the danger. The Catholics could remain quiet
+till rebellion was possible, then it became a duty. The law-courts now
+sought above all to make the accused priests declare themselves as to
+the validity of the bull and its obligation. Men held themselves
+justified in extreme severity against those who 'slip into the country
+at the instigation of the great enemy, the Pope, and poison the hearts
+of the subjects with pernicious doctrines.'[246] On this ground
+Campion met his death; Parsons escaped. Assuredly there were not so
+many executed as the Catholic world wished to reckon, but yet probably
+more than the statesmen of England admitted. They persisted that it
+was not a persecution for religion: and in fact the controverted
+questions lay mainly in the region of the conflict between Papacy and
+Monarchy: those executed were not so much martyrs of Catholicism as of
+the idea of the Papal supremacy over monarchs. But how closely
+connected are these ideas with each other! The priests for their part
+believed that they were dying for God and the Church. But the effect
+which the English government had in view was, with all its severity,
+not produced. We are assured on Catholic authority that in 1585 there
+were yet several hundred priests actively engaged. From their reports
+it is clear that they were still always counting on a complete
+victory. They vigorously pressed for the attempt at an invasion, which
+they represented as almost sure of success; 'for two-thirds of the
+English are still Catholic; the Queen has neither strong places nor
+disciplined troops: with 16,000 men she might be overthrown.' This
+time also the house of the Spanish ambassador, Bernardino Mendoza,
+formed the meeting-point for these tendencies; he kept up a constant
+communication with the emigrants who had been declared rebels, and
+with the discontented at home, with Mary Stuart and her friends in
+Scotland, with the zealous Catholics throughout the world, especially
+with the Guises, with whom Philip II himself now had an understanding.
+The increasing power of his sovereign gained him also an
+ever-increasing consideration.
+
+It was in these days that the Western and Southern Netherlands were
+again subdued by King Philip. After the death of his brother, his
+nephew Alexander Farnese of Parma had formed an army of unmixed
+Catholic composition, which had naturally from its inner unity gained
+the upper hand over the government of the States, which had called now
+a German and now a French prince to its head, and was composed of
+different religions and nationalities. First the seaports, then the
+towns of Flanders, and at last the wealthy Antwerp also, which by its
+mental activity and commercial resources had materially nourished the
+revolt, fell into the hands of the Spaniards. The Prince of Orange was
+assassinated by a fanatic. Alexander of Parma, who ascribed his
+victories to the Virgin Mary, pushed on his conquests gradually till
+they reached the Northern and Eastern Provinces.
+
+The reaction of these events, even while they were still in progress,
+was first felt in Scotland. There the young King James VI after many
+vicissitudes had, while still under age, taken the reins of government
+into his own hands: and a son of his great uncle, Esmé Stuart (who
+exchanged the title Aubigny which he brought from France for the more
+famous name of Lennox, and was a great friend of the Guises and the
+Jesuits) obtained the chief credit with him. Lennox promoted
+Catholicism, which was not so difficult, as part of the nobility still
+adhered to it, at least in secret; he too lived and moved in
+comprehensive plans for the re-establishment of the Church. Through
+the Guises he hoped to be placed in a position to invade England with
+a Catholic army of 15,000 men; if the English Catholics then did their
+duty, everything they wanted could be attained: for himself he was
+resolved to liberate Mary or die in the attempt. Mary was also to
+reascend the Scotch throne: her son was to be co-regent with her,
+provided that he himself returned to the bosom of the Catholic Church.
+Mary Stuart with her indestructible energy was involved in these
+designs also. She commended them warmly to the Pope and the King of
+Spain: for it was precisely in Scotland that the universal
+re-establishment could best be begun.[247] She wished only to know on
+what resources in men and money her friends there might reckon. We
+must remember the situation and the peril of these schemes and
+preparations, if we would understand to some degree the violent
+measures on which the Protestant lords in Scotland resolved. As in a
+similar case of an earlier time in Germany, they closed the castle, in
+which King James was received, against his attendants: Lennox had to
+leave Scotland. But the young King was shrewd enough, and sufficiently
+well advised, to rid himself of the lords almost in the same way that
+they had taken him. He succeeded, chiefly through the help of the
+French ambassador, a friend of the Guises. Hereupon too he seemed much
+inclined to favour the undertaking with which Henry Guise occupied
+himself in 1583, a scheme for a revolution in the affairs of both
+countries. Guise hoped, with the support of the King of Spain, the
+Pope, and the Duke of Bavaria, to be able to effect something
+decisive. James VI let his uncle know his full agreement with the
+proposed schemes. But, in fact, it did not seem to matter much
+whether he agreed or not. It was reported to Queen Mary, that the
+Catholic party in Scotland reckoned on having the most powerful king
+of Christendom on their side, with or against James' will; that Philip
+II was building so many vessels that in a short time he would become
+completely master of the Western ocean, and be able to invade whatever
+countries he pleased.
+
+It is evident how dangerous for England these Scotch movements were in
+themselves: Queen Elizabeth thought herself most vulnerable on the
+side of Scotland: moreover she already saw herself directly
+threatened. A plan fell into her hands, in which the number of ships
+and men necessary for an invasion of England, the harbours where they
+were to land, the places they were to seize, even the men on whose
+help they could reckon, were enumerated.[248] She convinced herself
+that the plan came from Mendoza, who held out the prospect of his
+King's assistance for the purpose, as the attack was to be made
+simultaneously from the Netherlands and from Spain. This time too
+Elizabeth dismissed the hostile ambassador; but how could she flatter
+herself with having thus exorcised the threatening elements? Now that
+the foe, with whom she had been for fifteen years at war--though not
+an open war yet one of which both sides were conscious--had become
+very much stronger, she was forced to take up a decisive position
+against him, to save herself from being overpowered.
+
+In 1584 her chief minister, William Cecil, now Lord Burleigh, High
+Treasurer of the kingdom, drew her attention to this necessity. He
+represented to her that she had nothing to fear from any one in the
+world except from Spain--but from Spain everything. King Philip had
+gained more victories from his cabinet, than his father in all his
+campaigns: he ruled a nation which was thoroughly of one mind in
+religion, ambitious, brave, and resolute; he had a most devoted party
+among the discontented in England. The question for the Queen was,
+whether she hoped to tame the lion or whether she wished to bind him.
+She could not build on treaties, for the enemy would not keep them.
+And, if he was allowed to subdue the Netherlands completely, no one in
+the world could avoid seeing to what object his power would be
+directed. He advises the Queen not to let things go so far--for those
+countries were the counterscarp of England's fortress--but to proceed
+to open war, to withstand the Spaniards in the Netherlands and attack
+them in the Indies. 'Better now,' he exclaims, 'while the enemy has
+only one hand free, than later when he can strike with both.'[249]
+
+In August 1585 Antwerp fell into the hands of the Spaniards; in the
+capitulation the case is already taken into consideration, that
+Holland and Zealand also might submit. The Northern Netherlands were
+threatened from yet another side, as Zutphen and Nimuegen had just
+been taken by the Spaniards. In this extreme distress of her natural
+ally she delayed no longer. The sovereignty they offered her she
+refused anew, but she engaged to give considerable assistance, in
+return for which, as a security for her advances, the fortresses
+Vliessingen and Briel were given up into her possession. To prove how
+much she was in earnest in this, she entrusted the conduct of the war
+in the Netherlands to Dudley, Earl of Leicester, who was still
+accounted her favourite and was one of the chief confidants of her
+policy. In December 1585 Leicester reached Vliessingen; on the 1st of
+January 1586, Francis Drake appeared before St. Domingo and occupied
+it. The war had broken out by land and by sea.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[232] Randolph states that the promise was given before Darnley's
+death. Strype, Annals iii. i. 234.
+
+[233] That this was thought of from the first is not to be supposed;
+the Queen had once previously declared herself against it. 'We fynde
+her removing either into this our realm or into France not without
+great discommodities to us.' Letter to Throckmorton, in Wright i. 253.
+
+[234] Gonzalez, Apuntamientos 338. From the 'short memoryall' of 1569
+in Hayne's State Papers 585 (though much in it is incorrect), we see
+that men believed in the union of both crowns against England, with
+'the ernest desyre to have the Quene of Scotts possess this crown of
+England.'
+
+[235] 'Sentenza declaratoria contra Elizabetta, che si pretende reina
+d'Inghilterra.' In Catena, Vita di Pio V, 309. The agreement of the
+bull (e.g. as to the 'huomini heretici et ignobili,' who had
+penetrated into the royal privy council) with the manifesto of the
+last rebellion, is worth observing.
+
+[236] The instructions which Mary and Norfolk gave their Italian agent
+for the Roman See are preserved in the Vatican archives and printed in
+Labanoff iii. 221. From Leslie's expression (Negociations, in Anderson
+iii. 152) that the duke negociated with Ridolfi through a Mr. Backer,
+'because he had the Italian tongue,' and that then all the plans were
+communicated to _him_ ('the whole devises'), we might conclude that
+Norfolk was in general very much in foreign hands.
+
+[237] Lo que se platico en consejo 7 Julio 1571. Some other weighty
+documents are in Appendix V to Mignet's Histoire de Marie Stuart, vol.
+ii.
+
+[238] Already on the 16th April the French ambassador, while speaking
+with Elizabeth on the conclusion of the treaty agreed on, remarks,
+'qu'elle a quelque nouvelle offence contre la dite reyne d'Ecosse,'
+which could have been nothing else but the first news of the seizure
+of one of Ridolfi's servants at Dover on the 10th April, who then
+under torture had confessed all.
+
+[239] 'Vendran otras ocasiones en tiempo di V. M. per pagarle dios el
+celo, con que tam caldamente abraza este su negocio.' Contestation del
+duque di Alba, in Gonzalez 450.
+
+[240] De la Mothe Fénélon au roi de France 22 Dec. 1571.
+Correspondence diplomatique de Bertrand de Salignac de la Mothe
+Fénélon iv. 317.
+
+[241] Sketch of a will, in Labanoff iv. 354. 'Je cedde mes droits, que
+je pretends et puis pretendre à la couronne d'Angleterre et autres
+seignuries et royaulmes en dependant au roy catholique ou autres des
+siens qu'il lui plaira, avesque l'advis et consentement de S. S.'
+
+[242] Conference at Westminster touching the Queen's marriage with the
+Duke of Anjou 1579. Egerton Papers 78. Sussex, who had previously
+given a somewhat different opinion, was one of those who signed.
+
+[243] Sacchinus, Historia societatis Jesu iii. 1; vii. 1; viii. 96.
+
+[244] 'Perche contro alle leggi d'Inghilterra egli havesse portato
+seco una bollo papale, alcuni grani benedetti et agnus dei.' Martyrio
+di Cutberto Maino, in Pollini, Istoria eccl. delle rivolutioni
+d'Inghilterra p. 499. It is a pity that the eminent Hallam had not the
+first reports at hand.
+
+[245] Facultates concessae Rob. Personio et Edm. Campiano 14 April
+1580. 'Catholicos tum demum obliget, quando publica ejusdem bullae
+executio fieri poterit.'
+
+[246] Execution of Justice in England. Somers Tracts i.
+
+[247] Lettre a Don Bernardino de Mendoza 6-8 April 1582. 'La grande
+aparence, qu'il ha de pourvenir (parvenir) maintenant au dict
+restablissement de la religion en ceste isle, començant pour la Scotia
+(par l'Ecosse).' In Mignet App. 522.
+
+[248] According to the Venetian accounts (Dispaccio di Spagna, Marzo
+1584) the King had sent an experienced soldier as a spy to England to
+investigate the possibility of a landing, 'havendo pensato di
+concertarsi bene con il re di Scotia, perche ancora egli a un tempo
+medesimo si movesse da quella parte.'
+
+[249] The Lord Treasurers advise in matters of Religion and State.
+Somers Tracts i. 164.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE FATE OF MARY STUART.
+
+
+How completely the circumstances of these times are misunderstood,
+when they are measured by the rules of an age of peace! Rather they
+were filled with hostilities in which politics and religion were
+mingled; foreign war was at the same time a domestic one. The
+religious confessions were at the same time political programmes.
+
+The Queen took up arms not to make conquests, but to secure her very
+existence against a daily growing power that openly threatened her,
+before it had become completely an overmatch for her: she provoked an
+open war: but she had not done enough when she now, as is necessary in
+such cases, took into consideration the training of soldiers, securing
+the harbours, fortifying strong places, improving the navy: the most
+pressing anxiety arose from the general Catholic agitation in the
+country.
+
+Elizabeth's statesmen were well aware that the sharp prosecution of
+the seminarist priests was not enough to put an end to it. With
+reference to the laity, the Lord Treasurer, however strict in other
+respects, recommends to his sovereign quite a different mode of
+proceeding. We should never proceed to capital punishment of such men:
+we should rather mitigate the oath imposed on them: in particular we
+should never force the nobles to a final decision between their
+religious inclinations and their political duties, never drive them to
+despair. But at the same time he gives a warning against awakening any
+hope in them that their demands could ever be satisfied, for this
+would only make them more obstinate. And on no consideration should
+arms be put into their hands. 'We do not wish to kill them, we cannot
+coerce them, but we dare not trust them.' Nothing would be more
+dangerous than to assume a confidence which was not really felt.
+
+Even before this the Privy Council had recommended the Queen to employ
+Protestants only in the government of her State, and to exclude all
+Catholics from a share in it.[250] The before-mentioned 'Advice' of
+Lord Burleigh is remarkable for extending the Protestant interest and
+adding a popular one to it. He thinks it intolerable that the
+copyholders and tenants of the Catholic lords, even when they fulfil
+their obligations in all other respects, experience bad treatment from
+them on account of religion: it is impossible to let many thousand
+true subjects be dependent on such as have hostile intentions. The
+plan Henry VIII had once entertained, of diminishing the authority of
+the Lords, is now brought by the High Treasurer at this crisis once
+more into vivid recollection. The Queen is to bind the Commons to
+herself, to win over their hearts. And Burleigh advises allowing the
+followers of dissenting Protestant Churches, especially the Puritans,
+to worship as they please: in preaching and catechising they are more
+zealous than the Episcopalians, very far more successful in converting
+the people, and indispensable for weakening the popish party. We see
+how the necessity of the war acts on home affairs. The chief minister
+favoured the elements which were forcing their way out through the
+existing forms of the state.
+
+In this general strain on men's minds their eyes once more turned to
+the Queen of Scots in her captivity. What would there have been at all
+to fear at other times from a princess under strong custody and cut
+off from all the world? But in the excitement of that age she could
+even so be still an object of apprehension. Her personal friends had
+from the first not seen a great mischance in her enforced residence in
+England. For by blameless conduct she refuted the evil report which
+had followed her thither from Scotland; and her right as heiress of
+the crown came to the knowledge of the whole nation.[251] In the days
+at which we have arrived we know with certainty that her presence in
+the country formed a great lever for Catholic agitation. A report
+found in the papal archives has been published, by which it is clear
+how much support men promised themselves from her for every resolute
+undertaking.[252] This document says that since she has numberless
+partisans, and although in prison has uninterrupted communication with
+them, she will always find means, when the time comes, of giving them
+notice of the approaching opportunity: she is resolved to encounter
+every hardship, nay even death itself, for the great cause.[253]
+
+Occupied with measures of defence on all sides, the English government
+had already long been considering how to meet this danger. This was
+the very reason why Elizabeth's marriage was so often spoken of with
+popular approbation: if she had children, Mary's claims would lose
+their importance. Gradually however every man had to confess to
+himself that this was not to be expected, and on other grounds hardly
+to be wished. Then men thought how to solve the difficulty in another
+way.
+
+The chief danger was this: if an attempt on Elizabeth's life
+succeeded, the supreme authority would devolve on Mary, who was on the
+spot, who cherished entirely opposite views, and would have at once
+realised them:--the thought occurred as early as 1579 of declaring by
+formal act of parliament that all persons by whom the reigning Queen
+should be in any way endangered or injured should forfeit any claim
+they might have to the crown;[254] terms which though general were in
+reality directed only against the Queen of Scots; at that time the
+proposal was not carried into effect.
+
+The negociations are not yet completely cleared up which were carried
+on with Mary in 1582-3 for her restoration in Scotland. The English
+once more repeated their old demand, that Mary should even now ratify
+the treaty of Edinburgh, and annul all that had been done in violation
+of it by her first husband or by herself. She was further not merely
+to renounce every design against the security and peace of England,
+but to pledge herself to oppose it: and in general, as long as
+Elizabeth was alive, to put forward no claim to the English throne:
+whether she had such a right after Elizabeth's death the parliament of
+England was to decide.[255] Here too the old view came into the
+foreground: Parliament was to be made the judge of hereditary right.
+The negociation failed owing to the Scotch intrigues of these years,
+in which the intention rather was to assert the claim of inheritance
+with the strong hand.
+
+And from day to day new attempts on Elizabeth's life came to light. In
+1584 Francis Throckmorton, who took part in these very schemes, was
+executed: in 1585 Parry also, who confessed having been in connexion
+with Mary's plenipotentiary in France, and who had come over to
+assassinate Queen Elizabeth. Writings were spread abroad in which
+those about her were called on to imitate, against this female
+Holofernes, the example set in the book of Judith.
+
+Protestant England in the danger of its sovereign saw its own. In all
+churches prayers were offered for her safety. The most remarkable
+proof of this temper is contained in an association of individuals for
+defending the Queen, which was at that time subscribed to far and wide
+through the country. It begins with a statement that, to promote
+certain claims on the crown, the Queen's life was threatened in a
+highly treasonable manner, and enters into a union in God's name, in
+which each man pledges himself to the others, to combat with word and
+deed, and even to pursue with arms, all who should make any attempt on
+the Queen's person; and not to rest till these wretches were
+completely destroyed. If the attempt was so far successful as to raise
+a claim to the crown, they pledged themselves never to recognise such
+a claim: whoever broke this oath and separated himself from the
+association should be treated by the other members as a perjurer.[256]
+
+The main object of this association was to cut off all prospect of the
+succession from any attempt in favour of the Queen of Scots: a great
+part of the nation pledged itself to reject a claim made good in this
+manner as exceptionable in every respect. The Parliament of 1585, many
+of whose members belonged to the association, not merely confirmed it
+formally: it now also expressly enacted, that persons in whose favour
+a rebellion should be attempted, and an attack on the Queen
+undertaken, should lose their right to the crown: if they themselves
+took part in any such plots, they were to forfeit their life. The
+Queen was empowered to appoint a commission of at least twenty-four
+members to judge of this offence.
+
+These resolutions and unions were of a compass extending far beyond
+the present occasion, however weighty. How important the
+ecclesiastical contest had become in all questions concerning the
+supreme temporal power! That the deposition of Queen Elizabeth,
+pronounced by the Pope, had no effect was due to the Protestant
+tendencies of the country, and to the fact that her hereditary claim
+had been hitherto unassailed. But now it was a similar hereditary
+claim, made by Queen Mary, not, it is true, formally recognised, but
+also not rejected, on which the partisans of this princess based their
+chief hope. Mary herself, who always combined the most vivid dynastic
+feelings with her religious inclinations, in her letters and
+statements does not lay such stress on anything as on the
+unconditional validity of her claim to inherit the throne. When for
+instance her son rejected the joint government which she proposed to
+him, she remarked with striking acuteness that this involved an
+infringement of the maxims of hereditary right; since he rejected her
+authorisation to share in the government, and recognised as legitimate
+the refusal of obedience she had experienced from her rebellious
+subjects. Once she read in a pamphlet that people denied Queen
+Elizabeth the power to name a successor who was not of the Protestant
+faith: she wrote to her that the supreme power was of divine right,
+and raised high above all these considerations, and warned her against
+opinions of that kind which were avowed by some near her, and which
+might lead to the elective principle and become dangerous to herself.
+This could not fail to have an exactly opposite effect on Elizabeth.
+She was again threatened through the strict dynastic right that she
+also enjoyed: she needed some other additional support. Despite all
+inclination to the contrary, she decided to look for it in the
+Parliament. She likewise aimed at making Mary submit the validity of
+her claim to its previous decision. She could not but be thankful that
+her subjects pledged themselves not to recognise any right to the
+succession which was to be asserted by an attack on her life; she
+ratified the act by which Parliament gave these feelings a legal form.
+It is obvious how powerfully the rights of Parliament were thus
+advanced as against the absolute claim of the hereditary monarchy. In
+the course of the development of events this was to be the case in a
+still higher degree.
+
+Mary rejected with horror the suspicion that she could take part in an
+attempt on Elizabeth's life: she wished to enrol herself in the
+Association for her security.[257] And who could have failed to
+believe at least that the threats against her own right and life, in
+case of a second attempt at assassination, would deter her partisans
+as well as herself from any thought of it! For they well understood
+the energy with which the Parliament knew how to vindicate its laws.
+
+But it is vain to try to bridle men's passions by showing them their
+results. If the attempt on the Queen's life succeeded, this
+Parliament of course would be annihilated as well as the Queen
+herself, and another order of things begin.
+
+In the seminary at Rheims the priests persuaded an English emigrant,
+called Savage, who had served in the army of the Prince of Parma, that
+he could not better secure himself eternal happiness than by ridding
+the world of the enemy of religion who was excommunicated by the holy
+father. Another English emigrant, Thomas Babington, a young man of
+education and ambition, in whom throbbed the pulse of chivalrous
+devotion to Mary, was informed of this design by a priest of the
+seminary, and was fired with a kind of emulation which has something
+highly fantastic about it. Thinking that so great an enterprise ought
+not to be confided to one man, he sought and found new confederates
+for it; when the murder was effected, and the Spanish troops landed,
+he was to be the man who with a hundred sturdy comrades would free his
+Catholic Queen from prison and lead her to her throne. Mendoza at that
+time (and indeed by Mary's recommendation, as she tells us) was
+Spanish ambassador in France: he was in communication with Babington
+and strengthened him in his purpose. Of all the distinguished men of
+the age Mendoza is perhaps the one who took up most heartily the idea
+of uniting the French and Spanish interests, and advocated it most
+fervently. King Philip II was also informed of the design. He now, as
+he had done fifteen years before, declared his intention, if it
+succeeded, of making the invasion simultaneously from Spain and
+Flanders. The Queen's murder, the rising of the Catholics, and at the
+same moment a twofold invasion with trained troops would have
+certainly been enough to produce a complete revolution. The League was
+still victorious in France: Henry III would have been forced to join
+it: the tendencies of the strictest Catholicism would have gained a
+complete triumph.
+
+If we enquire whether Mary Stuart knew of these schemes, and had a
+full understanding with the conspirators, there can be no doubt at all
+of it. She was in correspondence with Babington, whom she designates
+as her greatest friend. The letter is still extant in which she
+strengthens him in his purpose of calling forth a rising of the
+Catholics in the different counties, and that an armed one, with
+reasons for it true and false, and tells him how he may liberate
+herself. She reckons on a fine army of horse and foot being able to
+assemble, and making itself master of some harbours in which to
+receive the help expected not merely from Flanders and Spain, but also
+from France. In the letter we even come upon one passage which betrays
+a knowledge of the plot against Elizabeth's life; there is not a word
+against it, rather an approbation of it, though an indirect one.[258]
+
+And we have yet another proof of her temper and views at this time
+lying before us. As the zeal of the Catholics for her claim to the
+succession might be weakened by the fact that her son in Scotland, on
+whom it naturally devolved, after all the hopes cherished on his
+behalf, still remained Protestant, she reverted to an idea that had
+once before passed through her mind: she pledged herself to bring
+matters in Scotland to such a point that her son should be seized and
+delivered into the hands of the King of Spain: he was then to be
+instructed in the Catholic faith and embrace it; if James had not done
+so at the time of her death, her claim on England was to pass to
+Philip II. Day and night, so she said, she bewailed her son's being so
+stiffnecked in his false faith: she saw that his succession in England
+would be the ruin of the country.
+
+So it stands written in her letters: it is undeniable: but was that
+really her last and well-considered word? Was it her real wish that
+Elizabeth should be killed, her son disinherited notwithstanding her
+dynastic feelings, and that Philip II should become King of England?
+Were the Catholic-Spanish tendencies of Elizabeth's predecessor, Queen
+Mary Tudor, so completely reproduced in her?
+
+I think we can hardly maintain this with full historic certainty. Mary
+Stuart was not altogether animated by hot religious zeal: if she had
+been, how could she formerly have left the Protestant lords in
+possession of power so long as she did, and even have once thought of
+marrying Leicester with his Protestant views? Her son affirmed that he
+possessed letters from her, in which she approved of his religious
+views and confirmed him in them. It was not religious conviction and
+the abhorrence of any other faith, as in Mary Tudor, but her dynastic
+right and her self-confidence as sovereign that were the active and
+predominant motives in all the actions of Mary Stuart. And if there
+are contradictions in her utterances, we cannot hold her capable, like
+Catharine Medici, of taking up and secretly furthering two opposite
+plans at the same time; her different tendencies appear consecutively,
+not simultaneously, in exact accordance with her impulses. For Mary
+Stuart was never quiet an instant: even in her prison she shared in
+the movement of the world; her brain never ceased working; she was
+brooding over her circumstances, her distress and her hope, how to
+escape the one and realise the other: sometimes indeed there came a
+moment of resignation, but only soon to pass away again. She throws
+all her thoughts into her letters which, even if they are aiming at
+some object close at hand, are at the same time ebullitions of the
+moment, passionate effusions, productions of the imagination rather
+than of the understanding. Who could think such a letter possible as
+that in which she once sought to inform Elizabeth of the evil reports
+about her which the Countess of Shrewsbury made, and recounted a mass
+of scandalous anecdotes she had heard from her. The communication was
+meant to ruin the countess: Mary did not remark that it must also draw
+down the Queen's hatred on herself. No one would have dared even to
+lay the letter before the Queen. Mary's was a passionate nature,
+endowed with literary gifts: she let her pen run on without saying
+anything she did not really think at the instant, but without
+remembering in the least what lay beyond her momentary mood. Who will
+hold women of this character strictly to what stands in their letters?
+These are often as inconsiderate and contradictory as their words.
+
+While Mary was writing the above-mentioned letters, she was completely
+taken up with the proposals made to her. She guarded herself from
+inserting anything that could hinder their being carried into effect:
+by the eventual transfer of her son's claims to the foreign King, all
+opposition on the part of zealous Catholics would be done away. Her
+hopes and wishes hurried her away with them, so that she lost sight of
+the danger in which she thus placed herself. And was she not a Queen,
+raised above the law? Who would take it on himself to attack her?
+
+Mary Stuart was then under the charge of a strict Puritan, Sir Amyas
+Paulet, of whom she complained that he treated her as a criminal
+prisoner and not as a queen. The government now allowed a certain
+relaxation in the external circumstances of her custody, but not in
+the strictness of the superintendence. There hardly exists another
+instance of such a striking contrast between projects and facts. Mary
+composes these letters full of far-ranging and dangerous schemes in
+the deepest secrecy, as she thinks, and has them carefully re-written
+in cipher: she has no doubt that they reach her friends safely by a
+secret way: but arrangements are made so that every word she writes is
+laid before the man whose business it is to trace out conspiracies,
+Walsingham, the Secretary of State. He knows her ciphers, he even sees
+the letters that come for her before she does: while she reads them
+with haste and in hope of better fortune at hand, he is only waiting
+for her answer to use it against her as a decisive proof of her guilt.
+
+Walsingham now found himself in possession of all the threads of the
+conspiracy; as soon as that letter to Babington was in his hands, he
+delayed no longer to arrest the guilty persons: they confessed, were
+condemned and executed. By further odious means--the prisoner being
+removed from her apartments on some pretence and the rooms then
+searched--possession was obtained of other papers which witnessed
+against her. Then the question could be laid before the Privy Council
+whether she should now be brought to trial and sentenced in due form.
+
+Who had given the English Parliament any right to make laws which
+should be binding on a foreign queen, and in virtue of which, if she
+transgressed them, she could be punished with death? In fact these
+doubts were raised at the time.[259] Against them it was alleged that
+Mary, who had been forced to abdicate by her subjects and deprived of
+her dignity, could not be regarded any longer as a queen: while a
+deposed sovereign is bound by the laws of the land in which he
+resides. If she was still a queen, yet she was subject to the feudal
+supremacy of England, and because of her claim to its crown also
+subject to its sovereignty--two arguments that contradict each other,
+one of a feudal, the other of a popular character and closely
+connected with the idea of popular sovereignty. Whether the one or the
+other convinced any person, we do not hear; it was moreover not a
+matter for argument any longer.
+
+For how could anything else be expected but that the judicial
+proceedings prepared several years before would now be put in force? A
+law had been passed calculated for this case, if it should occur. The
+case had occurred, and was proved by legal evidence. It was necessary
+for the satisfaction of the country and Parliament--and Walsingham
+laid particular stress on this--that the matter should be examined
+with full publicity.
+
+The commission provided for in the Act of Parliament was named: it
+consisted of the chief statesmen and lawyers of the country. In
+Fotheringhay, whither the prisoner had now been brought, the splendid
+ancestral seat of the princes of the house of York, at which many of
+them were buried, they met together in the Hall on the 14th October.
+Mary let herself be induced to plead by the consideration that she
+would be held guilty, if she did not make any defence: it being
+understood that it was with the reserve that she did not by this give
+up any of the rights of a free sovereign. Most of the charges against
+her she gradually admitted to be true, but she denied having consented
+to a personal attempt on Elizabeth's life. The court decided that this
+made no essential difference. For the rebellion which Mary confessed
+to having favoured could not be conceived of apart from danger to the
+Queen of England's life as well as her government.[260] The court
+pronounced that Mary was guilty of the acts for which the punishment
+of death had been enacted in the Parliamentary statute.
+
+We cannot regard this as a regular criminal procedure, for judicial
+forms were but little observed; it was the decision of a commission
+that the case had occurred in which the statute passed by Parliament
+found its application. Parliament itself, then just summoned, had the
+proceedings of the Commission laid before it and approved their
+sentence.
+
+But this did not bring the affair to an end. Queen Elizabeth deferred
+the execution of the judgment. For in relation to such a matter she
+occupied quite a different position from that of Parliament.
+
+From more than one quarter she was reminded that, by carrying out the
+sentence, she would violate the divine right of kings; since this
+implied that subjects could not judge, or lay their hands on,
+sovereigns. How unnatural if a queen like herself should set her hand
+to degrade the diadem.[261]
+
+In the Privy Council some were of opinion that, as Mary could not be
+regarded as the author of the last plot, but only as privy to it,
+closer imprisonment would be a sufficient punishment for her.
+Elizabeth caught at this idea. The Parliament, she thought, might now
+formally annul Mary's claim to the English throne, declare it to be
+high treason to maintain it any longer, and high treason also to
+attempt to liberate her from prison: this would deter her partisans
+from an attempt then become hopeless, and also satisfy foreign
+nations. But it was urged in reply, that now to repudiate Mary
+Stuart's claim for the first time would be equivalent to recognising
+its original validity; and an English law would make no impression
+either on Mary or on her partisans. The remembrance of what had
+happened in Scotland revived again; of Darnley's murder, which men
+imputed to her without hesitation: she was compared to Johanna I of
+Naples who had taken part in her husband's murder: it was said, Mary
+has doubled her old guilt by attempts against the sacred person of the
+Queen; after she had been forgiven, she has relapsed into the same
+crime, she deserves death on many grounds.[262]
+
+Spenser, in the great poem which has made him immortal, has depicted
+the conflict of accusations and excuses which this cause called forth.
+One of his allegorical figures, Zeal, accuses the fair and splendid
+lady, then on her trial, of the design of hurling the Queen from her
+throne, and of inciting noble knights to join in this purpose. The
+Kingdom's Care, Authority, Religion, Justice, take part with him. On
+the other side Pity, Regard for her high descent and her family, even
+_Grief_ herself, raise their voices, and produce a contrary
+impression. But Zeal once more renews his accusation: he brings
+forward Adultery and Murder, Impiety and Sedition, against her. The
+Queen sitting upon the throne in judgment recognises the guilt of the
+accused, but shrinks from pronouncing the word: men see tears in her
+eyes; she covers her face with her purple robe.
+
+Spenser appears here, as he usually does, an enthusiastic admirer of
+his Queen. But neither should we see hypocrisy in Elizabeth's
+scruples, which sprang much more from motives which touched her very
+nearly. She kept away from all company: she was heard to break her
+solitary meditation by uttering old proverbs that applied to the
+present case. More than once she spoke with the deputation of
+Parliament which pressed for a decision. What she mainly represented
+to them was, how hard it was for her, after she had pardoned so many
+rebellions, and passed over so much treason in silence, to let a
+princess be punished, who was her nearest blood-relation: men would
+accuse her, the Virgin Queen, of cruelty: she prayed them to supply
+her with another means, another expedient: nothing under the sun would
+be more welcome to her. The Parliament firmly insisted that there was
+no other expedient; it argued in detailed representations that the
+deliverance of the country depended on the execution of the sentence.
+The Queen's own security, the preservation of religion and of the
+state, made it absolutely necessary. Mary's life was the hope of all
+the discontented, whose plots were directed only to the object of
+enabling her to ascend the throne of England, to destroy the followers
+of the true religion, and expel the nobility of the land--that is the
+Protestant nobility. And must not satisfaction be given to the
+Association which was pledged to pursue a new attempt against the
+Queen's life even to death? 'Not to punish the enemy would be cruel to
+your faithful subjects: to spare her means ruin to us.'
+
+Meanwhile they came upon the traces of a new attempt. In presence of
+the elder French ambassador, Aubespine, a partisan of the Guises,
+mention was made of the necessity of killing Elizabeth in order to
+save Mary at the last moment. One of his officers spoke with a person
+who was known in the palace, and who undertook to pile up a mass of
+gunpowder under Elizabeth's chamber sufficient to blow it into the
+air; he was led to hope for rewards from Guise and his brother
+Mayenne, whose interests would have been greatly promoted by such a
+deed.[263] But this time too Elizabeth was made acquainted with the
+design before it came to maturity. She ascribed her new danger to the
+silence, if not to the instigation, of the ambassador, the friend of
+the Guises: in its discovery she saw the hand of God. 'I nourish,' she
+exclaims, 'the viper that poisons me;--to save her they would have
+taken my life: am I to offer myself as a prey to every villain?'[264]
+At a moment when she was especially struck with the danger which
+threatened her from the very existence of her rival, after a
+conversation with the Lord Admiral, she had the long-prepared order
+for the execution brought to her, and signed it with quick and
+resolute strokes of the pen.
+
+The observation of Parliament, that her safety and the peace of the
+country required her enemy's death, at last gained the upper hand with
+her as well. But this did not imply that her conflicting feelings were
+completely silenced. She was haunted in her dreams by the idea of the
+execution. She had once more recourse to the thought that some
+serviceable hand might spare her the last authorisation, by secretly
+executing the sentence of the judges--an act which seemed to be
+justified even by the words of the Association; the demand was made in
+due form to the Keeper of the prisoner, Sir Amyas Paulet; he rejected
+it--and how could anything else have been expected from the
+conscientious Puritan--with an expression of his astonishment and
+indignation. Elizabeth had commissioned Secretary Davison, when she
+signed the order, to have it sealed with the Great Seal. Her idea
+seems to have been that, when all the forms had been duly complied
+with, she might the more easily get a secret execution, or that at
+some critical moment it might be at once performed; but she still
+meant to keep the matter in her own hand: for the custom was, before
+the last step, to once more ask her approval. But Davison, who marked
+her hesitation, did not think it advisable at this moment. Through
+Hatton he acquainted Lord Burleigh with the matter, and Burleigh put
+the question to the other members of the Privy Council: they took it
+on themselves to despatch the order, signed and sealed as it now was,
+without further delay to Fotheringhay.[265]
+
+On the 8th of February 1587 it was executed on Mary in the very hall
+where the sittings of the court had been held. As compared with
+Elizabeth's painful disquiet, who shrank from doing what she held to
+be necessary, and when she at last did it wished it again undone and
+thought she could still recall it, the composure and quiet of soul,
+with which Mary submitted to the fate now finally decided, impresses
+us very deeply The misfortune of her life was her claim to the English
+crown. This led her into a political labyrinth, and into those
+entanglements which were connected with her disastrous marriage, and
+then, through its combination with the religious idea, into all the
+guilt which is imputed to her more or less justly. It cost Mary her
+country and her life. Even on the scaffold she reminded men of her
+high rank which was not subject to the laws: she thought the sentence
+of heretics on her, a free queen, would be of service to the kingdom
+of God. She died in the royal and religious ideas in which she had
+lived.
+
+It is undeniable that Elizabeth was taken by surprise at this news:
+she was heard sobbing as though a heavy misfortune had befallen
+herself. It may be that her grief was lightened by a secret
+satisfaction: who would absolutely deny it? But Davison had to atone
+for taking the power into his own hands by a long imprisonment: the
+indispensable Burleigh hardly obtained pardon. In the city on the
+other hand bells were rung and bonfires kindled. For the universal
+popular conviction agreed with the judgment of the court, that Mary
+had tried to deliver the kingdom into the hands of Spaniards.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[250] Consultation at Greenwich 1579, In Murdin 340. 'Pluck down
+presently the strengthe and government of all your papists and deliver
+all the strengthe and government of your realm into the hands of wise
+assured and trusty protestants.'
+
+[251] Bishop Leslie's negociations, in Anderson iii. 235.
+
+[252] 'De praesenti rerum statu in Anglia brevis annotatio,' in
+Theiner, Annales ecclesiastici iii. 480 (at the year 1583). As mention
+is made in this writing of the restoration of order in the States of
+the Church, 'per felicissima novi pontificis auspicia,' we must
+certainly attribute it to the first years of Sixtus V.
+
+[253] 'Tam ad hos (haereticos) quam ad catholicos omnes ad nostras
+partes trahendos supra modum valebit, licet in carcere, reginae
+Scotiae opera. Nam illa novit omnes secretos fautores suos et hactenus
+habuit viam praemonendi illos atque semper ut speramus habitura est,
+ut cum venerit tempus expeditionis, praesto sint. Sperat etiam--per
+amicos--et per corruptionem custodum personam suam ex custodia
+liberare.' In Theiner, Annales ecclesiastici iii. 482.
+
+[254] The means to assure Her Majesty of peace. Egerton Papers 79.
+
+[255] 'Jus successionis judicio ordinum Angliae subjecturam.' Camden,
+i. 360. Compare Strype, Annals iii. i. 131.
+
+[256] Association for the assecuration of the Queen, subscribed by the
+members of Lincoln's Inn (Egerton Papers 208). We may assume that this
+was the general idea.
+
+[257] In a pamphlet of the time it is stated that she had subscribed
+and sworn to the Association.
+
+[258] Tytler (History of Scotland viii. App) maintains that the
+passage was inserted by Mary's enemies, and brings forward some
+reasons for this view which are worth considering. But Mignet (ii.
+348) has already remarked how many other improbable suppositions this
+necessitates. And what would have been the use of it, as the letter
+even without this addition would have sufficed to condemn her.
+
+[259] 'Objections against bringing Maria Queen of Scots to trial, with
+answers thereunto.' In Strype, Annals iii. 2. 397.
+
+[260] Evidence against the Queen of Scots. Hardwicke Papers i. 245.
+'Invasion and destruction of Her Majesty are so linked together, that
+they cannot be single. For if the invader should prevail, no doubt
+they would not suffer Her Majesty to continue neither government nor
+her life: and in case of rebellion the same reason holdeth.'
+
+[261] The French ambassador began, according to Camden 480, with the
+maxim 'regum interesse ne princeps libera atque absoluta morte
+afficiatur.' What Camden quotes from a letter of James makes a certain
+impression; the words are still more characteristic in the original:
+'quho beingh supreme et immediate lieutenants of godd in heaven,
+cannot thairefoire be judget by thaire aequallis in earth, quat
+monstruous thing is it that souveraigne princes thaimeselfis shoulde
+be the exemple giveris of thaire own sacred diademes prophaining.' 27
+Jan. 1586-7. In Nicolas, Life of Davison 70.
+
+[262] Reasons gathered by certain appointed in Parliament. In Strype
+iii. 1, 534.
+
+[263] According to the protocol of an interview with the ambassador
+(in Murdin, 579) there can be no doubt of the reality of the plot. The
+ambassador does not deny that he had been spoken to about it, he only
+excuses himself for not having had the Queen informed of it, but
+asserts that he had rejected it with abhorrence.
+
+[264] To James I, Letters of Elizabeth and James 42.
+
+[265] Arraignment of Mr. Davison in the Star Chamber, State Trials
+1230. In Nicolas, Life of William Davison, are printed the statements
+and memoranda of Davison as to his share in this matter. They are not
+without reserve; but, in what they contain, they bear the stamp of
+truth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE INVINCIBLE ARMADA.
+
+
+At this moment the war with the Spaniards--the resistance which the
+English auxiliaries offered to them in the Netherlands, as well as the
+attack now being made on their coasts--occupied men's minds all the
+more, as the success of both the one and the other was very doubtful,
+and a most dangerous counter-stroke was to be expected. The lion they
+wished to bind had only become exasperated. The naval war in
+particular provoked the extreme of peril.
+
+Hostilities had been going on a long while, arising at first from the
+privateering which filled the whole of the Western Ocean. The English
+traders held it to be their right to avenge every injustice done them
+on their neighbours' coasts--for man has, they said, a natural desire
+of procuring himself satisfaction--and so turned themselves into
+freebooters. Through the counter operations of the Spaniards this
+private naval war became more and more extensive, and then also
+gradually developed more glorious impulses, as we see in Francis
+Drake, who at first only took part in the mere privateering of injured
+traders, and afterwards rose to the idea of a maritime rivalry between
+the nations. It was an important moment in the history of the world
+when Drake on the isthmus of Panama first caught sight of the Pacific,
+and prayed God for His grace that he might sail over this sea some day
+in an English ship--a grace since granted not merely to himself but
+also in the richest measure to his nation. Many companies were formed
+to resume the voyages of discovery already once begun and then again
+discontinued. And as the Spaniards based their exclusive right to the
+possession of the other hemisphere on the Pope's decision, Protestant
+ideas, which mocked at this supremacy of the Romish See over the
+world, now contributed also to impel men to occupy lands in these
+regions. This was always effected in the main by voluntary efforts of
+wealthy mercantile houses, or enterprising members of the court and
+state, to whom the Queen gave patents of authorisation. In this way
+Walter Ralegh, in his political and religious opposition to the
+Spaniards, founded an English colony on the transatlantic continent,
+in Wingandacoa: the Queen was so much pleased at it that she gave the
+district a name which was to preserve the remembrance of the quality
+she was perhaps proudest of: she called it Virginia.[266]
+
+But at last she formally undertook the naval war; it was at the same
+time a motive for the league with the Hollanders, who could do
+excellent service in it: by attacking the West Indies she hoped to
+destroy the basis of the Spanish greatness.
+
+Francis Drake was commissioned to open the war. When, in October 1585,
+he reached the Islas de Bayona on the Gallician coast, he informed the
+governor, Don Pedro Bermudez, that he came in his Queen's name to put
+an end to the grievances which the English had had to suffer from the
+Spaniards. Don Pedro answered, he knew nothing of any such grievances:
+but, if Drake wished to begin war, he was ready to meet him.
+
+Francis Drake then directed his course at once to the West Indies. He
+surprised St. Domingo and Carthagena, occupied both one and the other
+for a short time, and levied heavy contributions on them. Then he
+brought back to England the colonists from Virginia, who were not yet
+able to hold their own against the natives. The next year he inflicted
+still more damage on the Spaniards. He made his way into the harbour
+of Cadiz, which was full of vessels that had either come from both the
+Indies or were proceeding thither: he sank or burnt them all. His
+privateers covered the sea.
+
+Often already had the Spaniards planned an invasion of England. The
+most pressing motive of all lay in these maritime enterprises. The
+Spaniards remarked that the stability and power of their monarchy did
+not rest so much on the strong places they possessed in all parts of
+the world as on the moveable instruments of dominion by which the
+connexion with them was kept up; the interruption of the
+communication, caused by Francis Drake and his privateers, between
+just the most important points on the Spanish and the Netherlandish
+coasts, seemed to them unendurable: they desired to rid themselves of
+it at any price. And to this was now added the general cry of
+vengeance for the execution of the Queen of Scots, which was heard
+from the pulpit in the presence of the King himself. But this was not
+the only result of that event. The life of Queen Mary and her claim to
+the succession had always stood in the way of Spanish ambition: now
+Philip II could think of taking possession of the English throne
+himself. He concluded a treaty with Pope Sixtus V, under which he was
+to hold the crown of England as a fief of the Holy See, which would
+thus, and by the re-establishment of the Church's authority, have also
+attained to the revival of its old feudal supremacy over England.[267]
+
+Once more the Spanish monarchy and the Papacy were closely united in
+their spiritual and political claims. Sixtus V excommunicated the
+Queen afresh, declared her deposed, and not merely released her
+subjects from their oath of allegiance, but called on every man to aid
+the King of Spain and his general the Duke of Parma against her.
+
+Negociations for peace however were still being carried on in 1587
+between Spanish and English plenipotentiaries. It was mainly the
+merchants of London and Antwerp that urged it; and as the Spaniards at
+that time had manifestly the best of the struggle, were masters of the
+lower Rhine and the Meuse, had invaded Friesland, had besieged and at
+last taken Sluys in despite of all resistance, we can understand how
+the English plenipotentiaries were moved to unexpected concessions.
+They would have consented to the restoration of the Spanish supremacy
+over the northern Netherlands, if Philip would have granted the
+inhabitants freedom of conscience. Alexander of Parma brought forward
+a proposal, to make, it is true, their return to Catholicism
+obligatory, but with the assurance that no Inquisition should be set
+over them, nor any one punished for his deviation from the faith. Even
+if the negociation was not meant to be completely in earnest, it is
+worth remarking on what rock it was wrecked. Philip II would neither
+grant such an assurance, which in its essence involved freedom of
+conscience, nor grant this itself completely in a better form. His
+strength lay precisely in his maintaining the Catholic system with
+unrelenting energy: by this he secured the attachment of the priests
+and the zealous laity. And how could he, at a moment when he was so
+closely united with the Pope, and could reckon on the millions heaped
+up in the castle of St. Angelo for his enterprise, so completely
+deviate from the strictness of exclusive belief. He thought he was
+within his right when he refused any religious concession, seeing that
+every other sovereign issued laws prescribing the religion of his own
+territories.[268]
+
+If the war was to be continued, Alexander of Parma would have wished
+that all his efforts should be first directed against Vliessingen,
+where there was an English garrison; from the harbour there England
+itself could be attacked far more easily and safely. But it was
+replied in Spain that this enterprise was likewise very extensive and
+costly, while it would bring about no decisive result. And yet
+Alexander himself too held an invasion of England to be absolutely
+necessary; his reports largely contributed to strengthen the King in
+this idea; Philip decided to proceed without further delay to the
+enterprise that was needful at the moment and opened world-wide
+prospects for the future.
+
+He took into consideration that the monarchy at this moment had
+nothing to fear from the Ottomans who were fully occupied with a
+Persian war, and above all that France was prevented from interfering
+by the civil strife that had broken out. This has been designated as
+the chief aim of Philip's alliance with the Guises, and it certainly
+may have formed one reason for it. Left alone, with only herself to
+rely on (so the Spaniards further judged), the Queen of England would
+no longer be an object of fear: she had no more than forty ships; once
+in an engagement off the Azores, in the Portuguese war, the English
+had been seen to give way for the first time: if it came to a
+sea-fight, the vastly superior Spanish Armada would without doubt
+prove victorious. But for a war on land also she was not prepared, she
+had no more than six thousand real soldiers in the country, with whom
+she could neither meet nor resist the veteran troops of Spain in the
+open field. They had only to march straight on London; seldom was a
+great city, which had remained long free from attack, able to hold out
+against a sudden assault: the Queen would either be forced to make a
+peace honourable to Spain, or would by a long resistance give the King
+an opportunity of forming out of the Spanish nobility, which would
+otherwise degenerate in indolence at home, a young troop of brave
+warriors. He would have the Catholics for him and with their help gain
+the upper hand, he would make himself master of the strong places,
+above all of the harbours; all the nations of the world could not take
+them from him again; he would become lord of the ocean, and thus lord
+and master of the continent.[269]
+
+Philip II would have preferred to begin the work as early as the
+autumn of 1587. He hoped at that time that Scotland, where the
+Catholic lords and the people showed a lively sympathy with Queen
+Mary's fate, would be thrown open to him by her son, who was supposed
+to wish to avenge her death. But to others this seemed not so certain;
+in especial the experienced Admiral Santa Cruz called the King's
+attention to the perils the fleet might incur in those seas: they
+would have to contend with contrary winds, and the disadvantage of
+short days and thick mists. Santa Cruz did not wish to endanger his
+fame, the only thing he had earned during a long life, by an ill-timed
+or very venturous undertaking. He held an invasion of England to be
+more difficult than most other enterprises, and demanded such
+preparations as would make the victory certain. While they were being
+made he died, after having lost his sovereign's favour. His successor,
+the duke of Medina Sidonia, whom the King chose because he had
+distinguished himself at the last defence of Cadiz, did not make such
+very extensive demands; but the fleet, which was fitted out under him
+and by him, was nevertheless, though not in number of ships (about
+130), yet in tonnage, size, and number of men on board (about 22,000)
+the most important that had ever been sent to sea by any European
+power. All the provinces of the Pyrenean peninsula had emulously
+contributed to it: the fleet was divided into a corresponding number
+of squadrons; the first was the Portuguese, then followed the
+squadrons of Castille, Andalusia, Biscay, Guipuzcoa, and then the
+Italian--for ships and men had come also in good number from Italy.
+The troops were divided like the squadrons; there was a 'Mass in time
+of war' for each province.
+
+With not less zeal did men arm in the Netherlands; the drum beat
+everywhere in the Flemish and Walloon provinces, all roads were
+covered with military trains. In the Netherlands too there were a
+great number of Italians, Corsicans and inhabitants of the States of
+the Church and Neapolitans, in splendid accoutrements; there were the
+brothers of the grand duke of Tuscany and of the duke of Savoy: King
+Philip had even allowed the son of a Moorish prince to take part in
+the Catholic expedition. Infantry and cavalry also had come from
+Catholic Germany.
+
+It was a joint enterprise of the Spanish monarchy and a great part of
+the Catholic world, headed by the Pope and the King, to overthrow the
+Queen who was regarded as the Head, and the State which was regarded
+as the main support, of Protestantism and the anti-Spanish policy.
+
+We do not find any detailed and at the same time authentic information
+as to the plan of the invasion; a Spanish soldier and diplomatist
+however, much employed in the military and political affairs of the
+time, and favoured with the confidence of the highest persons, J.
+Baptista de Tassis, gives us an outline, which we may accept as quite
+trustworthy. We know that in Antwerp, Nieuport, and Dunkirk, with the
+advice of Hanseatic and Genoese master-builders, transports had been
+got ready for the whole force: from Nieuport (to which place also were
+brought the vessels built at Antwerp) 14,000 men were to be conveyed
+across to England, and from Dunkirk 12,000. But where were they to
+effect a junction with each other and with the Spaniards? Tassis
+assures us that they had selected for this purpose the roadstead of
+Margate on the coast of Kent, a safe and convenient harbour;[270]
+there immediately after the Spanish armada had arrived, or as nearly
+as possible at the same time with it, the fleet of transports from the
+Netherlands also was to make the shore, and Alexander of Parma was
+then to assume the command in chief of the whole force and march
+straight on London.
+
+All that Philip II had ever thought or planned was thus concentrated
+as it were into one focus. The moment was come when he could subdue
+England, become master of the European world, and re-establish the
+Catholic faith in the form in which he professed it. When the fleet
+(on the 22nd July 1588) sailed out of Corunna, and the long-meditated,
+long-prepared, enterprise was now set in action, the King and the
+nation displayed deep religious emotion: in all the churches of the
+land prayers were offered up for forty days; in Madrid solemn
+processions were arranged to our Lady of Atocha, the patroness of
+Spain: Philip II spent two hours each day in prayer. He was in the
+state of silent excitement which an immense design and the expectation
+of a great turn in a man's fortune call forth. Scarcely any one dared
+to address a word to him.
+
+It was in these very days that people in England first really became
+conscious of the danger that threatened them. A division of the fleet
+under Henry Seymour was watching, with Dutch assistance, the two
+harbours held by the prince of Parma: the other and larger division,
+just returned from Spain and on the point of being broken up, made
+ready at Plymouth, under the admiral, Howard of Effingham, to receive
+the enemy. Meanwhile the land forces assembled, on Leicester's
+advice,[271] in the neighbourhood of London. The old feudal
+organisation of the national force was once more called into full
+activity to face this danger. Men saw the gentry take the field at the
+head of their tenants and copyholders, and rejoiced at their holding
+together so well. It was without doubt an advantage, that the
+threatened attack could no longer be connected with a right of
+succession recognised in the country; it appeared in its true
+character, as a great invasion by a foreign power for the subjugation
+of England. Even the Catholic lords came forward, among them Viscount
+Montague (who had once, alone in the Upper House, opposed the
+Supremacy, and had also since not reconciled himself to the religious
+position of the Queen), with his sons and grandsons, and even his
+heir-presumptive who, though still a child, bestrode a war-horse; Lord
+Montague said, he would defend his Queen with his life, whoever might
+attack her, king or pope. No doubt that these armings left much to be
+desired, but they were animated by national and religious enthusiasm.
+Some days later the Queen visited the camp at Tilbury: with slight
+escort she rode from battalion to battalion. A tyrant, she said, might
+be afraid of his subjects: she had always sought her chief strength in
+their good will: with them she would live and die. She was everywhere
+received with shouts of joy: psalms were sung, and prayers offered up
+in which the Queen joined.
+
+For, whatever may be men's belief, in great wars and dangers they
+naturally turn their eyes to the Eternal Power which guides our
+destiny, and on which all equally feel themselves dependent. The two
+nations and their two chiefs alike called on God to decide in their
+religious and political conflict. The fortune of mankind hung in the
+balance.
+
+On the 31st July, a Sunday, the Armada, covering a wide extent of sea,
+came in sight of the English coast off the heights of Plymouth. On
+board the fleet itself it was thought most expedient to attempt a
+landing on the spot, since there were no preparations made there for
+defence and the English squadron was not fully manned. But this was
+not in the plan, and would, especially if it failed, have incurred a
+heavy responsibility. Medina Sidonia was only empowered and prepared
+to accept battle by sea if the English should offer it. His galleys,
+improved after the Venetian pattern, and especially his galleons
+(immense sailing ships which carried cannon on their different decks
+on all sides), were without doubt superior to the vessels of the
+English. When the latter, some sixty sail strong, came out of the
+harbour, he hung out the great standard from the fore-mast of his ship
+as a signal for all to prepare for battle. But the English admiral did
+not intend to let matters come to a regular naval fight. He was
+perfectly aware of the superiority of the Spanish equipment and had
+even forbidden boarding the enemies' vessels. His plan was to gain the
+weather-gauge of the Armada, and inflict damage on them in their
+course, and throw them into disorder. The English followed the track
+of the Armada in four squadrons, and left no advantage unimproved that
+might offer. They were thoroughly acquainted with this sea, and
+steered their handy vessels with perfect certainty and mastery: the
+Spaniards remarked with dissatisfaction that they could at pleasure
+advance, attack, and again break off the engagement. Medina Sidonia
+was anxious above all things to keep his Armada together: after a
+council of war he let a great ship which lagged behind fall into the
+hands of the enemy, as her loss would be less damaging than the
+breaking up of the line which would result from the attempt to save
+her: he sent round his sargentes mayores to the captains to tell them
+not to quit the line on pain of death.[272]
+
+On the whole the Spaniards were not discontented with their voyage,
+when after a week of continuous skirmishing they, without having
+sustained any very considerable losses, had traversed the English
+channel, and on Saturday the 6th August passed Boulogne and arrived
+off Calais: it was the first point at which they had wished to touch.
+But now to cross to the neighbouring coast of England, as seems to
+have been the original plan, became exceedingly difficult, because the
+English fleet guarded it, and the Spanish galleons were less able in
+the straits than elsewhere to compete with those swift vessels, It was
+also being strengthened every moment; the young nobility emulously
+hastened on board. But neither could the admiral proceed to Dunkirk,
+as the harbour was then far too narrow to receive his large ships, and
+his pilots were afraid of being carried to the northward by the
+currents. He anchored in the roadstead east of Calais in the direction
+of Dunkirk.
+
+He had already previously informed the Duke of Parma that he was on
+the way, and had then, immediately before his arrival at Calais,
+despatched a pilot to Dunkirk, to request that he would join him with
+a number of small vessels, that they might better encounter the
+English, and bring with him cannon balls of a certain calibre, of
+which he began to fall short.[273] It is clear that he still wished to
+undertake from thence, if supported according to his views, the great
+attempt at a disembarkation which he was commissioned to effect. But
+Alexander of Parma, whom the first message had found some days before
+at Bruges, had not yet arrived at Dunkirk when the second came: the
+preparations for embarking were only then just begun for the first
+time; and they could scarcely venture actually to embark, as English
+and Dutch ships of war were still ever cruising before the harbour.
+
+Alexander Farnese's failure to effect a junction with Medina Sidonia
+has been always traced to personal motives; it was even said in
+England, at a later time, that Queen Elizabeth had offered him the
+hand of Lady Arabella Stuart, which might open the way to the English
+throne for himself. It is true that his enterprises in the Netherlands
+appeared to lie closest to his heart; even Tassis, who was about his
+person, remarks that he carried on his preparations more out of
+obedience than with any zeal of his own. But the chief cause why the
+two operations were not better combined lay in their very nature. The
+geographical relation of the Spanish monarchy to England would have
+required two separate invasions, the one from the Pyrenean peninsula,
+the other from the Netherlands. The wish to combine the forces of such
+distant countries in a single invasion made the enterprise, especially
+when the means of communication of the period were so inadequate,
+overpoweringly helpless. Wind and weather had been little considered
+in the scheme. In both those countries immense materials of war had
+been collected with extreme effort; they had been brought within a few
+miles of sea of each other, but combine they could not. Now for the
+first time came to light the full superiority which the English gained
+from their corsair-like and bold method of war, and their alliance
+with the Dutch. It was seen that a sudden attack would suffice to
+break the whole combination in pieces: Queen Elizabeth was said to
+have herself devised the plan and its arrangement.
+
+The Armada was still lying at anchor in line of battle, waiting for
+news from Alexander Farnese, when in the night between Sunday and
+Monday (7th to 8th August) the English sent some fire-ships, about
+eight in number, against it. They were his worst vessels which Lord
+Howard gave up for this purpose, but their mere appearance produced a
+decisive result. Medina Sidonia could not refuse his ships permission
+to slip their anchors, that each might avoid the threatening danger:
+only he commanded them to afterwards resume their previous order. But
+things wore a completely different appearance the following morning.
+The tide had carried the vessels towards the land, a direction they
+did not want to take; now for the first time the attacks of the
+English proved destructive to them: part of the ships had become
+disabled: it was completely impossible to obey the admiral's orders
+that they should return to their old position. Instead of this,
+unfavourable winds drove the Armada against its will along the coast;
+in a short time the English too gave up the pursuit of the enemy, who
+without being quite beaten was yet in flight, and abandoned him to his
+fate. The wind drove the Spaniards on the shoals of Zealand: once they
+were in such shallow water that they were afraid of running aground:
+some of their galleons in fact fell into the hands of the Dutch.
+Fortunately for them the wind veered round first to the W.S.W., then
+to the S.S.W., but they could not even then regain the Channel, nor
+would they have wished it; only by the longest circuit, round the
+Orkney Islands, could they return to Spain.
+
+A storm fraught with ruin had lowered over England: it was scattered
+before it discharged its thunder. So completely true is the expression
+on a Dutch commemorative medal, 'the breath of God has scattered them'
+(_flavit et dissipati sunt_).
+
+Philip II saw the Armada, which he had hoped would give the dominion
+of the world into his hand, return home again in fragments without
+having, we do not say accomplished but even, attempted anything worth
+the trouble. He did not therefore renounce his design. He spoke of his
+wish to fit out lighter vessels, and entrust the whole conduct of the
+expedition to the Prince of Parma. The Cortes of Castille requested
+him not to put up with the disgrace incurred, but to chastise this
+woman: they offered him their whole property and all the children of
+the land for this purpose. But the very possibility of great
+enterprises belongs only to one moment: in the next it is already gone
+by.
+
+First the Spanish forces were drawn into the complications existing in
+France. The great Catholic agitation, which had been long fermenting
+there, at last gained the upper hand, and was quite ready to prepare
+the way for Philip II's supremacy. But Queen Elizabeth thought that
+the day on which France fell into his hands would be the eve of her
+own ruin. She too therefore devoted her best resources to France, to
+uphold Philip II's opponent. When Henry IV, driven back to the verge
+of the coast of Normandy, was all but lost, he was by her help put in
+a position to maintain his cause. At the sieges of the great towns, in
+which he was still often threatened with failure, the English troops
+in several instances did excellent service. The Queen did not swerve
+from her policy even when Henry IV saw himself compelled, and found it
+compatible with his conscience, to go over to Catholicism. For he was
+clearly thus all the better enabled to re-establish a France that
+should be politically independent, in opposition to Spain and at war
+with it; and it was exactly on this opposition that the political
+freedom and independence of England herself rested. Yet as his change
+of religion had been disagreeable to the Queen, so was also the peace
+which he proceeded to make; she exerted her influence against its
+conclusion. But as by it the Spaniards gave up the places they
+occupied on the French coasts, which in their possession had menaced
+England as well, she could not in reality be fundamentally opposed to
+it.
+
+These great conflicts on land were seconded by repeated attacks of the
+English and Dutch naval power, by which it sometimes seemed as if the
+Spanish monarchy would be shaken to its foundations. Elizabeth made an
+attempt to restore Don Antonio to the throne from which Philip II had
+driven him. But the minds of the Portuguese themselves were very far
+from being as yet sufficiently prepared for a revolt: the enterprise
+failed, in an attack on the suburbs of Lisbon. The war interested the
+English most deeply. Parliament agreed to larger and larger grants:
+from two-fifteenths and a single subsidy (about £30,000), which was
+its usual vote, it rose in 1593 to three subsidies and six-fifteenths;
+the towns gladly armed ships at their own expense, and sailors enough
+were found to man them: the national energy turned towards the sea.
+And they obtained some successes. In the harbour of Corunna they
+destroyed the collected stores, which were probably to have served
+for renewing the expedition. Once they took the harbour of Cadiz and
+occupied the city itself: more than once they alarmed and endangered
+the West Indies. But with all this nothing decisive was effected; the
+Spanish monarchy maintained an undoubted ascendancy in Europe, and the
+exclusive possession of the other hemisphere: it was the Great Power
+of the age. But over against it England also now took up a strong and
+formidable position.
+
+Events in France exercised a strong counter-action on the Netherlands;
+under their influence the reconquest of the United Provinces became
+impossible for Spain. Elizabeth also contributed largely to the
+victories by which Prince Maurice of Orange secured a strong frontier.
+But these could not prevent a powerful Catholic government arising on
+the other side in the Belgian provinces: and though they were at first
+kept apart from Spain, yet it did not escape the Queen that this would
+not last for ever: she seems to have had a foreboding that these
+countries would become the battleground of a later age. However this
+might be, the antagonism of principle between the Catholic Netherlands
+(which were still ruled by the Austro-Spanish House) and the
+Protestant Netherlands (in which the Republic maintained itself), and
+the continued war between them, ensured the security of England, for
+the sake of which the Queen had broken with Spain. Burleigh's objects
+were in the main attained.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[266] Oldys, Life of Sir W. Raleigh 38.
+
+[267] Spondanus, Continuatio Baronii ii. 847. The word 'dicitur,'
+which Spondan uses, is omitted in Timpesti, Vita di Sisto V, ii. 51.
+
+[268] A letter of Philip's to the King of Denmark, in the Venetian
+Dispacci of this year, which in general would be of great value for a
+detailed account of the event.
+
+[269] The reports are in Herrera, Historia del mundo iii. 60 seq. In
+1860 Mr. Motley (History of the United Netherlands ii. ch. xviii.)
+communicated extracts from the letters exchanged at that time between
+Alex. Farnese and Philip II, which reveal the wishes of each
+successive moment.
+
+[270] J. B. de Tassis Commentarii: 'eo consilio, ut cum adventasset
+classis et constitisset in Morgat, qui est prope Dormiram [I read
+Douvram, as the copy from which the printed text is taken is very
+defective] districtus maris quietus portumque efficit satis securum,
+trajiceret Parmensis cum navigiis.' Papendrecht, Analecta Belgica II.
+ii. 491. In Motley i. ch. viii we now see that Al. Farnese in his very
+first plan pointed out the coast between Dover and Margate as the most
+proper place for the landing. A junction of the whole transport fleet
+with the Armada before Calais has something too adventurous in it to
+have been contemplated from the beginning.
+
+[271] The Earl of Leicester to the Queen. Hardwicke State Papers i.
+580. The dates given above are New Style.
+
+[272] Diario de los sucesos de armada Ilamada la invencible, in Salva,
+Collection de documentos ineditos xvi. 449: essentially the same
+report as that used by Barrow, Life of Sir Francis Drake.
+
+[273] Diario 458: 'mandase salir 40 filipotes luego para juntarse con
+esta armada para poder con ellos trabarse con los enemigos, que a
+causa de ser nuestros baseles muy pesados en comparacion de la
+ligereza de los enemigos no era posible en ninguna maniera venir a las
+manos con ellos.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE LATER YEARS OF QUEEN ELIZABETH.
+
+
+Every great historic existence has a definite purport; the life of
+Queen Elizabeth lies in the transactions already recorded, and their
+results in the change of policy which she brought about.
+
+The issue of the war between the hierarchy, which had once swayed
+every act and thought of the West, and those who had fallen off from
+it was not yet decided as long as England with its power vacillated
+between the two systems. Then this Queen came forward, attaching
+herself to the new view as by a predetermined destiny; she carried it
+out in a form answering to the historical institutions of her kingdom,
+and with an energy by which she at the same time upheld that kingdom's
+power. It was against her therefore that the hierarchy, when it could
+renew the contest, mainly directed its most energetic efforts: an
+author of the period makes those leagued with the Pope against the
+Queen say to each other, 'come let us kill her, and the inheritance
+shall be ours.' The chief among these was the mighty King who had
+himself once ruled England. She maintained a war with this league, in
+which it was at each moment a question of existence for her. She was
+assailed with all the weapons of war and of treason; but she adopted
+corresponding means of defence against every assault: she not only
+maintained herself, but created in the neighbouring countries a
+powerful representation of the principle which she had taken up,
+without pressing the adoption of a form for it exactly like her own.
+Without her help the church-reformation in Scotland, and at that time
+in France, would have been probably suppressed, and in the Netherlands
+it would have never taken actual shape. The Queen is the champion of
+West-European Protestantism and of all the political growth that was
+attached to the new faith. She herself expresses her astonishment at
+her success in this: 'more at the fact,' she says once, 'that I am
+still alive, than that my enemies would not have me to live.' That
+Philip effected so little against her, she believes to be due above
+all to God's justice; for the King attacked her in an unkingly manner
+while negociations were still going on: she sees in this a proof that
+an ill beginning leads to a disgraceful end, despite all power and
+endeavour. 'What was to ruin me, has turned to my glory.'[274]
+
+It is surely the greatest happiness that can be granted to any human
+being, while defending his own interest, to be maintaining the
+interests of all. Then his personal existence expands into a central
+part of the world's history.
+
+That personal and universal interest was likewise a thoroughly English
+one. Commerce grew amidst arms: the maintenance of internal peace
+filled the country with wellbeing and riches; palaces were seen rising
+where before only huts had stood: as the philosophic Bacon remarks,
+England now won her natural position in the world.
+
+Elizabeth was one of those sovereigns who have beforehand formed an
+idea for themselves as to the duties of government. Four qualities,
+she says once, seemed to her necessary for it: justice and
+self-control, highmindedness and judgment; she might pride herself on
+the two first: never in a case of equal rights had she favoured one
+person more than another: never had she believed a first report, but
+waited for fuller knowledge: the two others she would not claim for
+herself, for they were men's virtues. But the world ascribed a high
+degree of these very virtues to her. Men descried her subtle judgment
+in the choice of her servants, and the directing them to the services
+for which they were best fitted. Her high heart was seen in her
+despising small advantages, and in her unshaken tranquillity in
+danger. While the storm was coming on from Spain, no cloud was seen on
+her brow: by her conduct she animated nobles and people, and
+inspirited her councillors. Men praised her for two things, for
+zealous participation in deliberation and for care in seeing that
+what was decided on was carried into effect.[275]
+
+But we may not look for an ideal female ruler in Queen Elizabeth. No
+one can deny the severities which were practised under her government
+even with her knowledge. The systematic hypocrisy imputed to her may
+seem an invention of her enemies or of historians not thoroughly
+informed; she herself declares truthfulness a quality indispensable
+for a prince; but in her administration, as well as in that of most
+other rulers, reasonings appear which rather conceal the truth than
+express it; in each of her words, and in every step she took, we
+perceive a calculation of what is for her advantage; she displays
+striking foresight and even a natural subtlety. Elizabeth was very
+accessible to flattery, and as easily attracted by an agreeable
+exterior as repelled by slight accidental defects; she could break out
+at a word that reminded her of the transitory nature of human affairs
+or of her own frailty: vanity accompanied her from youth to those
+advancing years, which she did not wish to remark or to think were
+remarked. She liked to ascribe successes to herself, disasters to her
+ministers: they had to take on themselves the hatred felt against
+disagreeable or doubtful regulations, and if they did not do this
+quite in unison with her mood, they had to fear her blame and
+displeasure. She was not free from the fickleness of her family: but
+on the other hand she displayed also the amiable attention of a female
+ruler: as when once during a speech she was making in a learned
+language to the learned men of Oxford, on seeing the Lord Treasurer
+standing there with his lame foot, she suddenly broke off, ordered a
+chair to be brought him, and then continued; indeed it was said she at
+the same time wished to let it be remarked that no accident could
+discompose her. As Harrington, who knew her from personal
+acquaintance, expresses himself: her mind might be sometimes compared
+to a summer morning sky, beneficent and refreshing: then she won the
+hearts of all by her sweet and modest speech. But she was repellent in
+the same degree in her excited state, when she paced to and fro in her
+chamber, anger in every look, rejection in every word: men hastened
+out of her way. Among other correspondence we learn to know her from
+that with King James of Scotland,--one side of her political
+relations, to which we shall return:--how does every sentence express
+a mental and moral superiority as well as a political one! not a
+superfluous word is there: all is pith and substance. From care for
+him and intelligent advice she passes to harsh blame and most earnest
+warning: she is kind and sharp, friendly and rough, but almost ever
+more repellent and unsparing than mild. Never had any sovereign a
+higher idea of his dignity, of the independence belonging to him by
+the laws of God and man, of the duty of obedience binding on all
+subjects. She prides herself on no external consideration influencing
+her resolutions, threats or fear least of all; when once she longs for
+peace, she insists on its not being from apprehension of the enemy,
+but only from abhorrence of bloodshed. The action of life does not
+develop merely the intellectual powers: between success and failure,
+in conflict and effort and victory, the character moulds itself and
+acquires its ruling tone. Her immense good fortune fills her with
+unceasing self-confidence, which is at the same time sustained by
+trust in the unfailing protection of Providence.[276] That she,
+excommunicated by the Pope, maintains herself against the attacks of
+half the world, gives her whole action and nature a redoubled impress
+of personal energy. She does not like to mention her father or her
+mother: of a successor she will not hear a word. The feeling of
+absolute possession is predominant in her appearance. It is noticeable
+how on festivals she moves in procession through her palace: in front
+are nobles and knights in the costume of their order, with bared
+heads; next the bearers of the insignia of royalty, the sceptre, the
+sword, and the great seal: then the Queen herself in a dress covered
+with pearls and precious stones; behind her ladies, brilliant in
+their beauty and rich attire: to one or two, who are presented to her,
+she reaches out her hand to kiss as she goes by in token of favour,
+till she arrives at her chapel, where the assembled crowd hails her
+with a 'God save the Queen,' she returning them thanks with gracious
+words. Elizabeth received the whole reverence, once more unbounded,
+which men paid to the supreme power. The meats of which she was to eat
+were set on the table with bended knee, even when she was not present.
+It was on their knees that men were presented to her.[277]
+
+Between a sovereign like this and her Parliament points of contention
+could not be wanting. The Commons claimed the privilege of absolute
+freedom of speech, and repeatedly attacked the abuses which still
+remained in the episcopal Church, and the injurious monopolies which
+profited certain favoured persons. The Queen had members of the Lower
+House imprisoned for speeches disagreeable to her: she warned them not
+to interfere in the affairs of the Church, and even not in those of
+the State, and declared it to be her prerogative to summon and
+dissolve Parliament at her pleasure, to accept or reject its measures.
+But with all this she still did not on the other hand conceal that, in
+reference to the most important affairs of State, she had to pay
+regard to the tone of the two Houses: however much she might be loved,
+yet men's minds are easily moved and not thoroughly trustworthy. In
+its forms Parliament studied to express the devotion which the Queen
+claimed as Queen and Lady, while she tried to make amends for acts by
+which the assembly had been previously offended: for statements of
+grievances, as in the instance of the monopolies, she even thanked
+them, as for a salutary reminder. A French ambassador remarks in 1596
+that the Parliament in ages gone by had great authority, but now it
+did all the Queen wished. Another who arrived in 1597 is not merely
+astonished at its imposing exterior, but also at the extent of its
+rights. Here, says he, the great affairs are treated of, war and
+peace, laws, the needs of the community and the mode of satisfying
+them.[278] The one statement is perhaps as true as the other. The
+solution of the contradiction depends on this, that Queen and
+Parliament were united as to the general relations of the country and
+the world. The Queen, as is self-evident, could not have ruled without
+the Parliament: from the beginning of her government she supported
+herself by it in the weightiest affairs; but a simple consideration
+teaches us how much on the other hand Parliament owed precisely to
+that introduction into these great questions, which the Queen thought
+advisable. They avoided, and were still able to avoid, any enquiry
+into their respective rights and the boundaries of those rights. And
+besides Elizabeth guarded herself from troubling her Parliament too
+much by demands for money. She has been often blamed for her economy
+which sometimes became inconvenient in public affairs: as in most
+cases, nature and policy here also coincided. That she was sparing of
+money, and once was actually in a condition to decline a grant offered
+her, gave the administration an independence of any momentary moods of
+Parliament, which suited her whole nature, and without this might have
+been easily lost.
+
+William Cecil, Lord Burleigh, her treasurer, as economical as herself,
+was likewise her first minister. He had assisted her with striking
+counsel even before her accession, and since lived and moved in her
+administration of the state. He was one of those ministers who find
+their calling in a boundless industry,--he needed little sleep, long
+banquets were not to his taste:[279] never was he seen inactive even
+for half an hour; he kept notes of everything great and small;
+business accompanied him even to his chamber, and to his retirement at
+S. Theobald's. His anxious thoughts were visible in his face, as he
+rode on his mule along the roads of the park; he only lost sight of
+them for a moment when he was sitting at table among his growing
+children: then his heavy eyebrows cleared up, light merriment even
+came from his lips. Every other charm of life lay far from him: for
+poetry and poets he had no taste, as Spenser was once made to feel:
+in literature he patronised only what was directly useful; he
+recommended no one except for his being serviceable. Magnanimous he
+was not; he was content with being able to say to himself, that he
+drew no advantage from any one's ill fortune. He was designated even
+then as the man who set the English state in motion: this he always
+denied, and sought his praise in the fact that he carried out the
+views of the Queen, as she adopted them after hearing the plans
+proposed or even after respectful remonstrances. He had to bear many a
+slander: most of the reproaches made against him he brought himself to
+endure quietly: but if, he said, it could be proved against him that
+he neglected the Queen's interest, the war against Spain, and the
+support of the Netherlands, then he was willing to become liable to
+eternal blame. He was especially effective also through a moral
+quality--he never lost heart. It was remarked that he worked with the
+greatest alacrity when others were most doubtful. For he too had an
+absolute confidence in the cause which he defended. When the enemies'
+fortune stood highest, he was heard to say with great tranquillity,
+'they can do no more than God will allow.'[280]
+
+By the side of this pilot of the state, Robert Dudley, who was
+promoted to be Earl of Leicester, drew all eyes on himself as the
+leading man at court. Burleigh was looked on as Somerset's creation,
+Dudley was the youngest son of the Earl of Northumberland: for it was
+of advantage to Elizabeth, especially at first, to unite around her
+important representatives of the two parties which had composed her
+brother's government. One motive for her attachment to Leicester is
+said to have been the fact that he was born on the same day, and at
+the very same hour with herself: who at that time would not have
+believed in the ruling influence of the stars? But, besides this, the
+Earl dazzled by a fine person, attractive manners, and an almost
+irresistible charm of disposition. The confidential intimacy which
+Elizabeth allowed him caused scandalous rumours, probably without
+ground; for if they had been true, Leicester, who had his father's
+ambition, would have played a very different part. Elizabeth heard of
+them; she once actually brought a foreign ambassador into her
+apartments, to convince him how utterly impossible it would be for her
+to see any one whatever without witnesses; she censured a foreign
+writer for letting himself be deceived by a groundless rumour, but she
+would not on this account dismiss the favourite from court. She liked
+to have him about her, and to receive his homage which had a tinge of
+chivalry in it: his devotion satisfied a need of her heart. He could
+not however take any power to himself which would infringe on her own
+supreme authority; once, when such a case occurred, she reminded him
+that he was not in exclusive possession of her favour: she could
+bestow it on whom she would, and again recall it; at court, she
+exclaimed, there should be no Master, but only a Mistress.[281]
+Neither did Leicester display great mental gifts: in the campaigns of
+the Netherlands he did not at all answer even the moderate
+expectations that had been formed of him. If the Queen nevertheless
+put him at the head of her troops when the Spanish danger threatened,
+this was because he possessed her absolute personal confidence.
+
+With Leicester the Sidneys were most closely allied. Henry Sidney, his
+sister's husband, introduced civilisation and monarchic institutions
+into Wales, and was selected to extend them in Ireland. In his son
+Philip the English ideal of noble culture seemed to have realised
+itself; he combined a very remarkable literary power peculiar to
+himself, and talents suited for the society of men of the world (which
+well fitted him for the duties of an ambassador), with disinterested
+kindness to others, and a chivalrous courage in war, which gained him
+universal admiration both at home and in presence of the enemy.
+
+Leicester's good word is also said to have opened an entrance to court
+for young Walter Ralegh and to have promoted his first successes.
+Ralegh combined in his own person the aspirations of the age in a most
+vivid manner. He was ambitious, fond of show, with high aims, deeply
+engaged in the factions of the court; but at the same time he had a
+spirit of noble enterprise, was ingenious and thoughtful. In
+everything new that was produced in the region of discoveries and
+inventions, of literature and art, he played the part of a fellow
+worker: he lived in the circle of universal knowledge, its problems
+and its progress. In his appearance he had something that announced a
+man of superior mind and nature.
+
+Around Cecil were grouped the statesmen who had been promoted by him,
+and worked in sympathy with him: for instance Bacon the Keeper of the
+Seals, whom the Queen regarded as the oracle of the laws, and who also
+amused her by many a witty word; Mildmay, the Chancellor of the
+Exchequer, who though adhering to the principles now adopted yet
+gladly favoured the claims of Parliament, and even the tendencies of
+the Puritans; Francis Walsingham, Secretary of State, who had once
+suffered exile for his Protestantism and now supported it after his
+return with all the resources of the administration; it is said of him
+that he heard in London what was whispered in the ear at Rome; he met
+the crafty Jesuits with a network of secret counter-action which
+extended over the world; there has never been a man who more
+vigilantly and unrelentingly hunted down religious and political
+conspiracies; to pay his agents, in choosing whom he was not too
+particular, he expended his own property. Cecil and Bacon had married
+two daughters of that Antony Cooke, who had once taken part in Edward
+VI's education: the other sisters, wedded to Hobby and Killigrew, men
+who were engaged in the most important embassies, extended the
+connexion of these statesmen. Walsingham was allied by marriage with
+Mildmay, and with Randolph the active ambassador in Scotland.
+
+Once the Queen brought a man among them, who owed his rise only to her
+being pleased with his person and conversation, which likewise brought
+her much ill repute:[282] she promoted her vice-chamberlain
+Christopher Hatton to be Lord Chancellor of England. The lawyers made
+loud and bitter complaints of this disregard of their claims and their
+order. Hatton had however been long on good terms with the leading
+statesmen: in all the late questions of difficulty as to Mary Stuart's
+trial he had held firm to them. His nephew and heir soon after married
+a granddaughter of Burleigh.
+
+The Queen's own relations on the mother's side had always some
+influence with her. Francis Knolles who had married into this family,
+and was appointed by the Queen treasurer of her household, won himself
+a good name with his contemporaries and with posterity by his
+religious zeal and openness of heart. A still more important figure in
+this circle is Thomas Sackville, who is also named with honour among
+the founders of English literature; the part of the 'Mirror for
+Magistrates' which was due to him witnesses to an original conception
+of the dark sides of man's existence, and to a creative imagination.
+But the poet likewise did excellent service to his sovereign: he makes
+his appearance when an important treaty is to be concluded, or the
+people are to be called on to defend the country, or even when any
+agitation is feared in the troubles at home. He was selected to inform
+the Queen of Scots that the sentence of death had been pronounced on
+her. He is the Lord Buckhurst from whom the dukes of Dorset are
+descended.
+
+The distinguished family to which Anne Boleyn belonged, and which had
+such an important influence on her rise, that of the Howards, proved
+in its elder branch as little loyal to the daughter as it had once
+been to the mother. On the other hand Elizabeth had experienced the
+attachment of the younger line, that of Effingham, and had since
+repaid it with manifold favours. From this branch came the Admiral,
+who commanded the sea-force in the decisive attacks on the Spanish
+Armada. We know that he was not himself a great seaman; but he
+understood enough of the matter to enable him to avail himself of
+those who understood more than he did. The Queen looked on him as the
+man marked out by Providence for the defence of herself and of the
+country.
+
+General Norris, who gained reputation for the English arms on the
+continent by the side of Henry IV, was also related to her though more
+distantly: besides this, she wished to repay him for the good
+treatment she had formerly received in her distress from his
+grandfather.
+
+How predominantly the personal element once more manifests itself in
+this administration! As the Queen's own interest is also that of all,
+those who belong to her family or have won her favour and done her
+essential service, are the chiefs of the State and the leaders in war.
+The royal patronage extended this influence over the Church and the
+universities. But we find it no less in all other branches. Sir Thomas
+Gresham, the Queen's agent in money-matters, was the founder of the
+Exchange of London, to which she at his request gave the name of the
+Royal Exchange.
+
+In literature also we see the traces of her taste and her influence.
+Owing to the tone of good society the classics were studied by every
+one. The higher education was directed to them, as indeed the Queen
+herself found in them refreshment and food for the mind: many
+classical authors were translated, and the forms of the old poets
+revived or imitated. The Italians and Spaniards, who had led the way
+in similar attempts, further awoke the emulation of the English. In
+Edmund Spenser, in whom the spirit of the age shows itself most
+vividly, we constantly meet with imitations of the Latin or Italian
+poets, which here and there aspire to be paraphrastic translations,
+and may be inferior to his originals, even to the modern ones, in
+delicacy of drawing, since he purposely selected their most successful
+passages: yet how thoroughly different a spirit do his works breathe
+in their total effect! What in the Italians is a play of fancy is in
+him a deep moral earnestness. The English nation has an inestimable
+possession in these works of a moral and religious grandeur, and a
+simple view of nature, which happily expressed in single stanzas stamp
+themselves on every man's memory. Spenser has assigned to allegory, as
+a style, a larger sphere than perhaps belongs to it, and one allegory
+is always interweaving itself with another; the heroes whom he takes
+from the old romances become to him representatives of the different
+virtues, but he possesses such an original power of vivid
+representation that even in this form he gains the reader's interest.
+But, if we ask what is the main thing which he celebrates, we find
+that it is precisely the course of the great war in which his nation
+is engaged against the Papacy and the Spaniards. The Faery Queen is
+his sovereign, whose figure under the manifold symbols of the
+qualities which she possessed, or which were ascribed to her, is
+always coming forward afresh in his verse. With wonderful power
+Elizabeth united around her all the aspiring minds and energies of the
+nation.
+
+Not a few of the productions of the time have so strong an infusion of
+reverence for the Queen that we cannot help smiling: but it is true
+nevertheless that at her court the language formed itself, and all
+great aspirations found their central point. Elizabeth's statesmen,
+who had to deal with a Parliament that could not be led by mere
+authority, studied the rules of eloquence in the models of antiquity,
+and made their doctrines their own. On their table Quintilian lay by
+the side of the Statutes.
+
+The Queen, who loved the theatre and declared it a national
+institution by a proclamation, made it possible for Shakespeare to
+develop himself; his roots lie deep in this epoch, he represents its
+manners and mode of life: but he spreads far out beyond it. We shall
+return to him in a more suitable place than this, in which we are
+treating of the Queen's influence.
+
+It would contradict the nature of human affairs were we to expect that
+the general point of view, which swayed the State as a whole, could
+have induced every one who took part in its administration to move on
+to their common aim in one way. Of the great nobles of the court many
+rather supported the Puritans, as indeed the father of the Puritan
+Cartwright owed his position at Warwick to Leicester's protection;
+others inclined to favour the Catholics. The severity which the
+bishops thought themselves bound to exercise met with opposition among
+the leading statesmen: and to these again the soldiers were opposed.
+It was a society full of life, and highly gifted, but for that very
+reason in continual ferment and internal conflict.
+
+We have still to grasp clearly the event in which these antagonisms
+and the Queen's temperament yet once more led to a great catastrophe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The aged Burleigh, who had provoked the war with Spain, wished also to
+end it. From his past experience he concluded that he could not
+inflict any decisive blow on the Spanish monarchy, which still
+displayed a vast power of resistance; in 1597 it could again offer a
+high price for peace. The Spaniards, who had taken Calais from the
+French by a sudden attack, offered the Queen the restoration of this
+old English possession in exchange for the strong places in the
+Netherlands, entrusted to her in pledge.[283] For the Netherlands no
+other provision would have been thus made than was proposed in 1587:
+but England would have again won as strong a position on the Continent
+as it had before, and would have established its rule over the
+neighbouring seas: an open commerce would have been re-established,
+and Ireland freed from the hostile influence of the Spaniards: the
+Queen would have enjoyed peace in her advancing years. Burleigh saw as
+it were the conclusion of his life in this: he said that, if God
+granted him a good agreement with Spain, his soul would depart with
+joy.
+
+But for this policy he could not possibly get the approval of the
+young, whose ambitious hopes were connected with the continuance of
+the war. They measured the power of the country by their own thirst
+for action. If the Queen, so they said, would only not do everything
+by halves and not follow her secretaries so much, she could,
+especially now she had the Dutch as allies, tear the Spanish monarchy
+in pieces. How could they fail, with some effort, in occupying the
+Isthmus of Panama? And then they would at one blow deprive the
+monarchy of all its resources. And above all, the man who then played
+the most brilliant part at court, Robert Devereux Earl of Essex, was
+of this opinion. He was Leicester's stepson, introduced by him at
+court, and after his death his successor as it were in the Queen's
+favour. An attractive manly appearance, blooming youth, chivalrous
+manners, won him all hearts from the very first. With the Queen he
+entered into that rare relation, in which favour on the one side and
+homage on the other took the hues of mutual inclination, and even
+passion.
+
+What Essex's idea of it was he once revealed at a dramatic festivity
+which he arranged for the Queen in honour of her accession. There he
+made a hermit, an officer of state, and a soldier come forward and
+address their exhortations to an esquire who was intended to represent
+himself. By the first the knight was desired to give up all feelings
+of love, by the second to devote his powers to State affairs, by the
+third to apply himself to war. The answer is: the knight cannot give
+up his passion for his lady, since she animates all his thoughts with
+divine fire, teaches him true policy, and at the same time qualifies
+him to lead an army. Essex had taken part in some campaigns of Henry
+IV, and afterwards commanded the squadron which was in possession of
+the harbour of Cadiz for a moment, but without being able to hold it:
+he also failed in another enterprise which was planned to seize the
+plate-fleet; but this did not prevent him from evermore designing
+fresh and comprehensive plans. His view in this matter he also once
+represented dramatically.[284] He brought forward a native American
+prince who utters the wish to be freed from the Castilians and their
+oppressive rule: an oracle refers him to the Queen whose kingdom lies
+between the old and the new world, and who is naturally inclined to
+come to the aid of all the oppressed.
+
+The negociations for peace were wrecked mainly through their inherent
+difficulties: the Spaniards however had no hesitation in ascribing the
+ill result to the influence of the Queen's favourite, who had been won
+over by the King of France.[285] But the war could not after this be
+waged on the grand scale contemplated, because Henry IV himself now
+concluded peace, which freed the hands of the Spaniards to act against
+England, and even awoke once more their ideas of an invasion.
+
+Under the double influence of English oppression and the instigation
+of both Spain and Rome a revolt broke out in Ireland, in which the
+English suffered a defeat on the Blackwater, which is designated as
+the greatest mishap they had ever suffered in that island. Ulster,
+Connaught, and Leinster were in arms: their chief, Tyrone, who had
+learnt war in the English service, came forward as The O'Neil, and was
+already recognised by the Pope as sovereign of Ulster; the Irish
+reckoned on Spanish assistance, either in Ireland itself, or through
+an attack on England. Priests and Jesuits fed the Irish with hopes
+that this time they would free themselves, and destroy the very memory
+of the English rule.
+
+The Queen decided, in order to keep her hold on the island, to send
+over an unusually strong armament of horse and foot: and Essex, who
+had always been the loudest in blaming the errors of previous
+commanders, could not avoid at last himself undertaking its direction,
+though he did not do it with complete alacrity.
+
+Though Burleigh was dead, his son Robert Cecil nevertheless maintained
+himself in possession of the secretaryship of state and was at the
+head of his father's old friends, joined as they were by others who
+were not indeed his friends but were enemies of Essex. It was
+unwillingly that Essex quitted the court and thus left the field open
+to them: especially as his personal relation to the Queen was no
+longer what it had been of old. Aspiring by nature, supported by the
+good opinion of the people (on which his grand appearance and his bold
+spirit of enterprise had made much impression), and by the devotion
+of brave officers who were ready to follow him in any undertaking by
+land or sea, he presumed to desire to be something for himself. He
+wished to be no longer absolutely dependent on the nod of his
+mistress. The story goes that she once, in a violent passion at his
+disrespectful conduct, gave him a box on the ear, and that he laid his
+hand on his sword. Even in his letters expressions indicating
+resistance break through his declarations of submission. His friends
+indeed advised him to return to absolute obedience: then the Queen
+would raise the man whom she honoured above all others. He rejected
+this advice because he held that the Queen was a woman, from whom one
+gets nothing but by superior authority. It almost appears as though he
+thought he might obtain such an authority by the Irish war.
+
+But he found this expedition far harder than he had expected.
+Previously he had always said that the great rebel, Tyrone, must be
+tracked to Ulster, where were the roots of his power, and conquered
+there: then the rest of the country would return to obedience of
+itself. How great was the astonishment when he now nevertheless began
+with a march into Munster and Leinster, in which he wasted his
+resources without obtaining any great success! He maintained that the
+Privy Council of Ireland had urged him on to this: its members denied
+it. At last the campaign to the North was undertaken: but in this
+region the Irish were found to have the complete superiority: the
+Queen's newly-levied troops on the other hand were neither adapted,
+nor quite willing, to venture on a decisive action: the officers
+signed a protest against it: and Essex saw himself obliged to enter
+into negociations with Tyrone.
+
+The conditions which that chief demanded in return for his submission
+are exceedingly comprehensive: complete freedom of the Catholic church
+under the Pope, and a transfer of the dignities of state to the
+natives, so that only a viceroy, who should always belong to the high
+nobility, was to come from England: the chief Irish families were to
+be restored to their old possessions, and freed from the most
+oppressive laws, for instance that of wardship; and the Irish were to
+be allowed free trade with England.[286] These stipulations would
+have promised a free development to the Irish nation, and made the
+yoke of England exceedingly light. Essex accepted them, because the
+Spaniards were just now threatening an attack on England, and Tyrone
+could only be separated from them on these conditions; even then
+Tyrone begged that for the present they might be kept a profound
+secret, that he might not quarrel with the Spaniards too soon.
+
+But how could such comprehensive concessions be expected from the
+proud Queen? How could her counsellors, who always preferred direct
+negociation with Spain, have accepted them?
+
+The idea occurred to the Earl of Essex to return to England with a
+part of his troops, and at their head enforce the acceptance of his
+treaty, after which he would throw himself with all his might into the
+Spanish war. And without doubt this would have been the only way to
+carry out his plan, and become altogether master of the government.
+
+But it was represented to him that this looked exactly like an attempt
+at rebellion. Essex was induced to give it up, and make everything yet
+once more depend on the influence which he was confident he could
+exercise on the Queen by appearing in person. Even this however was a
+great risk: he not merely had no leave to do so, but it had been
+expressly forbidden him just previously: he thought it however the
+only way of obtaining his end. Without even having announced his
+departure to the Queen, he suddenly appeared with slight attendance at
+Nonsuch, her country house.[287] He dismounted before the door, and
+did not even take time to change his dress: as he was, with the dust
+of the journey on his face and clothes, he hastened to the Queen: that
+he did not find her in the reception-room did not check him; he rushed
+on into her chamber, where he entered without being announced, and
+kissed her hand: her hair was still flying about her face. At the
+first moment she received him graciously--in a couple of hours he
+might see her again: when he returned to her at table, she began to
+reproach him. From minute to minute the Queen predominated in her over
+the friend: by evening his arrest was announced to him.
+
+Already by his conduct in Ireland Essex had supplied food for the
+slander of his enemies: how much more must this have been the case
+through his self-willed return! As he was fond of tracing his descent
+from royal blood, he was accused of even aspiring to the throne, after
+the example of Bolingbroke: for this purpose he had leagued himself
+with Tyrone and the Irish grandees, whose loyalty he praised
+notwithstanding their revolt. We can say with certainty that the views
+of the Earl of Essex never went so far. In the question as to the
+Queen's successor, which occupied every one, he had taken his side for
+the rights of the King of Scotland: he imputed to his enemies the
+design of favouring on the other hand the claim of the Infant of Spain
+(which was at that time put forward in all seriousness in a book much
+read) with the view of purchasing peace by his recognition. He
+assigned, as the motive for his conduct, his inability to endure the
+atheists, papists, and Spanish partisans in the Queen's council: as a
+Christian he could not possibly look on while religion perished, and
+as an Englishman he would not stand aloof while his fatherland was
+being ruined.[288] He had never wished to be anything else than a
+subject--but 'only of his Queen, not the underling of an unworthy and
+low vassal.' So far as men saw, he stood in connexion with both the
+parties opposed to the prevailing system. He was prayed for in the
+churches of the Puritans: Cartwright was one of his friends; the
+Scotch doctrine, that the Supreme Power, if it showed itself negligent
+in matters of religion, could be compelled by those immediately under
+it to take them in hand, is said to have been preached with reference
+to him. As Earl Marshal of England, Essex indeed thought he possessed
+an independent right of interference. But the mitigation of the
+ecclesiastical laws would also have benefited the Catholics; and it
+was among them that he had perhaps the most decided allies. If we
+might combine his views into a whole, they were directed towards
+raising the natives of America against Spain, at the same time that by
+toleration both in England and Ireland he united all patriots in the
+war against that power, in which he discerned that the chief interest
+of the nation lay.
+
+Essex remained a long while in the custody of the Keeper of the Seal,
+who was favourably disposed towards him; then he was sentenced by the
+Star Chamber not to exercise any longer his high offices as member of
+the Privy Council, as Earl Marshal, and Master of the Ordnance, and to
+live as a prisoner in his own house during the Queen's pleasure. He
+seemed to reconcile himself to this fate, and behaved modestly for a
+considerable time: he was still flattering himself with the hope of
+regaining his sovereign's favour, when a monopoly was withdrawn from
+him which formed the chief part of his income. This new victory of his
+enemies was intolerable to him: he would not let himself be brought so
+low by them as to be forced to live like a poor knight, without
+influence and independence. The thought occurred to him that, if he
+could but see the Queen once more, he might effect a change in his own
+destiny and in that of England. The popularity he enjoyed in the
+capital, the continued attachment of his old companions in arms, the
+friendship of some considerable nobles, allowed him to entertain the
+hope that he could attain this in despite of those around her, could
+make himself master of the palace, and force her to summon a
+Parliament--in which the change of government and the succession of
+the King of Scotland should be alike confirmed. Essex was no longer
+the blooming man of times past, he was seen moving along with his neck
+bowed down, but he still had his mind fixed on wide-ranging and
+ambitious thoughts: from his youth up elevated by good fortune and
+favour, he held everything possible which he set his hand to do. On
+the 8th February 1601 an armed band assembled at his house under
+certain lords; the Keeper of the Seal and his attendant, whom the
+Queen despatched in order to inform herself of the cause of the
+agitation, were detained. Essex dared to march through the capital
+with his armed men, in order to raise it on his behalf. He reckoned on
+the desertion of the city militia to him, and the connivance of the
+city magistrates; but instead of finding support he only excited
+astonishment. No one stirred in his favour. He was scarcely able--for
+royal troops were soon in arms against him--to make his way back to
+his house: there was nothing left for him but to surrender at
+discretion.
+
+At his trial the principle, which had already had so much weight in
+the proceedings against Mary Stuart, was expressly stated, that every
+attempt at rebellion must be looked on as directed against the life of
+the reigning sovereign.[289] A crisis had occurred which obliged
+Elizabeth to execute the man for whom among all men living she
+cherished the deepest and warmest feeling, just as formerly she had
+been forced to condemn one of the grandees connected with her by
+blood, and then her sister Queen of equal rights with herself--all of
+them for traitorous attempts against her government and person. She
+said she would gladly have saved Essex, but she was forced to let the
+laws of England take their course.
+
+Essex is to be compared with his contemporary Biron in so far as they
+both rebelled against sovereigns with whom they had stood in the
+closest relations. In both it was mainly injured self-esteem which
+goaded them on. As Biron had a portion of the lower French nobility
+for him, so Essex had the soldiers by profession and the officers of
+the army to a great extent on his side: they both appealed once more
+to religious antipathies. But above all they thought of again making
+room for the old independence of the warlike nobles: they both
+succumbed to the authority of the firmly-rooted power of the state.
+
+At that time there were fresh negociations going on for a peace
+between Spain and England; but they could as little now as before
+agree on the great subjects in dispute, the question of the
+Netherlands, and the interests of commerce, which at the same time
+involved points of religion. And the Spaniards broke off negotiations
+all the more readily, as exaggerated rumours of Essex's conspiracy
+resounded everywhere, making a revolt in England appear possible. They
+then instantly thought of a landing in an English harbour, and this
+the Catholics promised to support with considerable bodies of horse
+and foot. In Ireland, where the refusal of the concessions held out to
+them by Essex revived the national enmities, the Spaniards really
+effected a landing: under Don Juan d'Aguilar they occupied Kinsale:
+and hoped not merely to become masters of Ireland but to cross from
+thence to their friends' assistance in England.
+
+Hence Queen Elizabeth, who perceived the connexion of these
+hostilities, now reverted to the necessity of carrying on the war
+again on a larger scale. Her view was chiefly directed to a new
+enterprise against Portugal: its separation from Castile she held to
+be the greatest European success that was possible: but she hoped to
+bring about a change in Italy as well: there Venice was to attack the
+nearest Spanish territories. When she called the Venetians to
+aid--among other things she wished also to obtain a loan from the
+government--she put them in mind how much her resistance to the
+Spanish monarchy had benefited the European commonwealth: hence it was
+that Spain had been prevented from carrying out her tyrannical views
+throughout the world, in the Netherlands and in Germany, in France and
+Italy; the Republic, which loved freedom, would recognise this.
+Elizabeth thought to resume the war, if possible, at the head of all
+that part of Europe which was opposed to Spain, and in league with
+Henry IV, with whom she negociated on this subject. In the beginning
+of 1603 a squadron was fitted out under Sir Richard Lawson to attack
+the coasts of the Pyrenean peninsula. Men discussed the comparative
+forces which the two kingdoms could bring into the field.
+
+But the Queen's days were already drawing to a close.
+
+In February 1603 the Venetian secretary Scaramelli had an audience of
+her, and gives a report of it from which we see that she still
+completely preserved her wonted demeanour. He found the whole court,
+the leading ecclesiastics and the temporal dignitaries, assembled
+around her: they had been entertained with music. When he entered, the
+Queen rose in her usual rich attire, with a diadem of precious stones,
+almost encircled with pearls: rubies hung from her neck; and in her
+mien no one could detect any decay of her powers. 'It is time at
+last,' she said to the secretary, who wished to throw himself on his
+knees before her, while she raised him with both hands, 'it is time at
+last for the Republic to send its representative to a Queen by whom it
+has been always honoured.' The letter of the Republic was handed to
+her, and she gave it to the Secretary of State; after he had opened it
+and given it back to her again, she sat down to read it: it contained
+a complaint that Venetian ships had been seized by the English
+privateers, who then made all seas unsafe. The English nation, she
+then said, is not so small but that evil and thievish men may be found
+in it: while she promised enquiry and justice, she nevertheless
+reverted to her main point that she had received nothing from the
+republic during the forty-four years of her government but grievances
+and demands,--even the loan had been refused;--Venice had hitherto,
+contrary to her custom, not sent any embassy to her; not, she thought,
+because she was a woman, but through fear of other powers. Scaramelli
+answered that no temporal or even spiritual sovereign had any
+influence on the Republic in such matters; he ascribed the neglect to
+circumstances which no one could control. The Queen broke off: I do
+not know, she added, whether I have expressed myself in good Italian:
+I learned the language as a child, and think I have not forgotten it.
+After that serious address she again seemed gracious, and gave the
+secretary her hand to kiss, when she dismissed him. The next day
+commissioners were appointed to enquire into his grievances.[290]
+
+At that time the affairs of Ireland were once more occupying the
+Queen. The Spaniards had been compelled by Lord Mountjoy to leave the
+island; he had beaten them together with the Irish in a decisive
+action: but, despite his victory, many further conflicts took place,
+and the rebellion was not suppressed; Tyrone still maintained himself
+in the hills and woods of Ulster; and, as a return of the Spaniards
+was feared, Mountjoy too was at last disposed to come to an agreement
+with him. The Queen was in her inmost soul against this, for only
+fresh rebellions would be occasioned by it; she required an absolute
+surrender at discretion: if she once allowed the rebels to have their
+lives secured to them, she soon after retracted the concession. She
+even spoke of wishing to go to Ireland, in person; the impression
+produced by her presence would put an end to all revolt.
+
+But at this moment a sudden alteration was remarked in her: she no
+longer appeared at the festivities before Lent, which went off in an
+insignificant style. At first her seclusion was explained by the death
+of one of her ladies whom she loved, the Countess of Nottingham: but
+soon it could not be concealed that the Queen herself was seized with
+a dangerous illness: sleep and appetite began to fail her: she showed
+a deep melancholy. 'No,' she replied to one of the kinsmen of her
+mother's house, Robert Cary, who at that moment had come back to court
+and addressed friendly words to her about her health, 'No Robin, well
+I am not, my heart has been for some time oppressed and heavy;' she
+broke off with painful groans and sighing, hitherto unwonted in her,
+now no longer suppressed. It was manifest that mental distress
+accompanied the bodily decay.[291]
+
+Who has not heard of the ring which Elizabeth is said to have once
+given to the Earl of Essex with the promise that, if it were presented
+to her, she would show him mercy, whatever might have occurred: he
+had, so the tale runs, in his last distresses wished to send it her
+through the Countess of Nottingham: but she was prevented from giving
+it by her husband who was an enemy of Essex, and so he had to die
+without mercy: the Queen, to whom the Countess revealed this on her
+death bed, fell into despair over it. The ring is still shown, and
+indeed several rings are shown as the true one: as also the tradition
+itself is extant in two somewhat varying forms; attempts have been
+made to get rid of the improbabilities of the first by fresh fictions
+in the second.[292] They are both so late, and rest so completely on
+hearsay, that they can no longer stand before historical criticism.
+
+Nevertheless we cannot deny, as the reports in fact testify in several
+places, that the remembrance of Essex weighed on the Queen's soul. It
+must certainly have reminded her of him, that she was now brought back
+exactly to the course he had insisted on, namely a friendly agreement
+with the invincible Irish chief. She had allowed less imperious, more
+compliant, declarations to reach Ireland. But was the man a traitor,
+who had recommended a policy to which they had been forced to have
+recourse after such repeated efforts? Had he deserved his fate at her
+hands?[293] It was remarked that the anniversary of the day on which
+Essex two years before had suffered on the scaffold, Ash Wednesday,
+thrilled through her with heart-rending pain; the world seemed to her
+desolate, since he was no longer there; she imputed his guilt to the
+ambition, against which she had warned him, and which had misled him
+into steps, from the consequences of which she could not protect him.
+But had she not herself uttered the decisive word? She burst into
+self-accusing tears. Her distress may have been increased by finding
+that her statesmen no longer showed her the old devotion, the earlier
+absolute obedience. When they, as we know, had framed a formal theory
+for themselves, that they might act against an express command of the
+Queen, on the assumption of her general intention being directed to
+the public good, could the sharp-sighted, suspicious, sovereign fail
+to perceive it? Could she fail to remark the agitation as to her
+successor, which occupied all men's minds, while the reins were
+slipping from her hands? The people, on whose devotion she had from
+the first moment laid so much stress, and partly based her government,
+seemed after Essex' death to have become cold towards her.
+
+In every great life there comes a moment when the soul feels that it
+no longer lives in the present world, and draws back from it.
+
+Once more Elizabeth had the English Liturgy read in her room: there
+she sat afterwards day and night on the cushions with which it was
+covered, in deep silence, her finger on her mouth: she rejected physic
+with disdain.[294] Most said and believed she did not care to recover
+or to live any longer, that she wished to die. When she was at last
+got to bed, and had a moment left of consciousness and interest in the
+world, she had the members of her Privy Council summoned: she then
+either said to them directly that she held the King of Scotland to be
+her lawful and deserving successor, or she designated him in a way
+that left no doubt.[295]
+
+Amidst the prayers of the Archbishop of Canterbury, who was kneeling
+by her bed, she breathed her last.
+
+It is not merely the business of History to point out how far great
+personages have attained the ideals which float before the mind of
+man, or how far they have remained below them. It is almost more
+important for it to ascertain how far the universal interests, in the
+midst of which eminent characters appear, have been advanced by them,
+whether their inborn force was a match for the opposing elements,
+whether it allowed itself to be conquered by them or not. There never
+was a sovereign who maintained a conflict of world-wide importance
+amidst greater dangers and with greater success than Queen Elizabeth.
+Her grandfather had begun a political emancipation from the ruling
+influences of the continent, her father an ecclesiastical one:
+Elizabeth took up their task and accomplished it victoriously against
+Rome and against Spain, while her people had an ever-increasing part
+in public affairs, and thus entered into a new stage of development.
+Her memory is inseparably connected with the independence and power of
+England.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[274] Elizabeth to James VI, August 1588, in Rymer and Bruce 53.
+
+[275] Molino: 'Fu prudentissima nel governare diligente nel
+consultare, perche voleva assistere a tutti li negotii,
+perspicasissima nel provedere le cose ed accuratissima perche le
+deliberationi fatte fossero eseguite.'
+
+[276] One of her expressions was: 'He that placed her in that seat
+would preserve her in it.' Contemporary notice in Ellis, Letters ii.
+iii. 194.
+
+[277] Hentzner, Itinerarium 137.
+
+[278] De Maisse, in Prevost-Paradol, Mémoire sur Elizabeth et Henri
+IV. Séances et travaux de l'académie des sciences morales, tom. 34.
+
+[279] Ockland, in Strype iii. 2, 237: 'Somni perparcus, parce vinique
+cibique in mensa sumens, semper gravis atque modestus.'
+
+[280] Letter to a friend, in Strype iii. 2, 379. Certain true general
+notes upon the actions of Lord Burleigh, in Strype iii. 2, 505. A
+letter from Leicester is in existence, in which he tries to prove that
+William Cecil had obligations to his father and not merely to the
+Protector.
+
+[281] Naunton, Fragmenta regalia.
+
+[282] Sir H. Nicolas, Life and Times of Christopher Hatton,
+communicates (p. 30) fragments of the Queen's letters, which lead him
+to remark that the supposition of an immoral relation (which he
+elsewhere adopts) is refuted by them. The Queen inquires for instance,
+What is friendship? 'The union of two minds bound to each other by
+virtue. He is no more a friend who desires more than the other can
+reasonably grant.'
+
+[283] Herrera, Historia del mundo iii. 754.
+
+[284] Device made by the Earl of Essex: Devereux, Lives and Letters of
+the Devereux, Earls of Essex, ii. App. F.
+
+[285] Herrera complains at first of the 'ministros infideles' of the
+Queen: among them he names Essex.
+
+[286] In Winwood, Memorials i.
+
+[287] Rowland Whyte to Sir Robert Sidney, Michaelmass Day 1599 (the
+day after the Earl's arrival). Sidney Papers ii. 127.
+
+[288] 'I could not but see and feel what misery was near unto my
+country by the great power of such as are known indeed to be atheists
+papists and pensioners of the mortal enemies of this kingdom.'
+Confession to Ashton, in Devereux ii. 165.
+
+[289] 'As foreseeing that the rebel will never suffer the King to live
+or reign, who might permit or take revenge of the treason and
+rebellion.' In Campbell, Lives of the Lord Chancellors ii. 199.
+
+[290] Dispaccio di Carlo Scaramelli 19 Feb. 1603 (Venetian Archives).
+
+[291] Memoirs of Robert Cary 116.
+
+[292] The first appears in Aubery's Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire
+de Hollande 1687, 214; with another apocryphal tale about finding the
+bones of Edward IV's children as early as Elizabeth's time. Aubery
+asserts that he heard the history of the ring from his father's mouth,
+who had heard it from Prince Maurice of Orange, to whom it had been
+communicated by the English ambassador Carleton. According to him the
+Queen then took to her bed, dressed as she was, sprang from it a
+hundred times during the night, and starved herself to death. Who does
+not, in reading this, feel himself in a sphere of wild romance? Lady
+Spelman has tried to clear away the improbability involved in it, that
+Essex should have applied to the wife of one of his enemies, by making
+Essex give the ring to a boy passing by, who was to give it, not to
+the Countess of Nottingham, but to her sister, and then mistook the
+two ladies.
+
+[293] Scaramelli, 27 March: 'per occasione del perdono finalmente
+fatto al conte di Tirone cadde in una consideratione, che il conte di
+Esses gia tanto suo intimo di cuore fosse morto innocente.'
+
+[294] Letter of the French ambassador from London, 3rd April 1603.
+'C'est la verité que delors, qu'elle se sentit atteinte du mal, elle
+dit de vouloir mourir.' Villeroy, Mémoires d'estat iii. 212. Cary:
+'The Queen grew worse and worse, because she would be so.' Compare
+Sloane MS. in Ellis iii. 194.
+
+[295] Scaramelli writes to his Signoria 7th April (New Style) what was
+said during those days: 'La regina nel fine della infirmita et della
+vita dopo haver dormito alcune poche hore ritornata di sana mente
+conoscendosi moribonda il primo di Aprile corr. fece chiamare i
+signori del regio consiglio--e commandava loro,--che la corona
+pervenisse al Più meritevole ch'ella ha trovato sempre nel suo secreto
+esser il Re di Scotia cosi per il dritto della successione, che per
+esserne Più degno che non è stata lei, poiche egli è nato re et ella
+privata--egli le portera un regno et ella non porta altro che se
+stessa donna.' Without quite accepting this, we must not pass it over.
+Winwood too writes to Tremouille: 'le jour avant son trespas elle
+declara pour son successeur le roy d'Escosse.' Mémoires i. 461.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK IV.
+
+FOUNDATION OF THE KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN. FIRST DISTURBANCES UNDER
+THE STUARTS.
+
+
+Under no dynasty in the world have great national changes been so
+dependent on the personal aims of princes as in England under the
+Tudors. Just as all Henry VIII's subsequent proceedings were
+determined by the affair of the divorce, so also the policy of his
+three children was due to the relations into which they were thrown by
+their birth.
+
+No one however could derive the course of English history at this
+epoch from this cause alone. How could Henry VIII have even thought of
+detaching his kingdom from the Roman See, but for the ancient and
+deep-seated national opposition to its encroachments? But the nation
+had also for ages had manifold and deep sympathies with Rome; and Mary
+Tudor allied herself with these. Together with subjective personal
+agencies, national influences of universal prevalence were at work.
+The different leanings of the sovereigns appear as exponents of
+opposite tendencies already existing in the nation. The struggle
+between these was decided when, as in the reign of Elizabeth, the most
+vigorous nature combined with the most powerful interests and the most
+influential motives to gain the mastery, although others of a
+different character were still by no means suppressed.
+
+Now however the energetic race of the Tudors had disappeared from the
+throne. By the right of natural inheritance another family ascended
+it, which had its roots and associations in Scotland, the crown of
+which country it united with that of England. If a long time elapsed
+before the English commonwealth was as closely attached to the new
+dynasty as it had been to the old, under which it had developed; so
+it is also clear that the point of view from which this dynasty
+started could not be exactly the same as that which had hitherto
+prevailed. This could not be expected under a prince who had already
+reigned for a quarter of a century and had long ago taken up, in his
+native country, a firm position with regard to the great conflicts of
+the age. This position we must first of all endeavour to represent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+JAMES VI OF SCOTLAND: HIS ACCESSION TO THE THRONE OF ENGLAND.
+
+
+_Origin of fresh dissension in the Church._
+
+Our eyes again turn to the man to whom the last great religious and
+political change in Scotland is mainly due--John Knox.
+
+We find him, propped on his staff and supported on the other side by a
+helping arm, stepping homewards from the church where he had once more
+performed a religious service: the multitude of the faithful lined the
+road, and greeted him with reverence. He could no longer walk alone,
+or raise his voice as before; it was only in a more confined space
+that he used still to gather a little congregation round him, to whom
+on appointed days and at fixed hours he proclaimed the teaching of the
+Gospel with unabated fire. He lived to hear of the wildest outbursts
+of the struggle on the continent, and to pronounce his curse on the
+King of France, who had taken part in the massacre of St. Bartholomew;
+but, in one respect, he was more fortunate than Luther, who in his
+last days was threatened with mischief from hostile elements about him
+which he could not control; for around John Knox all was peace. He
+thanked God for having granted him grace, that by his means the Gospel
+was preached throughout Scotland in its simplicity and truth: he now
+desired nothing more than to depart out of this miserable life; and
+thus, without pain, in November 1572, after bearing the burden and
+heat of the day, he fell asleep.
+
+With him and his contemporaries the second generation of the reformers
+came to an end. They had fought out the battle against the papacy, and
+had established the foundations of a divergent system: now however a
+third generation arose, which had to encounter violent storms within
+the pale of the new confession itself.
+
+In Scotland the Regents Mar and Morton now thought it necessary, even
+for the sake of the constitution, in which the higher clergy formed an
+important element, to restore episcopacy, which had been laid low in
+the tumult of the times; and to fill the vacant offices with
+Protestant clergy, appointed however in the old way, by the election
+of the chapters on the recommendation of the Government: it was
+desired at the same time to invest them with the power of ordination
+and a certain jurisdiction. Knox was at least not hostile to this
+measure. The resolution to convene an assembly of the Church at Leith
+was formed while he was still alive, and was ratified by Parliament in
+January 1573.
+
+But in the Church, which had formed itself in perfect independence by
+means of free association, this project, which besides was spoiled by
+many blunders in the execution, necessarily provoked strong
+opposition. Andrew Melville may be regarded as Knox's successor in the
+exercise of the authority of leader; a man of wide learning, who had
+in his composition still more of the professor than of the preacher,
+and united convictions not less firm than those of Knox with an equal
+gift of eloquence. He however on principle excluded episcopacy in any
+form from the constitution, as, in his opinion, the Scriptures
+recognised only individual bishops: he especially disapproved of the
+connexion between the bishops and the crown. The spiritual and the
+temporal powers he considered to be distinct kinds of authority, of
+which the one was as much of divine right as the other. But he did not
+regard the clergy or ministry of preaching as alone charged with
+spiritual authority: he thought that the lay elders formed the basis
+of this authority: that, once elected, they were permanent, had
+themselves a spiritual rank, watched over the purity of doctrine, took
+the lead in the call of the preachers, and, together with these,
+formed assemblies by whose conclusions every member of the
+congregation was bound. A General Assembly erected on this basis had
+the legislative authority in the Church, with the right of visitation
+and of spiritual correction. It was incumbent on the King to protect
+them; but he was amenable to their sentence. Such is the discipline
+laid down in the Second Book, which was approved in the year 1578, in
+a General Assembly, of which Melville was Moderator.[296]
+
+With these opposite principles before his eyes, the young King grew
+up. He showed himself to be imbued with the reformed doctrine, but he
+was decidedly averse to this form of church government, which created
+a power in the nation intended to counterbalance and withstand that of
+the monarch. The political views of his teachers, highly popular as
+they were, awoke in him, as was natural, the inborn feelings of a
+king. He longed with all his soul for the restoration of episcopacy,
+which, according to his view, was of almost chief importance for both
+Crown and Church.
+
+This was indeed a different strife from the battle between Catholicism
+and Protestantism, which filled the rest of the world: but they had
+points of contact with one another, inasmuch as the reform of doctrine
+had almost everywhere put an end to episcopal government. And the
+larger conflict was constantly exercising fresh influence on the state
+of the question in Scotland.
+
+When the Catholic party was on the point of becoming master of the
+young King, the Protestant lords, as has been mentioned above, gained
+possession of his person by the Raid of Ruthven. They were the
+champions of Presbyterianism in the Church; but as they had been
+overthrown, and overthrown moreover in consequence of the support
+which the King received from an ambassador friendly to the Guises,
+that form of government could not survive their fall. In the
+Parliament of 1584, which obeyed the wishes of the ruling powers,
+enactments distinctly opposed to it were passed. By these the
+constitution of the Three Estates united in Parliament was ratified.
+They forbade any one to attack the Estates either collectively or
+singly, and therefore to attack the bishops. No meeting in which
+resolutions should be taken about temporal or even about spiritual
+affairs was to be held without the King's approval: no jurisdiction
+was to be exercised which was not acknowledged by the King and the
+Estates. The judicial power of the King over all subjects and in all
+causes, and therefore even in spiritual causes, was therein expressly
+confirmed.
+
+At that time however Jesuits and Seminarists effected an entrance into
+Scotland as well as into other countries, and produced a great effect:
+Father Gordon especially, who belonged to one of the most
+distinguished families in the country, that of the Earls of Huntly,
+was exceedingly active; and for two months the King allowed his
+presence at court. Who could guarantee that the young prince would not
+be entirely carried away by this current when his chief counsellor,
+with whom the final decision mainly rested, belonged to the party of
+the Guises?[297] A great reward was offered to him: he was to be
+married to an archduchess; and at some future day, after the victory
+had been won, he was to be raised to the throne of England and
+Scotland. When we take into consideration that Melville, who set
+himself to oppose this influence, had spent ten years at Geneva and
+among the Huguenots, we see plainly how the struggles which distracted
+the continent threatened to invade Scotland as well.
+
+
+_Alliance with England._
+
+In this danger Queen Elizabeth, who for her own sake did not venture
+to allow matters to go so far, resolved to interfere more actively in
+the affairs of Scotland than she had hitherto done. It is not
+perfectly clear what share her government had in the return of the
+exiled Protestant lords, whose attack had compelled King James to
+allow the conviction for high treason of his former minister and
+favourite, who fled to France in consequence. But their return was
+certainly welcome to her; and she advised the King not to alienate
+the great men of his kingdom, that is to say the returned lords, from
+his own side. In the instructions to her ambassador it is expressly
+said that he should aim at withholding the King from any alliance with
+the League in France, which was then growing powerful. She had just
+determined to make open war upon the King of Spain, who guided all the
+proceedings of the League; what could be more important for her than
+to retain the King of one division of the island on her own side? For
+that object she need not require him to support the Presbyterians; his
+point of view was the same which she contended for in the Netherlands
+and in France, and very closely akin to her own.
+
+She had besides a great reward to offer him. Distasteful as it was to
+her to speak of her successor, she then determined to give the King
+the assurance that nothing should be done which was prejudicial to his
+claim, and she agreed to a secret acknowledgment of it.[298] Her
+ambassador gave expression to these views in Scotland, and she herself
+spoke in similar terms to the Scottish ambassador in England.
+
+The acceptance of these overtures by King James was the decisive event
+of his life. He was not so blind as not to see that any promise on the
+part of England, although not binding in regular form, afforded a kind
+of certainty entirely different from all the assurances of the League,
+however comprehensive. The Queen moreover pledged herself to a subsidy
+that was very acceptable to the poverty of the Scots, while her
+protection served the King himself as a stay against his nobles, whom
+he dared not alienate, but on whom he could not allow himself to be
+dependent.
+
+Thus in July 1586 an offensive and defensive alliance was concluded at
+Berwick between the King and Queen in order to protect the religion
+adopted in their dominions, which, in the language of the Prayer-book,
+they termed the 'Catholic,' and to repel, not only every invasion, but
+every attempt on the person of their majesties or their subjects,
+without regard to any ties of blood or relationship. The King promised
+the Queen to come to her assistance with all his forces in the event
+of any attack on the Northern counties, and not to allow his subjects
+to support any hostile movements which might take place in Ireland.
+Every word shows how absolutely and entirely in the events that were
+at hand he identifies the interests of England with his own.[299]
+
+It was of more especial advantage to the Queen that James entirely
+renounced the cause of his mother. He had exerted himself in her
+behalf, but his intercession never went beyond the limits of friendly
+representation. Mary's secret resignation of her claims in favour of
+Philip II had certainly not been unknown to him; he complained on one
+occasion that she threatened him on his throne and was as little
+attached to him as to the Queen of England. He loudly condemned her
+conspiracies against Elizabeth and gave utterance to the unfeeling
+remark that she might drain the cup which she had mixed for herself.
+At the trial of his mother he was content with obtaining an assurance
+from the English Parliament, which was of great importance to him,
+that his rights should not be impaired by her condemnation. The claims
+to the English throne which brought Mary to destruction rather served
+to strengthen her son, as it threw him altogether on the side of the
+English system.[300]
+
+On the approach of the Spanish armada James at once placed his power
+and his person at the disposal of the Queen. He assured her that he
+would behave not as a foreign prince, but as if he were her son and a
+citizen of her realm. With unusual decision he put himself at the head
+of the Protestant nobles, and pursued the Catholic lords who gave ear
+to those Spanish overtures which he had resisted.
+
+He now sought for a wife in a Protestant family. With the concurrence,
+if not at the instigation, of the English ministers, he solicited the
+hand of a daughter of Frederick II, King of Denmark, whom Elizabeth
+had praised for adhering to the general interests of the Protestant
+world. In this enterprise James was influenced by the consideration
+that if any other state opposed his claims on England, Denmark with
+its naval power could afford him substantial assistance. A touch of
+romance is imparted to his youth by the circumstance that he set out
+in person to fetch home his bride, who was detained in Norway by
+contrary winds, and who had been promised to him by her mother after
+her father's death. Their marriage was celebrated at Opslo (Nov. 23,
+1589), but their homeward voyage was now attended with difficulty;
+James therefore took his wife over the snow-clad mountains and the
+Sound, back to her mother to Kronborg and Copenhagen, and spent a
+couple of months there. He had many conversations with the divines of
+the country, during which the idea of an union of both Protestant
+confessions was mooted. He also paid a visit to Tycho Brahe on the
+island of Hveen, which gave him indescribable pleasure: he believed
+that in his company he fathomed the marvels of the universe, and
+lauded the astronomer in spirited Latin verse as the friend of Urania,
+and as the master of the starry world.[301] And a general influence
+was exercised in Europe both by his alliance with the house of
+Oldenburg, and the connexion which he formed through it with many of
+the most distinguished families in Germany. His consort was niece of
+the Elector of Saxony, sister-in-law of the Elector of Brandenburg,
+and granddaughter of the German Nestor, Ulric of Mecklenburg. Her
+sister had just married Henry Julius Duke of Brunswick; at whose
+marriage, which was celebrated at Cronberg, a company of North German
+princes met together, which seemed like one single family. But the
+days of this assemblage were not occupied with banquets and
+festivities alone. To the impression which was then made on James may
+be traced the despatch of an embassy to the Temporal Electors of the
+Empire, which he deputed soon after his return to invite them to
+mediate between England and Spain. If the King of Spain were
+disinclined for peace, he thought that a powerful alliance should be
+formed against him for the maintenance of religion.
+
+For such an alliance as this, England and Scotland seemed to offer a
+centre. In an assemblage of the clergy, the King had once
+congratulated himself on living at a time when the light of the Gospel
+was shining; and in the same spirit his Chancellor gave Lord Burleigh
+to understand, that this British microcosm, severed from the rest of
+the world, but united internally by language, religion, and the
+friendship of its princes, could best oppose the bloodthirstiness of
+an anti-Christian League.[302]
+
+
+_Renewal of the Episcopal Constitution in Scotland._
+
+In Scotland, as well as elsewhere, the waves of the all-prevailing
+struggle kept raging.
+
+Embassies went backwards and forwards between Spain and the powerful
+lords, Huntly, Errol and Angus, who kept alive Catholicism in the
+Highlands; and a plan was formed to assemble a force of Scots and
+Spaniards in Scotland, which should first overthrow the forces of that
+country, and thence advance into England.[303] King James at least
+believed that he had gathered a definite statement to this effect from
+an examination of those who had been arrested. Philip the Second's
+design of getting the crown of France into his own family would have
+been powerfully seconded by this undertaking, by which it was designed
+to treat Great Britain in the same way. In the beginning of 1593 we
+find James at Aberdeen engaged on a campaign against the Highlands:
+the lesser nobles and the Protestants were on his side: the great
+earls were driven back into the most remote districts as far as
+Caithness, and the larger part of their domains fell into the hands of
+the King. But they were not yet entirely conquered, and the next
+Parliament showed that they had the greater part of the nobility on
+their side. No one wished to be too severe on them;[304] even the
+legal advisers of the crown recommended the King not to commence a
+suit against them, in which they might probably be acquitted. It is
+impossible to describe the displeasure which affected Elizabeth on
+this turn of affairs, which she ascribed to the pusillanimous and
+negligent government of James. Did he not know, she asked, that the
+religion of the rebels was only a cloak for treason? Would he trust
+men who had so often betrayed him? He could never expect them to keep
+their plighted faith in the future, if their great offences in the
+past were not even acknowledged: a lax government set all turbulent
+spirits in motion, and led to shipwreck. With this advice, and similar
+suggestions from the clergy, came the news of fresh commotion. Francis
+Stuart, who had been made Earl of Bothwell by James, but who after
+this had given great trouble by frequently changing sides, had now
+joined the Catholic lords; and a plan had been concerted between them
+to deal with James as they had formerly dealt with his mother, to make
+him prisoner, and to put the prince just born to him in his place. At
+last in September 1594 we find the King again in the field. The young
+Argyle, whom he sent before him as his lieutenant, was met by the
+earls in open fight, but they did not venture to encounter the King
+himself. He took Strathbogie, the splendid seat of the Earls of
+Huntly; Slaines, the principal castle of the Earls of Errol; some
+strongholds in Angus; Newton, a castle of the Gordons; and had most of
+them razed. Even in these districts he proceeded at last to erect a
+regular government in the name of the King. His superiority was so
+decided that the earls left Scotland in the spring of 1595; Father
+Gordon also followed them reluctantly, after he had once more said
+mass at Elgin. But even this was not such a defeat of the Catholic
+party as might have been followed by their annihilation. The earls
+felt the hardships of exile with double force from the loss of the
+consideration which they had enjoyed at home; and when they offered
+their submission to the King, and satisfaction to the Scottish Church,
+James and his Privy Council were quite ready to accede to their offer:
+for they thought that disunion with his most powerful lieges lessened
+the reputation of the crown, and might be very dangerous at some
+future time if the throne of England became vacant; as these important
+personages might then, like Coriolanus, side with the enemy.
+
+The only question now was, how the Presbyterian Church would regard
+this. James had come to a general understanding with the Church, when
+they made common cause against the League. In the year 1592 an
+agreement was arrived at, by which the King gave a general recognition
+to Presbyterianism, although he still left some grave questions
+undecided; for instance, that of the rights of the Crown, and the
+General Assemblies. But in proportion as he now gave intimation of a
+retrograde tendency in favour of the Catholic lords, he roused the
+prejudices of the Protestants against himself. They told him that the
+lords had been condemned to death according to the laws of God, and by
+the sentence of Parliament, the Great Assize of the kingdom: that the
+King had no right to show mercy in opposition to these. He had allowed
+their return into the country; the Church demanded the renewal of
+their exile: not till then would it be possible to deliberate upon the
+satisfaction offered by them. All the pulpits suddenly resounded with
+invectives against the King. The proud feeling of independent
+existence was roused in all its force in the breasts of the churchmen.
+Andrew Melville explicitly declared, that there were two kingdoms in
+Scotland, of which the Church formed one: in that kingdom the
+sovereign was in his turn a subject; those who had to govern this
+spiritual realm possessed a sufficient authorisation from God for the
+discharge of their functions. The Privy Council might be of opinion
+that the King must be served alike by Jews and heathens, Protestants
+and Catholics, and become powerful by their aid; but in wishing to
+retain both parties he would lose both. The King forced himself to ask
+support for his projects from Robert Bruce, at that time the most
+prominent of the preachers, who answered him, that he might make his
+choice, but that he could not have both the Earl of Huntly and Robert
+Bruce for his friends at the same time.[305]
+
+By dealing gently with the Catholic lords the King had intended not
+only to win them over to his side, but also in prospect of the English
+succession, which was constantly before his eyes, to give the English
+Catholics a proof of the moderation of his intentions. Even in
+Scotland he wished not to appear the sovereign of the Presbyterian
+party alone. It was absolutely repugnant to him to adopt the ideas of
+the Church entirely as his own. But the leaders of the Church were
+bent on shutting him within a narrow circle in accordance with their
+own ideas, from which there should be no escape. In his clemency to
+Catholic rebels they saw a leaning to that Catholicism which fought
+against God and threatened themselves with destruction. The efforts
+which had been necessary to overpower these adversaries, and the
+obligations under which they had laid the King himself during the
+struggle, inspired them with resolution to bind him to their system by
+every means in their power.
+
+But as the King also adhered to his own views, a conflict now broke
+out between them which holds a very important place in the history of
+the State as well as of the Church of Scotland.
+
+The King ordered the Commissioners of the Church, who made demands so
+distasteful to him, to leave the capital. The preachers then turned to
+the people. From the pulpit Robert Bruce set before an already excited
+congregation the danger into which the ecclesiastical commonwealth had
+fallen owing to the return of the Catholic lords and the indulgence
+vouchsafed to them; and invited those present to pledge themselves by
+holding up their hands to the defence of their religion on its present
+footing. They not only gave him their assent, but went so far as to
+make a tumultuous rush for the council-house in which the King was
+sitting with some members of the Privy Council and the Lords of
+Session. With difficulty was the tumult so far quieted as to allow
+James to retire to Holyrood.[306] Here a demand was laid before him to
+remove his councillors, to allow the commissioners to resume their
+functions, and to banish the lords again from the country. It was
+intended that religious profession should supply a rule for the
+guidance of the State.
+
+But in political conflicts nothing is more dangerous than to overstep
+the law by any act of violence. It was the violence attempted by the
+leaders of the Presbyterians against the King, their attack on the
+rights of his crown, that procured him the means of resistance. He
+betook himself with his court to Linlithgow and there collected the
+nobles, who for the most part stood by him, the borderers, whose
+leaders the Humes and Kerrs took up arms for him, and bodies of
+Highlanders, a force to which the magistrates succumbed, not wishing
+their city to be destroyed; so that even the ministers thought it
+advisable to leave. On New-Year's Day 1597 James made his entry with a
+warlike retinue into Edinburgh, where a convention of the Estates met
+and passed decisive resolutions in his favour. Both the provost and
+baillies of the town were obliged to take a new oath of fealty by
+which they bound themselves to suffer no insults to the King and his
+councillors from the pulpit: and it was resolved that the citizens
+should henceforth submit the magistrates of their choice to the King
+for his approval. The right of deposing the ministers was assigned to
+the King, who was acknowledged sole judge of all offences, even of
+those committed in sermons and public worship.[307]
+
+The King had now the Temporal Estates on his side; for however popular
+the footing on which the Presbyterian Church might be constituted, no
+one wished to give it uncontrolled sway. King James was able to form
+plans for transforming its constitution in such a manner as to make
+it consistent with the authority of the crown.
+
+A series of questions which he dedicated to the consideration of the
+public was well calculated to further his end. He asked whether the
+external regimen of the Church might not be controlled both by King
+and clergy, and the legislative power be vested in them in common.
+Might not the King, as a religious and pious magistrate, have the
+power of summoning General Assemblies? Might he not annul unjust
+sentences of excommunication? Might he not interfere if the clergy
+neglected their duties, or if the bounds of the two jurisdictions
+became doubtful.
+
+At the next assembly of the Church at Perth (Feb. 1597) the current
+set in the opposite direction. 'Mine eyes,' so says one of the most
+zealous adherents of the Church, 'witnessed a new sight, preachers
+going into the King's palace sometimes by night, sometimes in the
+morning,--mine ears heard new sounds.' The greatest pains had been
+taken to secure the presence of a number of ministers from the
+northern provinces, who were still more anxious about the spread of
+their doctrines than about controversies touching the constitution of
+the Church; and who rather reproached the clergy of the southern
+counties with having taken on themselves the government of the Church.
+But even among the latter the King, who spared neither threats nor
+flatteries, won adherents. Moreover an opinion gained ground that
+concessions must be made to him, as far as conscience allowed, in
+order not to alienate him entirely from the Church or drive him to
+take the opposite side. The answers to his questions contained
+admissions. The right of taking the initiative in everything relating
+to the external government of the Church was conceded to him, together
+with a share in the nomination of ministers in the principal towns;
+properly speaking the patronage of the Church in these towns was made
+over to him. The Church itself made a most important concession in
+renouncing its right of using the pulpit to attack the crown.
+Henceforward no one was to venture to impugn the measures of the King,
+until an officer of the Church had made a remonstrance to him on the
+subject. And the same ideas prevailed also in the subsequent
+assemblies at Dundee and Perth. The former of these conceded to the
+King a share in all the business which the Church took in hand; it
+allowed him to stay the proceedings of the Presbyteries when they ran
+counter to the royal jurisdiction or to recognised rights. In Dundee
+the excommunicated lords were admitted to a reconciliation and
+acknowledged as true vassals of the King, after making a declaration
+by which they acknowledged the Scottish to be the true Church;
+although the stricter party would not even then forgive them. But the
+point of chief importance was that the King succeeded in getting a
+Commission formed to co-operate with him in maintaining peace and
+obedience in the kingdom. Invested with full powers by the Church but
+dependent on the King, this Commission procured him a preponderating
+influence in all ecclesiastical affairs. For the most part it
+consisted of men of moderate views.
+
+There is a contemporary narrative of the decay of the Church in
+Scotland which begins from this date. For here, it was thought, ended
+the period during which the word revealed from Sinai and Zion to the
+apostles and prophets was the only rule of doctrine and Church
+discipline without any mixture of Babylon or the City of the Seven
+Hills, or of policy of man's devising; when the Church was 'Beautiful
+as the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the sun, terrible as an
+army with banners.'
+
+James, who regarded all this as due merely to the opposition of
+enemies, went on his way without bestowing further consideration on
+the depth, strength, and inward significance of this spirit which was
+destined once more to agitate the world. He again took up in serious
+earnest the design of erecting a Protestant episcopacy which had been
+entertained by Mar and Morton. Not only was this necessary for the
+constitution but for the sake of the clergy also: as George Gladstaine
+explained before a large assembly at Dundee, it was desirable that
+they should take part in the exercise of the legislative power. A
+small majority, but still a majority, in this assembly decided in
+favour of the proposal. The King assured them that he wished neither
+for a Papistical nor for an English prelacy; he wished only that the
+best clergy should take cognizance of the affairs of the Church in the
+council of the nation. In order to unite both interests he desired
+that the General Assembly should propose to the King six candidates
+for each vacancy and should have the right of giving instructions to
+the King's nominee for his Parliamentary action, and of demanding an
+account from him of his execution of the same. The King esteemed it a
+great triumph when in the Parliament of 1600 he was able actually to
+introduce two bishops whom he had nominated with the concurrence of a
+Commission of the Synods.
+
+It appears a general result worth noticing that he had again brought
+both parties in the country into subjection to the crown, the one
+however by open battle, the other by compliance which had somewhat the
+air of inclination towards it.
+
+
+_Preparations for the Succession to the English Throne._
+
+That the former of these parties was properly speaking Protestant, and
+the latter in its sentiment Catholic, created a certain feeling of
+surprise. Queen Elizabeth, who had been attacked and insulted by the
+Presbyterians sometimes even from the pulpit, could not find fault
+with the crown for liberating itself from the ascendancy of the new
+Church as it had done from that of the old: on the contrary she had
+expressly approved of this policy; but she warned the King not to
+allow himself to be so blinded by personal preference as again to put
+confidence in any traitor, and not to separate himself from the flock
+which must fight for him if he wished to stand. In the case of
+Scotland, as well as in the case of her own dominions, she always kept
+before her eyes the contrast between the Catholic and the Protestant
+principle, in comparison with which all other differences appeared to
+her subordinate.
+
+In his own views less rigid and consistent, King James had on the
+contrary even made advances to the Papacy. He at one time found it
+advisable to enter into relations with Pope Clement VIII, whose
+behaviour about the absolution of Henry IV showed that he did not at
+least belong to the party of Spain and the zealots. A letter to the
+Pope was forwarded from the Scottish cabinet addressing him as Holy
+Father, with the signature of the King as his obedient son. A Scot, by
+profession a Catholic, afterwards made the statement that, at the time
+when Pope Clement was encamped before Ferrara, he had been sent to him
+in order to seek his friendship, and to promise him religious liberty
+for the Catholics if King James should ascend the English throne.[308]
+
+According to the account of King James himself Pope Clement invited
+him to return to the Catholic faith; to whom he made answer, that the
+prevailing controversies might be again submitted to a general
+council; and that to the decision of such a council he would submit
+himself unconditionally. Clement replied that he need not speak of a
+council, for at Rome no one would hear of it; that the King had better
+remain as he was. These transactions are still enveloped in doubt and
+obscurity: the announcements of pretended agents cannot be depended
+on. There were often men who did not fully share in the secret and who
+in consequence far outran their commission.[309] But it cannot be
+denied that there were attempts at an approximation. Among the English
+refugees after Mary's death two parties had arisen, one of which
+supported the Spanish claims, while the other was quite ready to
+acknowledge King James supposing that some concessions were made.
+Every day men who were inclined to Catholicism were seen rising into
+favour at the Scottish court. It was remarked that the Secretary of
+State, the Lord Justice, and the tutors of the royal children, were
+Catholics. Queen Anne of Scotland does not deny that many attempts
+were made to bring her back to the old religion: though she assures us
+that she did not hearken to them, it is notwithstanding undeniable
+that she felt a strong impulse in that direction. She received relics
+which were sent her from Rome, probably from superstition rather than
+from reverence for the saints, but at all events she received them.
+Her intimate friend, the Countess of Huntly, who often shared the same
+bed with the Queen, fostered these views in her. King James remained
+unaffected by them. He attended sermons three times a week; he was
+riveted to Protestantism by convictions which rest on learning: but
+how did it come to pass that he allowed these deviations from
+Protestantism about him? Was it from weakness and connivance, or was
+it from policy?
+
+With the English Catholics also he established a connexion. Offers and
+conditions with a view to his succession were put before him; and
+English Catholics presented themselves at his court in order to
+proceed with the business or to maintain the connexion.
+
+All this threw Queen Elizabeth into a state of great excitement. It
+was insufferable to her that any one should even speak of her death,
+or, as she said, celebrate her funeral beforehand. But now when James
+without her knowledge formed relations with her subjects, she regarded
+his conduct as an affront. Through her ambassador in Scotland she had
+an English agent named Ashfield arrested, and gained possession of his
+papers. Great irritation on both sides ensued, of which the
+above-mentioned correspondence between the King and Queen gives
+evidence. In angry letters the latter complained of the disparaging
+expressions which James had let fall in his Parliament. In respectful
+language but with unusual emphasis the King complained that the
+accusations of an adventurer charging him with a plot against the life
+of the Queen were not repressed in England with proper severity. A
+period followed during which James expected nothing but further acts
+of hostility from Elizabeth's ministers. He pretended to know that the
+claims to the throne advanced by his cousin the Lady Arabella,
+daughter of Charles Darnley, the younger brother of his father Henry,
+who had the advantage of not being a foreigner, supplied them with a
+motive for their proceedings. He even thought it possible that a book
+published by Parsons under the name of Doleman, which maintained the
+claims of Isabella daughter of King Philip, was inspired by the
+English ministers themselves in order to throw his rights into the
+background. He ascribed to them the intention of coming to an
+agreement with the Spaniards to his disadvantage, only in order to
+maintain their own power.
+
+So far the dislikes of King James and the Earl of Essex coincided.
+Although a formal understanding between them cannot be proved, they
+were nevertheless allies up to the point of regarding the Queen's
+ministers as their enemies.
+
+Very significant were the instructions which James gave to an embassy
+which he despatched to England after the downfall of the Earl. His
+ambassadors were directed to ascertain whether the popular discontent
+went so far as to contemplate the overthrow of the Queen and her
+ministers, in which case they were to take care that the people
+'invoked no other saint,' i.e. sought protection and support from no
+one else but him. Above all he wished to be assured with regard to the
+capital that it would acknowledge his right: he wished to form ties
+with the leading men in the civic and learned corporations; the
+greater and lesser nobles who inclined to him were to have early
+information what to do in certain contingencies, and to keep
+themselves under arms. As he had always thought it possible that he
+might require naval assistance from Denmark, so now he instigated a
+sort of free confederation of the magnates and barons of Scotland:
+they were to prepare their military retainers in order to enforce his
+rights. Not that he had formed any design against the Queen, but he
+believed that after her death he must give battle to her ministers in
+order to gain the crown, and he appeared determined not to decline the
+contest.
+
+In reality however this mode of action was foreign to his nature. How
+often he had said that a man must let fruit ripen before plucking it:
+and a foreign prince, to whose sayings he attached great value, had
+advised him to proceed by the safest path. This was the Grand Duke
+Ferdinand of Tuscany, who then played a certain part in Europe, as he
+had set on foot the alliance between Henry IV and the Pope in
+opposition to Spain: Mary de' Medici, Queen of France, was his niece.
+With the house of Stuart also he stood on the footing of a relation:
+his consort, like the mother of King James, was a scion of the house
+of Lorraine, and a marriage at some future day between the King's
+eldest son and the daughter of the Grand Duke was already talked of.
+This relationship, and Ferdinand's reputation for great political
+far-sightedness and prudence, caused his advice to exercise great
+influence on James's decisions, as James himself tells us. So long as
+victory wavered between Essex and his opponents, or, as he conceived,
+between the existing government and the people, James did not declare
+himself: when the issue was decided he gave his policy a different
+direction and made advances to the ruling ministers, whom up to this
+time he had regarded as his enemies.
+
+They were quite ready and willing to meet him. Robert Cecil asserted
+later that he had by this means best provided for the safety and
+repose of the Queen, for that by an alliance between the government
+and the heir to the crown the jealousy of the Queen was best appeased:
+yet still he observed the closest secrecy with regard to it. It is
+known that he dismissed a secretary because he feared that he might
+see through the scheme and then betray it. He thought that he was
+justified in keeping the Queen in ignorance of a connexion that could
+only be distasteful to her at her advanced age, which had deepened the
+suspicion natural to her disposition, although at the same time this
+connexion was indispensable for her repose. These ministers were
+tolerably independent in their general conduct of affairs. They had
+embarked on other negotiations also without the knowledge of the
+Queen; they thought such conduct quite permissible, if it conduced to
+the advantage of England. And was not Robert Cecil moreover bound to
+seize an opportunity of calming the prejudices of the King of Scotland
+against himself and his house, which dated from his father's
+participation in the fate of Queen Mary? This was the only way of
+enabling him to prolong his authority beyond the death of his
+mistress, with which it would otherwise have expired.
+
+The letters are extant which were exchanged in these secret
+transactions between Henry Howard, whom the Secretary of State
+employed as his instrument, and a minister of King James. They are not
+so instructive as might have been expected; for the Asiatic style of
+Howard, which serves him as a mask, throws a veil even over much which
+we should like to know. But they now and then open a view into the
+movements of parties, especially in reference to the opposition of
+Cecil and his friends to Raleigh and Cobham, which towards the close
+of the Queen's reign filled the court with suppressed uneasiness.
+
+The intercourse which had been opened certainly had the effect of once
+more putting England and Scotland on a friendly footing. One of his
+most trusty councillors, Ludovic Earl of Lennox, son of that Esmé
+Stuart who at one time had stood so high in the King's esteem, was
+sent by James on a mission to the Queen, in order to convince her of
+his continued attachment;[310] and this ambassador in fact found
+favour with her. James declared himself ready to send his Highlanders
+to the assistance of the Queen in Ireland, and to enter as a third
+party into the alliance with France against Spain, if it were brought
+about. He did not hesitate to give her information of the advances
+which had been made by the other side, even by the Roman court. Among
+these he mentioned a mission of James Lindsay for the purpose of
+bringing him to promise toleration to the Catholics. It may be doubted
+whether it is altogether true, as he affirms, that he declined the
+proposal: but the Roman records attest that Lindsay in fact could get
+nothing from him but words.[311]
+
+It is enough to remark that on the whole the views of James were again
+brought into harmony with those of the Queen: but that does not mean
+that he had also broken off all relations with the other side. It
+would have been extremely dangerous for him if Pope Clement had
+pronounced against him the excommunication which was suspended over
+Elizabeth, and he was very grateful to the Pope for not going so far.
+And if he would not agree to treat the Catholics with genuine
+toleration, yet without doubt he let them hope that he would not
+persecute those who remained quiet.[312] It was probably not
+disagreeable to him if they looked for more. He was of opinion that he
+ought to have two strings to his bow.
+
+He had now formed connexions with all the leading men in England of
+whatever belief. There was no family in which he had not won over one
+member to the support of his cause.[313]
+
+
+_Accession to the Throne._
+
+Thus on different sides everything had been carefully prepared
+beforehand when the Queen died. Although it may be doubtful whether
+she had in so many words declared that James should be her successor,
+yet it is historically certain that she had for a long time consented
+to this arrangement. The people had not yet so entirely conquered all
+hesitation on the subject.
+
+At the moment of the Queen's decease the capital fell into a state of
+general commotion. Perhaps 40,000 decided Catholics might be counted
+in London, who had considered the government of the Queen an
+unauthorised usurpation. Were they now to submit themselves to a King
+who like her was a schismatic? Or were there grounds for entertaining
+the hope held out to them that the new prince would grant them freedom
+in the exercise of their religion. People pretended to find Jesuits in
+their ranks who were accused of stimulating the excitement of their
+feelings: and the government thought it necessary to arrest or keep an
+eye upon a number of men who were regarded as leaders of the Catholic
+party.
+
+The trained bands of the town were called out to meet the danger, and
+they consisted entirely of Protestants. But they also were agitated by
+uncertainty about the intentions of their new sovereign. What the
+Catholics wished and demanded, the free exercise of their religion,
+the Protestants just as strongly held to be inadmissible and
+dangerous.
+
+Meanwhile the Privy Council had met at Richmond, where they were
+joined by the lords who were in town. Some points of great importance
+were mooted--whether the Privy Council had still any authority, even
+after the death of the sovereign from whom their commission
+proceeded--whether this authority was not entirely transferred to the
+lords as the hereditary councillors of the crown. The question was
+probably raised whether conditions should not be prescribed beforehand
+to the King of Scotland with regard to his government. But the
+prevailing ferment did not allow time for the discussion of these
+questions. On the same day (March 24) the heralds proclaimed James
+king under the combined titles of King of England, Scotland, France,
+and Ireland.
+
+It could not be perceived that the pomp of this proclamation produced
+any extraordinary impression. No mourning for the death of the Queen
+was exhibited; still less joy at the accession of James: all other
+interests were absorbed by the anticipation of coming events. The tone
+of feeling first became decided some days afterwards, when a
+declaration from the new King was published, wherein he promised the
+maintenance of religion on its present footing, and the exclusion of
+every other form of it.[314] On this the Protestants were quieted; the
+Catholics shewed themselves discouraged and exasperated. Yet the heads
+of the party who were held in custody were released on bail, and
+assured by the King's agents, that if even they were not permitted to
+worship in public, they should not have to fear either compulsion or
+persecution.
+
+No movement was made against the acknowledgment of King James,
+although this was contrary to the old arrangements recognised by
+Parliament. But no one was forthcoming who could have enforced rights
+based upon these. The aged Hertford came forward to sign the
+proclamation of the lords both for himself, and in the name of his son
+who represented the Suffolks. The Lady Arabella made a declaration
+that she desired no other position than that which the present King
+might allow her. The Privy Council besought King James,--according to
+its own expression 'falling at his feet with deep humility,'--to come
+and breathe new life into the kingdom of England that had been
+bereaved of its head.
+
+We must not stay to discuss incidental questions, e.g. how the first
+news reached James, and how he received it. He remained quiet until he
+had obtained sure intelligence, and then without delay prepared to
+take possession of the throne, to which his mother's ambition and his
+own had for so many years been directed. Once more he addressed the
+people of Edinburgh assembled in the great church after the sermon. He
+would not admit the statement which had occurred in the discourse,
+that Scotland would mourn for his departure; for he was going, as he
+said, only from one part of the island to the other: from Edinburgh it
+was hardly further to London than to Inverness. He intended to return
+often; to remove pernicious abuses in both countries; to provide for
+peace and prosperity; to unite the two countries to one another. One
+of them had wealth, the other had a superabundance of men: the one
+country could help the other. He added in conclusion that he had
+expected to need their weapons: that he now required only their
+hearts.
+
+What filled his soul with pride and the consciousness of a high
+calling, was the thought that he would now carry into effect what the
+Romans, and in later times the Anglo-Saxon and Plantagenet kings, and
+last of all the Tudors, had sought to achieve by force of arms or by
+policy, but ever in vain--the union of the whole island under one
+rule, like that which native legendary lore ascribed to the mythical
+Arthur. When he came to Berwick, around which town the two nations had
+engaged in so many bloody frays, he gave utterance, so it is said, to
+his intention of being King not of the one or of the other country but
+of both united, and of assuming the name of King of Great
+Britain.[315]
+
+At York he met his predecessor's Secretary of State, Robert Cecil. As
+no one knew the relations into which he had already entered with
+Cecil, every one was astonished at the kind reception which he
+accorded to him. That did not prevent him however from being just to
+the other side as well. He greeted the youthful Essex as the son of
+the most renowned cavalier whom the realm of England had possessed; he
+appointed him to be the companion of the Prince of Wales, and made him
+carry the bared sword before him at his entrance into some of the
+towns. Southampton and Neville were received into favour; the Earl of
+Westmoreland was placed in the Privy Council. He gave it to be
+understood that he would again raise to their former station the great
+men of the kingdom, who up to this time, as he said, had not been
+treated according to their merits.
+
+In order to begin the work of union at once in the highest place, he
+added some Scottish members to the Privy Council, and placed Scots
+side by side with the Secretary of State and Treasurer of England. The
+Keeper of the Privy Seal was raised to the Lord Chancellorship, but
+obliged to resign the post of Master of the Rolls, which fell to the
+share of a Scot, who however contented himself with drawing the income
+without discharging the duties of the office. The main feature of the
+condition of affairs which now grew up was the understanding between
+Cecil and those Scots who were most influential with the King. These
+were the leaders of the two parties, one of which hitherto had rather
+inclined to Spain and the other to France, Lennox and Mar, and
+especially the most active, perhaps the cleverest man of all, George
+Hume. These were consulted on affairs of importance. The Scots had
+the advantage, to which custom almost gave them a right, of seeing the
+King as often as they wished: but Cecil and his English friends, in
+consequence of their knowledge and practice in business, had the chief
+management of affairs in their hands.
+
+The times were gloomy owing to the prevalence of an infectious
+disease; still extraordinary numbers of the English nobility thronged
+to London, in order to see the King, who took up his residence at
+Greenwich. It is computed that there were 10,000 people at court.
+James felt infinitely happy amidst the homage which clergy and laity
+vied with one another in rendering him.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[296] M'Crie, Life of Andrew Melville, ch. iii.
+
+[297] In a memoir in the Barberini Library, 'De praesenti Scotiae
+statu in iis quae ad religionem spectant brevissima narratio,' it is
+said, 'supra hominum opinionem auctus est Catholicorum numerus.'
+
+[298] Abstract of Randolph's instructions, from his own pen (Strype,
+Annals iii. i. 442): 'Nothing shall be done prejudicial to the King's
+title, but the same to pass by private assurance from Her Majesty to
+the King.'
+
+[299] Tractatus foederis et arctioris amicitiae. Rymer vi. 4. Randolph
+says, 'Three were the causes (of the alliance), viz. the noblemen, the
+money, and the assurance.' Strype iii. i. 568.
+
+[300] Courcelles, in Tytler vii. 333.
+
+[301] Slangen, Geschichte Christians iv. i. 117. Chyträus, Saxonia
+864, 870. Cp. Melvil, Memoires, 175.
+
+[302] Thirlstane to Burleigh, Aug. 13, 1590. In Tytler ix. 49.
+
+[303] Lord Burleigh's speech in the House of Lords, Strype, Annals iv.
+192. According to the 'Narratio de rebus Scoticis,' the Scottish
+magnates were the first movers.
+
+[304] James to Elizabeth. 'The sayde rebellis hadd so travelled by
+indirect means with everie nobleman, as quhen I feld thaier
+myndis--thay plainlie--refusid to yeild to any forfaiture.' 19 Sept.
+1593. In Bruce, Letters of Queen Elizabeth and King James VI of
+Scotland, 87.
+
+[305] Calderwood, v. 440. 'As to the wisdom of your counsell, which I
+call devilish and pernicious, it is this: that yee must be served with
+all sorts of men to come to your purpose and grandour Jew and Gentile,
+Papist and Protestant. And becaus the ministers and protestants in
+Scotland are over strong and controll the king they must be weakenned
+and brought low.'
+
+[306] The tumult in Edinburgh, in Calderwood v. 511.
+
+[307] In James Melville's Diary (p. 383) an act is mentioned with the
+date of January 1597, 'discharging the ministers stipends that wald
+not subscryve a Band acknawlaging the king to be only judge in matters
+of treassone or uther civill and criminall causses committed be
+preatching, prayer or what way so ever--Thair was keipit a frequent
+convention of esteates wharin war maid manie strange and seveire
+actes.'
+
+[308] So Crichton informs the Venetian secretary, Scaramelli, July 10,
+1603.
+
+[309] With regard to the offers brought by Ogilvy to Spain this has
+been undeniably proved on the evidence of another Jesuit. Winwood i.
+
+[310] He expressed to her an 'humble desire that I would banish from
+mynde any evill opinion or doupt of your sincerity to me.' (Dec. 2,
+1601, in Bruce.)
+
+[311] 'Breve relazione di quanto si è trattato tra S. Sta ed il re
+d'Inghilterra.' MS. Rom. From no other quarter moreover is any direct
+proof adduced of a promise of toleration properly so called.
+
+[312] The abbot of Kinloss told the Venetian secretary, 'che il re si
+trova obligatissimo col pontefice, chiamandolo veramente Clemente,
+perche per istanze che sono state più volte fatte a S. Bene da
+principi, non ha voluto mai dishonorarlo con divenire ad
+escommunicatione di sua persona, e che perciò S. M. desirera di
+corresponderle, aggiungendo che i catolici mentre staranno quieti et
+honestamente occulti non saranno cercati nè perseguitati.'
+(Scaramelli, 8 Maggio, 1603.)
+
+[313] Scaramelli, from the lips of one of the King's agents, March 27.
+
+[314] Scaramelli (April 12) alludes to a declaration from the King,
+'Per la conservatione della religione in che vive essa citta e regno.
+Questo aviso,' he proceeds, 'ha reso sicuri gli heretici.' In
+Halliwell, Letters of the Kings of England ii. 97, there is a letter
+from the King to the same effect addressed to his agent Hambleton, the
+contents of which were probably divulged at the moment.
+
+[315] Scaramelli, April 17, 'Dicendosi che lasciando i nomi di uno e
+l'altro regno habbia qualche intentione di chiamarsi re della Gran
+Bretagna per abbracciar con un solo nome ad imitatione di quel antico
+e famoso re Arturo tutto quello che gira il spatio di 1700 miglia
+unito.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+FIRST MEASURES OF THE NEW REIGN.
+
+
+How often in former times, when England was in the midst of great and
+glorious undertakings, had the Scots, who feared lest they themselves
+should be subjected to the power of their neighbours, taken the side
+of the enemy and obstructed the victory! Even the last wars might have
+taken quite a different course had Scotland made common cause with
+Spain. It was this connexion between the two kingdoms which made union
+with Scotland a political necessity for England. Ralegh describes this
+union under the present circumstances as no less fortunate for England
+than the blending of the Red and White Rose had been, as the most
+advantageous of all the means of growth which were open to her.
+
+The kingdom of Scotland, like that of England, had extended the
+supremacy of the Teutonic over the Keltic races, for these two
+elements formed the main constituents of both kingdoms. The German in
+conflict with the Keltic race had developed its character and energy.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1603.]
+
+The Orkney Islands, to which Scotland asserted its claim even against
+the kindred race of the Norwegians, and the Hebrides, which were
+reputed the home of warriors of extraordinary bravery, were now united
+in one kingdom with the Channel Islands, which still remained in the
+possession of England from the days of the old connexion between the
+Normans of Normandy and that country. The Gael of Scotland, the
+Gwythel of Erin--and the Irish still appear in most records as
+savages--the Cymry of Wales and their Cornish kinsmen, who still spoke
+their old language, now appeared as subjects of the same sceptre. The
+accession of James to the throne exercised an immediate influence on
+Ireland. Tyrone, the O'Neil, threw aside the agreement which the
+Queen's ministers had concluded with him against their will, thinking
+that he no longer required it, since the right heir had ascended the
+throne. The people seemed willing to espouse the cause of the new King
+as that of the native head of their race, and a genealogy was
+concocted in which his descent was traced to the old Milesian kings.
+The whole circuit of the British Isles was united under the name of
+Stuart. As a hundred years before the last great province of France
+had been gradually united to the French crown, and even within human
+memory Portugal, like the other provinces of the Spanish peninsula,
+had been added to the crown of Spain, so now a united Britain was
+formed side by side with these two great powers. James himself noticed
+the resemblance, and a proud feeling of self-confidence filled his
+breast, when he reflected that the change had been made without the
+help of arms, as if by the force of the internal necessity of things.
+Just as formerly the claim to universal supremacy together with the
+spread of the Church had greatly increased the importance of the
+Papacy, so now the claim to hereditary right possessed by James seemed
+to him of immeasurable value, for by it he had won so great and
+coveted a prize: it appeared to him the expression of the will of God.
+
+Surprise might be felt that France, which for several centuries had
+exercised a ruling influence on Scotland, and which in this union of
+the two crowns might have seen a disadvantage if not a danger for
+herself, allowed it to take place without obstruction. This conduct
+may be explained principally by the violent opposition which existed
+between Henry IV and Spain even after the peace of Vervins, and by the
+hostile influence incessantly exercised by that power upon the
+internal relations of his kingdom, in the pacification of which he was
+still engaged. It would have been dangerous for Henry himself to
+revive the hatred between England and Scotland, which could only have
+redounded to the advantage of his foes.
+
+James I however did not intend, and could not be expected to occupy
+exactly the same position as his predecessor. If he had adopted her
+views, yet this was a compliance exacted from him by a regard to the
+succession: he had felt that it was wrung from him. It is
+intelligible, and he did not attempt to disguise the fact, that he
+felt the death of Elizabeth to be in some sense his emancipation. He
+avoided appearing at her obsequies; every word showed that he did not
+love to recall her memory. In London people thought to please him by
+getting rid of the likenesses of the glorious Queen, and replacing
+them by those of his mother. The first matter which was submitted to
+him whilst still in Scotland, and which engaged him on the journey and
+immediately after his arrival, was the question whether he should
+proceed with the war which Elizabeth had planned; whether in fact he
+should continue her general policy. Henry IV sent without delay one of
+his most distinguished statesmen, who was moreover a Protestant,
+Maximilian de Bethune, Duke of Sully, as Ambassador Extraordinary; and
+Sully did not neglect to explain to the King the plan of an alliance
+between the States of Europe under the lead of France, that should be
+able to cope with the Austro-Spanish power, a plan which Sully had
+entertained all his life. James gave the ambassador, as he wished, a
+private audience in a retired chamber of his palace at Greenwich,
+asked many questions, and listened with attention, for he loved
+far-reaching schemes; but he was far from intending to embark on them.
+As he had reached the throne without arms, so he wished to maintain
+himself there by peaceful means.[316] It was natural that the Queen,
+who had been excommunicated by the Pope, and had carried on a war for
+life and death with the Spanish crown, should have intended to renew
+the struggle with all her might: such designs suited her personal
+position; but his own was different. Deeply penetrated by the idea of
+legitimacy, he even hesitated whether he should support the
+Netherlanders, who after all, in his judgment, were only rebels. To
+the remark that it would be a loss for England herself if the taking
+of Ostend, then besieged by the Spaniards, were not prevented, he
+replied by asking unconcernedly whether this place had not belonged
+in former times to the Spanish crown, and whether the English trade
+had not flourished there for all that. In these first moments of his
+reign however the difficulties of his government were already brought
+into view, together with the opposition between different tendencies
+latent in it. If he was unwilling to continue the policy of his
+predecessor, yet he could not absolutely renounce it: there were
+pledges which he could not break, interests which he could not
+neglect. In order to meet his objections the argument employed by
+Elizabeth was adduced, that she supported the Provinces only because
+the agreements, in virtue of which they had submitted themselves to
+the house of Burgundy, had been first broken by the other side.[317]
+The King's tone of mind was such that this argument may well have had
+an effect upon him. At last he consented to bestow further assistance,
+although only indirectly. He conceded that one half of the sum which
+Henry IV paid to the States General should be subtracted from the
+demands which England had against France, and should be employed by
+the Netherlanders in recruiting in the English dominions. By this
+expedient he intended to satisfy the terms of the old alliance between
+England and the Provinces, and yet not be prevented from coming to an
+agreement with Spain.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1604.]
+
+The ambassador of the Archduke and the Infanta, the Duke of Aremberg,
+was already in the country, but he was afflicted with gout and
+somewhat averse to transact business in writing; and nothing more than
+general assurances of friendship were exchanged. In October 1603 one
+of the Spanish envoys, Don Juan de Tassis, Count of Mediana, made his
+appearance. Astonishment was created when, on his entrance into the
+hall where the assembled Court awaited him, he advanced into the
+middle of the room before he uncovered his head. He spoke Spanish; the
+King answered in English: an interpreter was required between them,
+although they were both masters of French. But however imperfect
+their communications were, they yet came to an understanding. The King
+and the ambassador agreed in holding that all grounds for hostility
+between Spain and England had disappeared with the death of Queen
+Elizabeth.
+
+After a fresh and long delay--for the Spaniards would have preferred
+to transfer the conference to some town on the continent--negotiations
+were first seriously undertaken in May 1604, and then after all in
+England. The affairs of the Netherlands formed the principal subject
+of discussion.
+
+The King of Spain demanded that the King of England should abstain
+from assisting his rebellious subjects. The English explained the
+reason why the United Netherlanders were not considered rebels. The
+Spaniards demanded that the fortresses at least, which the Provinces
+had formerly surrendered to the Queen as a security for the repayment
+of the loan made by her, should be restored to their lawful owner the
+King, who would not fail to repay the money advanced. King James
+answered that he was tied by the pledges of the Queen, and that he
+must maintain his word and honour.[318] The Spaniards on this started
+the proposal that the English on their part should break off their
+traffic with the United Provinces. The English replied that this would
+be most injurious to themselves. In these transactions James was
+mainly guided by the consideration that, if he decidedly threw off the
+Provinces, he would be giving them over into the hands of France, to
+the most serious injury of England, and without advantage to Spain. On
+this account principally he thought that he was obliged to maintain
+his previous relations with them. The English found a very
+characteristic reason for peace with Spain in the wish to restore
+their old commercial connexion with that country. The Spaniards were
+ready to make this concession, but only within the ancient limits,
+from which the trade with both the Indies was excluded. They argued
+that their government did not allow this even to all its own subjects;
+how then could foreigners be admitted to a share in it? Cecil on this
+remarked that England by its insular position was adapted for trading
+with the whole world, and could not possibly allow these regions to be
+closed against her; that she already had relations with countries on
+which no Spaniard had ever set foot, and that a wide field for further
+discoveries was still open. At no price would he allow his countrymen
+to be again excluded from America or the East Indies, to which
+countries they had just begun to extend their voyages.[319]
+
+The peace which was at length brought about is remarkable for its
+indefiniteness. The English promised that they would not support the
+rebellious subjects and enemies of the King of Spain; and it was
+arranged that an unrestricted trade should again be opened with all
+countries, with which it had been carried on before the war. At the
+first glance this looked as if any further alliance with Holland, as
+well as the navigation to the Indies, was rendered impossible. The
+Venetian envoy once spoke with King James on the subject, who answered
+that it would soon be shown that this opinion was erroneous. In fact,
+as soon as the first ships returned from the East Indies, preparations
+were at once made for a second expedition. The States General were not
+interfered with in the enlistment which they had been allowed to
+begin; for it was maintained that they could not be included under the
+term rebellious subjects. The only difference made was that similar
+leave to enlist in the English dominions was granted to the Spaniards
+also, who for that purpose resorted especially to Ireland. In this way
+the peace exactly expressed the relations into which England was
+thrown by the change of government. James, who for his own part would
+have wished simply to renew the friendly relations which had formerly
+existed, found himself compelled to stipulate for exceptions owing to
+the form which the interests of England had now assumed. The Spaniards
+allowed them, because even on these terms the termination of the war
+was of the greatest advantage to them, and they did not surrender the
+hope of changing the peace into a full alliance later on, although
+their proposals to that effect were in the first instance declined.
+
+And notwithstanding any ambiguity which might arise as to the scope of
+the treaty with regard to individual questions, the conclusion of
+peace was in itself of great importance: it implied a change of policy
+which created the greatest stir. It affected the United Provinces and
+filled them with anxiety, for in their judgment not only was the
+action of Spain against them no longer fettered, but the Spanish
+ambassador in England was sure in time by means of gold and intrigues
+to acquire an influence which must be fatal to them.
+
+The King thought that he had achieved a great success. His intention
+was to be as fully acknowledged by the Catholic powers as by the
+Protestant; to occupy a neutral position between those who were
+favourable, and those who were opposed, to Spain, and to live in peace
+with all, without however losing sight of the interests of England.
+Men could not be blind to the correspondence between this policy and
+the general tendency of these times. From the epoch of the Absolution
+of Henry IV and the overthrow of the League, the separation between
+religious and political interests had begun. Men on either side no
+longer regarded the ascendancy of Spain as a support or as a danger to
+religion. The Spanish government itself under the guidance of the Duke
+of Lerma acquired a peaceful character. Thus King James was made happy
+by seeing embassies from the Catholic states arrive in England. Not
+until he stood between the two parties did he feel himself to be in
+truth a king, and to surpass his predecessor.
+
+This sovereign assumed a similar attitude towards the Catholics of
+England as well. He could not vouchsafe to them a real toleration; but
+a few months after his arrival in England he actually carried out what
+he had already promised, an alleviation of those burdens which weighed
+most heavily on them. The most grievous was the fine collected every
+month from those who refused to take part in the Protestant service.
+James declared to an assemblage of leading Catholics, that he would
+not enforce this fine so long as they behaved quietly, and did not
+show contempt towards himself and the State. The Catholics reminded
+him that their absence from the service of the Church might be
+interpreted as contempt. He assured them that he would not regard it
+in this light. The fines, which in late years had amounted to more
+than £10,000, decreased in the year 1603 to £300, and in 1604 to £200.
+The King, like his predecessor, would not tolerate Jesuits and
+Seminarists, but he was content with their banishment; it would have
+been contrary to his temper to have had them executed. He sought to
+avoid all the consequences that must have been provoked by the
+hostility of this element which was still so powerful in the world at
+large and among his own subjects.
+
+But even within the domain of Protestantism he was now encountered by
+a similar problem.
+
+The investigation of the influence which the Scots and English have
+exercised on one another in the last few centuries would be a task of
+essential importance for the history of intellectual life; for in the
+development of the prevailing spirit of the nation the Scots as well
+as the English have had a large share. Even under Elizabeth these
+relations had begun to exist. The growth of English Puritanism
+especially, which had already given the Queen much trouble, must be
+regarded as but the dissemination of the forms and ideas that had
+arisen in the Church of Scotland. But how much stronger must the
+action of this cause have become now that a Scottish king had ascended
+the English throne! The union between two populations which so nearly
+resembled one another in their original composition, and in the
+direction taken by their religious development, could not be a merely
+territorial union: it must lead to the closest relation between the
+spirit of the two peoples.
+
+It was natural from the state of the case, that on the accession of a
+Scottish king in England the English clergy who leaned to the Scottish
+system should embrace the hope of being emancipated to some extent
+from that strict subordination to their bishops which they endured
+with reluctance. On the first arrival of James, whilst he was still on
+his way to London, they laid before him an address signed by eight
+hundred of the clergy, in which they besought him, in accordance with
+God's word, to lighten the rigour of this jurisdiction and of their
+condition in general, and in the first place to allow them to set
+before him the feasibility of the alteration. They had nourished the
+hope that the King might be prevailed on to reduce the English
+episcopate to the level of the Scottish, in the shape in which he had
+just restored it.[320]
+
+But the tendencies which the King brought with him out of Scotland ran
+in an altogether different direction. He had often been personally
+affronted by the Presbyterians: he hated their system; for in his
+opinion equality in the Church necessarily led to equality in the
+State. His intention was rather by degrees to develop further on the
+English model those beginnings of episcopacy which he had introduced
+into Scotland. In December 1603 he convened, as the Puritans wished,
+an assembly of the Church at Hampton Court, to which he also invited
+the leading men among the opponents of uniformity. But he opened the
+conference at once with a thanksgiving to Almighty God 'for bringing
+him into the promised land where religion was purely professed, where
+he sat among grave, learned, and reverend men, not, as before,
+elsewhere, a king without state, without honour, without order, where
+beardless boys would brave him to his face.' He declared that the
+government of the English Church had been approved by manifold
+blessings from God himself; and he said that he had not called this
+assembly in order to make innovations in the same, but in order to
+strengthen it by the removal of some abuses. In the conference which
+he opened he held the office of moderator himself. Certainly the
+suggestions of the Puritans were not altogether without result. When
+they expressed the wish to see the Sunday more strictly observed, to
+have a trustworthy and faithful translation of the Bible provided, and
+to have the Apocrypha excluded from the canonical scriptures, they met
+with a favourable reception; but the King would neither allow the
+confessions of faith to be tampered with, nor the ceremonies which had
+been brought under discussion to undergo the least diminution. He
+thought that they were older than the Papacy, that the decision of
+deeper questions of doctrine ought to be left to the discussion of the
+Universities, and that the articles of the faith would only be
+encumbered by them. And every limitation of episcopal authority he
+entirely refused to discuss. The bishops themselves were amazed at the
+zeal with which the King espoused the cause of ecclesiastical
+jurisdiction, and allowed their justification of it even on a point of
+great importance for the constitution, the imposition of the oath _ex
+officio_.[321] They even exclaimed that God had bestowed on them a
+king, the like of whom had not been seen from the beginning of the
+world. It had been the intention and custom of other princes to limit
+the jurisdiction of the clergy, and to diminish their possessions. How
+much had they suffered from this even under Elizabeth! On the contrary
+it was one of the first endeavours of James I to put an end for ever
+to these attacks. For as in Scotland the abolition of bishoprics had
+been attended with a diminution of the authority of the crown, he had
+reason to be deeply convinced of the identity of episcopal and
+monarchical interests. In the heat of the conference at Hampton Court
+he laid down as his principle, 'No bishop no king.'
+
+But in all this did King James fall in with the spirit of the English
+constitution? Did he not rather at this point intrude into it the
+sharpness of his Scottish prejudices? The old statesmen of England had
+acknowledged the services of the English Puritans in saving the
+Protestant confession in the struggle with Catholicism. The Puritans
+only wished not to be oppressed. He confounded them altogether with
+their Scottish co-religionists with whom he had had to contend for
+the sovereignty of the realm.
+
+In less than two months from the Hampton Court Conference the Book of
+Common Prayer was re-issued with some few alterations, with regard to
+which the King expressly stated that they were the only alterations
+which were to be expected; for that the safety of states consisted in
+clinging fast to what had been ordained after good consideration. This
+was soon followed by a new collection of ecclesiastical laws, in the
+shape which they had taken under the deliberations of Convocation. In
+them the royal supremacy was insisted on in the strongest terms, and
+that over the whole kingdom, Scotland included. The same competence
+with regard to the Church was therein assigned to the King which had
+belonged to the pious kings of Judah and to the earliest Christian
+emperors: their authority was declared to be second only to that of
+Heaven. Henceforward no one was to be ordained without promising to
+observe the Book of Common Prayer and to acknowledge the
+supremacy.[322] And this statute had a retrospective application, even
+to those who were already in possession of an ecclesiastical benefice.
+The King and Archbishop Bancroft ordered that a short respite should
+be given to those who were inclined to acquiesce; but that those who
+made a decided resistance should without further ceremony be deprived
+of their benefices.
+
+On this the whole body of Puritans necessarily became agitated. A
+number of clergymen sought out the King at Royston in December 1604.
+While they announced to him their decision rather to resign their
+benefices than to submit to these ordinances, they called his
+attention to the danger to which the souls of the faithful would be
+subjected by this severity. In February a petition in favour of those
+ministers who refused to subscribe was presented to the King by some
+of the gentry of Northamptonshire. He expressed himself about this
+with great vehemence at a sitting of the Privy Council. He said that
+he had from his cradle suffered at the hands of these Puritans a
+persecution which would follow him to his grave. But in England the
+tribunals were quite ready to come to his assistance. In the Star
+Chamber it was declared a proceeding of seditious tendency to assail
+the King with joint petitions in a matter of religion.
+
+Towards the end of February 1605 the bishops cited the clergy of
+Puritan views to appear at St. Paul's in London in order to take the
+oath. There were some members of this party who held it lawful to
+conform to the Anglican Church because it at least acknowledged the
+true doctrine. These had time for reflection given them; the rest who
+persevered in an opposition of principle were deprived of their
+offices without delay.
+
+These proceedings for the first time recalled most vividly to men's
+minds the memory of the late Queen. People said that, though she
+disliked the Puritans, she had never consented to persecute them on
+religious grounds, for that she well knew how much she owed to them in
+every other respect. They saw a proof of the King's incapacity in his
+departure from her example and pattern. They thought him to blame for
+remitting in favour of Catholic recusants the execution of the penal
+laws enrolled among the statutes of the realm. And the foreign policy
+of the King awakened no less disapproval. It was felt as an injury,
+that he had put an end by the peace to the hostilities against Spain,
+which had now become even popular. Even the severe edicts issued
+against the piracy, which had found support in different quarters,
+produced in many places an unfavourable impression. The King was
+obliged to compensate the admiral for the losses which he affirmed
+that he had suffered in consequence.[323] And how much greater were
+the apprehensions for the future which were connected with this
+policy! It was remarked that he sacrificed the interests of religion
+and of the country to those of the Catholics and the Catholic powers.
+
+But there was now an organ of political opposition in the country in
+which all these hostile feelings found their expression. The
+resentment of injured interests, the resistance of the Puritans, and
+the excitement of the capital, impressed themselves on the Parliament.
+
+All previous governments had exercised a systematic influence upon the
+election of members of the Lower House, and had encroached on their
+freedom. When the first elections under King James were about to be
+held he declared himself against the exercise of any such influence.
+He ordered that the elections should be conducted with freedom and
+impartiality, without regard to the bidding of any one and without the
+interference of strangers; and that the electors should be allowed to
+return the most deserving candidates in each county. He thought that,
+as he avoided unpopular measures, men would voluntarily meet his
+wishes. It appeared to him sufficient, if, in issuing the writs, he
+coupled with them the admonition to avoid all party spirit, and
+especially to abstain from electing such as from blind superstition on
+the one hand, or from fickleness or restlessness on the other, wished
+to disturb the uniformity of religion.[324] But in politics personal
+gratitude is only a feeble motive. The elections followed the current
+of opinion which had been set in motion by the Hampton Court
+Conference. In the very first Parliament of King James many Puritans
+obtained entrance into the House: the new line which this Parliament
+struck out influenced the whole subsequent period.
+
+The speech with which King James opened the session on the 19th of
+March 1604, immediately before the conclusion of the first year of his
+reign, has been often and often reproduced. It is full of the ideas
+with which his mind was principally occupied, of the union of both
+kingdoms in one great whole, and of the establishment of religious
+uniformity. He thought that in neither of the two kingdoms ought the
+memory of their special privileges to be kept alive, for they were
+pure monarchies from the first: no privilege could separate them from
+their head. He explicitly called the Puritans an ochlocratic sect.
+
+It is extraordinary that, while he sought to win men's affections, it
+was his fortune to use expressions which were sure to provoke the
+strongest religious and political antipathies.
+
+Parliament acknowledged his succession to be rightful and lawful, and
+granted to him, as to his predecessors, tonnage and poundage, i.e. the
+right of levying customs, for his life: it arranged according to his
+wishes for the withdrawal of many sentences which had been pronounced
+against his interest; but in other matters it offered him from the
+very first persistent opposition. Contrary to what might have been
+expected, the first point concerned the validity of the elections.
+
+In Buckinghamshire the King's officers had annulled an election on the
+ground of illegality, and had held a second. The Lower House found
+that this was improper, on the ground that the right of deciding in
+matters concerning the election of representatives belonged from
+ancient times to the House of Commons alone. They declined to confer
+on this subject with the Privy Council, or with the Upper House.
+Ill-will and jealousy were excited against those of higher rank who
+had wished to bring one of their own party into the House of Commons,
+and the tempers of the members seemed to be becoming no little
+inflamed. At last, by the personal mediation of the King,[325] the
+Lower House was induced to allow both of the elected candidates to be
+unseated, and a third to be elected in their place. Even this it
+agreed to reluctantly; but it was at least its own resolution, and not
+the result of official influence: and the Speaker issued his writ for
+a new election. One of the foremost principles of parliamentary life,
+that the scrutiny of elections belonged to the Parliament alone, was
+in this manner indubitably established afresh.
+
+Even his ideas on the union of the two kingdoms, which were nearest to
+his heart, were shared by few members of the Lower House; and he was
+obliged to raise the question by a new and urgent address. A
+commission of both Houses was indeed nominated to deliberate together
+with the Scots on the execution of the plan. The commission however
+was so numerous, and so large a number was required to be actually
+present for the transaction of business, that it was evident
+beforehand that no result would be achieved; especially as it was
+confidently to be expected that the Scots would appoint just as
+numerous a commission on their side.[326] And the King was already
+aware that the opposition against him was not confined to the Lower
+House, but in this matter at least was most widely diffused. The
+proclamation was already drawn up by which he intended to declare
+himself King of Great Britain. The judges were consulted by the Upper
+House, but their sentence favoured the view that this alteration could
+not take place without disadvantage to the State.
+
+The grant of a subsidy was most urgently needed by the King, whose
+purse had been emptied by the expenses of taking possession and by his
+prodigality; but the tone of feeling was so unfavourable that he
+forbore to apply for it, as he would not expose himself to a refusal
+which was certain beforehand.
+
+A petition in favour of some indulgence for the Puritans was drawn up
+in complete opposition to the King's views, although it seems not to
+have been carried through or sent in. A rigorous bill against the
+Jesuits and recusants on the other hand actually passed through the
+House. Lord Montague, who spoke against it, was brought before the
+House of Lords to answer for some expressions which he used on that
+occasion, and which savoured of Catholic principles.
+
+It is quite clear that the very first Parliament of King James set
+itself systematically in opposition to him. He desired union,
+clemency to the Catholics, and punishment of the Puritans; and he
+required subsidies: on all these subjects an opposite view prevailed
+in Parliament. And the divergence was not confined to single points.
+The maintenance of that extended prerogative which had been once
+established, had been endured under a sovereign who was a native of
+the country, had deserved well of her subjects, and was thoroughly
+English in her sentiments. But similar pretensions appeared
+insufferable in a king of foreign birth, who pursued ideas that were
+British rather than English, or rather who had combined for himself a
+number of tendencies arising out of the position in which, grand as it
+was, he stood alone among English sovereigns. We perceive that by this
+time the notion had been definitely formed of reviving the rights of
+Parliament which had fallen into abeyance in the late reigns.[327]
+Even under the Tudors Parliament had exercised a very considerable
+influence, but had more or less submitted to the ruling powers. Under
+the new government it thought of winning back the authority which it
+had wrung from more than one Plantagenet, and had possessed under the
+house of Lancaster. Already members were heard to assert that the
+legislative power lay in their hands; and that, if the King refused to
+approve the laws for which they demanded his sanction, they would
+refuse him the subsidies which he needed.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1605.]
+
+And this resolution was strengthened by the ill-feeling which the
+treatment of the Puritan ministers excited. The Parliament had been
+adjourned from August 1604 until February 1605: but the King feared
+that these clergymen, who had been assailed just at that time, might
+apply to the Lower House in which so many Puritans had seats.[328] He
+therefore prorogued it afresh in the hope of getting rid of certain
+persons who were especially hostile, or of bringing them over to his
+own side.
+
+Instead of this, new grievances were constantly accumulating. In the
+absence of regular subsidies the King helped himself to money by a
+voluntary loan, which gave great offence, and in this matter also led
+people to contrast the late Queen's conduct with that of James. She
+had, so people said, conducted the war in Spain, afforded help to the
+Netherlands, and maintained garrisons on the Scottish border, three
+measures which had cost her millions; of all this there was no mention
+under the present King. On the contrary he had additional revenues
+from Scotland; for what reason did he require extraordinary
+subsidies?[329] Men complained of his movements to and fro in the
+country, and of the harshness with which the right of the court to
+transport and cheap entertainment on these occasions was enforced; of
+his hunting, by which the tillage was injured; most of all, of his
+intended advancement of the Customs Duties, for this would damage
+trade and certainly would benefit only the great men who were
+interested in the farming of the Customs. The King had once thought of
+dissolving Parliament, but afterwards renounced the idea. As it was,
+when Parliament was summoned for November 1605, a stormy session lay
+before it, owing to the attack made by the Parliamentary and Puritan
+party upon the behaviour of the King in ecclesiastical and political
+questions, as well as upon the financial disorder which was gaining
+ground.
+
+An event intervened which gave an entirely different direction to the
+course of affairs.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[316] Économies royales v. 23.
+
+[317] Molino, Giugno 9, 1604: 'Se ben è vero, ch'erano suddite del re
+di Spagna, è anco verissimo, che quei popoli si erano soggettati alla
+casa di Borgogna--con quelle conditioni e capitoli, che si sa: i quali
+se fossero stati osservati dalli ministri di Spagna, senza dubio quei
+popoli non se sariano ribellati. Da queste parole restarono li
+Spagnoli offesi.'
+
+[318] Cecil to Winwood, June 13. 'That he is tied by former contracts
+of his predecessors, which he must observe.
+
+[319] From the reports of the French ambassador, in Siri, Memorie
+recondite i. 278.
+
+[320] Letter from the South (Winchester) to Berwick, in Calderwood vi.
+235. 'I would the scotish presbytereis would be petitioners that our
+bishops might be like theirs in autoritie though they keep their
+livings. The King is resolved to have a preaching ministry.'
+
+[321] The High Commission was compared with the Inquisition: 'men are
+urged to subscribe more than law requireth and by the oath _ex
+officio_ forced to accuse themselves.' The archbishop answered that
+this was a mistake: 'if the article touch the party for life, liberty,
+or scandall, he may refuse to answer.' State Trials ii. 86. The
+account in Wilkins iv. 374 is more unsatisfactory than the character
+of the book would lead us to expect.
+
+[322] Art. 36: 'Neminem nisi praevia trium articulorum subscriptione
+ordinandum'.
+
+[323] Duodo relates (Dec. 6, 1603) that the King said to him: 'Che
+dubita, che li suoi capitani di mare siano alquanti interessati che
+anzi, e mostro di dirlo in gran confidenza era stato necessitato
+assegnar non so che provisione del suo proprio denaro all'Amiraglio;
+perche si doleva di non poterse sostentare per esserli mancato alcun
+utile di questa natura.'
+
+[324] 'The choice to be made freely and indifferentlye without respect
+of any commaunde sute prayer or other meanes to the contrary.' From a
+memorandum of the Lord Chancellor Egerton, Egerton Papers 385. Molino,
+May 12, 1604: 'Stimò il re che il concedere la liberta alle provincie
+di poter far elettione degli huomini per mandar al parlamento conforme
+agli antichi privilegi del regno et il non haver voluto osservare li
+molti tratti delli precessori suoi che non avrebbero permesso che la
+elettione cadesse in altre persone che in suoi confidenti e
+dipendenti, dovesse disponer gli animi di ogn'uno a sodisfarlo e
+compiacerlo.'
+
+[325] Molino: 'Havendo voluto troncar l'occasione di qualche maggior
+scandalo; perche di gia li sangui si andavano riscaldando molto.'
+
+[326] Molino (Dispaccio 19 Maggio) states this reason.
+
+[327] Molino: 'Parlando molto liberamente della liberta e della
+autorita del parlamento in vista pero sempre degli antichi privilegi,
+quali erano andati in desuetudine e se saranno reassonti--senza dubio
+sera un detrimento dell'autorita e potesta regia.' (12 Maggio.)
+
+[328] Molino: 'Dubitando che quando li capi di questa setta facessero
+qualche moto al parlamento, dove ne sono tanti di questa professione,
+potesse nascer qualche inconveniente.'(20 Oct. 1604.)
+
+[329] Molino: 'Queste cose vanno spargendo quelli che han poco volunta
+di sodisfar alli desideri di S. M. che per se ne sta molto dubiosa.'
+(3 Nov. 1605.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE GUNPOWDER PLOT AND ITS CONSEQUENCES.
+
+
+James I was welcomed, if one may say so, by a conspiracy on his
+entrance into England.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1603.]
+
+Two men of rank, Markham and Brook, who had before held communications
+with him, and had cherished bright expectations, but found themselves
+passed over in the composition of the new government, now imagined
+that they might rise to the highest offices if they could succeed in
+detaching the King from those who surrounded him, and in getting him
+into their own hands, perhaps within the walls of the Tower or even in
+Dover Castle. They conspired for this object with some Catholic
+priests, who could not forgive the King for having deceived their
+expectations of a declaration of toleration at the commencement of his
+reign. They intended to call out so great a number of Catholics ready
+for action, that there could be no doubt of the successful issue of a
+coup-de-main. A priest was then to receive the Great Seal and above
+all things to issue an edict of toleration. We are reminded of the
+combination under Essex, when even some Puritans offered their
+assistance in an undertaking directed against the government. One of
+their leaders, Lord Grey de Wilton, a young man of high spirit and
+hope, was now induced to join the plot. But on this occasion the
+Catholics were the predominant element. The priests thought that the
+pretence of the necessity of supporting the King against the effect of
+a Puritan rising would best contribute to set the zealous Catholics in
+motion; and it is undeniable that other persons of high rank were also
+connected with these intrigues. The principal opponents of Cecil and
+his friends, whose hostile influence on Elizabeth had at an earlier
+period been feared by the minister, were Lord Cobham, the brother of
+Brook, and Sir Walter Ralegh. Cobham, who like most others had looked
+for the overthrow of Cecil on the accession of the King, fell into an
+ungovernable fit of disappointed ambition when Cecil was more strongly
+confirmed in his position; and his anger was directed against the King
+himself, from whom he now had nothing to expect, and who had brought
+with him a family which made the hope of any further alteration appear
+impossible. He had let fall the expression in public that the fox and
+his cubs must be destroyed at one blow. Negotiations, aiming at the
+renewal of the Lady Arabella's claims, had been opened with the
+ambassador of the Archduke, who then perhaps felt anxiety lest King
+James, under the influence of Cecil, should adhere to the policy of
+his predecessor. In order to effect a revolution, Cobham launched into
+extravagant schemes which embraced all Europe.
+
+The affair might have been dangerous, if a man of the activity,
+weight, and intelligence of Walter Ralegh had taken part in it. Ralegh
+does not deny that Cobham had spoken to him on the subject, but he
+affirms that he had not heeded the idle words, and had even forgotten
+them again:[330] and in fact nothing has been brought to light which
+proves his complicity, or even his remote participation, in this plot.
+Still without doubt he was among the opponents of the government. If
+it is true, as people say, that he made an attempt by means of a
+letter to the King to procure the fall of Cecil, it is easily
+conceivable that the latter and his friends availed themselves of
+every opportunity to involve him in the accusation. Ralegh defended
+himself with so much courage and vigour, that the listeners who had
+come wishing to see him condemned went away with a tenfold stronger
+desire that he might be acquitted. He himself did not deny that he
+might be condemned by the cruel laws of England: he reminded the King
+however of a passage in the old statutes, in which for that very
+reason mercy and pity were recommended to him. The accused were all
+condemned. Brook and the priests paid the penalty of death: Markham,
+Cobham, and Grey were reprieved when they were already standing on the
+scaffold--reprieved moreover by an autograph mandate of James, which
+was entirely due to an unexpected resolution of the King, who wished
+to shine by showing mercy as well as by severity. The first of these
+lived henceforward in exile: the second continued to live in England,
+but weighed down by his disgrace: Grey and Walter Ralegh were
+imprisoned in the Tower. We shall meet with Ralegh once more: he never
+lost sight of the world, nor the world of him.
+
+This conspiracy which, although wrongly as we have seen, bears the
+name of Ralegh, was an attempt to put an end in some way or other to
+the government, in the shape in which it had been erected by the union
+of English statesmen with the Scottish King. Its movers wished to
+effect this object by getting rid either of the statesmen, or even of
+the King himself. But on the contrary they only succeeded in
+establishing the government so much the more firmly; and it then under
+the joint influence of both its components entered on the course which
+we have described. But if it was so seriously endangered at its
+commencement, its progress also could not be free from hostile
+attacks. The Puritans threw themselves into the ranks of the
+Parliamentary Opposition. The Catholics were brought into a most
+singular position.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1604.]
+
+In public they found themselves far better off under James than they
+had been under Elizabeth. Far greater scope was allowed to the local
+influence of Catholic magnates in protecting their co-religionists.
+The penal laws, which as regards pecuniary payments were virtually
+abolished, were moreover no longer vigorously enforced in any other
+respect. Not only were the chapels of the Catholic ambassadors in the
+capital numerously attended, but in some provinces, especially in
+Wales, Catholic sermons were known to be delivered in the open air,
+and attended by thousands of hearers.[331] At times the opinion
+revived that the King was inclined to go over to Catholicism. He
+repudiated the supposition with some show of indignation. But, as we
+stated, the Queen incontestably sympathised with the Papacy. She even
+refrained from attending the Anglican service, and formed relations
+with the Nuncio in Paris, from whom she received communications and
+presents. Though Pope Clement on a former occasion had issued breves
+which made the obedience of Catholics to a new government dependent on
+the profession of Catholicism by the sovereign, yet these were
+virtually recalled by a later issue. When the English ambassador in
+Paris complained to the Nuncio there of the above-mentioned
+participation of Catholic priests in a conspiracy against the King,
+the Nuncio laid before him a letter of the Pope's nephew, Cardinal
+Aldobrandini, in which he declared it to be the Pope's pleasure that
+the Catholics in England should be obedient to their king, and should
+pray for him.[332] Thus it exactly fell in with the King's views to be
+a Protestant, as was absolutely necessary for his authority in England
+and Scotland, and yet at the same time not to have the Catholics
+against him, and to be able to reckon the Pope of Rome among his
+friends.
+
+It is evident that this state of affairs, as it was inconsistent with
+the laws of England, could not be permanently maintained. Even men of
+moderate views in other respects disapproved the middle course taken
+by the King: for they thought it necessary to concede nothing to the
+adherents of the Papacy, if they were to be saved from the necessity
+of conceding everything. The Catholics desired a public declaration of
+toleration. But this could only have emanated from Parliament: the
+King had not the courage, and his ministers had not the wish, to make
+a serious proposal to that effect. On the contrary, when the
+Protestant spirit of the capital displayed itself so unmistakably in
+consequence of the severities with which the Puritans were threatened,
+the King and his Privy Council, while affirming that they were merely
+executing the laws, announced their intention of introducing a like
+severity in the treatment of the Catholics. James I appeared to feel
+himself insulted if any one threw a doubt on his wish to allow the
+laws to operate in both directions. And as the Parliament which was so
+zealously Protestant was expected to reassemble in the autumn of 1605,
+the laws against the Catholics began to be applied without
+forbearance. A renewed persecution was first set on foot against the
+priests, who it is true were not punished with death, at least in the
+vicinity of the Court, but were thrown into prison, where they not
+infrequently succumbed to the rough treatment which they had
+undergone. But even the laity daily suffered more and more from the
+violence of the spies who forced their way into their houses. They
+complained loudly and bitterly of the insecurity of their position,
+which had already gone so far that often no tenants could be found for
+their farms; and they considered that the least evil, for to-day they
+lost their possessions, to-morrow they would lose their freedom, and
+the day after their life.[333] There had now for a long time been two
+parties among them, one of which submitted to what was inevitable,
+while the other offered a violent resistance. With the fresh increase
+of oppression, the latter party obtained the upper hand. They mocked
+at the hope, in which men indulged themselves, of a change of religion
+on the part of the King, who on the contrary was in their view an
+irreclaimable Protestant, and assumed an air of clemency to the
+Catholics, only to draw the rein tighter hereafter. A brief from the
+Pope exhorted them to acquiesce: but even the Pope could not persuade
+them to allow themselves to be sacrificed without further ceremony.
+Some of the most resolute once more applied to the Spanish court at
+this time as they had done before. But in that quarter not only had
+peace been concluded, but the hope of effecting a close alliance with
+England had been conceived. A deaf ear was turned to all their
+applications.
+
+While they were thus hard pressed and desperate, the thought of
+helping themselves had, if not originated, at least ripened, in the
+breast of one or two of the boldest of them. They conceived a plan
+which in savage recklessness surpassed anything which was devised in
+this epoch so full of conspiracies.
+
+Among the families which sheltered the mission-priests on their
+arrival in England, and who were moved by them to throw off their
+reserve in the profession of Catholicism, the Treshams and Catesbys
+were especially prominent in Northamptonshire. They belonged to the
+wealthiest and most important families in that county; and the penal
+laws had borne upon them with especial severity. The Winters of
+Huddington, who also were very zealous Catholics, were related to
+them. It is easy to understand, how the young men who were growing up
+in this family, such as Thomas Winter and Robert Catesby,
+acknowledging no duty to the Protestant government, retorted the
+oppression which they experienced from it with bold resistance and
+schemes of violence. In these they were joined by two brothers of the
+same way of thinking, John and Christopher Wright, stout and
+soldier-like men, belonging to a family which came originally from
+York. They all participated in the attempt of the Earl of Essex, for
+above all things they were eager for the overthrow of the existing
+government: and Robert Catesby was set at liberty only on payment of a
+heavy fine, which he could hardly raise by the sale of one of the most
+productive of the family estates. They were among those who, when
+Queen Elizabeth lay on her death-bed, proclaimed most loudly their
+desire for a thorough change, and were arrested in consequence.[334]
+They had expected toleration at least from the new government: as this
+was not granted them they set to work at once on new schemes of
+insurrection. Christopher Wright was one of those who had invited
+Philip III to support the Catholics. When the Constable of Castile
+came to Flanders to negotiate the peace, Thomas Winter visited him in
+order to lay their wish before him. Though they met with a refusal
+from him as well as from his master they found nevertheless a support
+which was independent of the approval of individuals. In the archducal
+Netherlands a combination of a peculiar kind, favourable to their
+views, had been formed, in consequence of the permission to recruit in
+the British dominions, which by the terms of the peace had been
+granted to Spain as well as to the Netherlands. An English regiment,
+about fifteen hundred strong, had been raised, in which the chaplains
+were all Jesuit fathers; and no officers were admitted but those who
+were entirely devoted to them. An English Jesuit named Baldwin, and a
+soldier of the same opinions, Owen by name, were the leading spirits
+among them. There was here, so to speak, a school of soldiers side by
+side with a school of priests, in which every act of the English
+government provoked slander, malediction, and schemes of opposition.
+Pope Clement was blamed for not threatening James with excommunication
+as Elizabeth had formerly been threatened; and the necessity for
+violent means of redress was canvassed without disguise. These views
+were repeated in congenial circles in Paris and reacted also upon
+their friends in England. Robert Catesby had been most active in the
+enlistment of the regiment. Christopher Wright on his journey to Spain
+was attended by one of the most resolute officers of this regiment,
+Guy Fawkes. The latter returned with Winter to England, and was
+pointed out by Owen as a man admirably qualified to conduct the
+horrible undertaking which was being prepared for execution. It must
+remain a question in whose head the thought of proceeding to it at
+this moment originated: we only know that Catesby first communicated
+it to another, and then with the aid of this comrade to the rest of
+the band. To this another member had been added, who was connected, if
+only in a remote degree, with one of the most distinguished families
+among the English nobility. I refer to Thomas Percy, a kinsman of the
+Earl of Northumberland, who through his influence had once received a
+place in the court establishment of King James of Scotland, and had
+then been the medium for forming a connexion between this prince and
+the Catholics. He was enraged because the assurances which he then
+thought that he might make to the Catholics in the name of the King,
+had not been fulfilled by the latter. In the spring of 1604, just at
+the time when the peace between England and Spain was concluded, by
+which no stipulations were made for the Catholics, they met one day in
+a lonely house near S. Clement's Inn, and bound themselves by a sacred
+and solemn oath to inviolable secrecy. It had been their intention
+once more to submit to the assembled Parliament an urgent petition in
+the name of the Catholics: but the resolutions of the House had
+sufficed to convince them that nothing could be gained by this step.
+Quite the contrary: it was apparent that the next session would impose
+far heavier conditions on them. An attack on the person of the King,
+or of his ministers, in the shape in which it had so often been
+resolved upon, could not do much even if it were successful: for the
+Parliament was always in reserve with its Protestant majority to
+establish anti-Catholic statutes, and the judges to execute them.
+Catesby now disclosed a plan which comprehended all their opponents at
+once. The King himself and his eldest son, the officers of state and
+of the court, the lords spiritual and temporal, the members of the
+House of Commons, one and all at the moment when they were collected
+to reopen Parliament, were to be blown into the air with gunpowder in
+the hall where they assembled--there where they issued the detested
+laws were they to be annihilated; vengeance was to be taken on them at
+the same time that room was to be made for another order of things in
+Church and State.
+
+This project was not altogether new. Already under Elizabeth there had
+been a talk of doing again to her what Bothwell had done or attempted
+to do to Henry Darnley: but men had perceived even at that time that
+this would not conduce to their purpose, and had hit upon a plan of
+blowing the Queen and her Parliament into the air together. Henry
+Garnet, the superior of the Jesuits, had been consulted on the
+subject; and he had declared the enterprise lawful, and had only
+advised them to spare as many of the innocent as possible in its
+execution.[335] The scheme which had been started under Elizabeth was
+resumed under King James, when men saw that his accession to the
+throne did not produce the hoped-for change. On this occasion also
+scruples were felt on the ground that many a Catholic would perish at
+the same time. To a question on the subject submitted to him without
+closer description of the case Garnet answered in the spirit of a
+mufti delivering his fettah, that if an end were indubitably a good
+one, and could be accomplished in no other way, it was lawful to
+destroy even some of the innocent with the guilty.[336] Catesby had no
+compassion even for the innocent: he regarded the lords generally as
+only poltroons and atheists, whose place would be better filled by
+vigorous men.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1605.]
+
+Without delay, before the end of December 1604, the conspirators
+proceeded to make their preparations. Percy, who was still numbered
+among the retainers of the court, hired a house which adjoined the
+Houses of Parliament. They were attempting to carry a mine through the
+foundation walls of that building--a design that says more for their
+zeal than for their intelligence, and one which could hardly have been
+effected--when a vault immediately under the House of Lords happened
+to fall vacant, and, as they were able to hire it, offered them a far
+better opportunity for the execution of their scheme. They filled it
+with a number of powder-barrels which are said to have contained the
+enormous quantity of 9,000 pounds of powder, and they confidently
+expected to bring about the great catastrophe with all its horrors on
+November 5, 1605, the day which after many changes had been appointed
+for the opening of Parliament. Their intention was, as soon as the
+King and the Prince of Wales had perished, to gain possession of the
+younger prince or of the princess, and to place one or other on the
+throne, with a regency under a protector during their minority.[337]
+All preparations had been made for bringing an effective force into
+the field; and its principal leaders were to assemble at Dunchurch in
+Warwickshire under pretence of hunting. The English regiment in
+Flanders was to be brought over and was to serve as the nucleus of a
+new force. There is no doubt that Owen was thoroughly conversant with
+their plans. Many other trustworthy people were admitted into the
+secret, and supported the project with their money. One of these was
+sent to Rome in order to convince the Pope of the necessity of the
+undertaking and to move him to resolutions in support of it. On All
+Saints' Day Father Garnet interrupted his prayer with a hymn of praise
+for the deliverance of the inheritance of the faithful from the
+generation of the ungodly.
+
+But warnings had already come to the government, especially from
+Paris, where the priests of the Jesuit party ventured to express
+themselves still more plainly than in London. The warning was conveyed
+with the express intimation that 'somewhat is at present in hand among
+these desperate hypocrites.'[338] What an impression must now have
+been produced when one of the Catholic lords, who at an earlier period
+had followed this party, but had for some time withdrawn from it, Lord
+Mounteagle, communicated to the first minister a letter in which he
+was admonished in mysterious language to hold aloof from the opening
+of Parliament. It may be that the King, as he himself relates, in
+deciphering the sense of a word hit upon the supposition that a fate
+similar to that of his father was being prepared for him; or it may be
+that the ministers had, as they affirm, come upon the traces of the
+matter; but however this may have been, on the evening before the
+opening of Parliament the vaults were examined, when not only were the
+powder-barrels found among wood and faggots, but also one of the
+conspirators, Guy Fawkes, who was busy with the last preparations for
+the execution of the plot. With a smiling countenance he confessed his
+purpose, which he seemed to regard as the fulfilment of a religious
+duty. The pedantic monarch thought himself in the presence of a
+fanatical Mutius Scaevola.
+
+The rest of the conspirators who were in London, alarmed by the
+discovery, hastened to the appointed rendezvous at Dunchurch; but the
+news which they brought with them caused general discouragement. With
+a band of about one hundred men, they set off to make their escape to
+Wales, the home of most of the Catholics, hoping to receive the
+promised reinforcements and the support of the population on their
+way. They once actually attempted to assure themselves of the latter;
+but on declaring that they were for God and the country, they received
+the answer that they ought also to be for the King. No one joined
+them, and many of their comrades had already dispersed when they were
+overtaken at Holbeach by the armed bands of Worcestershire under the
+Sheriff. Percy and Catesby, as they stood back to back, were shot dead
+by two balls from the same musket; the two Wrights were killed, and
+Thomas Winter taken prisoner.[339]
+
+The authority of government triumphed over this most frantic attempt
+to break through it, as it had triumphed in every similar case since
+the time of Henry VII.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1606.]
+
+It was perhaps the most remarkable feature in this last, that it was
+directed especially against the Parliament. During the Wars of the
+Roses, it had only been necessary to drive the then reigning prince
+out of the field, or to chase him away, in order to create a new
+parliamentary rule. The attempts against Queen Elizabeth rested on the
+hope of producing a similar result by her death: but it was apparent
+in her last years that her death would be useless, and the
+comparatively free elections after that event returned a Parliament of
+the same character as the preceding. Even under the new reign the
+Protestant party secured their ascendancy in the elections; and the
+only possibility of an alteration for the future was to be found in
+the annihilation of the Parliament, not so much of the institution--at
+least this was not mooted--but of the men who composed it and gave it
+its character. The violent attempt on the Parliament is a proof of its
+power. The Gunpowder Plot was directed against the King, not in his
+personal capacity as monarch, but as head of the legislative
+authority. It was felt that this power itself with all its component
+parts must be destroyed without scruple or mercy, if an order of
+things in the State corresponding to the views of the hierarchical
+party was ever again to obtain a footing.
+
+The necessary and inevitable result of the conspiracy was that
+Parliament, which did not enter on the session until January 1606,
+still further increased the existing severity of its laws. The great
+body of Catholics had not in any way participated in the plot; but
+yet, as it had originated among them, and was intended for the redress
+of their common grievances, they were all affected by the reaction
+which it produced. The Catholic recusants were to be subjected to the
+former penalties: they were sentenced to exclusion from the palace and
+from the capital; they were forbidden to hold any appointment in the
+public service either in the administration of justice, or as
+government officials, or even as physicians; they were obliged to open
+their houses at any moment for examination; the solemnisation of their
+marriages and the baptism of their children were henceforth to be
+legal only if performed by Protestant clergymen. It is evident that
+the Papal See would have preferred to restrain the agitation of the
+Catholics at this juncture; but as the latter appealed to the
+principle which had been impressed on them by their missionaries, that
+men had no duties to a king who was a heretic, the Parliament thought
+it necessary to impose on them an oath which concerned the authority
+of their Church as well as that of the State. Not only were they to be
+compelled to acknowledge the King as their legitimate prince, to
+defend him against every conspiracy and every attack, even when made
+under the pretext of religion, and to promise to reveal any such to
+him; they must also renounce the doctrine that the authority of the
+Church gave the Pope the right of deposing a king, and absolving his
+subjects from their oath of allegiance; and they must condemn as
+impious and heretical the doctrine that princes excommunicated by the
+Pope could be dethroned or put to death by their subjects.[340]
+Attention was directed to the English regiment in the service of the
+Archduke; and it was thought dangerous that so many malcontents should
+be assembled there, and should practise the use of arms, in order
+perhaps to turn them some day against their country. It was enacted
+that the Oath of Supremacy should be imposed on every one who took
+service abroad before his departure, with a pledge that he would not
+be reconciled to the Papacy: even securities for the observance of the
+oath were to be exacted.
+
+In the spring of the year 1605 the whole state of England still showed
+a tendency to clemency and conciliation. In the early part of 1606 the
+opposite tendency had completely obtained the upper hand.
+
+But this state of affairs necessarily reacted on Catholic countries
+and governments. In Spain, where it was easiest to rouse the
+susceptibilities of Catholicism, the severe measures of the Parliament
+of themselves created a feeling of bitterness: but besides this, Irish
+refugees resorted thither who gave an agitating account of the way in
+which these measures were carried out in Ireland:[341] so that the
+nation felt itself affronted in the persons of its co-religionists.
+Both governments, that of Spain and that of the Netherlands, refused
+to hand over to the English government men like Baldwin and Owen, who
+were taxed with participating in the plot, or to banish others whom
+the English government considered dangerous. The pious were reminded
+of the will of Queen Mary, in which she had transferred her
+hereditary right over England, France, Ireland and Scotland, to the
+House of Spain in case her son should not be converted to the Church.
+
+And how deeply must the Court of Rome have felt itself injured by the
+imposition of the Oath of Supremacy. A Pope of the Borghese family had
+just been elected, Paul V, who was as deeply convinced of the truth of
+the Papal principles, and as firmly resolved to enforce them, as any
+of his predecessors; and who was surrounded by learned men and
+statesmen who looked upon the maintenance of these principles as the
+salvation of the world. Their religious pride was galled to the quick
+by the imposition of such an oath as that exacted in England, by which
+principles at that time zealously taught in Catholic schools were
+described not only as objectionable but as heretical. They thought it
+possible that the temporal power might prevail on the English
+Catholics to accept this oath, as in fact the archpriest Blackwell who
+had been appointed by Clement VIII took it, and advised others to do
+the same. But by this act the supremacy of the King would be
+practically acknowledged, and the connexion of the English Catholics
+with the Papacy dissolved. Moved by these considerations, Paul V, in a
+brief of September 1, 1606, declared that the oath contained much that
+was contrary to the faith, and could not be taken by any one without
+damage to his salvation. He expressed his anticipation that the
+English Catholics, whose constancy had been tested like gold in the
+fire of the persecutions, would show their firmness on this occasion
+also, and that they would rather undergo all tortures, even death
+itself, than insult the Divine Majesty. At first the archpriest and
+the moderate Catholics, who did not consider that the political claims
+referred to in the oath were the true principles of the Papacy,
+declared that the brief was spurious; but after some time it was
+confirmed in all due form, and an address appeared from the pen of the
+most eminent apologist of the See of Rome, Cardinal Bellarmin, in
+which he reminded the archpriest that the general apostolical
+authority of the Pope could not be impugned even in a single iota of
+the subtleties of dogma: how much less then in this instance, where
+the question was simply whether men should look for the head of the
+Church in the successor of Henry VIII, or in the successor of S.
+Peter.
+
+These statements however greatly irritated the King, both as a man of
+learning and as a temporal potentate. He took pen in hand himself in
+order to defend the oath, in the wording of which he had a large
+share. He expressed his astonishment that so distinguished a scholar
+as Bellarmin should confound the Oath of Supremacy with the Oath of
+Allegiance, in which no word occurred affecting any article of faith,
+and which was only intended to distinguish the champions of an attempt
+like the Gunpowder Plot from his quiet subjects of the Catholic
+religion. He said that nothing more disastrous to these could have
+happened than that the Pope should condemn the oath, and thereby the
+original relation of obedience which bound them to their sovereign;
+for he was requiring them to repudiate this obedience and to abjure
+again the oath which had already been taken by many, after the example
+of the archpriest. James I took much trouble to justify the form of
+oath by the decrees of the old councils.[342]
+
+Criminal attempts, even when they fail, have at times the most
+extensive political consequences. James I had started with the idea of
+linking his subjects of every persuasion to himself in the bonds of a
+free and uniform obedience, and of creating harmonious relations
+between the rival powers of the world and his own realm of Great
+Britain. Then intervened this murderous attempt; and the measures to
+which he had recourse in order to secure his person and his country
+against the repetition of criminal attacks like this last, rekindled
+the national and religious animosities which he desired to lull, and
+fanned them into a bright flame.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[330] Letter to the King. Works viii, 647; cf. i. 671.
+
+[331] Discursus status religionis, 1605: 'Ipsi magnates non verentur
+se profiteri catholicos et plerique alii ex nobilitate, praecipue in
+principatu Walliae et in provinciis septentrionalibus,--ubi numerus
+eorum non ita pridem crevit in immensum.
+
+[332] 'S. Sta vole e comanda, che li Catolici siano obedienti al re
+d'Inghilterra, come a loro signore e re naturale. Vra Sria attenda
+con ogni diligenza e vigilanza a questi negotii d'Inghilterra
+procurando che conforme alla volonta di N. Sra obedischino al suo re
+e non s'intrighino in congiure tumulti ed altre cose, per le quali
+possino dispiacere a quella Ma.'
+
+[333] The Venetian Ambassador in his reports mentions 'doglienze e
+querelle accompagnate di lacrime di sangue.' The Roman reports are to
+the same effect. De vero Statu Angliae. La vera relatione dello stato.
+Agosto 1605. The persecution of the Catholics had begun on July 26.
+
+[334] Camden in writing to Cotton names Bainham, Catesby, Tresham, and
+the two Wrights. He calls them 'gentlemen hunger-starved for
+innovation.' Camdeni Epistolae 347.
+
+[335] Garnet says, in his conference with Hall, which was overheard,
+that he was accused of giving 'some advice in Queen Elizabeth's time
+of the blowing up of the parliament house with gunpowder; I told them
+it was lawful' Jardine, Gunpowder Plot 202.
+
+[336] From his examination: Jardine 206.
+
+[337] Lingard ix. 52. From Greenway's memoranda.
+
+[338] From a letter of Parry to Sir T. Edmondes, Paris, October 10,
+1605; in Birch's Negotiations 234.
+
+[339] Molino just at the time reports this, as the King also relates
+it in his 'Conjuratio sulphurea.' Cf. Barclay, Series patefacti
+parricidii 569.
+
+[340] 'Juro quod ex corde abhorreo detestor et abjuro tanquam impiam
+et haereticam hanc damnabilem doctrinam et propositionem quod
+principes per papam excommunicati vel deprivati possint per suos
+subditos vel alios quoscunque deponi aut occidi'. The form originally
+drawn up had asserted that the Pope generally had no right to
+excommunicate kings. But King James, in his fondness for weighing
+every side of the question, did not wish to go so far as this.
+
+[341] June 1606. Winwood, Memorials ii. 224. Cornwallis to Salisbury:
+'Such an apprehension of despair here they have of late received to
+make any conjunction or further amitie with us, by reason of the
+extreame lawes and bitter persecution, as they terme it, against those
+of their religion both in England and especially in Ireland.' June 20,
+229. 'They repair to the Jesuits, priests, fryars, and fugitives; the
+first three joyne with the last children of lost hope, who having
+given a farewell to all laws of nature--dispose themselves to become
+the executioneris of the--inventions of the others.'
+
+[342] Apologia pro juramento fidelitatis, opposita duobus brevibus ...
+et literis Bellarmini ad Blackwellum Archipresbyterum. Opera Jacobi
+Regis, p. 237. Lond. 1619.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+FOREIGN POLICY OF THE NEXT TEN YEARS.
+
+
+What had already taken place before James ascended the throne,
+occurred again under these circumstances. Although belonging to one of
+the two religious parties which divided the world between them, he had
+sought to form relations with the other, when circumstances which were
+beyond all calculation caused and almost compelled him to return to
+his original position.
+
+The Republic of Venice enjoyed his full sympathies in the quarrel in
+which at this time it became involved with the Papacy. The laws which
+it had made for limiting the influence of the clergy appeared to him
+in the highest degree just and wise. He thought that Europe would be
+happy if other princes as well would open their eyes, for they would
+not then experience so many usurpations on the part of the See of
+Rome; and he showed himself ready to form an alliance with the
+Republic. The Venetians always affirmed that the lively interest of
+the King of England in their cause had already, by provoking the
+jealousy of the French, strengthened their resolution to arrange these
+disputes in conjunction with Spain.[343] When the Republic, although
+compelled to make some concessions, yet came out of this contest
+without losing its independence, it continued to believe that for this
+result also it was indebted to King James.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1609.]
+
+In the same way, there can be no serious doubt that the refusal of the
+alliance, which the Spaniards had more than once proposed to the King
+of England, impelled the former to turn their thoughts to a peaceful
+adjustment of their differences with the Netherlands. They had made
+similar overtures to France also, but these had been shipwrecked by
+the firmness and mistrust of Henry IV. They were convinced however
+that, without winning over at least one of these two powers, they
+would never even by their strongest efforts again become masters of
+the Netherlands. In spite of some advantages which they had obtained
+on the mainland, they were so hard pressed by the superiority of the
+Dutch fleet, that they at last came forward with more acceptable
+proposals than they had before made. The English government advised
+the States-General to show compliance on all other points if their
+independence were acknowledged: not to stand out even if this were
+recognised only for a while through a truce, for in that case they
+would obtain better conditions on the other points: and that in regard
+to these England would protect them.[344] By their conduct to both
+sides, by standing aloof from the one and by bestowing good advice on
+the other, the English thus promoted the conclusion of the twelve
+years truce, and thereby procured for the United Provinces an
+independent position which they did not allow to be wrested from them
+again. The Spaniards attributed the result not so much to the
+Provinces themselves as to the two Powers allied with them: they
+thought that the articles of the treaty had been drawn up by the
+former, but devised and dictated by the latter. It was their serious
+intention that this agreement should be only temporary; they reckoned
+upon the speedy death of the King of France, and upon future troubles
+in England, for an opportunity of resuming the war.[345] But whatever
+the future might bring to pass, England, as well as France, derived an
+incalculable advantage at the time from the erection of an independent
+state under their protection, which could not but ally itself with
+them against the still dominant power of Spain.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1610.]
+
+On the whole the general understanding which King James maintained
+with Henry IV secured a support for his State, and imparted to himself
+a political courage which was otherwise foreign to his nature. The two
+sovereigns also made common cause in the Cleves-Juliers question. Two
+Protestant princes with the consent of the Estates had taken
+possession of it on the strength of their hereditary title. When an
+Archduke laid hands on the principal fortress in the country, a
+general feeling of jealousy was roused: and even in England it was
+thought that the point at issue here was not the possession of a small
+principality, but the confirmation of the House of Austria and the
+Papacy in their already tottering dominion over these provinces of the
+Lower Rhine, which might exercise such an important influence on the
+State of Europe.[346] When Henry IV joined the German Union and the
+Dutch for the protection of the two princes and for the conquest of
+Juliers, James also decided to bestow his aid. He took into his own
+pay 4000 of the troops who were still in the service of the Republic,
+sent them a general, and despatched them to the contested dominions to
+take part in the struggle.
+
+It does not appear that any one in England was aware of the great
+designs which Henry IV connected with this enterprise. When, on the
+eve of its execution, he was struck down in the centre of his capital
+by the dagger of a fanatic, friends and foes alike were thrilled with
+the feeling that the event affected them all, and would have an
+immeasurable influence on the world. In England also it was felt as a
+domestic calamity. Robert Cecil, now Earl of Salisbury, said in
+Parliament that Henry IV had been as it were their advanced guard
+against conspiracies of which he had always given the first
+information: that the first warning of the Gunpowder Plot must have
+come from him; that he had as it were stood in the breach, and that
+now he had been the first victim. The crimes of Ravaillac and of
+Catesby had sprung from the same source.
+
+The enterprise against Juliers was not hindered by this event. The
+forces of the Union under the Prince of Anhalt, and the Dutch and
+English troops under Maurice of Orange and Edward Cecil, with the
+addition of a number of volunteers from such leading families in
+England as those of Winchester, Somerset, Rich, Herbert, had already
+made considerable progress in the siege when, at last, at the orders
+of the widowed Queen, the French also arrived, but in the worst plight
+and suffering severely from illness, so that they could not carry out
+the intention, with which they came, of sequestrating the place in the
+interests of France. When the fortress had been taken it was delivered
+to the two princes, who now possessed the whole country. This was an
+event of general historical importance, for by this means Brandenburg
+first planted its foot on the Rhine, and came into greater prominence
+in Europe on this side also. It took place, like the foundation of the
+Republic of the Netherlands, with the concurrence of England and
+France, and in opposition to Austria and Spain, but at the same time
+by the help of the Republic itself and of those members of the Estates
+of the German empire who professed the same creed.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1611.]
+
+The times had gone by when the Spaniards had taken arms as if for the
+conquest of the world; but their pretensions remained the same. It was
+still their intention, in virtue of the privileges assigned them by
+the Pope, to exclude all others from the colonisation of America and
+from commerce with the East Indies. They laid claim to Northern Africa
+because it had been tributary to the crown of Aragon, to Athens and
+Neopatras because they had belonged to the Catalans, to Jerusalem
+because it had belonged to the King of Naples, and even to
+Constantinople because it had passed by will to Ferdinand II of Aragon
+from the last of the Palaeologi. On the strength of the claims made by
+the old dukes of Milan they deemed themselves to have a right to the
+towns of the Venetian mainland, and to Liguria. Philip III was in
+their eyes the true heir of the Maximilian branch of the German house
+of Austria: according to their view the succession in Bohemia and
+Hungary fell to him. The progress of the Catholic revival afforded
+them an opportunity of exercising a profound influence on the German
+empire, while the same cause extended their influence over Poland;
+they obtained through their commercial relations even the friendship
+of Protestant princes and towns in the North. Their intention was now
+to associate the two antagonistic powers of the West with their policy
+by means of alliances with the reigning families. The first
+considerable step in this direction was made after the death of Henry
+IV, when they succeeded in concerting with his widow a double
+marriage, between the young King of France and an Infanta of Spain,
+and between the future King of Spain and a French princess. It was
+thought certain beforehand that they would get the conduct of French
+policy into their hands during the minority of Louis XIII. But they
+were already seeking to draw the house of Stuart also into this
+alliance in spite of the difference of religion. In August 1611 the
+Spanish ambassador, whose overtures had hitherto been fruitless, came
+forward to announce that an alliance between the Prince of Wales and a
+Spanish infanta would meet with no obstacle on the part of Spain, if
+it should be desired on the part of England. It was thought that the
+Queen, who found a satisfaction of her ambition in this brilliant
+alliance, and the old Spanish and Catholic party, who were still very
+numerous in the highest ranks and among the people, might employ their
+whole influence in its favour.
+
+But there was still at the head of affairs a man who was resolved to
+oppose this design, Robert Cecil, to whom it is generally owing that
+the tendencies of Elizabeth's policy lasted on so long into the time
+of the Stuarts as they did. I do not know whether the two Cecils can
+be reckoned among the great men of England: they would almost seem to
+have lacked that independent attitude and that soaring and brilliant
+genius which would be requisite for such an eminence; but without
+doubt few have had so much influence on its history. Robert Cecil
+inherited the employments, the experiences, and the personal
+connexions of his father William. He knew how to rid himself of all
+rivals that rose to the surface[347] by counteracting their
+proceedings in secret or openly, justifiably or not: enmity and
+friendship he reciprocated with equal warmth. He made no change in the
+method of transacting business which was conducted by the whole Privy
+Council; but his natural superiority and the importance that he
+gradually acquired always brought the decision into accordance with
+his views. The King himself gave intimations that he did not look upon
+his predominance as altogether proper. In one of his letters he jests
+over the supremacy calmly exercised by his minister at the centre of
+affairs, while he, the King, so soon as his minister summoned him,
+must hasten in, and yet at last could do nothing but accept the
+resolutions which he put into his hands. A small deformed man, to whom
+James, as was his wont, gave a jesting nickname on this account, he
+yet impressed men by the intelligence which flashed from his
+countenance and from every word he spoke; and even his outward bearing
+had a certain dignity. His independence was increased by his enormous
+wealth, acquired mainly by investments in the Dutch funds, which at
+that time returned an extraordinarily high interest. Surrounded by
+many who accepted presents, he showed himself inaccessible to such
+seductions and incorruptible. At this time he was the oracle of
+England.[348]
+
+Among the English youth the wish was constantly reviving that the war
+with Spain, in which success was expected without any doubt, might be
+renewed with all vigour. Robert Cecil was as little in favour of this
+as his father formerly had been. Peaceful relations with Spain were
+rendered especially necessary by the condition of Ireland, where
+Tyrone, not less dissatisfied with James than he had been with
+Elizabeth, had again thrown off his allegiance, and had at last gone
+abroad to procure foreign aid for his discontented countrymen. But if
+Cecil could not break with Spain, yet he would not allow that power
+to strengthen itself or to obtain influence over England herself. In
+regard to the proposal of marriage that was made he had said that the
+gallant Prince of Wales could find blooming roses everywhere and did
+not need to search for an olive.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1612.]
+
+The notion continued to prevail that James I, even if he did not take
+arms, ought to put himself at the head of the anti-Spanish party in
+Europe, now that Henry IV was no more.
+
+The King and his ministers thought that for maintaining in the first
+place the state of affairs established in Cleves and Juliers, an
+alliance of the countries which had co-operated in producing it was
+the only appropriate means. In March 1612 we find the English
+ambassador at the Hague, Sir Ralph Winwood, at Wesel, where a
+defensive alliance that had long been mooted between James I and the
+princes of the Union, including those of the Palatinate, Brandenburg,
+Hesse, Wurtemberg, Baden, and Anhalt, was actually concluded. Both
+contracting parties promised one another mutual support against all
+who should attack them on account of the Union or of the aid they had
+given in settling and maintaining the tenure of Cleves and Juliers.
+The King was accordingly pledged to bring 4000 men into the field, and
+the Princes 2000 as their contingent, or to pay a sum of money fixed
+by rule at the choice of the country which should be attacked.[349]
+The agreement was concluded for six years, the period for which it was
+also agreed that the Union should still continue. The idea was
+started, I do not know whether by King James or rather by the leading
+English statesmen, of making this alliance the basis of a general
+European coalition against the encroachments of the Spaniards.[350]
+The German princes invited the Queen-Regent of France to join it, and
+to bring the Republic of the United Provinces into it. Mary de'
+Medici refused, on the ground that this was unnecessary, as the
+Republic was sufficiently secured by the defensive alliance previously
+concluded; but her ministers at that time still lent their assistance
+for the object immediately in view. The Spaniards had conceived the
+intention of raising the Archduke Albert to the imperial throne after
+the death of the Emperor Rudolph. A portion of the Electors, among
+others the Elector of Saxony, which had been prejudiced by the
+settlement of Juliers, was in his favour. He possessed the sympathies
+of all zealous Catholics; but England and France saw in the union of
+the imperial power with the possession of the Spanish Netherlands a
+danger for themselves and for the republic founded under their
+auspices. They plainly declared to the Spaniards that they would not
+permit it, but would set themselves against it with their allies, that
+is to say, of course, with the Republic and the Union.[351]
+
+Little seems to have been heard in Germany of the protest of the
+powers in regard to the imperial succession: but it was effectual. The
+imperial throne was ascended not by Albert but by Matthias, who had
+far more sympathy with the efforts of the Protestants and approved of
+the Union. Indeed the Spaniards too, under the guidance of the pacific
+Lerma, were not inclined to drive matters to extremities.
+
+In the youthful republic of the Netherlands an estrangement, involving
+also a difference of opinion on religious questions, arose at that
+time between the Stadtholder and the magistrates of the aristocracy.
+The party of the Stadtholder clung to the strict Calvinistic
+doctrines; the aristocratic party were in favour of milder and more
+conciliatory views, which besides allotted to the temporal power no
+small influence over the clergy, as Arminius had maintained in his
+lectures at Leyden. After his death a German professor, Conrad
+Vorstius, had been invited to Holland, who added to the opinions of
+his predecessor others which deviated still more widely from
+Calvinism, and inclined to Socinianism. The world has always felt
+astonished that King James took a side in this controversy, wrote a
+book against Vorstius, and did not rest till he had been ejected from
+his office. In fact learned rivalry was not the only motive which
+induced him to take pen in hand: we perceive that the adherents of
+Arminius, the supporters of Vorstius, were obnoxious to him on
+political grounds also. The leaders of the burgher aristocracy showed
+a marked coldness to the interests of England after the conclusion of
+the truce, and a leaning to those of France. The King moreover was of
+opinion that positive orthodoxy was necessary for maintaining the
+conflict with Catholicism, and for upholding a state founded on
+religion: and he sent an invitation to the Prince of Orange to unite
+with him in this cause. The strict Calvinism of the prince was at the
+same time an act of homage to England.
+
+While religious and political affairs were in this state of
+perplexity, which extended to the French Reformed Church as well, a
+marriage was settled between the Princess Elizabeth of England and the
+Elector Palatine, Frederick V.
+
+This young prince, who at that time was still a ward, had the prospect
+of succeeding at an unusually early age to a position in which he
+could exert an influence on the German empire. By the mother's side he
+was grandson of the founder of Dutch independence, William of Orange;
+his uncles were the Stadtholder Maurice and the Duke of Bouillon, who
+might be considered the head of the Reformed Communion in France, and
+who had married another daughter of William. Frederick had spent some
+years with the Duke at Sedan. The Duke of Bouillon, like Maurice, took
+an active part in various ways in the European politics of that age:
+these two men stood at the head of that party on the continent which
+most zealously opposed the Papacy and the house of Austria. Bouillon
+had first directed the attention of James to the young Frederick, and
+had painted to him his good qualities and his great prospects, and,
+although not without reserve, had pronounced a match between him and
+the Princess Elizabeth desirable,[352] as it would form a dynastic
+tie between the Protestantism of England and that of the continent.
+The brother of the Duke of Wurtemberg, Louis Frederick, who then
+resided in England on behalf of the Union, still more decidedly
+advocated the match. He told the King that he would have in the young
+count not so much a son-in-law, as a servant who depended on his nod;
+and that he would pledge all the German princes to his interest by
+this means.[353] After the conclusion of the alliance at Wesel the
+Count of Hanau, who was likewise married to a daughter of William,
+visited London with two privy councillors of the Palatinate, in order
+to bring the matter to an issue: they were to meet there with the Duke
+of Bouillon, to whose advice they had been expressly referred. Another
+suit for the hand of the Princess was then before the English court.
+The Duke of Savoy had made proposals for a double marriage between his
+two children and the English prince and princess. There appeared to be
+almost a match between Catholic and Protestant princes to decide which
+party should bear off 'this pearl,' the Princess of England. Without
+doubt religious considerations mainly carried the day in favour of the
+German suitor. The Princess displayed great zeal in behalf of
+Protestantism; and James said that he would not allow his daughter to
+be restricted in the exercise of her religion, not even if she were to
+be Queen of the world.[354] On the 16th of May the members of the
+Privy Council signed the contract in which the marriage was agreed
+upon between 'My Lady Elizabeth,' only daughter of the King, and the
+Grand-Master of the Household and Elector of the Holy Roman Empire,
+Frederick Count Palatine, and the necessary provisions were made as to
+dower and settlements. This may be regarded as the last work of Robert
+Cecil: he died a few days after. The pulpits had attacked the marriage
+of the princess with a Catholic, and had exhorted the people to pray
+for her marriage with a Protestant. The common feeling of Protestants
+was gratified when this result came to pass.
+
+The question of the future marriage of Henry Frederick Prince of Wales
+was treated in a kindred spirit though not exactly in the same way.
+
+All eyes were already directed to this young prince and his future
+prospects. He was serious and reserved; a man of few words, sound
+judgment, and lofty ideas; and he gave signs of an ambitious desire to
+rival his most famous predecessors on the throne.[355] He understood
+the calling of sovereign in a different sense from his father. On one
+occasion when his father set his younger brother before him as a model
+of industry in the pursuit of science, he replied that he would make a
+very good archbishop of Canterbury. For one who was to wear the crown
+skill in arms and knowledge of seamanship seemed to him indispensable;
+he made it his most zealous study to acquire both the one and the
+other. His intention undoubtedly was to make every provision for the
+great war against the Spanish monarchy which was anticipated. He
+wished to escort his sister to Germany in order to form a personal
+acquaintance with the princes of the Union, whom he regarded as his
+natural allies. These views could not have been thwarted if the
+proposal of the Duke of Savoy, which had been rejected in behalf of
+the Princess, had been accepted in behalf of the Prince.[356] For
+every day the Duke separated himself more and more from the policy of
+Spain: he had even wished at one time to be admitted into the Union.
+He offered a large portion with the hand of his daughter, and was
+ready to agree to those restrictions in the exercise of her religion
+which it might be thought necessary to prescribe. Meanwhile, however,
+another project came up. The grandees of France wished to bring a
+prince of such high endowments and decided views into the closest
+relations with the house of Bourbon, in order to oppose the action of
+Spain on the French court by another influence. They made proposals
+for a marriage between the Prince of Wales and the second daughter of
+Henry IV, the Lady Christine of France. They found the most cordial
+reception for this scheme among the English who favoured
+Protestantism, and understood the course of the world. It was thought
+that the new League, for this was the designation given to the
+increasing preponderance of Spanish and Catholic views in France,
+would by this means be thrown into confusion in its own camp; the
+French government would be brought back to its old attitude of
+hostility towards Spain, and would only thus be completely sure of the
+States General, which could never separate themselves both from
+England and France at the same time. The Prince embraced the notion
+that the Princess must immediately be brought to England to be
+instructed in the Protestant faith, and perhaps to be converted to it.
+As she was still very young his notion was so far reasonable, although
+in other respects her age was a considerable obstacle. While he
+referred the decision to his father, he yet made a remark which shows
+his own leanings, that this marriage would certainly be most
+acceptable to all his brother Protestants.[357] What a prospect would
+have dawned on these if a young and energetic king of England,
+confederate with Germany and Holland, and looked up to in France for a
+double reason, both on account of the old and still unforgotten
+claims,[358] and on account of his marriage, had taken the Huguenots
+under his protection or actually appealed to them in his own behalf!
+
+The 5th of November 1612 was fixed as the day on which the question
+was to be decided by a commission expressly appointed for this
+purpose. King James, who is represented as favourable to the connexion
+with France, went from Theobald's to the meeting: the Prince had drawn
+out for himself the arguments by which he thought to refute the
+objections of opponents. On the very same day he was taken ill, and
+was obliged to ask for an adjournment; but from day to day and hour to
+hour his illness became more dangerous. He exhibited a composed and,
+when addressed on religious questions, a devout frame of mind, but he
+did not wish to die. When some one said to him that God only could
+heal him, he replied that perhaps the physicians also might do
+something. On the 17th of November, two hours after midnight, he
+died--'the flower of his house,' as men said, 'the palladium of the
+country, the terror of his foes.' They even went so far as to put him
+at this early age on a level with Henry IV, who had been proved by a
+life full of struggles and vicissitudes. The comparison rested on the
+circumstance that the young and highly-gifted prince was forced to
+succumb to an unexpected misfortune while preparing for great
+undertakings which, like those of Henry IV, were to be directed
+against Spain.
+
+It is very probable that this prince, if he had lived to ascend the
+English throne, would have attempted to give to affairs a turn
+suitable to the vigorous designs which engrossed his thoughts.
+According to all appearance he would not have trodden in the footsteps
+of his father. He appeared quite capable of reviving the old plans of
+conquest entertained by the house of Lancaster: he would have united
+outspoken Protestant tendencies with the monarchical views of Edward
+VI, or rather of Elizabeth. With the men who then held the chief power
+in England he had no points of agreement, and they already feared
+him.[359] They were even accused of having caused his premature death.
+
+Yet the course which had been struck out with the co-operation of the
+young prince was not abandoned at his death.
+
+The Elector Palatine had already arrived in London. His demeanour and
+behaviour quieted the doubts of one party and put to shame the
+predictions of the other: he appeared manly, firm, bent on high aims,
+and dignified: he knew how to win over even the Queen who at first was
+unfavourable to him. Letters exchanged at that time are full of the
+joy with which the marriage was welcomed by the Protestants. But it
+was just as decidedly unwelcome to the other party. An expression
+which was then reported in Brussels shewed how lively the hatred was,
+and how widely and how far into the future political combinations
+extended. It was said that this marriage was designed to wrest the
+Imperial throne from the house of Austria; but it was added, with
+haughty reliance on the strength of Catholic Europe, that this design
+should never succeed.[360]
+
+Another collision seemed at times to be immediately impending. In the
+year 1613 the English government sent to ask the districts most
+exposed to a Spanish invasion, how many troops they could severally
+oppose to it, and had appointed the fire signals which were to
+announce the coming danger. It is indeed not wonderful that under such
+circumstances it continued the policy which was calculated to promote
+a general European opposition to the Spaniards.
+
+When the French grandees though fit to contest the Spanish marriages
+which Mary de' Medici made up, they had King James on their side, who
+regarded it as the natural right of princes of the blood to undertake
+the charge of public affairs during a minority. At the meeting of the
+Estates in 1614, it was their intention to get the government into
+their hands, and then to bring it back again to the line of policy of
+Henry IV. The English ambassador, Edmonds, showed that he concurred
+with them.
+
+Soon afterwards the differences between the Duke of Savoy and the
+Spanish governor in Milan terminated in an open rupture. The French
+grandees, though they had not carried their point in the
+States-General, yet showed themselves independent and strong enough to
+follow their own wishes in interfering in this matter. While the
+Queen-Regent supported the Spaniards, they came to the assistance of
+the Duke. In this struggle King James also came forward on his side in
+concert with the Republic of Venice, which was still able to throw a
+considerable weight into the scale on an Italian question.
+
+The cause of Savoy appeared the common cause of opposition to Spain.
+James deemed himself happy in being able to do something further for
+that object by removing the misunderstanding which existed between
+Protestant Switzerland and the Duke. On his own side he carefully
+upheld the old connexion between England and the Cantons. He gave out
+that in this manner the territories of his allies would extend to the
+very borders of Italy, for Protestant Switzerland formed the
+connecting link between his friends in that country and the German
+Union which, in turn, bordered on the Netherlands.
+
+With the same view, in order that his allies might not have their
+hands tied elsewhere, he laboured to remove the dissensions between
+Saxony and Brandenburg, and between the States-General and Denmark. At
+the repeated request of certain German princes, he made it his
+business to put an end, by his intervention, to the war that had
+broken out between Sweden and Denmark. By the mediation of his
+ambassadors the agreement of Knäröd was arrived at, which regulated
+the relations between the Northern kingdoms for a considerable time.
+James saw his name at the head of an agreement which settled the
+rights of sovereignty in the extreme North 'from Tittisfiord to
+Weranger,' and had the satisfaction of finding that the ratification
+of this agreement by his own hand was deemed necessary.[361] A general
+union of the Protestant kingdoms and states was contemplated in this
+arrangement.
+
+In connexion with this, the commercial relations that had been long
+ago concluded with Russia assumed a political character. During the
+quarrels about the succession to the throne, when Moscow was in danger
+of falling under the dominion of Poland, which in this matter was
+supported by Catholic Europe, the Russians sought the help of Germany,
+of the Netherlands, and especially of England. We learn that the house
+of Romanoff offered to put itself in a position of inferiority to King
+James, who appeared as the supreme head of the Protestant world, if he
+would free Russia from the invasion of the Poles.
+
+Already in the time of Elizabeth the opposition to the Spanish
+monarchy had caused the English government to make advances to the
+Turks.
+
+Just at the period when the fiercest struggle was preparing, at the
+time when Philip II was making preparations for annexing Portugal, the
+Queen determined to shut her eyes to the scruples which hitherto had
+generally deterred Christian princes from entering into an alliance
+with unbelievers. It is worth noticing that from the beginning East
+Indian interests were the means of drawing these powers nearer to one
+another. Elizabeth directed the attention of the Turks to the serious
+obstacles that would be thrown in their way, if the Portuguese
+colonies in that quarter were conquered by the far more powerful
+Spaniards.[362] The commercial relations between the two kingdoms
+themselves presented another obvious consideration. England seized the
+first opportunity for throwing off the protection of the French flag,
+which had hitherto sheltered her, and in a short time was much rather
+able to protect the Dutch who were still closely allied with her. The
+Turks greatly desired to form a connexion with a naval power
+independent of the religious impulses which threatened to bring the
+neighbouring powers of the West into the field against them. They knew
+that the English would never co-operate against them with Spaniards
+and French. Political and commercial interests were thus intertwined
+with one another. A Levant company was founded, at the proposal of
+which the ambassadors were nominated, both of whom enjoyed a
+considerable influence under James I.
+
+As in these transactions attention was principally directed to the
+commerce in the products of the East Indies carried on through the
+medium of Turkish harbours, was it not to be expected that an attempt
+should be made to open direct communication with that country? The
+Dutch had already anticipated the English in that quarter; but
+Elizabeth was for a long time withheld by anxiety lest the
+negotiations for peace with Spain, which were just about to be opened,
+should be interrupted by such an enterprise. Yet under her government
+the company was formed for trading with the East Indies, to which,
+among other exceptional privileges, the right of acquiring territory
+was granted. It was only bound to hold aloof from those provinces
+which were in the possession of Christian sovereigns. We have seen how
+carefully in the peace which James I concluded with Spain everything
+was avoided which could have interrupted this commerce. James
+confirmed this company by a charter which was not limited to any
+particular time. And in the very first contracts which this company
+concluded with the great Mogul, Jehangir, they had the right bestowed
+on them of fortifying the principal factories which were made over to
+them. The native powers regarded the English as their allies against
+the Spaniards and Portuguese.
+
+In the year 1612 Shirley, a former friend of Essex, who had been
+induced by the Earl himself to go to the East, and who had there
+formed a close alliance with Shah Abbas, returned to England, where he
+appeared wearing a turban and accompanied by a Persian wife. He
+entrusted the child of this marriage to the guardianship of the Queen,
+when he again set off for Persia, in order to open up the commerce of
+England in the Persian Gulf.
+
+But it was a still more important matter that the attempts which had
+been made under the Queen to set foot permanently on the other
+hemisphere could now be brought to a successful issue under King
+James. It may perhaps be affirmed that, so long as the countries were
+at open war, these attempts could not have been made, unless Spain had
+first been completely conquered. England could not resume her old
+designs until a peace had been concluded, which, if it did not
+expressly allow new settlements, yet did not expressly forbid them,
+but rather perhaps tacitly reserved the right of forming them. Under
+the impulse which the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot gave, I will not
+say to war, but certainly to continued opposition to Spain, the King
+bestowed on the companies formed for that purpose the charters on
+which the colonisation of North America was founded. The settlement of
+Virginia was again undertaken, and, although in constant danger of
+destruction from the opposition of warlike natives and the dissensions
+of its founders, yet at last by the union of strict law and personal
+energy it was quickened into life, and kindled the jealousy of the
+Spaniards. They feared especially that it would throw obstacles in the
+way of the homeward and outward voyages of their fleets.[363] Their
+hands, however, were tied by the peace: and we learn that when they
+made overtures for the marriage of the Prince of Wales with a Spanish
+Infanta, they proposed at the same time that this colony should be
+given up. But the Prince of Wales from the interest which he took in
+all maritime enterprises was just the man to exert himself most warmly
+in its behalf. Under his auspices a new expedition was equipped, which
+did not sail till after his death, and then materially contributed to
+secure the colony. Not without good reason have the colonists
+commemorated his name.
+
+How immensely important at least for England have her relations with
+the Spanish monarchy been shown to be! She had been formerly its ally,
+its attacks she had then withstood, and now resisted it at every turn.
+Only in rivalry with this power, and in opposition to it, was the
+great Island of the West brought into relations, for which it was
+suited by its geographical position, with every part of the known
+world.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[343] Contarini, Relatione 1610: 'Pareva che nelli moti passati col
+papa havesse la republica aggradito Più l'offerte dei Inglesi che gli
+offizii et interpositioni di Franza e da quelle pia che da questi
+riconosciuto l'accommodamento: il che per tutta la Franza si è potuto
+comprendere.'
+
+[344] The Lords of the Privy Council to Sir Richard Spencer and Sir
+Ralph Winwood. Aug. 1, 1608. In Winwood ii. 429.
+
+[345] This is affirmed by Bentivoglio, who as Nuncio at Brussels was
+closely acquainted with these transactions. Historia della guerra di
+Fiandra iii. 490.
+
+[346] Winwood to Salisbury, October 7, 1609. Memorials iii. 78.
+
+[347] Molino: 'E huomo astuto sagace e persecutore acerrimo de' suoi
+nemici ... ne a avuto multi et tutti egli a fatto precipitare.'
+
+[348] Ibid.: 'L'autorità del quale è cosi assoluta, che con verità si
+puo dire essere egli il re e governatore di quella monarchia'
+
+[349] Alligantia inter regem et electores Germaniae, in Rymer vii. ii.
+178.
+
+[350] Francesco Contarini visited him in September 1610 in the
+country, and joined him in the chase, on which occasion James touched
+on various topics in conversation: 'De' pensieri di Spagnoli con poca
+loro laude ... non mostro far alcun conto del Duca di Sassonia suo
+cognato ni della investitura data li dall'imperatore nel ducato di
+Cleves.'
+
+[351] Beaulieu to Trumbull, Paris, June 29, 1612: 'Both from this
+state (France) and the state of England it hath been plainly enough
+intimated unto them (the Spaniards) that if they would go about to
+make the Archduke Albert Emperor or king of the Romans, both these
+states with their allies would set the rest to hinder it.'
+
+[352] Green, Princesses of England v. 180; De la Boderie ii. 248.
+
+[353] This is the report of A. Foscarini, Jan. 20, 1612.
+
+[354] Winwood to Trumbull, Memorials iii. 357.
+
+[355] Correro 1609, May 20: 'Non solo riesce esquisitamente in tutti
+gli esercitii del corpo, ma si dimostra nelle attioni sue molto
+giudicioso e prudente.'--Ant. Foscarini 1612: 'Amplissimi erano i suoi
+concetti; di natura grave severa ritenuta di pochissime parole.'
+
+[356] W. Ralegh: On a marriage between Prince Henry and a daughter of
+Savoy. Works viii. 237.
+
+[357] Given in French by Levassor, Histoire de Louis XIII, i. 2, 347.
+So far as I know, the original has not yet been brought to light,
+although its genuineness cannot be doubted, as Levassor was acquainted
+with Robert Carr's letter to the Prince, which was first printed by
+Ellis ii. iii. 229.
+
+[358] Foscarini, to whom we are indebted for information on many of
+these points: 'teneva mal animo contra Spagna e pretension in
+Francia.'
+
+[359] It was affirmed that Henry Howard (Earl of Northampton) had been
+heard to say that 'the prince if ever he came to reign would prove a
+tyrant.' Bacon: Somerset's Business and Charge. Works vi. 100.
+
+[360] Trumbull to Winwood, March 2, 1613. 'These men are enraged,
+fearing that we do aim at the wresting of the empire out of the
+Austrians hand which they say shall never be effected so long as the
+conjoyned forces of all the Catholiques in Christendom shall be able
+to maintain them in that right.' Winwood, Mem. iii. 439.
+
+[361] Dispaccio di Antonio Foscarini, 5 Luglio 1612: 'Si aplica il re
+assai il pensiero a metter in pace li due re di Suecia e Danimarca et
+hieri fu qui di ritorno uno de' gentilhuomini inviati per tal
+fine:--poi si camineva immediatamente a stringere unione con tutti li
+principi di religione riformata.'
+
+[362] A letter of Germigny in Charrière, Negociations de la France
+dans le Levant iii. 885 n, mentions the representations of the first
+agent. 'Cet Anglais avait remontré l'importance de l'agrandissement du
+roy d'Espagne mesmes où il s'impatroniroit de Portugal et des terres
+despendantes du dit royaume voisines à ce Seigneur au Levant.'
+
+[363] A. Foscarini 1612, 9 Ag.: 'Preme grandemente a Spagnoli veder
+sempre Più stabilirsi la colonia in Virginia non perche stimino quel
+paese nel quale non è abondanza nè minera d'oro--ma perche
+fermandovisi Inglesi con li vascelli loro, correndo quel mare
+impedirebbono la flotte.' 1613 Marzo 8: 'Le navi destinate per
+Virginia al numero di tre sono passate a quella volta e se ne
+allestiranno anco altre degli interessati in quella popolatione.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+PARLIAMENTS OF 1610 AND 1614.
+
+
+For the full occupation of this position in the world, and for
+maintaining and extending it, nothing was more necessary than internal
+harmony in Great Britain, not only between the two kingdoms, but also
+in each of them at home. While Robert Cecil procured full recognition
+for considerations of foreign policy, he conceived the further design
+of bringing about such an unity above all things in England itself,
+as, if successful, would have procured for the power of the King an
+authority paramount to all the other elements of the constitution.
+
+The greatest standing evil from which the existing government
+suffered, was the inequality between income and expenditure; and if
+the lavish profusion of the King was partly responsible for this, yet
+there were also many other reasons for it. The late Queen had left
+behind no inconsiderable weight of debt, occasioned by the cost of the
+Irish war: to this were added the expenses of her obsequies, of the
+coronation, and of the first arrangements under the new reign. Visits
+of foreign princes, the reception and the despatch of great embassies,
+had caused still further extraordinary outlay; and the separate
+court-establishments of the King, the Queen, and the Prince, made a
+constant deficit inevitable. Perpetual embarrassment was the result.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1610.]
+
+James I expresses himself with a sort of naive ingenuousness in a
+letter to the Lords of Council of the year 1607. In this letter he
+exhorts them not to present to him any 'sute wherof none of yourselves
+can guess what the vallew may prove,' but rather to help him to cut
+off superfluous expenses, as far as was consistent with the honour of
+the kingdom, and to assist him to new lawful sources of revenue,
+without throwing an unjust burden upon the people. 'The only disease
+and consumption which I can ever apprehend as likeliest to endanger
+me, is this eating canker of want, which being removed I could think
+myself as happy in all other respects as any other king or monarch
+that ever was since the birth of Christ: in this disease I am the
+patient, and yee have promised to be the physicians, and to use the
+best care uppon me that your witte, faithfulnes and diligence can
+reach unto.'[364]
+
+As Lord Treasurer, Robert Cecil had the task of taking in hand the
+conduct of this affair also. He had refused to make disbursements
+which he thought improper, but to which the King had notwithstanding
+allowed himself to be led away: he would not hear of increasing the
+revenue by such means as the sale of offices, a custom which seemed to
+be at that time transplanting itself from France into England. He
+sought to add to the revenue in the first place by further taxation of
+the largely increasing commerce of the country. And as tonnage and
+poundage had been once for all granted to the King, he thought it
+appropriate and permissible to raise the custom-house duties as an
+administrative measure. Soon after the new government had come into
+power it had undertaken the rearrangement of the tariff to suit the
+circumstances of the time. Cecil, who was confirmed in his purpose by
+a decision of the judges to the effect that his conduct was perfectly
+legal, conferred with the principal members of the commercial class on
+the amount and nature of the increase of duty.[365] The plan which
+they embraced in accordance with the views prevalent at the time
+contemplated that the burden should principally fall upon foreigners.
+
+The advantages which were obtained by this means were not
+inconsiderable. The Custom-House receipts were gradually increased
+under King James by one-half; but yet this was a slow process and
+could not meet the wants that likewise kept growing. The Lord
+Treasurer decided to submit a comprehensive scheme to Parliament, in
+order to effect a radical cure of the evil. The importance of the
+matter will be our excuse for examining it in detail.
+
+He explained to them that a considerable increase of income (which he
+put down at £82,000) was required to cover the regular expenditure,
+but that a still greater sum was needed for casual expenses, for which
+in the state, as in every household, certainly a quarter of the sum
+reached by the regular expenditure was required. He therefore proposed
+that £600,000 should be at once granted him for paying off the debt,
+and that in future years the royal income should be raised by
+£200,000.
+
+This request was so comprehensive and so far beyond all precedent,
+that it could never have been made without a corresponding offer of
+concessions on a large scale. The Earl of Salisbury in his proposal
+formally invited the Parliament to adduce the grievances which it had,
+and promised in the King's name to redress all such so far as lay in
+his power. It is affirmed that his clear-sighted and vigorous speech
+made a favourable impression. Parliament in turn acceded to the
+proposal, and alleged its most important grievances. They affected
+both ecclesiastical and financial interests: among the latter class
+that which concerned the Court of Wards is the most important
+historically.
+
+Of the institutions by which the Normans and Plantagenets held their
+feudal state together, none perhaps was more effectual than the right
+of guardianship over minors, whose property the kings managed for
+their own advantage. They stepped as it were into the rights of
+fathers; even the marriage of wards depended on their pleasure. From
+the time of Henry VIII a court for the exercise of this jurisdiction
+and for feudal tenures generally had existed, which instituted
+enquiries into the neglect of prescriptive custom, and punished it.
+One of the most important offices was that of President of the Court,
+which was very lucrative, and conferred personal influence in various
+ways. It had been long filled by Robert Cecil himself.
+
+The Lower House now proposed in the first place that this right and
+the machinery created to enforce it, which gave birth to various acts
+of despotism, should be abolished. How often had the property of wards
+been ruined by those to whom the rights of the state were transferred.
+The debts which were chargeable against them were never paid.[366] The
+Lower House desired that not only the royal prerogatives, but also
+that the kindred rights of the great men of the kingdom over their
+vassals should cease, and especially that property held on feudal
+tenures should be made allodial.
+
+It is evident what great interests were involved in this scheme, which
+was thoroughly monarchical, and at the same time was opposed to
+feudalism. Its execution would have put an end to the feudal tie which
+now had no more vitality, and appeared nothing more than a burden; but
+at the same time the crown would have been provided with a regular and
+sufficient income, and, what is more, would have been tolerably
+independent of the grants of Parliament, so soon as an orderly
+domestic system was introduced. We can understand that in bringing
+this matter to an issue a minister of monarchical views might see an
+appropriate conclusion to a life or rather two lives, his father's and
+his own, dedicated to the service of the sovereign. And it appeared
+that he might well hope to succeed, as a considerable alleviation was
+offered at the same time to the King's subjects as well.
+
+The King reminded them that the feudal prerogative formed one of the
+fairest jewels of his crown, that it was an heirloom from his
+forefathers which he could not surrender; honour, conscience, and
+interest, equally forbade it. The Lower House replied that it would
+not dispute about honour and conscience, but as to interest, that
+might be arranged. They were ready by formal contract to indemnify the
+crown for the loss which it would suffer.[367]
+
+The crown demanded £100,000 as a compensation for the loss it would
+suffer; and besides this, the £200,000 before mentioned which it
+required for restoring the balance between income and expenditure. We
+need not here reproduce the repulsive spectacle presented by the
+abatement of demands on the one side, and the increase of offers on
+the other. At last the Lord Treasurer adhered to the demand for
+£200,000 everything included. He declared that if this was refused the
+King would never again make a similar offer. On this at last the
+Parliament declared itself ready to grant the sum; but, even then, set
+up further conditions about which they could not come to an immediate
+agreement, so that their mutual claims were not yet definitively
+adjusted.
+
+On the contrary these negotiations had by degrees assumed a tone of
+some irritation. Parliament found that the Earl of Salisbury had acted
+unconstitutionally in proposing to raise the scale of duties without
+its consent, and would not be content with his reference to the
+decision of the judges mentioned above, and to the conferences with
+the merchants. He endeavoured at a private interview with some of the
+leading members to bring round the opinion to his side: but the House
+was angry with those who had been present at it, and their good
+intentions were called in question.[368]
+
+The speeches also, with which the King twice interrupted the
+proceedings, produced an undesirable effect. He was inclined to meet
+the general wishes, without surrendering however any part of his
+prerogatives. But at the same time he expressed himself about these in
+the exaggerated manner peculiar to him, which was exactly calculated
+to arouse contradiction.[369] Whilst he was comparing the royal power
+to the divine, he found that the House on one pretext or another
+refused even to open a letter which he had addressed to them about the
+speech of some member which had displeased him: on the contrary he was
+obliged to receive back into favour the very member who had affronted
+him. Parliament regarded liberty of speech as the Palladium of its
+efficiency; foreigners were astonished at the recklessness with which
+members expressed themselves about the government.
+
+As a rule the investigation of relative rights has an unfavourable
+result for those who are in actual possession of authority. The
+prerogative which the King exalted so highly presented itself to the
+Parliament in an obnoxious aspect. In the debates on the contract the
+question was raised, how Sampson's hands could be bound, that is to
+say, how the King's prerogative could be so far restricted as to
+prevent him from breaking or overstepping the agreement.
+
+During a dispute with the House of Lords the sentiment was uttered,
+that the members of the Lower House as representing the Commons ranked
+higher than the Lords, each of whom represented only himself.[370] It
+is easy to see how far this principle might lead.
+
+Even his darling project of combining England and Scotland into a
+single kingdom could not be carried out by the King in the successive
+sessions of Parliament. One of the leading spirits of the age, Francis
+Bacon, was on his side in this matter as in others. When it was
+objected that it was no advantage to the English to take the
+poverty-stricken Scots into partnership, as for example in commercial
+affairs, he returned answer, that merchants might reckon in this way,
+but no one who rose to great views: united with Scotland, England
+would become one of the greatest monarchies that the world had ever
+seen; but who did not perceive that a complete fusion of both elements
+was needed for this? Security against the recurrence of the old
+divisions could not be obtained until this was effected. Owing to the
+influence of Bacon, who at that time had become Solicitor-General, the
+question of the naturalisation of all those born in Scotland after
+James had ascended the English throne, was decided with but slight
+opposition, in a sense favourable to the union of the two kingdoms, by
+the Lord Chancellor and the Judges. The decision however was not
+accepted by Parliament. And when the question was now raised how far
+the assent of Parliament was necessary in a case like this, the
+adverse declaration of the Lord Chancellor was exactly calculated to
+provoke a contest of principle in this matter also.[371] With the
+advice of the Lord Chancellor and the Council James had declared
+himself King of Great Britain, and had expressed the wish that the
+names of England and Scotland might be henceforth obliterated; but his
+Proclamation was not considered sufficient without the assent of
+Parliament; and in this case the judges took the side of the
+Parliament. The dynastic ideas with which James had commenced his
+reign could not but serve to resuscitate the claim of Parliament to
+the possession of the legislative power. At other times the precedents
+adduced by the Lord Chancellor in the debate on the 'post-nati' might
+have controlled their decision: at the present time they no longer
+made any impression. The opposition of political ideas came to the
+surface in this matter as in others. The King held the strongly
+monarchical view that the populations of both countries were united
+with one another by the mere fact of their being both subject to him.
+To this the Parliament opposed the doctrine that the two crowns were
+distinct sovereignties, and that the legislation of the two countries
+could not be united. They wished to fetter the King to the old legal
+position which they were far more anxious to contract than to expand.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1613.]
+
+The consequences must have been incalculable, if the Earl of Salisbury
+and the Lord Chancellor had succeeded in carrying out their
+intentions. A common government of the two countries would have held
+in all important questions a position independent of the two
+Parliaments, and the person of the sovereign would have been the
+ruling centre of this government. If besides an adequate income had
+been definitely assigned to the crown independent of the regularly
+recurring assent of Parliament, what would have become of the rights
+of that body? Not only would Elizabeth's mode of government have been
+continued, but the monarchical element which could appeal to various
+precedents in its own favour would probably have obtained a complete
+ascendancy.
+
+But for that very reason these efforts were met by a most decided
+opposition. It is plain that these rival pretensions, and the motive
+from which they sprang, paved the way for controversies of the most
+extensive kind.
+
+The scheme of the contract was as little successful as that of the
+union of the two kingdoms. The parties were contented with merely
+removing the occasion for an immediate rupture; and after some short
+prorogations Parliament was finally dissolved.
+
+The King, who felt himself aggrieved by its whole attitude as well as
+by many single expressions, was reluctant to call another. In order to
+meet his extraordinary necessities recourse was had to various old
+devices and to some new ones; for instance, the creation of a great
+number of baronets in 1612, on payment of considerable sums: but
+notwithstanding all this, in the year 1613 matters had gone so far,
+that neither the ambassadors to foreign courts, nor even the troops
+which were maintained could be paid. In the garrison of Brill a mutiny
+had arisen on this account; the strongholds on the coast and the
+fortifications on the adjacent islands went to ruin. For this as well
+as for other reasons the death of the Earl of Salisbury was a
+misfortune. The man on whom James I next bestowed his principal
+confidence, Robert Carr, then Lord Rochester, later Earl of Somerset,
+was already condemned by the popular voice because he was a Scot, who
+moreover had no other merit than a pleasing person, which procured him
+the favour of the King. The authority enjoyed by the Howards had
+already provoked dissatisfaction. The Prince of Wales had been their
+decided adversary, and this enmity was kept up by all his friends.
+Robert Carr, however, thought it advisable to win over to his side
+this powerful family to which he had at first found himself in
+opposition. Whether from personal ambition or from a temper that
+really mocked at all law and morality he married Frances Howard, whose
+union with the Earl of Essex had to be dissolved for this
+object.[372] The old enemies of the Howards, the adherents of the
+house of Essex, many of whom had inherited this enmity, now became the
+opponents of the favourite and his government. When at last urgent
+financial necessities allowed no other alternative, and absolutely
+compelled the issue of a summons for a new parliament, the contending
+parties seized the opportunity of confronting one another. The
+creatures of the government neglected no means of controlling the
+elections by their influence; but they were everywhere encountered by
+the other party, who were favoured by the increasing dissatisfaction
+of the people.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1614.]
+
+At the opening of Parliament in April 1614, and on two occasions
+afterwards, the King addressed the Lower House. Among all the
+scholastic distinctions, complaints of the past, and assurances for
+the future, in which after his usual fashion he indulges, we can still
+perceive the fundamental idea, that if even the subsidies which he
+required and asked were granted him, he would notwithstanding agree to
+no conditions on his side, and take upon himself no distinct pledges.
+He was resolved no longer to play the game of making concessions in
+order to ask for something in return, as he had done some years
+before; he found that far beneath his dignity. Still less could he
+consent that all the grievances that might have arisen should be
+heaped up and presented to him, for that would be injurious to the
+honour of the government. Each one, he said, might lay before him the
+grievances which he experienced in his own town or in his own county;
+he would then attend to their redress one by one. In the same way he
+would deal with each House separately. If he is reproached with
+endeavouring to extend his prerogatives he denies the charge; but he
+affirms that he cannot allow them to be abridged, but that, in
+exercising them, he would behave as well as the best prince England
+ever had.[373] He has no conception of a relation based on mutual
+rights; he acknowledges only a relation of confidence and affection.
+In return for liberal concessions he promises liberal favour.
+
+This was a view of things resting upon a patriarchal conception of
+kingly power, in favour of which analogies might no doubt have been
+found in the early state of the kingdoms of the West, but which was
+now becoming more and more obsolete. What had still been possible
+under Elizabeth, when the sovereign and her Parliament formed one
+party, was no longer so now; especially as a man who had attracted
+universal hatred stood at the head of affairs. Besides this a dispute
+was already going on which we cannot pass over in silence.
+
+It arose upon the same matter which had caused such grave
+embarrassment to the Earl of Salisbury, the unlimited exercise of the
+right of levying tonnage and poundage entirely at the discretion of
+the government. It was affirmed that the Custom-House receipts had
+increased more than twentyfold since the commencement of James's
+reign, and that a great part of the increased returns was enjoyed by
+favoured private individuals. The Lower House demanded first of all an
+examination into the right of the government, and declared that
+without it they would not proceed to vote any grant.[374]
+
+In the Lower House itself on one occasion a lively debate arose on the
+subject. The opinion was advanced on the part of the friends of the
+government that, in this respect as in others, a difference existed
+between hereditary and elective monarchies, that in the first class,
+which included England, the prerogative was far more extensive than in
+the latter. Henry Wotton, and Winwood, who had been long employed on
+foreign embassies, explained what a great advantage in regard to their
+collective revenues other states derived from indirect taxes and
+customs. But by this statement they awakened redoubled opposition.
+They were told that the raising of these imposts in France had not
+been approved by the Estates and was in fact illegal; that the King
+of Spain had been forced to atone for the attempt to introduce them
+into the Netherlands by the loss of the greater part of the provinces.
+Thomas Wentworth especially broke out into violent invectives against
+the neighbouring sovereigns, which even called forth remonstrances
+from the embassies. He warned the King of England that in his case
+also similar measures would lead to his complete ruin.[375] It was not
+only urged that England ought not to take example by any foreign
+country, but the very distinction drawn between elective and
+hereditary monarchies suggested a question whether England after all
+was so entirely a hereditary monarchy as was asserted. It was asked if
+it might not rather be said that James I, who was one of a number of
+claimants who had all equally good rights, owed his accession to a
+voluntary preference on the part of the nation, which might be
+regarded as a sort of election. These were ideas of unlimited range,
+and flatly contradicted those which James had formed on the rights of
+birth and inheritance. He felt himself outraged by their expression in
+the Lower House.
+
+In order to give the force of a general resolution to their assertion,
+that in England the prerogative did not include the fixing of the
+amount of taxes and customs without the consent of Parliament, the
+Commons had made proposals for a conference with the Upper House. But
+hereupon the higher clergy declared themselves hostile, not only to
+their opinion, but even to the bare project of a conference. Neil,
+Bishop of Lincoln, affirmed that the oath taken to the King in itself
+forbade them to participate in such a conference; that the matter
+affected not so much a branch of the royal prerogative as its very
+root; that the Lords moreover would have to listen to seditious
+speeches, the aim and intention of which could only be to bring about
+a division between the King and his subjects. The Lord Chancellor had
+asked the judges for their opinion; but they had declined to give any.
+The result was that the Upper House did not accede to the proposal of
+a conference.
+
+The Commons were greatly irritated at the resistance which was offered
+to their first step. They too in conferences which related to other
+matters disdained to enter into the subjects brought before them. They
+complained loudly of the insulting expressions of the bishop which had
+been repeated to them. An exculpatory statement of the Upper House did
+not content them; they demanded full satisfaction as in an affair of
+honour, and until this had been furnished them they declared
+themselves determined to make no progress with any other matter.
+
+The King however on his side now lost patience at this. He considered
+that an attack was made on the highest power when the general progress
+of business was hindered for the sake of a single question, and he
+appointed a day on which this affair of the subsidy must be disposed
+of. He said that, if it were not settled, he would dissolve
+Parliament.
+
+One would not expect such a declaration to change the temper of the
+Lower House. Speeches were heard still more violent than those
+previously made. The Scots, to whose influence every untoward
+occurrence was imputed, were threatened with a repetition of the
+Sicilian Vespers. There were other members however who counselled
+moderation; for it almost appeared as if the dissolution of this
+Parliament might be the dissolution of all parliaments. Commissioners
+were once more sent to the King in order to give another turn to the
+negotiations. The King declared that he knew full well how far his
+rights extended, and that he could not allow his prerogatives to be
+called in question.[376]
+
+These passionate ebullitions of feeling against the Scots, although
+they referred to matters of a more alarming, but happily of an
+entirely different nature, made the King anxious lest the destruction
+of his favourites, or even his own ruin, might be required to content
+his adversaries. On the 7th of June he dissolved Parliament. He
+thought himself entitled to bring up for punishment the loudest and
+most reckless speakers, as well as some other noted men from whom
+these speakers had received their impulse, for instance Cornwallis,
+the former ambassador in Spain. He considered that they had intended
+to upset the government: not only had they failed, but they themselves
+must atone for the attempt.[377]
+
+The estrangement was not too great to allow the hope of a
+reconciliation. It had been represented to the King that he ought not
+to be ready to regard financial concessions as a compliance unbecoming
+to the crown, for that in these matters he was at no disadvantage as
+compared with any person or any foreign power; that on the contrary
+the decision always proceeded from himself; that he was the head who
+cared for the welfare of the members. It was said that he need by no
+means fear that men would make use of his wants to lay fetters on him;
+that bonds laid by subjects on their sovereigns were merely cobwebs
+which he might tear asunder at any moment. Even Walter Ralegh had
+stated this.[378] But the King had no inclination, after the
+Parliament had repelled his overtures with rude opposition, to expose
+himself by summoning a new one to new attacks on his prerogatives as
+he understood them. By the voluntary or forced contributions of
+different corporations, especially of the clergy and of the great men
+of the kingdom, he was placed in a condition to carry on his
+government in the ordinary way. Every measure which would have
+necessitated a great outlay was avoided.
+
+It is plain however into what a disagreeable position he was thus
+brought. His whole method of government was based upon the superiority
+of England. He had at that time brought the system of the Church in
+Scotland nearer to the English model. The bishops in that country had
+even received their consecration from the English. But he had not
+effected this without violent acts of usurpation. He had been obliged
+to remove his most active opponents out of the country; but even in
+their absence they kept up the excitement of men's feelings by their
+writings. The Presbyterians saw in everything which he succeeded in
+doing, the work of cunning on the one side and treachery on the other,
+and gave vent to the deepest displeasure at his deviation from their
+solemn Covenant with God.
+
+Relying on the right of England, but for the first time inviting
+immigrants from Scotland, James undertook the systematic establishment
+of colonies in Ireland. The additional strength however which by this
+means accrued to the Protestant and Teutonic element entirely
+annihilated all leanings which had been shown in his favour at his
+accession to the crown, and aroused against him the strongest national
+and religious antipathies of the native population in that country.
+
+He then met with this opposition in Parliament which hampered all his
+movements. It was foreign to his natural disposition to think of
+effecting a radical removal of the misunderstanding that had arisen.
+On the contrary he kept adding fresh fuel to it on account of the
+deficiencies of his government, which began to impair his former
+importance. The immediate consequence was that in foreign affairs he
+was no longer able to maintain the position which he had taken up as
+vigorously as might have been wished. His allies pressed him
+incessantly to bestow help on them: but if even he had wished it, this
+was no longer in his power. It was not that Parliament in withholding
+his supplies had disapproved of the object which they were intended to
+serve. On the contrary the Parliament lamented that this object was
+not pursued with sufficient earnestness; but it wished above all to
+extend its right of sanction over the whole domain of the public
+revenues. But the King was not inclined to treat with Parliament for
+the supplies of money required; he feared to incur the necessity of
+repaying its grants by concessions which would abridge the ancient
+rights of his crown. The centre of gravity of public affairs must lie
+somewhere or other. The question was already raised in England whether
+for the future it was to be in the power of the King and his
+ministers, or in the authority of Parliament.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[364] Letter to the Lords, anno 1607: in Strype, Annals iv. 560.
+
+[365] Antonio Correro, 25 Giugno 1608: 'Con l'autorità ch'egli tiene
+con li mercanti di questa piazza li ha indutti a sottoporsi ad una
+nova gravezza posta sopra le merci che vengono e vanno da questo
+regno.'
+
+[366] Molino: 'La gabella dei pupilli porge materia grande a sudditi
+di dolorsene e d'esclamare sino al celo studiando ogn'uno di liberasi
+da simili bene.--Se uno aveva due campi di questa ragione e cento
+d'altra natura, i due hanno questa forza, di sottomettere i cento alla
+medesima gravezza.'
+
+[367] Beaulieu to Trumbull. Winwood, Memorials iii. 123.
+
+[368] Carleton to Edmonds: Court and Times of James I, i. 12, 123.
+
+[369] Chamberlain to Winwood. Mem. iii. 175. 'Yf the practise should
+follow the positions, we should not leave to our successor that
+freedome we received from our forefathers.'
+
+[370] Tommaso Contarini, 23 Giugno 1610: 'Che le loro persone, come
+representanti le communita, siano di maggior qualita che li signori
+titolati quali representano le loro sole persone, il che diede
+grandissimo fastidio al re.'
+
+[371] Campbell, Lives of the Lord Chancellors ii. 225.
+
+[372] Lorking, writing to Puckering (The Court and Times of James the
+First i. 254), remarks as early as July 1613 on the first mention of
+the marriage, that its design was 'to reconcile him (Lord Rochester)
+and the house of Howard together, who are now far enough asunder.'
+
+[373] The King's second speech. Parliamentary History v. 285.
+
+[374] A. Foscarini 1614, 20 Giugno. 'Il re ha sempre avuto seco (on
+his side) la camera superiore e parte dell'inferiore: il rimanente ha
+mostrato di voler contribuir ogni quantita di sussidio ma a conditione
+che si vedesse prima qual fosse l'autorità del re, sull'impor
+gravezze.'
+
+[375] Chamberlain to Carleton, May 28. Court and Times of James I, i.
+312.
+
+[376] According to a report furnished by A. Foscarini: 'Elessero 40
+d'essi a quali diede Lunedi audienza S. M.--dissero che la
+supplicavano per tanto lasciar per ultima da risolvere la materia di
+danari.' Unfortunately we have only very scanty information about this
+Parliament.
+
+[377] Extract from a letter of Winwood to Carleton, June 16. Green,
+Calendar of State Papers, James I, vol. ii. 237.
+
+[378] The Prerogative of Parliaments. Works viii. 154.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+SURVEY OF THE LITERATURE OF THE EPOCH.
+
+
+The times in which great political struggles are actually going on are
+not the most favourable for production in the fields of literature and
+art. These flourish best in the preceding or following ages, during
+which the impulse attending those movements begins or continues to be
+felt. Just such an epoch was the period of thirty or forty years
+between the defeat of the Armada and the outbreak of the Parliamentary
+troubles, a period comprising the later years of Queen Elizabeth and
+the earlier years of King James I. This was the epoch in which the
+English nation attained to a position of influence on the world at
+large, and in which at the same time those far-reaching differences
+about the most important questions of the inner life of the nation
+arose. The antagonism of ideas which stirred men's minds generally
+could not but reproduce itself in literature. But we also see other
+grand products of the age far transcending the limits of the present
+struggle. Our survey of the history will gain in completeness if we
+cast even but a transient glance, first at the former and then at the
+latter class of these products.
+
+In Scotland the studies connected with classical antiquity were
+prosecuted with as much zeal as anywhere else in Europe; not however
+in order to imitate its forms in the native idiom, which no one at
+that time even in Germany thought of doing, but in order to use it in
+learned theological controversies, and to maintain connexion with
+brother Protestants of other tongues. S. Andrew's was at one time a
+centre for Protestant learning: Poles and Danes, Germans and French
+visited this university in order to study under Melville. Even Latin
+verse was written with a certain elegance. A fit monument of these
+studies and their direction is to be found in Buchanan's History of
+Scotland, a work without value for the earlier period, and full of
+party spirit in describing his own, as Buchanan is one of the most
+violent accusers of Mary Stuart, but pervaded by that warmth and
+decision which carry the reader along with it: at that time it was
+read all over the world. Buchanan and Melville were among the
+champions of popular ideas on the constitution of states and the
+relations between sovereign and people. It cannot be affirmed that
+classical studies were without influence upon their views, but the
+doctrine to which they adhered grew out of a different root. It rests
+historically upon the doctrine of the superiority of the Church, and
+the councils representing the Church, over the Papacy, as it was put
+forth in the fifteenth century at Paris. A Scottish student there,
+John Major, made this doctrine his own, and after his return to his
+native country, when he himself had obtained a professorship, he
+applied it to temporal relations. The positions of the advocates of
+the councils affirmed that the Pope, it was true, received his
+authority from God, but that he might be again deprived of it in cases
+of urgent necessity by the Church, which virtually included the sum of
+all authority in itself. In the same way John Major taught that an
+original power transmitted from father to son pertained to kings, but
+that the fundamental authority resided in the people; so that a king
+mischievous to the commonwealth, who showed himself incorrigible,
+might be deposed again. His scholars, who took so large a part in the
+first disturbances in Scotland, and their scholars in turn, firmly
+maintained this doctrine. They differed from their contemporaries the
+Jesuits, who considered the monarchy to be an institution set up by
+the national will, in ascribing to it a divine right, but they urged
+that a king existed for the sake of the people, and that as he was
+bound by the laws agreed on by common consent, resistance to him was
+not only allowed, but under certain circumstances might even be a
+duty. We must also remark the opposite view, which was developed in
+contradiction to this, but yet rested on the same foundation. It was
+admitted that the king, if the people were considered as a whole,
+existed for their sake, and not the people for his; but the king, it
+was said, was at the same time the head of the people; he possessed
+superiority over all individuals: there was no one who could say in
+any case that the contract between king and people had been broken: no
+such general contract existed at all; there could be no question at
+all of resistance, much less of deposition, for how could the members
+rebel against the head? King James maintained that the legislative
+power belonged to the king by divine and human right, that he
+exercised it with the participation of his subjects, and always
+remained superior to the laws. His position rests on these views, in
+the development of which he himself had certainly a great share; he,
+like his opponents, had his political and ecclesiastical adherents. In
+the Scottish literature of the time both tendencies are embodied in
+important historical works; the latter principally in Spottiswood's
+Church History, which represents the royalist views and is not without
+merit in point of form, so that even at the present day it can be read
+with pleasure; the former in contemporary notices of passing events
+which were composed in the language and even in the dialect of the
+country, and which in many places are the foundation even of
+Buchanan's history. They are the most direct expression of national
+and religious views, as they found vent in the assemblies of preachers
+and elders; in them we feel the life-breath of Presbyterianism.
+Calderwood and the younger Melville, who collected everything which
+came to hand, espoused the popular ideas; for information on facts and
+their causes they are invaluable, although in respect of form they do
+not rival Spottiswood, who, like them, employs the language of the
+country.
+
+It might perhaps be said that it was in Scotland that the two systems
+arose which since that time, although in various shapes, have divided
+Britain and Europe. In the historians just mentioned we might see the
+types of two schools, whose opposite conceptions of universal and
+especially of English history, set forth by writers of brilliant
+ability, have exercised the greatest influence upon prevailing ideas.
+
+
+In England these ideas certainly gained admission, but they did not
+make way at that time. When Richard Hooker expresses the popular ideas
+as to the primitive free development of society, this is done
+principally in order to point out the extensive authority of the
+legislative power even over the clergy, and to defend the
+ecclesiastical supremacy of the English crown, which had been
+established by the enactments of that very power. The question was
+mooted how far the sovereign was above the laws. Many wished to derive
+these prerogatives from the laws; others rejected them. Among those
+who maintained them unconditionally Walter Ralegh appears, in whose
+works we find a peculiar deduction of them in the statement that the
+sovereign, according to Justinian's phrase, was the living law: he
+derives the royal authority from the Divine Will, which the will of
+man could only acknowledge. He says in one place that the sovereign
+stands in the same relation to the law, as a living man to a dead
+body.
+
+What a remarkable work would it have been, had Walter Ralegh himself
+recorded the history of his time. But the opposition between parties
+was not so outspoken in England as in Scotland; it had not to justify
+itself by general principles, to which men could give their adhesion;
+it contained too much personal ill-feeling and hatred for any one who
+was involved in the strife to have been able to find satisfaction in
+expressing himself on this head. The history of the world which Walter
+Ralegh had leisure to write in his prison, is an endeavour to put
+together the materials of Universal History as they lay before him
+from ancient times, and so make them more intelligible. He touches on
+the events of his age only in allusions, which excited attention at
+the time, but remain obscure to posterity.
+
+In direct opposition to the Scots, especially to Buchanan, Camden, who
+wrote in Latin like the former, composed his Annals of the Reign of
+Queen Elizabeth. His contemporary, De Thou, borrowed much from
+Buchanan. Camden reproaches him with this, partly because in Scotland
+men preached atrocious principles with regard to the authority of the
+people and their right of keeping their kings in order. The elder
+Cecil had invited him to write the history of the Queen, and had
+communicated to him numerous documents for this purpose, which were
+either in his own possession or belonged to the national archives.
+Camden set cautiously to work, and went slowly on. He has himself
+depicted the trouble it cost him to decipher the historical contents
+of these scattered and dusty papers. He has certainly not surmounted
+all the difficulties which stand in the way of composing a
+contemporary history. Here and there we find even in his pages a
+regard paid to the living, especially to King James himself, which we
+would rather see away. But such passages are rare. Camden's Annals
+take a high rank among histories of contemporary transactions. They
+are of such authenticity in regard to facts, and show so intimate an
+acquaintance with causes gathered from trustworthy information, that
+we can follow the author, even where we do not possess the documents
+to which he refers. His judgments are moderate and at the same time in
+all important questions they are decided.
+
+When we read Camden's letters we become acquainted with a circle of
+scholars engaged in the severest studies. In his Britannia, which
+gives a more complete and instructive picture of the country than any
+other work, they all took a lively interest. Their works are clumsy
+and old-fashioned, but they breathe a spirit of thoroughness and
+breadth which does honour to the age. With what zeal were
+ecclesiastical antiquities studied in Cambridge, after Whitaker had
+pointed the way! Men sought to weed out what was spurious, and in what
+was genuine to set aside the part due to the accidental forms of the
+time, and to penetrate to the bottom of the sentiments, the belief,
+and activity of the writers. The constitution of the Church naturally
+led them to devote special study to the old provincial councils. For
+the history of the country they referred to the monuments of
+Anglo-Saxon times, and began even in treating of other subjects to
+bring the original sources to light. Everywhere men advanced beyond
+the old limits which had been drawn by the tradition of chroniclers
+and the lack of historical investigation hitherto shown.
+
+Francis Bacon was attracted by the task of depicting at length a
+modern epoch, the history of the Tudors, with the various changes
+which it presented and the great results it had introduced, in which
+he saw the unity of a connected series of events. Yet he has only
+treated the history of the first of that line. He furnishes one of the
+first examples of exact investigation of details combined with
+reflective treatment of history, and has exercised a controlling
+influence on the manner and style of writing English history,
+especially by the introduction of considerations of law, which play a
+great part in his work. The political points of view which are present
+to the author are almost more those of the beginning of the
+seventeenth than those of the beginning of the sixteenth century. But
+these epochs are closely connected with each other. For what Henry VII
+established is just what James I, who loved to connect himself
+immediately with the former monarch, wished to continue. Bacon was a
+staunch defender of the prerogative.
+
+The dispute which arose between Bacon as a lawyer and Edward Coke
+deserves notice.
+
+Coke also has a place in literature. His reports are, even at the
+present day, known without his name simply as 'The Reports,' and his
+'Institutes' is one of the most learned works which this age produced.
+It is rather a collection provided with notes, but is instructive and
+suggestive from the variety of and the contrast of its contents. Coke
+traced the English laws to the remotest antiquity; he considered them
+as the common production of the wisest men of earlier ages, and at the
+same time as the great inheritance of the English people, and its best
+protection against every kind of tyranny, spiritual or temporal. Even
+the old Norman French, in which they were to a great extent composed,
+he would not part with, for a peculiar meaning attached itself, in his
+view, to every word.
+
+On the other hand Bacon as Attorney-General formed the plan of
+comprising the common law in a code, by which a limit should be set to
+the caprice of the judges, and the private citizen be better assured
+of his rights. He thought of revising the Statute-Book, and wished to
+erase everything useless, to remove difficulties, and to bring what
+was contradictory into harmony.
+
+Bacon's purpose coincided with the idea of a general system of
+legislation entertained by the King: he would have preferred the Roman
+law to the statute law of England. Coke was a man devoted to the
+letter of the law, and was inclined to offer that resistance to the
+sovereign which was implied in a strict adherence to the law as it
+was. In the conflict that arose the judges, influenced by his example,
+appealed to the laws as they were laid down, according to the verbal
+meaning of which they thought themselves bound to decide. Bacon
+maintained that the Judges' oath was meant to include obedience to the
+King also, to whom application must be made in every matter affecting
+his prerogative. This is probably what Queen Elizabeth also thought,
+and it was the decided opinion of King James. He made the man who
+cherished similar views his Lord Chancellor, and dismissed Coke from
+his service. Bacon when in office was responsible for a catastrophe
+which, as we shall see, not only ruined himself, but reacted upon the
+monarchy. The English, contemporaries and posterity alike, have taken
+the side of Coke. Yet Bacon's industry in business is not therefore
+altogether to be despised. He urged the King, who was disposed to
+judge hastily, to take time and to weigh the reasons of both parties.
+He gave the judges who went on circuit through the country the most
+pertinent advice. The directions which he drew up for the Court of
+Chancery have laid the foundations of the practice of that court, and
+are still an authority for it. His scheme of collecting and reforming
+the English laws still, even at the present day, appears to statesmen
+learned in the law to be an unavoidable necessity; and the opinion is
+spreading that steps must be taken in this matter in the direction
+already pointed out by Bacon.
+
+Bacon was one of the last men who identified the welfare of England
+with the development of the monarchical element in the constitution,
+or at all events with the preponderance of the authority of the
+sovereign within constitutional limits. The union of the three
+kingdoms under the ruling authority of the King appeared to him to
+contain the foundation of the future greatness of Britain. With the
+assertion of the authority of the sovereign he connected the hope of a
+reform of the laws of England, of the establishment of a comprehensive
+system of colonisation in Ireland, and of the assimilation of the
+ecclesiastical and judicial constitution of Scotland to English
+customs. He loved the monarchy because he expected great things from
+it.
+
+But it cannot be denied that he brought his ideas into a connexion
+with his interests, which was fatal to the acceptance of the former.
+His is just a case in which we feel relieved when we turn from the
+disputes of the day to the free domain of scientific activity, in
+which his true life was spent. He has indeed said himself that he was
+better fitted to hold a book in his hands than to shine upon the stage
+of the world. In his studies he had only science itself and the whole
+of the world before his eyes.
+
+The scholastic system founded on Aristotle, the inheritance of
+centuries of ecclesiastical supremacy, had been assailed some time
+before he took up the subject; and the inductive method which he
+opposed to that system was not anything quite new. But the idea of
+Bacon had the most comprehensive tendency: it tended to free the
+thoughts and enquiries of men of science from the assumptions of a
+speculative theology which regulated their spiritual horizon. The most
+renowned adversaries of scholasticism he had to encounter in turn,
+because they covered things with a new web of words and theories which
+he could not accept. He thought to free men from the deceptive notions
+by which their minds are prepossessed, from the fascination of words
+which throw a veil over things, and of tradition consecrated by great
+names, and to open to them the sphere of the certain knowledge of
+experience. Nature is in his eyes God's book, which man must study
+directly for His glory and for the relief of man's estate; he thought
+that men must start from sense and experience, in order that by
+intercourse with things they might discover the cause of phenomena.
+He would have preferred for his own part to have been the architect of
+an universal science, an outline of which he had already composed; but
+he possessed the self-restraint to hold back from this in the first
+instance, to work at details, and to make experiments, or, as he once
+says, to contribute the bricks and stones which might serve for the
+great work in the future. He only wanted more complete devotion and
+more adequate knowledge for his task. His method is imperfect, his
+results are untrustworthy in points of detail; but his object is
+grand. He designates the insight for which he labours by the
+Heraclitean name of dry light, that is, a light which is obscured by
+no partiality and no subordinate aim. He would place the man who
+possesses it as it were upon the mountain top, at the foot of which
+errors chase one another like clouds. And in his eyes the satisfaction
+of the mind is not the only interest at stake, but such discoveries as
+rouse the activity of men and promote their welfare. Nature is at the
+same time the great storehouse of God: the dominion over nature which
+men originally possessed must be restored to them.
+
+In these speculations the philosopher became aware that there was a
+risk lest men should imagine that by this means they could also
+discover the nature of God. Bacon lays down a complete separation of
+these two provinces; for he thinks that men can only attain to second
+causes, not to the first cause, which is God; and that the human mind
+can only cope with natural things; that divine things on the contrary
+confuse it. He will not even investigate the nature of the human soul,
+for it does not owe its origin to the productive powers of nature, but
+to the breath of God.
+
+It had been from the beginning the tendency of those schools of
+philosophy erected on the basis of ancient systems, in which Latin and
+Teutonic elements were blended, to transfuse faith with scientific
+knowledge; but Bacon renounces this attempt from the beginning. He
+puts forward with almost repulsive abruptness the paradoxes which the
+Christian must believe: he declares it an Icarian flight to wish to
+penetrate these secrets: but so much stronger is the impulse he seeks
+to give the human mind in the direction of enquiry into natural
+objects.[379]
+
+Among these he ranks the state of human society, to which all his life
+long he devoted a careful and searching observation. His Essays are
+not at all sceptical, like the French essays, from which he may have
+borrowed this appellation: they are thoroughly dogmatic. They consist
+of remarks on the relations of life as they then presented themselves,
+especially upon the points of contact between private and public life,
+and of counsels drawn from the perception of the conflicting qualities
+of things. They are extremely instructive for the internal relations
+of English society. They show wide observation and calm wisdom, and,
+like his philosophical works, are a treasure for the English nation,
+whose views of life have been built upon them.
+
+What better legacy can one generation leave to another than the sum of
+its experiences which have an importance extending beyond the fleeting
+moment, when they are couched in a form which makes them useful for
+all time? Herein consists the earthly immortality of the soul.
+
+But another possession of still richer contents and of incomparable
+value was secured to the English nation by the development of the
+drama, which falls just within this epoch.
+
+In former times there had been theatrical representations in the
+palaces of the kings and of great men, in the universities, and among
+judicial and civic societies. They formed part of the enjoyments of
+the Carnival or contributed to the brilliancy of other festivities;
+but they did not come into full existence until Elizabeth allowed them
+to the people by a general permission. In earlier times the scholars
+of the higher schools or the members of learned fraternities, the
+artisans in the towns, and the members of the household of great men
+and princes, had themselves conducted the representation. Actors by
+profession now arose, who received pay and performed the whole year
+round.[380] A number of small theatres grew up which, as they charged
+but low entrance-fees, attracted the crowd, and while they influenced
+it, were influenced by it in turn. The government could not object to
+the theatre, as the principal opposition which it had to fear, that of
+the Puritans, shut itself out from exercising any influence over the
+drama, owing to the aversion of their party to it. The theatres vied
+with one another: each sought to bring out something new, and then to
+keep it to itself. The authors, among whom men of distinguished talent
+were found, were not unfrequently players as well. All materials from
+fable and from history, from the whole range of literature, which had
+been widely extended by native productions and by appropriation from
+foreign sources, were seized, and by constant elaboration adapted for
+an appreciative public.
+
+While the town theatres and their productions were thus struggling to
+rise in mutual rivalry, the genius of William Shakspeare developed
+itself: at that time he was lost among the crowd of rivals, but his
+fame has increased from age to age among posterity.
+
+It especially concerns us to notice that he brought on the stage a
+number of events taken from English history itself. In the praise
+which has been lavishly bestowed on him, of having rendered them with
+historical truth, we cannot entirely agree. For who could affirm that
+his King John and Henry VIII, his Gloucester and Winchester, or even
+his Maid of Orleans, resemble the originals whose names they bear? The
+author forms his own conception of the great questions at issue. While
+he follows the chronicle as closely as possible, and adopts its
+characteristic traits, he yet assigns to each of the personages a part
+corresponding to the peculiar view he adopts: he gives life to the
+action by introducing motives which the historian cannot find or
+accept: characters which stand close together in tradition, as they
+probably did in fact, are set apart in his pages, each of them in a
+separately developed homogeneous existence of its own: natural human
+motives, which elsewhere appear only in private life, break the
+continuity of the political action, and thus obtain a twofold dramatic
+influence. But if deviations from fact are found in individual points,
+yet the choice of events to be brought upon the stage shows a deep
+sense of what is historically great. These are almost always
+situations and entanglements of the most important character: the
+interference of the spiritual power in an intestine political quarrel
+in King John: the sudden fall of a firmly seated monarchy as soon as
+ever it departs from the strict path of right in Richard III: the
+opposition which a usurping prince, Henry IV, meets with at the hands
+of the great vassals who have placed him on the throne, and which
+brings him by incessant anxiety and mental labour to a premature
+grave: the happy issue of a successful foreign enterprise, the course
+of which we follow from the determination to prepare for it, to the
+risk of battle and to final victory; and then again in Henry V and
+Henry VI, the unhappy position into which a prince not formed by
+nature to be a ruler falls between violent contending parties, until
+he envies the homely swain who tends his flocks and lets the years run
+by in peace: lastly the path of horrible crime which a king's son not
+destined for the throne has to tread in order to ascend it: all these
+are great elements in the history of states, and are not only
+important for England, but are symbolic for all people and their
+sovereigns. The poet touches on parliamentary or religions questions
+extremely seldom; and it may be observed that in King John the great
+movements which led to Magna Charta are as good as left out of sight;
+on the contrary he lives and moves among the personal contrasts
+offered by the feudal system, and its mutual rights and duties.
+Bolingbroke's feeling that though his cousin is King of England yet he
+is Duke of Lancaster reveals the conception of these rights in the
+middle ages. The speech which Shakspeare puts into the mouth of the
+Bishop of Carlisle is applicable to all times. The crown that secures
+the highest independence appears to the poet the most desirable of all
+possessions, but the honoured gold consumes him who wears it by the
+restless care which it brings with it.
+
+Shakspeare depicts the popular storms which are wont to accompany a
+free constitution in the plots of some of his Roman dramas: of these
+Plutarch instead of Holinshed furnishes the basis. He is right in
+taking them from a foreign country: for events nearer to his audience
+would have roused an interest of a different kind, and yet would not
+have had so universal a meaning. What could be more dramatic, for
+example, and at the same time more widely applicable than the contrast
+between the two speeches, by the first of which Caesar's murder is
+justified, while by the second the memory of his services is revived?
+The conception of freedom which the first brings to life is set in
+opposition to the thought of the virtues and services of the possessor
+of absolute power, and thrust by them into the background; but these
+same feelings are the deepest and most active in all ages and among
+all nations.
+
+But the attested traditions of ancient and modern times do not satisfy
+the poet in his wish to lay bare the depths of human existence. He
+takes us into the cloudy regions of British and Northern antiquity
+only known to fable, in which other contrasts between persons and in
+public affairs make their appearance. A king comes on the stage who in
+the plenitude of enjoyment and power is brought by overhasty
+confidence in his nearest kin to the extremest wretchedness into which
+men can fall. We see the heir to a throne who, dispossessed of his
+rights by his own mother and his father's murderer, is directed by
+mysterious influences to take revenge. We have before us a great
+nobleman, who by atrocious murders has gained possession of the
+throne, and is slain in fighting for it: the poet brings us into
+immediate proximity with the crime, its execution, and its recoil: it
+seems like an inspiration of hell and of its deceitful prophecies: we
+wander on the confines of the visible world and of that other world
+which lies on the other side, but extends over into this, where it
+forms the border-land between conscious sense and unconscious madness:
+the abysses of the human breast are opened to view, in which men are
+chained down and brought to destruction by powers of nature that dwell
+there unknown to them: all questions about existence and
+non-existence; about heaven, hell, and earth; about freedom and
+necessity, are raised in these struggles for the crown. Even the
+tenderest feelings that rivet human souls to one another he loves to
+display upon a background of political life. Then we follow him from
+the cloudy North into sunny Italy. Shakspeare is one of the
+intellectual powers of nature; he takes away the veil by which the
+inward springs of action are hidden from the vulgar eye. The extension
+of the range of human vision over the mysterious being of things which
+his works offer constitutes them a great historical fact.
+
+We do not here enter upon a discussion of Shakspeare's art and
+characteristics, of their merits and defects: they were no doubt of a
+piece with the needs, habits, and mode of thought of his audience; for
+in what case could there be a stronger reciprocal action between an
+author and his public, than in that of a young stage depending upon
+voluntary support? The very absence of conventional rule made it
+easier to put on the stage a drama by which all that is grandest and
+mightiest is brought before the eyes as if actually present in that
+medley of great and small things which is characteristic of human
+life. Genius is an independent gift of God: whether it is allowed to
+expand or not depends on the receptivity and taste of its
+contemporaries.
+
+It is certainly no unimportant circumstance that Shakspeare brought
+out King Lear soon after the accession of James I, who, like his
+predecessor, loved the theatre; and that Francis Bacon dedicated to
+the King his work on the Advancement of Learning in the same year
+1605.
+
+Of these two great minds the first bodied forth in imperishable forms
+the tradition, the poetry, and the view of the world that belonged to
+the past: the second banished from the domain of science the analogies
+which they offered, and made a new path for the activity displayed by
+succeeding centuries in the conquest of nature, and for a new view of
+the world.
+
+Many others laboured side by side with them. The investigation of
+nature had already entered on the path indicated by Bacon, and was
+welcomed with lively interest, especially among the upper classes.
+Together with Shakspeare the less distinguished poets of the time
+have always been remembered. In many other departments works of solid
+value were written which laid a foundation for subsequent studies.
+Their characteristic feature is the union of the knowledge of
+particulars, which are grasped in their individuality, with a
+scientific effort directed towards the universal.
+
+These were the days of calm between the storms; halcyon days, as they
+have well been named, in which genius had sufficient freedom in
+determining its own direction to devote itself with all its strength
+to great creations.
+
+As the German spirit at the epoch of the Reformation, so the English
+spirit at the beginning of the seventeenth century, took its place
+among the rival nationalities which stood apart from one another on
+the domain of Western Christendom, and on whose exertions the advance
+of the human race depends.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[379] In a letter to Casaubon he says 'vitam et res humanas et medias
+earum turbas per contemplationes sanas et veras instructiores esse
+volo.' (Works vi. 51).
+
+[380] Sam. Cox in Nicolas' Memoirs of Hatton, App. XXX.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK V.
+
+DISPUTES WITH PARLIAMENT DURING THE LATER YEARS OF THE REIGN OF JAMES
+I AND THE EARLIER YEARS OF THE REIGN OF CHARLES I.
+
+
+It has been my wish hitherto in my narrative to suppress myself as it
+were, and only to let the events speak and the mighty forces be seen
+which, arising out of and strengthened by each other's action in the
+course of centuries, now stood up against one another, and became
+involved in a stormy contest, which discharged itself in bloody and
+terrible outbursts, and at the same time was fraught with the decision
+of questions most important for the European world.
+
+The British islands, which in ancient times had been the extreme
+border-land, or even beyond the extreme border-land of civilisation,
+had now become one of its most important centres, and, owing to the
+union just effected, had taken a grand position among the powers of
+the world. But it is nevertheless clear at first sight that the
+constituent elements of the population were far from being completely
+fused. In many places in the two great islands the old Celtic stock
+still existed with its original character unaltered. The Germanic
+race, which certainly had an indubitable preponderance and was
+sovereign over the other, was split into two different kingdoms,
+which, despite the union of the two crowns, still remained distinct.
+The hostility of the two races was increased by a difference of
+religion, which was closely connected with this hostility though it
+was not merged in it. As a general rule the men of Celtic extraction
+remained true to the Roman Catholic faith, while the Germanic race was
+penetrated by Protestant convictions. Yet there were Protestants among
+the former, and we know how numerous and how powerful the Catholics
+were among the latter. Besides this, moreover, opposite tendencies
+with regard to ecclesiastical forms struck root in the two kingdoms.
+It was now the principal aim of the family by whose hereditary claim
+the two kingdoms and the islands had been united, not only to avert
+the strife of hostile elements, but also to reconcile them with one
+another, and to unite them in a single commonwealth under its
+authority, which all acknowledged and which it was desired to extend
+by such an union. This was a scheme which opened a great prospect, but
+at the same time involved no inconsiderable danger. Each of the two
+kingdoms watched jealously over its separate independence. They would
+not allow the dynasty to bring about a common government, which would
+thus have set itself up above them, and would have established a new
+kind of sovereignty over them. While the crown sought to enforce
+prerogatives which were contested, it had to encounter in both
+kingdoms the claims advanced by the holders of power in the nation,
+whom in turn it endeavoured to repress. The quarrel was complicated by
+a conception of the relations of the crown to foreign powers answering
+to its new position, and running counter to the national view. At the
+same time very perceptible analogies to this state of things were
+offered by the religious wars, which began to convulse the continent
+more violently than ever, and aroused corresponding feelings in the
+British isles. The dynasty which tried to appease the prevailing
+opposition of principles might find that, on the contrary, it rather
+fomented the strife, and was itself drawn into it. This in fact took
+place. Springs of action of the most opposite nature and antagonisms
+growing out of nationality, religion, and politics, which could not be
+understood apart from one another, co-operated in giving rise to
+events which do not form a single continuous course of action, but
+rather present a varied and changing result, due to elements which
+were grand and full of life, but still waited for their final
+settlement. It is clear how much this depended on the character and
+discernment of the king.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+JAMES I AND HIS ADMINISTRATION OF DOMESTIC GOVERNMENT.
+
+
+At one period of his youth James I had been accustomed to vary his
+application to his lessons with bodily exercises. At that age he had
+divided his days between learned studies and the chase of the smaller
+game in Stirling Park, accompanied in both pursuits by friends and
+comrades of the same age; and he retained during all his life the
+habits he had then formed.[381] He spent only a couple of months in
+the year in London, or at Greenwich: he preferred Theobald's, and
+still more distant country seats like Royston and Newmarket, where he
+could give himself up to hunting. Even before sunrise he was in
+motion, surrounded by a small number of companions practised in the
+chase and selected for that object, amongst whom he was himself one of
+the most skilful. He thought that he might vie with Henry IV even in
+field sports; but he was not hindered by his fondness for these
+amusements from continuing his studies with unwearied application. He
+was impelled to these not, strictly speaking, by thirst for general
+knowledge, although he was not deficient in this, but principally by
+interest in the theological controversies which engaged the attention
+of the world. He more than once went through the voluminous works of
+Bellarmin; and, in order to verify the citations, he had the old
+editions of the Fathers and of the Decrees of the Councils sent him
+from Cambridge. In this task a learned bishop stood at his side to
+assist him. He endeavoured with many a work of his own to thrust
+himself forward in the conflict of opinions. He had the vanity of
+wishing to be regarded as the most learned man in the two kingdoms,
+but he could only succeed in passing for a storehouse of all sorts of
+knowledge; for a man who overestimates himself is commonly punished by
+disregard even of his real merits. These may not meet with recognition
+until later times. The writings of James I wore the pedantic dress of
+the age; but in the midst of scholastic argumentation we yet stumble
+upon apt thoughts and allusions. The images which he frequently
+employs have not that delicacy of literary feeling which avoids what
+is ungraceful, but they are original and sometimes striking in their
+simplicity. Naturally thorough and acute, he labours not without
+success to prove to his adversaries the untenableness of the grounds
+on which they proceed, or the logical fallacy of their conclusions.
+Here and there we catch the elevated tone of a consciousness that
+rests upon firm conviction. Even in conversation he sought to turn
+away from particulars as soon as they came under discussion, and to
+pass to general considerations, a province in which he felt most at
+home. In his incidental utterances which have been taken down, he
+displays sound sense and knowledge of mankind. It is especially worth
+noticing how he considers virtue and religion to be immediately
+connected with knowledge--the confusions in the world appear to him
+for the most part to arise from mediocrity of knowledge[382]--and how
+highly moreover he estimates a sense for truth. He finds the most
+material difference between virtue and vice in the greater inward
+truthfulness of the former. King James delivers many other
+well-weighed principles of calm wisdom: it is only extraordinary how
+little his own practice corresponded with them.[383] When in one of
+his earlier writings we mark the seriousness with which he speaks of
+the duty incumbent on a king of testing men of talent, of measuring
+their capacity, and of appointing his servants not according to
+inclination but according to merit, we should expect to find him in
+this respect a careful and conscientious ruler. Instead of this we
+find that he always has favourites, whose merits no one can discover;
+to whom he stands in the extraordinarily compound relation of father,
+teacher, and friend, and to whom he allows a share in the power which
+he possesses. He could never free himself from a ruinous prodigality
+towards those about him, in spite of resolutions of amendment. How
+soon were the costly objects flung away which Elizabeth had collected
+and left behind at her death![384] How many possessions or sources of
+revenue accruing to the crown did he allow to pass into private hands!
+Any regulation of his household expenditure was as little to be
+expected from him in England as in Scotland. Like the princes of the
+thirteenth century he considered that the royal power assigned him
+privileges and advantages in which he had a full right to allow his
+favourites and servants to share. Not seldom the most scandalous
+abuses were connected with these: for instance, when the court was to
+be provided with the common necessaries of life during its journeys,
+it was required that they should be delivered to it at low prices: the
+servants exacted more supplies than were wanted, and then sold the
+surplus for their own profit. In grotesque contrast with the
+disgraceful cupidity of his attendants is the exaggerated conception
+which James had formed for himself of the ideal importance of the
+royal authority, which at that time some persons attempted with
+metaphysical acuteness to lay down almost in the same terms as the
+attributes of the Deity. He had similar notions about his dignity and
+the unconditional obligation of his subjects. Even in his
+Parliamentary speeches he did not refrain from expressing them. He
+made no secret of them in his life in the country, where he met with
+unbounded veneration from every one. It was remarked as a point of
+contrast between him and Elizabeth, that while she had always spoken
+of the love of her subjects, James on the contrary was always talking
+of the obedience which they owed him on the ground of divine and human
+right. And people recognised many other points of contrast between
+them besides this.[385] When the Queen had formed a resolution, she
+had never shrunk from the trouble of directing her attention to its
+execution even in the minutest details. King James did not possess
+this ardour; for he could not descend from the world of studies and
+general views in which he lived, to take a searching interest in the
+business of the government or of justice. He had indeed been known to
+say that it was annoying to him to hear the arguments on both sides
+quietly discussed in a question of right submitted to him; for that in
+that case he was unable to come to any conclusion. The Queen loved
+gallant men and characters distinguished for boldness: the King was
+without any sense of military merit, and felt uncomfortable in the
+presence of men of enterprising spirit. He thought that he could only
+trust those whom he had chained to himself by favours, presents, and
+benefits. The Queen served as a pattern of everything which was proper
+and becoming. James, who restricted himself to the intercourse of a
+few intimate friends, formed attachments which he thought were to
+serve as the rule of life. He himself was slovenly; in England, as
+formerly in Scotland, he neglected his appearance, and indulged in
+eccentricities which appeared repulsive to others, and were taken
+amiss from him. Even at that time there was a common feeling in
+England in favour of what is becoming in good society; and although
+the feeling was for a long time less deeply engraved on men's minds,
+and less sensitive to every outrage than it became at a later period,
+men did not pardon the King for coming into collision with it.
+
+Hence this sovereign appeared in complete contradiction with himself.
+Careless, petty, and at the same time most unusually proud; a lover of
+pomp and ceremony, yet fond of solitude and retirement; fiery and at
+the same time lax; a man of genius and yet pedantic; eager to acquire
+and reckless in giving away; confidential and imperious; even in
+little matters of daily life not master of himself, he often did what
+he would afterwards rather have left undone. With all his knowledge
+and acuteness, the high flight of his thoughts was often allied to a
+moral weakness which among all circles did serious injury to that
+reverence which had hitherto been reserved for those who held the
+highest authority, and which was partly bestowed even on him. It could
+not seem likely that such a man should be able to exercise great
+influence on the fortunes of Britain.
+
+He did however exercise such an influence. He gave the tone to the
+policy of the Stuart dynasty, and introduced the complication in which
+the destiny of his descendants was involved.
+
+In the first years of his reign in England, so long as Robert Cecil
+was alive, King James exercised no deep influence. The Privy Council
+possessed to the full the authority which belonged to it by old
+custom. James used simply to confirm the resolutions which were
+adopted in the bosom of the Council under the influence of the
+Treasurer: he appears in the reports of ambassadors as a phantom-king,
+and the minister as the real ruler of the country.[386] After the
+death of Cecil all this was changed. The King knew the party-divisions
+which prevailed in the Council: he let its members have their own way,
+and even connived at the relations they formed with foreign powers for
+their own interest; but he knew how to hold the balance between them,
+and in the midst of their divisions to carry out his own views. In
+those country seats, where no one seemed to take thought for anything
+except the pleasures of the chase and learned pursuits, the business
+of the state also was carried on in course of time with
+ever-increasing ardour.[387] The secretaries about the King were
+incessantly busy, while the secretaries' chambers in London were
+idle. Great affairs were generally transacted between the King and the
+favourite in the ascendant at the time, in conferences to which only a
+few others were admitted, and sometimes not even these. The King
+himself decided; and the resolutions which were taken were
+communicated to the Privy Council, which gradually became accustomed
+to do nothing more than invest them with the customary forms. If it be
+asked what the object of the King's efforts was, the answer must be
+that it was to set the exercise of the supreme power free from the
+controlling influence of the men of high rank to whom the King had
+deferred on his first accession. This was generally the aim of the
+great rulers of that century. This had been the principal end of the
+policy of Philip II of Spain during his long political life: however
+the Kings and Queens of France may have differed on other points, they
+were all, both Henry III and Henry IV, Mary de' Medici while she was
+regent, and Lewis XIII so soon as he succeeded to the exercise of
+power, at one in this endeavour. James, who was a new sovereign in one
+of his kingdoms, and almost always absent from the other, had more
+difficulties in his way than other monarchs. Wherever it was possible
+he proceeded with energy and rigour. People were astonished when they
+reckoned up the number of considerable men who served him in high
+offices, and were then deprived of them. He laboured incessantly to
+make way for the impartial exercise of justice in the King's name
+throughout Scotland, in spite of the privileges of the great Scottish
+nobles as its administrators. In his ecclesiastical arrangements in
+that country, he was fond of insisting on his personal wishes: in
+cases of emergency indeed he made known that all the treasures of
+India were not of so much value in his eyes as the observance of his
+ordinances; and he threatened the opponents of the royal will with the
+King's anger, to which he then gave unbridled indulgence.[388] As he
+looked upon the Church of England as the best bulwark against the
+influence of the Jesuits which he feared on the one side, and that of
+the Puritans which he hated on the other, it was naturally his
+foremost endeavour to fortify his power, and to unite the two kingdoms
+with one another by the promotion and spread of the forms of that
+Church. The essential motive of his system of colonisation in Ireland
+was the wish to establish the Church, by the aid of which he designed
+to subjugate or to suppress hostile elements. In England he imparted
+to it a character still more clerical and removed from Presbyterianism
+than that which had previously distinguished it: he wished it to be as
+much withdrawn as possible from the action of civil legislation. But
+in proportion as he supported himself on the Church he fell out with
+the Parliament, in which aristocratic tendencies and sympathies with
+popular rights and with Puritanism were blended with a feeling of
+independence that was hateful to him. He once said that five hundred
+kings were assembled there, and he thought that he was fulfilling a
+duty in resisting them. The most momentous questions affecting
+constitutional rights in regard to the freedom of elections, freedom
+of speech, the limits of legislative power, and above all the right of
+granting taxes, were brought forward under King James. And on every
+other side he saw himself involved in a struggle with hostile
+privileges and proud independent powers, from whose ascendancy both in
+Church and State he was careful to keep himself free, while at the
+same time he did not proceed to extremities or come to an absolute
+rupture. He was naturally disposed, and was moreover led by
+circumstances, to make it a leading rule of conduct, to adhere
+immovably to principles which he had once espoused, and never to lose
+sight of them; but, having done this, to appear vacillating and
+irresolute in matters of detail. His position abroad involved the same
+apparent contradiction. Placed in the midst of great rival powers, and
+never completely certain of the obedience of his subjects, he sought
+to ensure the future for himself by crafty and hesitating conduct. All
+the world complained that they could not depend on him; each party
+thought that he was blinded by the other. Those however who knew him
+more intimately assure us that we must not suppose that he did not
+apprehend the snares which were laid for him; that if only he were
+willing to use his eyes, he was as clear-sighted as Argus; that there
+was no prince in the world who had more insight into affairs or more
+cleverness in transacting them. They say that if he appeared to lack
+decision, this arose from his fine perception of the difficulties
+arising from the nature of things and their necessary consequences;
+that he was just as slow and circumspect in the execution as he was
+lively and expeditious in the discussion of measures; that he knew how
+to moderate his choleric temperament by an intentional reserve,[389]
+and that even his absence from the capital and his residence in the
+country were made to second this systematic hesitation; that, if a
+disputed point awaited decision, instead of attending a meeting with
+the Privy Councillors who were with him, he would take advantage of a
+fine day to fly his falcons, for he thought that something might
+happen in the meanwhile, or some news be brought in, and that the
+delay of an hour had often ere now been found profitable.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1613.]
+
+It was then through no mere weakness on King James's part that he
+conceded power to a favourite. In a letter to Robert Carr he describes
+what he thought he had found in him, viz. a man who did not allow
+himself to be diverted a hair's-breadth from his service,[390] who
+never betrayed a secret, and who had nothing before his eyes but the
+advantage and good name of his sovereign. The greater share that he
+secured for such a man in the management of affairs the greater the
+power which he believed that he himself exercised in them. The
+favourite who depended entirely on the will of the king and knew his
+secrets, he supposed would be both feared and powerful as a first
+minister, and would pave the way by his influence upon the state for
+the carrying out of the views of the sovereign. He thought that he
+could combine the government of the state and the advance of
+monarchical ideas, with the comfort of a domestic friendship with an
+inferior.
+
+James himself brought about the alliance, which we noticed, between
+Robert Carr, whom he raised to the earldom of Somerset, and the house
+of Howard. By the union of the hereditary importance of an old family
+that had almost always held the highest and most influential offices,
+with the favour of the King which carried with it the fullest
+authority, a power was in fact consolidated which for a while governed
+England. Henry Howard, Earl of Northampton, the Lord Treasurer Thomas
+Howard, Earl of Suffolk, and Robert Carr were considered the triumvirs
+of England.[391] In the midst of this combination appears Lady Frances
+Howard, the daughter of the Earl of Suffolk, whose divorce from Essex
+and marriage with Somerset had sealed the political alliance between
+the two families. She was young and beautiful, with an expression of
+modesty and gentleness, but at the same time stately and brilliant, a
+fit creature to move in a society that revelled in the enjoyment of
+life, in the culture of the century, and in the possession of high
+rank. But what an abyss of dark impulses and unbridled passion
+sometimes lies hid under such a shining exterior! The Lady Frances had
+once sought to draw Prince Henry into her net. Many said that she had
+employed magic for this purpose; indeed they assumed that the early
+death of the Prince had been brought on partly by this means.[392] Her
+marriage with the king's favourite was, if this be true, only a
+secondary satisfaction of her ambition, but yet a satisfaction which
+she could not forego. Somerset had an intimate friend, whose advice
+and services at a former period had been very useful to him, but who
+opposed this marriage and fell out with him on account of it--his name
+was Overbury.[393] Lady Frances swore to effect his death. We are
+revolted at the licence which personal hate enjoyed of misusing the
+power of the state, when we read that Overbury was first brought to
+the Tower, and then had creatures who could be relied on set about him
+there, with whose help the victim was removed out of the way by means
+of poison. Lady Frances was not the only female poisoner among the
+higher classes of society. This mode of assassination had spread in
+England as it had done in Italy and at times in France. In these
+transactions the most abandoned profligacy allied itself with the
+brilliancy and the advantages of a high position, but they foreboded a
+speedy ruin. The authority of Somerset awakened discontent and secret
+counterplots. He was naturally turbulent, obstinate, and insolent, and
+had the presumption to behave in his usual manner even to the King
+whom he set right with an air of intellectual superiority which
+revived in the King's breast bitter recollection of the years of his
+childhood. James put up with this conduct for a while; he then,
+against the will of the favourite, set his hand to raise to a level
+with him another young man, for whom he entertained a personal liking:
+at last the misunderstanding came to an open rupture. And at the same
+time an accident brought to light the circumstances of Overbury's
+death.[394] All Somerset's old enemies raised their heads again, and
+proceedings were instituted against him and his wife which terminated
+in their condemnation.[395] The King pardoned them, to the extent of
+allowing them to lead a life secluded from the world; they resided
+afterwards in the same house, but, as far as is known, in complete
+separation without even seeing one another.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1615.]
+
+Shortly before this event Henry Howard had died. Thomas Howard, whose
+wife was accused of exercising a pernicious and corrupt influence upon
+affairs, lost his office of High Treasurer. The place of Carr was
+occupied by the young man above referred to, whom Carr's adversaries
+had combined to push forward, George Villiers, a native of
+Leicestershire, where his family had lived upon their own ancestral
+property from the time of the Conquest. After the early death of his
+father, his mother, a Beaumont by birth, a lady still young and full
+of ambition and knowledge of the world, had educated him not only in
+the training of English schools but in French ways and manners, and
+had then brought him to court. He differed from Carr in being
+naturally good-tempered, and of a courteous obliging disposition,
+which won the heart of every one.[396] Although no one doubted that he
+would be spoilt by a higher position, yet people thought that he could
+never become malicious like Somerset. Lord Pembroke and Archbishop
+Abbot both gave him a helping hand in his rise: the latter moved the
+Queen also, although she was not without scruples, to aid in it.
+Villiers was a man after the King's own heart, well-formed, capable of
+intellectual cultivation, devoted: in consequence of the favour and
+confidence of the King the youth, who after a time was created Duke of
+Buckingham, acquired a ruling position in the English state. The old
+Admiral Effingham, Earl of Nottingham, resigned his office in order to
+make room for him: some other high officials were appointed under his
+influence and according to his views; in a short time the white wands
+of the royal household and the under-secretaryships and subordinate
+offices had been transferred to the hands of his adherents and
+friends.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1617.]
+
+But foreign as well as domestic relations were affected by this
+change. Somerset had stood in the most confidential relations with the
+Spanish ambassador: he was accused of having betrayed to him the
+secrets of the state from his office.[397] His wife, if not himself,
+was thought to have drawn money from Spain. Probably the intelligence
+of this behaviour, which came to the King's ears, contributed most to
+the downfall of Somerset. This event did not in itself involve a
+change of policy. In the advice which was given to the young favourite
+from a well-informed source, it is presupposed that the good
+understanding with Spain would continue: but it was now possible for
+the adversaries of this power to bestir themselves again. Some of the
+most conspicuous men of the other party, such as Winwood, the
+Secretary of State, would even have been glad if open war with Spain
+had immediately broken out.
+
+The mutual opposition between these powerful tendencies, and the men
+who made them their own, brought the career of Walter Ralegh to a
+close.
+
+Somerset was Ralegh's personal enemy, and had gained possession of his
+best estate. After his fall Ralegh was liberated from the Tower. He
+still lay under the weight of a sentence which had been pronounced
+against him on the occasion of the plot which bears his name. He might
+have purchased its removal; but he was assured by the most influential
+voices that he had nothing more to fear from it; and he thought that
+he could apply the money more profitably to the execution of the great
+design which he had long ago formed, and which he had never for an
+instant lost sight of during his captivity. A story was then afloat
+that after the destruction of the kingdom of Peru the descendants of
+the Incas had founded another kingdom between the Amazon and the
+Orinoco, the Dorado of the Spaniards. It was Ralegh's ambition to open
+to his countrymen this region which would be easily accessible from
+the coasts, of which he had formerly taken possession in the name of
+England. The old reputation of Ralegh's name procured him sufficient
+support for his expedition, not only from the merchants, but also from
+wealthy private individuals; and the King gave him a patent which
+empowered him to sail to the ports of America still in possession of
+the heathen, in order to open commercial intercourse with them, and to
+spread the Christian, especially the Reformed, faith among them.[398]
+In July 1617 Ralegh set sail from Plymouth harbour for this object,
+with seven ships of war and a number of small transports carrying
+about 700 men.
+
+It was presupposed that in such an enterprise all hostilities against
+the Spaniards would be avoided. When the Spanish ambassador complained
+of this expedition undertaken by a man who had already on one occasion
+been very troublesome to the Spanish colonies, the Privy Council
+answered that Ralegh was pledged by his instructions to do no damage
+to the Spaniards; and that 'if he violated them his head was there to
+pay for it.'[399] The King himself repeated this answer to him.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1618.]
+
+Ralegh in fact guarded against any collision with the Spaniards on his
+voyage. He was said not to have taken a single Spanish vessel, and he
+directed his course without stopping to Guiana, the goal which he had
+set before himself. But the Spaniards had become powerful there,
+although not until after his former visit. From Caraccas they had
+conquered the natives, who were engaged in internal wars, and had
+firmly established themselves at a short distance from the coast.
+What was likely to happen if they opposed the forces which Ralegh
+landed to search for the gold mines which he had formerly seen there?
+Ralegh remembered full well what a danger he ran if he engaged in a
+struggle and fought with them: he knew that he was thereby forfeiting
+his life. But on the other side, was he to return without fulfilling
+his purpose, and to burden himself with the reproach of not having
+told the truth? Worst of all, was he to fail in effecting the object
+which he had entertained all his life long, and not to achieve the
+discovery on which he staked the future glory of his name? It was
+perhaps the greatest moment in a life that almost always lifts itself
+above the ordinary level, when the thirst for discovery gained the
+victory over considerations of legality and the danger involved in
+discarding them. And well might he have hoped that not only pardon but
+praise would have been accorded him, if he had actually obtained
+possession of the gold mines, by whatever means. He commanded his men
+when they advanced inland to behave to the Spaniards as the Spaniards
+behaved to them. A collision was thus unavoidable. It took place at S.
+Thomas, which was destroyed, but the Spaniards nevertheless had
+completely the superiority: Ralegh's only son was killed; and the
+captain who had the charge of the expedition was so disheartened that
+he committed suicide. These disasters involved the utter failure of
+the expedition. His crews, who were naturally insubordinate,
+quarrelled among themselves, and on the voyage home the fleet
+dispersed. Ralegh came back to England without an ounce of gold, and
+without having effected any result whatever: he appeared in the light
+of an adventurer who had wantonly desired to break the peace with
+Spain. And when the ambassador of this power asked for full and signal
+satisfaction, in order to restore the good understanding which
+Ralegh's enterprise had at once interrupted, was it to be expected
+that the King should take under his protection the man who had not
+complied with the conditions prescribed to him, and whom for other
+reasons he did not love? And moreover the pulse of free generosity
+which befits a sovereign did not beat in the breast of King James. He
+consented that the old sentence of condemnation, for fifteen years
+suspended over Ralegh's head, should now be enforced against him. It
+had been pronounced against him for entering into a secret alliance
+with Spain; an attack on Spain led to its execution. Ralegh and the
+King exhibit a contrast between ambition that scorns danger on the one
+side, and caution that supports itself by the forms of law on the
+other, such as even in England has hardly ever been so sharply drawn.
+The King could not possibly get any good by his conduct. The position
+of England in the world depended upon the resistance that she offered
+to the preponderance of Spain in both the Indies and in Europe. The
+King detached himself from one of the chief interests of the nation
+when he allowed a felon's death to be inflicted on the man of lofty
+genius, who had undertaken, by an ill-advised attempt it is true, to
+give effect in America to this feeling of world-wide opposition. James
+thought that his welfare lay in maintaining the peace with Spain. But
+we know that at an earlier date he had entered on a course adverse to
+Spain, and that even now he had not entirely renounced it. What
+confusion must eventually follow from this divided policy!
+
+NOTES:
+
+[381] Ant. Foscarini, Relatione 1618: 'Il re ritiene questa sorte di
+vita nella quale fu habituato, e spende tutto il tempo che puo nella
+caccia e ne studj.'
+
+[382] 'Crums fallen from King James' Table, or his Table Talk.' MS. in
+the British Museum.
+
+[383] Wilson, James I, 289: 'He had pure notions in conception, but
+could bring few of them into action, though they tended to his own
+preservation.' Wilson, Weldon, and the notices in Balfour, are
+certainly all of them deeply tinged with party feeling. The elder
+Disraeli is quite right in rejecting them: but his own conception is
+very unsatisfactory. Gardiner (1863) avoids unauthenticated
+statements; but the views of James' character which have grown up and
+established themselves owing to the commonplace repetition of such
+statements, control his representation of it.
+
+[384] Foscarini: 'A due sorti di persone dona particolarmente, a
+grandi et a quelli che gli assistono che sono quasi tutti Scocesi, e
+non vaca cosa alcuna della quale possino cavar utile, che non la
+demandino e nello stesso momento obtengono.'
+
+[385] Harrington: Nugae Antiquae i.
+
+[386] Niccolo Molino, Relatione 1607: 'A abandonato e messo dietro le
+spalle tutti gli affari li quali lascia al suo consiglio ed a suoi
+ministri, onde si puo dire con verità ch'egli sia principe di nome e
+Più tosto d'apparenza che d'effetto.'
+
+[387] A. Foscarini 1618: 'In campagna gli viene di giorno in giorno
+dal consiglio che risiede per ordinario in Londra dato conto di quanto
+passa et inviatigli spacci e corrieri: tratta e risolve molte cose con
+il consiglio solo de suoi favoriti.--Risolve per ordinario in momenti
+et havendo seco segretarii per gli affari d'Inghilterra, per quelli di
+Scotia e Ibernia comanda ciascuno di essi, quanto occorre e vuol che
+si faccia in tutti i suoi regni.'
+
+[388] Calderwood, vii. 311, 434, &c.
+
+[389] Girolamo Lando, Relatione 1622: '(S. M. è) inclinata
+all'ambiguita et alla dimora non gia per naturale complessione
+impastata di foco, colerico et molto ardente, ma perche vuol darsi a
+credere di cavare della protrattione del tempo ciò, che
+desidera--conli scemi dell'ira tenendo pure quelli della
+mansuetudine.'
+
+[390] 'Unmoveable in one hair that might concern me against the whole
+world.' James to Somerset, in Halliwell ii. 127; certainly one of the
+most important documents in this collection.
+
+[391] Narrative of Abbot in Rushworth i. 460.
+
+[392] A. Foscarini, 1615 Nov. 13. 'Si mantiene viva la voce e sospetto
+del principe defonto.' Nov. 20, 'Avanthieri parti il re, che per
+questo accidente e per le gravi dissensioni ed odii che regna in corte
+si mostra molto addolorato.'
+
+[393] The personal motive of the estrangement might have lain in
+Overbury's speech to Somerset, mentioned by Payton during the trial:
+'"I will leave you free to yourself to stand on your own legs." My
+lord of Somerset answered his legs were strong enough to bear
+himself.' (State Trials ii. 978.) He wished to show that he could
+dispense with Overbury.
+
+[394] According to Wilson, Ralph Winwood was informed by a confession
+made at Vliessingen. From a letter of Winwood extracted by Gardiner
+(History of England ii. 216) we only learn that Winwood received the
+first intimation: he reckons it as a proof of the justice of the King
+of England that he allowed the investigation to be made.
+
+[395] Somerset intimated that he possessed secrets the disclosure of
+which would compromise the King: and there is nothing, however
+conjectural or infamous, which has not seemed to some among posterity
+to be probable on this ground. James I says, 'God knows it is only a
+trick of his idle brain, hoping thereby to shift his trial. I cannot
+hear a private message from him without laying an aspersion upon
+myself of being an accessory to his crime.' (Halliwell ii. 138.)
+
+[396] Girolamo Lando, Relatione 1622, praises him for 'apparenza di
+modestia, benignita e cortesia,--bellezza, gratia, leggiadria del
+corpo, a tutti gli esercitii mirabilmente disposto.'
+
+[397] 'Che le lettere Più importanti del re sono passate in mano di
+Spagna.' Ant. Foscarini, Nov. 13, 1615. There is a letter of James I
+of October 20 which likewise supposes acts of treachery of this kind.
+What is true in this supposition we now learn from Digby's letter, in
+Gardiner, App. iii. 2.
+
+[398] 'To the south parts of America or elsewhere within America
+possessed and inhabited by heathen and savage people.' So run the
+words of the commission: it is therein said expressly 'Sir Walter
+Ralegh being under the peril of the law.'
+
+[399] Dispaccio Veneto Feb. 10, 1617: 'Che le cose erano concertate
+che S. M. cattolica non avrebbe occasione di riceverne disgusto--che
+era fermamente del re, che il Rale andasse al suo viaggio, nel quale
+se avesse contravenuto alle suoi instruttioni--haveva la testa con che
+pagherebbe la disubbidienza.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+COMPLICATIONS ARISING OUT OF THE AFFAIRS OF THE PALATINATE.
+
+
+During these years there had been persons at the helm of state in most
+countries, who either from natural disposition or from a calculation
+of present circumstances had cherished peaceful views. In spite of all
+the activity of Spanish policy, Philip III and his minister Lerma
+clung to the principle that the rest needed to restore the strength of
+the exhausted monarchy must be granted to it. The Emperor Matthias
+owed the crown he wore to his alliance with the Protestants: his first
+minister Klesel, although a cardinal, was a lukewarm Catholic, and a
+man of conciliatory views in general. The Regent of France, Mary de'
+Medici, had surrendered the warlike designs of her husband when she
+entered on the exercise of sovereign power. Christian IV of Denmark
+held similar views. He declined the proposals of the Poles, which were
+aimed at a renewal of the war against Sweden: he preferred, with the
+approval of his council of state, to proceed with the building of
+towns and harbours in which he was engaged.
+
+Hence it was possible on the whole to carry out a policy such as that
+maintained by James I. It corresponded to the tone prevalent among the
+other powers.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1617.]
+
+From time to time it seemed probable that the opposing forces which
+were contending with one another in the depths of European life, would
+burst forth and shatter the peaceful state of affairs. For the
+advancing revival of Catholicism roused the hostile feelings of
+Protestants, while the union of the German and the independent feeling
+of the Italian princes resisted the extension of the alliances of
+Spain. In the year 1615, on the Netherland frontier, and in the year
+1616 on the boundaries between Austria and Venice, warlike movements
+began which threatened to prove the commencement of a general
+struggle: but these were disputes of an essentially local nature, and
+peaceful dispositions still maintained the upper hand.
+
+But in the year 1617 and 1618 a question arose which no longer allowed
+this state of things to continue. It concerned the imperial dignity of
+Germany, but it exercised so powerful a secondary influence upon
+affairs most thoroughly English that even in a history of England a
+short discussion must be devoted to it.
+
+The increasing weakness of the Emperor Matthias rendered his speedy
+end probable; and all preparations were already being made in the
+house of Austria to secure the succession of the Archduke Ferdinand of
+Styria to the imperial throne, as well as to his own hereditary
+kingdoms and provinces. No arrangement could in itself have been more
+suitable in the nature of things. Ferdinand was the most vigorous
+scion of his house; and both the German Archdukes laid their own
+well-founded claims at his feet. A resignation on the part of Philip
+III of the claims which he inherited from his mother was thought
+indispensable: but even this created no difficulty. It was merely
+stipulated that Ferdinand should indemnify him for resigning them; and
+this he was willing to do. It only remained that the crown of the
+German Empire should also be assured to him. The Archdukes were eager
+for an immediate negotiation on the subject, and were already certain
+of the support of the spiritual electors.
+
+It is clear however that the succession was not merely a change of
+persons. The place of the peaceable and moderate Matthias would be
+filled by one of the most devoted pupils of the Jesuits in the person
+of Ferdinand, who had made himself terrible to the Protestants by an
+unsparing restoration of Catholicism in his own country. Moreover the
+alliance between the German and Spanish line, which had been loosened
+in the last few years, was to be consolidated into a union resting on
+common interests: so that it seemed likely that Austria would enjoy a
+supremacy like that which had been established in the time of Charles
+V. The letters which passed between the members of that house, and
+which had accidentally been divulged, excited surprise by the note of
+general hostility which they struck, while the share of the Palatinate
+and of Brandenburg in the election was treated in them as a formality
+which could be dispensed with in case of necessity.[400]
+
+It is quite intelligible that the Protestants should be agitated by
+this discovery, and should entertain the idea of opposing the election
+of Ferdinand. Not that one of them thought of acquiring the throne for
+himself; they did not resist the election of a Catholic emperor as
+such, but they wished to guard against the resumption of the
+combination between the Austro-Spanish power and the prerogatives of
+the imperial crown. At first their eyes fell upon Duke Maximilian of
+Bavaria, whom they would by this means have for ever detached from
+that power. The Elector Frederick controlled the jealousy which, as
+Elector Palatine, he felt for a branch of the same house, and went to
+Munich in order to prevail on his cousin to consent to this
+arrangement; for, according to the plea advanced on grounds of
+imperial right, the imperial crown could not be allowed to become
+hereditary in the house of Austria. He hoped that the Archbishop
+Ferdinand of Cologne, the brother of the Duke of Bavaria, would
+support him, and that his influence would win over the other spiritual
+electors also. The Union and the League would then have combined to
+oppose the house of Austria.
+
+But meanwhile open resistance to the claims of this family had already
+broken out in its own provinces. While the Emperor Matthias was still
+alive, the Archduke Ferdinand, through the combination, as prescribed
+by Bohemian usage, of an election with the recognition of his
+hereditary claims, had been acknowledged future King of Bohemia, and
+had been already crowned, on condition that he would not mix in public
+affairs before the death of his predecessor. But immediately after the
+coronation people thought that they could discover his hand in every
+act of the government. Cardinal Klesel, the man in whom the greatest
+confidence was reposed, especially by the Protestant portion of the
+Estates, had been overthrown owing to the influence of the Spanish
+ambassador. In opposition to the influence thus exercised, 'against
+the practices and snares of the Jesuits,' as the phrase ran, the
+zealous Protestants who, when Ferdinand was accepted as King, had been
+thrust into the background or had retired, now obtained the upper hand
+in the country, and proceeded to open insurrection while the Emperor
+Matthias was still alive. This Prince was the first who was overturned
+by the collision of the two parties, whose enmity was again reviving,
+and between whom he had thought of mediating. He was bitterly
+disappointed by his failure. After his death the Bohemians thought
+themselves justified in refusing any longer to acknowledge Ferdinand
+as their King, and in seeking on the contrary for a worthier successor
+to the throne, on the ground that in Ferdinand's election the
+traditional forms had not been accurately observed, and that he was
+undermining all religious and political freedom. Their eyes had even
+fallen on Catholic princes; but as the motive which prompted their
+resistance was certainly the religious one, their attention was still
+more drawn to the most eminent Protestant prince in their vicinity,
+Frederick Elector Palatine, who as head of the Union was himself the
+principal opponent of the election of Ferdinand as Emperor.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1618.]
+
+On the very first steps taken in this matter, the King of England was
+affected by these movements. We learn that, on the occasion of the
+overtures made by Frederick, Maximilian of Bavaria had been moved to
+write to James I, and to express to him his satisfaction at the family
+connexion which had sprung up between them. The interest of the
+Palatinate and of England seemed one and the same, especially as the
+King was still considered a member and protector of the Union. The
+presumption that the son-in-law of the King of England would find
+support from his power, contributed greatly to the importance which
+the Elector at this moment enjoyed.
+
+But at the same time it was evident in what an embarrassing position
+James I was now placed, and that not only on account of the danger
+threatening the continuance of peace, which he thought no price too
+high to secure: his hands were tied not merely by this general
+consideration, but by another special reason as well. He was at that
+moment seriously engaged in a treaty for the marriage of his son with
+a Spanish infanta, which was to carry out the long-talked-of alliance
+between his family and the Austro-Spanish line.
+
+The first overtures in regard to the present Prince of Wales had been
+made by the Duke of Lerma to the English envoy, Digby, to whom he
+opened a proposal for the marriage of Prince Charles with Mary,
+daughter of Philip III. The Spanish ambassador, Gondomar, had then
+taken the management of the affair in hand. We should do him wrong by
+supposing that he wished to deceive the King. Gondomar rather belonged
+to the party who looked for the welfare of the Spanish monarchy in the
+maintenance of peace, especially with England. The scheme of the
+marriage was part of the system of powerful alliances by which it was
+sought to prop the greatness of Spain. Even the uncertain rumour of
+this scheme, which was instantly propagated, sufficed to agitate the
+Protestant party in Europe and in England itself. The King declared
+that he moved only with leaden foot towards the proposal which had
+been made to him; and that, if it were seen that the alliance was
+dangerous to religion or to existing agreements, it should never take
+effect. But even the Secretary of State, Ralph Winwood, who repeated
+this declaration, disapproved of the scheme, as did also the whole
+school of Robert Cecil. They had wished to marry the Prince to the
+daughter of a German line, perhaps to a Brandenburg princess; and the
+States General offered their money and their services in order to win
+the consent of any such princess, and to convey her to England. Many
+would have preferred even a domestic alliance after the old fashion.
+Opposition was also offered on the part of the Church of England.
+Archbishop Abbot only delayed to urge it until the conditions of the
+marriage should come under discussion. But the King likewise had the
+approval of influential voices on his side. It was considered possible
+to conclude the marriage, and yet to preserve the other alliances of
+the country. People thought that England would in that case be only
+the more courted by both parties, and that the peace of the world
+would rest on the shoulders of the King.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1619.]
+
+But what a contradiction was involved in the ascendancy which these
+ideas obtained? The hereditary right to the crown of Bohemia, which
+the estates of that country would no longer acknowledge, belonged to
+the house of Spain. It was intended that the Elector Palatine should
+step into its place by election; and this prince was son-in-law to the
+King. After James had married his daughter to the head of the
+Protestants in Germany, he conceived the thought of marrying his son
+to the member of a family which had made the patronage and protection
+of Catholicism its special calling. It seemed as if he was purposely
+introducing into his own family the disunion which rent Europe in
+twain.
+
+The negotiations in Germany after a time resulted in the victory of
+the house of Austria, which in spite of all opposition carried the day
+in the election of the Emperor. The Elector Palatine acknowledged
+Ferdinand II without hesitation. But almost at the same moment he
+received the news that he had himself been elected king by the Estates
+of Bohemia. It cannot be proved that he was privy to this beforehand:
+even the rumour that his wife urged him to accept the crown because
+she was a king's daughter meets with no confirmation. They were not so
+blind as not to perceive the enormous danger in which the acceptance
+of this offer would involve them. In reply to a question of the
+Elector, his wife answered that she regarded the election as a divine
+dispensation, that if he determined to accept it, which she left
+entirely to his consideration, she for her part was resolved to
+undergo everything that might follow from it. We must not regard as
+hypocrisy the prominence which the prince and the princess alike gave
+to religious considerations. Such was the fashion of the times
+generally, and especially of the party to which they belonged.
+
+The Elector Frederick however did not yet declare his decision. The
+question of the acceptance of the crown of Bohemia was debated from
+every point of view by the very councillors who had just been present
+at the election of the Emperor. Their decision was in favour of the
+prince inviting first of all the advice of his friends in the empire,
+of the States-General, but especially of the King of England, and
+making sure of their support.[401] The Bohemian envoys, who most
+urgently requested an immediate answer, were put off with the reply
+that the Elector must first of all be certain of the consent of the
+father of his consort. Count Christopher Dohna was sent to England to
+persuade King James to give it. He was commissioned to deliver to him
+a letter from the Princess-Electress in which she most urgently
+entreated her father to support her husband and to prove his paternal
+love to them both.
+
+King James came now face to face with the greatest question of his
+life, which summed up and brought to light, so to speak, all the cross
+purposes and conflicting political aims among which he had long moved.
+A word from him was now of the greater consequence, as the
+States-General declared that they would act as he did. But what was
+his decision to be? He was not unmoved by the thought that the
+prospect of possessing a crown was opened to his son-in-law and
+grandchildren. On the other hand he was greatly impressed by a
+representation which the King of Spain forwarded to him, that his
+right to the crown of Bohemia was indisputable--as in fact the Spanish
+line had a contingent claim to the succession--and that he would
+contend for it with all his strength: on which King James said that he
+also as a great sovereign had an interest in seeing that no one was
+deprived of his own. The theories of James I about the hereditary
+rights of princes, the electoral rights of the Estates, and the
+influence of religious profession in these matters, presented
+themselves to his mind together with his wishes on the question of the
+aggrandisement of his dynasty. He remarked that it could not be
+allowed that subjects should presume to fall away from their sovereign
+on a question of religion; he even feared that this doctrine might
+react to his own prejudice on England. In these considerations the
+balance evidently was in favour of a refusal. James would have
+deserved well of the world if he had given utterance to that refusal,
+and had decisively dissuaded his son-in-law from accepting the crown.
+And from his oft-repeated assertions at a later period, to the effect
+that the Elector had proceeded on his own responsibility, we might
+think that he had expressed himself in definite terms in favour of a
+different course.
+
+In reality however this is not the case. He condemned the revolt of
+the Bohemians against Matthias: in regard to Ferdinand it was his
+opinion that they should prove from the old capitulations their right
+to declare his election and coronation invalid, and to proceed to a
+new election, in which case he would himself support them.[402] He
+expressed himself in such a manner, that even members of the Privy
+Council received the impression that he would approve of and even
+support the acceptance of the crown when once it had taken place.
+Christopher Dohna relates that in the negotiations at that time he one
+day declared that his master, the Elector, was ready to refuse the
+crown if the King required him to do so; and that James replied, 'I do
+not say that.'[403]
+
+Monarchs are set in authority in order that they may pronounce
+definitive decisions according to the best of their own judgment. It
+is sometimes their duty to take a decided line. James, who hitherto
+had always stood between different parties, could not nerve himself at
+this eventful moment for a firm and straightforward resolve. In the
+monstrous dilemma in which the various questions at issue were
+becoming involved he could not come to any decision. The kindest thing
+that can be said of him is that at this moment his nature was not
+equal to the requirements of the situation.
+
+Count Dohna, following the example of James's councillors, concluded
+from his expressions that he was not only not opposed to the
+acceptance of the crown, but that he would allow himself to be
+enlisted in its favour, and would support it. And there is no doubt
+that this view exercised a decisive influence upon the final
+resolution of the Elector Frederick. He certainly was already strongly
+inclined to accept the crown in opposition to his more clear-sighted
+and sagacious mother, but in agreement with his ardent wife: but he
+had not yet uttered the final words when Dohna's report came in.[404]
+When he learned from this that the King was not decidedly
+unfavourable, the Elector thought that he recognised a dispensation of
+God which he would not decline to carry out. In the presence of his
+councillors at the castle of Heidelberg he declared to the Bohemian
+ambassadors that he accepted the crown; and soon afterwards he set out
+for Bohemia. In October 1619 (Oct. 25/Nov. 4) he was crowned at
+Prague.
+
+What unforeseen consequences however for himself and his friends, for
+Germany and for England, were destined to spring out of this
+undertaking!
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1620.]
+
+In London, where the popular party had already from the first fixed
+their eyes on the Princess, this step was welcomed with the most
+joyous approval. It was represented to the King that the most
+brilliant prospect was thus opened to his family; that on the next
+vacancy his son-in-law, who already himself held two votes in the
+electoral body, could not fail to be chosen Emperor; and that England
+would by this means acquire the greatest influence on the continent.
+It was expected that these feelings for his family, and the successful
+issue of events, would work together to detach him again from Spain.
+
+James on one occasion, on receiving the news of the confinement of his
+daughter, drank a bowl of wine 'to the health of the King and Queen of
+Bohemia.' He went so far as this, and people thought it worth while to
+record the event; but he could not be brought to acknowledge Frederick
+openly. He was not satisfied with the proof of their right advanced by
+the Bohemians: in conversation he advocated the right of Austria.
+
+Spain and the League, as was inevitable, joined forces with Austria.
+In the first instance the Palatinate itself was the object of their
+joint attack. How could men have helped thinking that King James would
+resolutely take the inheritance of his grandsons under his protection?
+The Union invited him to do so, reminding him of the obligation
+imposed on him by his connexion with them mentioned above: they said
+it was no favour, but justice which they demanded of him. But James
+replied that he had pledged himself only to repel open and
+unjustifiable attacks, but that in the present case the Palatinate was
+the attacking party, and that Austria stood on the defensive. The
+Union presently saw itself compelled to conclude a treaty with the
+League, which left that power free to act against Bohemia. The
+Palatinate however was not secured thereby against the Spaniards.[405]
+To effect this, it would have been deemed advisable to make an attack
+from Holland on the Spanish Netherlands; for if a single fortified
+place had been occupied there, the Palatinate would have had nothing
+more to fear from Spain. But to this measure also James refused his
+consent: he thought that this would be equivalent to beginning war,
+which he did not wish.
+
+The general sympathy of the nation was strong enough at last to cause
+a large English regiment of 2500 men, under Horace Vere, to be sent on
+the continent, in order that the Palatinate, on which the Spaniards
+now advanced, might not become utterly a prey to them. The Earls of
+Essex and Oxford, who had contributed most to raise the regiment,
+themselves took part in the campaign. They were joined by many other
+young men of leading families, who wished to learn the art of war. But
+they had received from the King positive commands to commit no act of
+hostility. The troops of the Union, who showed themselves quite ready
+to fight the Spaniards, were withheld by the threat that in that case
+the King would recall these troops instead of sending two more
+regiments to join them, the hope of which he held out to them in the
+event of their obedience. It was enough for the King that the English
+troops occupied the most important places. Vere held Mannheim, Herbert
+Heidelberg, Burrows Frankenthal; while the greater part of the country
+fell into the hands of the Spaniards.
+
+Europe had reason to be alarmed at the advantage which accrued to the
+Spanish monarchy from this affair. The Tyrol and Alsace were already
+promised them to form links between Lombardy and the Netherlands: the
+possession of the Lower Palatinate completed their chain of
+communication.
+
+The action of Spain and England presented a marked contrast. Spain,
+while it forsook Lerma's policy, held together all its friends--Germany,
+Austria, the League, the Pope, the Archducal Netherlands--and combined
+their forces for joint action on a large scale; while King James, in
+clinging to the policy of peace, let his allies fall asunder and
+crippled their activity.
+
+But if James so acted in the case of the Palatinate which he wished to
+save, what might be fully expected in the case of Bohemia, with regard
+to which he openly declared, after some hesitation, that he could take
+no further part in its affairs? The new King found no hearty obedience
+among the Bohemians, partly because they found themselves deceived in
+their expectation of being assisted with troops by the Union, and with
+money by England. But worse than all, the ill-disciplined soldiery
+being without pay, broke out in mutiny: they were almost more ready to
+help themselves to their arrears by an attack upon the capital than to
+defend their sovereign or their country. On the other hand the
+soldiers of Austria and of the League, well paid and well disciplined,
+were spurred on by zealous priests. On their first attack they
+scattered the troops of Frederick to the four winds (November 1620).
+It would not have been impossible for Frederick to wage a defensive
+war in Bohemia; but regard to the danger into which the Queen would
+have been thrown in consequence prevented the attempt. That one day
+cost them both crown and country.
+
+It is impossible to describe the impression which the news of this
+defeat produced in London. The King was held blameable because not a
+single soldier commissioned by him had been found beside his daughter
+to draw the sword in her defence. This was attributed either to
+culpable negligence of his own affairs, or to the influence of the
+Spanish ambassador. Not Gondomar himself, who was too shrewd to act
+thus, but certainly his friends and Catholics generally, let their joy
+at this event be known. The citizens responded with manifestations
+that were directed against the King himself. A placard was put up in
+which he was told that he would be made to feel the anger of the
+people, if in this affair he any longer followed a policy opposed to
+its views.
+
+James I could no longer put off the question what steps he was to
+take. The tidings reached him at Newmarket, where he was spending the
+cold and gloomy days in hunting. He broke off this amusement and
+hastened to Westminster, in order to attend council with his
+ministers.
+
+Towards the end of December a meeting was held, in which the secretary
+Naunton depicted the whole position of the foreign policy of England,
+and drew from it the conclusion that the King must above all arm, as
+in that case he could carry on war, or at least negotiate with
+firmness and some prospect of success. King James himself brought the
+affair of Bohemia under discussion. He complained, and seemed to feel
+it as an injury to his paternal authority, that the Elector Frederick
+even now continued to make the acknowledgment of his right to the
+crown of Bohemia a condition of his accepting the mediation offered by
+the King. Viscount Doncaster, who had just returned from a mission to
+Germany, fell on his knees before him, in order to remark to him that
+Frederick deserved no blame for clinging to a right which he supposed
+to be valid: that his refusal was not addressed to James as a father,
+but as King of England.[406] James I distinctly stated afresh that he
+could not and would not espouse the cause of his son-in-law in
+Bohemia. But by this time not only was Frederick's new crown as good
+as lost, but his whole existence was endangered; the greater part of
+his hereditary territory was in the enemy's hands. James declared with
+unusual decision that he would not allow the Palatinate, which would
+one day descend to his grandchildren, to be wrested from them; that he
+was resolved to send to the Continent in the next year an army
+sufficient to reconquer it. It might be asked if this measure also
+would not inevitably lead to a breach with Spain. King James did not
+think so. He thought that he could carry on a merely local quarrel,
+and yet at the same time avoid a war on the part of the one power
+against the other. He did not intend to attack the King of Spain's own
+dominion, so long as that sovereign did not meddle with his.
+
+But however that might be, whether he was to begin war, though only on
+a limited scale, or whether he wished to prosecute negotiations with
+success, in any case it was necessary for him to arm. But for this
+purpose he required other means besides those of which he could
+dispose at his own discretion.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[400] Memorial of the Archduke Maximilian of Feb. 1, 1616, in Lunig,
+Europäische Staatsconsilia i. 918. It is clear from this that the
+anxiety of the members of the Union with regard to the Venetian war
+was not so groundless as it might otherwise appear. The Archduke lays
+before the Emperor the question whether 'in the event of the
+continuance of the Venetian disturbances he would use the opportunity
+to bring a numerous force into the field, and maintain it until the
+laudable work had been everywhere set in train, and had been
+prosecuted with the wished-for result.'
+
+[401] Reasons for hesitating advanced by the Privy Councillors of the
+Prince Elector, in Moser, who calls them prophetic, Patriotisches
+Archiv. vii. 118. The Palatinate 'will not well be able to decide
+anything certain and final: she has therefore made everything depend
+on England and the States-General, and has asked them, as well other
+her friends and potentates in the empire, for trusty counsel and
+declaration of what they will do in every case by her.'
+
+[402] 'Non approbare che in vita del imperatore li populi si
+sollevassero, ma che bene consigliava dopo morte dassero in luce le
+loro ragioni del jus eligendi sopra nullita dell'elettione di
+Ferdinando, con elegerne un altro, nel qual caso offeriva anche
+l'ajuto et il soccorso suo.'
+
+[403] 'S. M., se non assenti all accettare della corona, non disse ne
+anche mai all ora di dissentire: che anzi alla venuta di lui in questa
+corte offerendole al nome dell'istesso suo signore, che quando ella
+havesse voluto, l'averebbe anche lasciata, egli rispondesse: io non
+dico questo.' Girolamo Lando, Feb. 5, 1621.
+
+[404] Dohna mentioned that 'the leading English councillors held that,
+if the Prince Elector would but soon accept the crown, the King on his
+part would soon declare himself and give his approval, which
+accordingly threw almost the greatest weight into the scale.' Secret
+Report in Moser vii. 51.
+
+[405] From the documents relating to these proceedings, it is proved
+that Spinola had received instructions in June 1620 to gain possession
+of the Palatinate; that assurances however were given to King James
+even in August that nothing was really known of the object of his
+expedition. Senkenberg iii. 545 n.
+
+[406] Dispaccio Veneto, 8 Gennaio 1621.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+PARLIAMENT OF THE YEAR 1621.
+
+
+We already know the antipathy of James to the Parliament, which had
+become a power to which, as soon as it was manifested in a newly
+assembled House, the power of the King was obliged to bend. James had
+already often felt the ascendancy of Parliament. The schemes of union
+with Scotland, which filled his soul with ambition, had been shattered
+by the resistance of that body. The exclusively Protestant disposition
+which prevailed there had made it impossible for him to give a legal
+sanction to the favour which he entertained for the Catholics, and
+which his views of policy naturally disposed him to show. He had been
+obliged to desist from the attempt to secure financial independence by
+surrendering the feudal privileges of the crown. The Parliament raised
+claims which the King regarded as attacks on the prerogative of the
+crown: even his advances to it had been met by a stubborn resistance.
+In the ordinary course of things he would never again have summoned
+Parliament together.
+
+This complication in foreign affairs then arose. All parties,
+including even the King himself, were convinced that England must step
+forth armed among the contending powers of the world: and that, not in
+the fashion of the last expedition, so little in keeping with the
+situation, when private support and tacit sympathy found the means,
+but on a large scale, as the position of the kingdom among the great
+powers demanded. But without Parliamentary grants this was impossible.
+The summoning of a new Parliament was therefore an incontestable
+necessity.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1621.]
+
+But on the other hand there was not wanting reasons for hesitation,
+for it could not be disguised that concessions would be inevitable.
+King James saw that as plainly as any one, and declared himself
+beforehand ready to make them. In contradiction to his former
+assertions he gave out that he would this time allow grievances to be
+freely alleged, and would give his best assistance in removing them.
+He said that he wished to meet Parliament half way, and that it should
+find him an honourable man. From the investigation of abuses the less
+was feared because the late opposition was ascribed to a factious
+resistance to Somerset's administration. But that favourite had since
+fallen: and of the leaders of that opposition several had gone over to
+the government, and some had died.[407] The declared purpose of arming
+for the reconquest of the Palatinate was in accordance with the
+feelings of the nation and of the Protestants: no doubt was felt that
+it would win universal sympathy.
+
+This was in fact the case. The most favourable impression was produced
+when the King in his speech from the throne (January 30, 1621), which
+was principally taken up with this subject, declared his resolution to
+defend the hereditary claim of his grandchildren to the territories of
+the Palatine Electorate, and the free profession of Protestantism; to
+compel peace if it were necessary sword in hand; for which objects he
+claimed the assistance of the country. Parliament did not hesitate for
+an instant to express its concurrence with him in these designs. Two
+subsidies were granted on the spot, and the resolution was carried
+into effect during the continuance of the debates, a step which was
+altogether unprecedented. The King thanked the Parliament for this
+extraordinary readiness, which would, he said, increase his importance
+both at home and abroad.
+
+But this did not prevent Parliament on the other hand from bringing
+forward its claims with all possible energy. The power of granting
+money was the sinew of all its powers. The necessity of asking
+assistance from Parliament in urgent embarrassments, which the Tudors
+had avoided as far as possible, now appeared as pressing as ever. Was
+it not to be expected that demands should call forth counter-demands?
+And the opposition in the previous Parliament rested on a far wider
+basis than that of hostility to Somerset: at the present election also
+the candidates of the government were rejected in most of the counties
+and towns.[408]
+
+The commission appointed for the investigation of abuses did not deal
+only with those which were acknowledged to be such. The principal
+question rather concerned the competence of the crown to confer such
+privileges as those out of which the abuses originated. Under the lead
+of Edward Coke, the great lawyer, Parliament adopted a principle which
+secured for it a firm standing ground.
+
+Coke, who moreover did not think it necessary to ask the King's
+consent for liberty of speech, because this was, he thought, an
+independent right of Parliament, vindicated the position that no royal
+proclamation had validity if it contradicted an act of Parliament or
+an existing law. He took his stand on the times of the later
+Plantagenet and of the Lancastrian kings: and he considered that the
+form which the relation between the government and Parliament then
+assumed was the only legal form. But the government of James I had
+granted extraordinarily obnoxious privileges--for instance, the right
+of setting up taverns with a restriction on the entertainment of
+guests by private individuals, or by the old inns; and again the right
+of arresting acknowledged vagrants. But the most obnoxious grants were
+those of patents for the monopoly of some trade, which were annoying
+to the whole mercantile class, and brought profit only to a few
+favoured individuals. Coke argued that the patents were either in
+themselves illegal, or injurious in their enforcement, or both
+together. While he proved to Parliament its forgotten or disregarded
+rights, Coke won the full confidence of both Houses alike: the Upper
+and the Lower House made common cause. Thus the system of government
+as it had been developed under the Tudors and continued under the
+Stuarts was encountered face to face by another system, which rested
+upon other precedents and principles.
+
+And people were not content with merely declaring the patents invalid;
+they called those to account who had got possession of them, and even
+the high officials who had contributed to issue them. A general
+commotion ensued: every day fresh information came in and fresh
+complaints were drawn up.[409]
+
+The Lord Chancellor Bacon had been already brought into danger by this
+affair. He had assisted in introducing monopolies of different
+manufactures under the pretence that work would be found for the poor
+by means of them. It was well known that in matters of this sort he
+had for the most part followed the suggestions of the Prime Minister.
+While Bacon was defending the ideal mission of the monarchy, he had
+the weakness to identify himself too closely with the accidental form
+which authority just at that particular moment took. In return he
+found on the other hand that the attacks really aimed at the
+government recoiled in the first instance upon him. In reality they
+were directed principally against Buckingham. In order to save him
+from destruction, suggestions had been made to the King that he might
+prefer to dissolve Parliament, as it seemed plain that he had far more
+reason to expect harm from the attacks than advantage from the grants
+made by that body. Buckingham saved himself only by coming forward
+against the monopolies himself, in accordance with the advice of his
+ecclesiastical confidant, Dean Williams. Claims had been made against
+two of his brothers also on account of the monopolies. Far from taking
+them under his protection, he said on the contrary that his father had
+still a third son who was determined to root out abuses; and that not
+until the present proceedings had been taken had he recognised the
+advantages of parliamentary government. Upon this, the leading men
+with whom Williams had formed a connexion, desisted from attacking the
+First Minister. It even came about that a person of high rank,
+accused at the bar of the House of Lords, who had let fall an
+expression, comparing Buckingham to old favourites of hateful memory,
+was obliged to retract it with considerable ceremony. But a victim was
+required: one was found in the Lord Chancellor Bacon.
+
+Although condemned by law and morality, an evil practice still
+prevailed of receiving presents of money in official transactions. The
+sums were known and have been registered, by means of which Gondomar
+retained the services of a number of statesmen in the interest of
+Spain. How many similar abuses in the control of the Treasury had been
+brought to light only a short time before! Even the great philosopher,
+who in his writings is so zealous against bribes, contracted during
+his administration the stain of receiving them. That he might stand on
+an equality with the great lords, he incurred inordinate expenses,
+which these bribes assisted him to meet. Edward Coke was wholly in the
+right when he exclaimed that a corrupt judge was 'the grievance of
+grievances.'[410] Two-and-twenty cases were proved in which the
+supreme judge, the Lord Chancellor of England, had taken presents from
+the parties concerned. Lord Bacon made no attempt to justify his
+conduct; he only affirmed--and this appears in fact to have been the
+case--that in his decisions he never was influenced by the presents
+that had been made him. When he was called to account for them, he
+acquiesced himself in the justice of the proceeding, for he allowed
+that a reform was necessary, and only deemed himself unfortunate in
+being the person with whom it began. The Lords pronounced sentence
+upon him that he should never again fill an official position, nor be
+capable of sitting in Parliament, and that he should be banished from
+the precincts of the court.
+
+Apart from its importance as affecting individuals, this event is
+very important in the history of the constitution, which now returned
+to its former paths. That the Lower House again as in old times was
+able to procure the fall of one of the highest officials, is an
+evidence of its growing power. That the First Minister and favourite
+allowed his intimate friend to fall is a proof of the weakness of the
+highest authority, which moreover ought itself to have attacked abuses
+of this kind. Bacon justly remarked that reform would soon reach
+higher regions.
+
+But while Parliament, which the government had no inclination to
+withstand openly, thus obtained the ascendancy in domestic matters, it
+was also already turning its eyes in the direction of foreign affairs.
+These were times in which a warm religious sympathy was awakened by
+the advance which the counter-reformation was making in the hereditary
+dominions of Austria, as well as in France, and by the persecutions
+which befell the Protestants in both countries. The Spaniards were
+again engaging in war for the subjugation of the Netherlands. In
+Parliament, on the other hand, it was thought necessary to combine
+with the Republic, and to equip a fleet to assist the Huguenots, and
+even to attack Spain, in order thus to make a diversion in favour of
+the Palatinate. At the very time of the opening of Parliament the ban
+of the empire was pronounced against Frederick Elector Palatine amid
+the sound of trumpets and drums in the Palace at Vienna. This was
+regarded in the whole Protestant world as an injustice, for it was
+thought that Ferdinand II had been injured by Frederick only as King
+of Bohemia, and not as Emperor: and on the same grounds the English
+Parliament was of opinion that the execution of the ban ought to be
+hindered by force of arms; and it showed itself dissatisfied that the
+King sought to meet the evil only by demonstrations and embassies.
+
+We can easily understand that the attitude of Parliament aroused the
+anxiety of the King. He caused the debates on the war to be put a stop
+to, remarking that they infringed his prerogative, for which great
+affairs of this kind were exclusively reserved. And yet, so
+extraordinary was the complication of affairs that the declarations
+made in Parliament were not altogether displeasing to him. In June he
+adjourned Parliament, without formally proroguing it. What was the
+reason of this? Because Parliament had brought in a new bill
+containing the severest enactments against Jesuits and Catholic
+recusants. The King refused to accept it, as by this means the
+persecution of Protestants in Catholic countries would receive a new
+impulse. But he was also unwilling to express his refusal in a final
+shape, because he knew that the wish to hinder the adoption of harsh
+measures against the Catholics would exercise an influence upon the
+Spaniards in their negotiations with him.[411] If he had proceeded to
+a prorogation, he would have been obliged to reject the laws; and he
+preferred to keep the prospect of them still open, which he was able
+to do by resorting to the form of an adjournment. He made it a merit
+in the eyes of the Spaniards that, far from increasing the severity of
+the penal laws, he did not even enforce them in their existing form,
+when moreover, if enforced, they would bring him in a large sum. But
+he was glad to see that people feared that he might do at some future
+time what at present he had refrained from doing. When he promised the
+Parliament on his royal word, that he would call it together again
+without fail in the autumn, he was also influenced by the
+consideration that he intended the Spaniards to look forward with fear
+to the resolution which might then be taken. He was greatly pleased
+that Parliament before dispersing drew up an energetic remonstrance
+against the persecutions of the Protestants all over the world, and
+especially against the oppression of his children. Not that he wished
+to give effect to it: on the contrary he adhered to the policy of
+assisting his son-in-law only by means of diplomacy: but he desired
+that the Spaniards should fear a war with England, and he thought that
+anxiety on this point would induce them and their friends to show
+themselves conciliatory and respectful.
+
+Sir John Digby, who was commissioned with the negotiations at the
+Spanish court, was referred by that power to Brussels and Vienna; and
+in fact he received favourable answers, not only from the Infanta
+Isabella in the former, but even from the Emperor himself in the
+latter city. The Emperor held out to him the hope that the matter
+would be reconsidered at a future assembly of the Estates of the
+Empire, which he intended to convene at Ratisbon. But meanwhile
+warlike operations and the execution of the ban held their course
+undisturbed. In Bohemia the counter-reformation was carried through
+with extreme severity. Four-and-twenty Protestant nobles and leaders
+were executed, and their heads with hoary beards were seen exposed on
+the Bridge at Prague. Silesia hastened to make its peace with the
+Emperor: the Princes of the Union laid down their arms, but they did
+not yet make their peace by this means. Tilly took possession of the
+Upper Palatinate, and then turned with his victorious army to the
+Lower Palatinate in order to complete the subjugation of this
+province, notwithstanding all the protection of England. On the Lower
+Rhine the forces of the Spaniards and of the States General confronted
+each other in arms. Under these circumstances the Princes, who were
+invited, refused to appear at an Assembly of the Empire,[412] for none
+of them thought that he could leave his home without incurring evident
+danger. The Infanta Isabella too in Brussels declined to conclude the
+truce which Sir John Digby proposed.
+
+While affairs were in this position, Parliament resumed its
+interrupted sittings in November 1621. Dean Williams, who after
+Bacon's fall had received the Great Seal, opened the session with a
+request for the immediate grant of new subsidies, which he said would
+be required even before Christmas. He promised that in the coming
+February, when they resumed their sittings, the other affairs should
+be brought under discussion.[413]
+
+On this occasion as on a previous one, the King wished for nothing
+more than a renewed and stronger demonstration. Even now he lived and
+moved in a policy of compromise between opposite views. While his
+son-in-law was being robbed of his country in the interest of Spain,
+he adhered to the wish of marrying his son to a Spanish Infanta: he
+thought that he would bring about the restoration of the Palatinate
+most easily by the influence which this new alliance would confer. But
+he thought that his friendly advances should also be accompanied by
+threats, and he wished to be placed by the grants of Parliament in a
+position to arm more effectually than before. It would have been in
+accordance with his views, if Parliament had repeated its former
+declarations, according to which it was ready to put forth all its
+power in his behalf, in order to place him in a position to compel by
+force of arms what might be refused to his peaceful negotiations.
+
+It is worth noticing in all this that James not only met the wishes of
+Parliament because he required support, but that he also encouraged
+the disposition which it showed in favour of Protestantism, in order
+to avail himself of it: he thought that he would always be able to
+control it. But how often has a policy been shipwrecked, which has
+thought to avail itself of great interests and great passions for some
+end immediately in view!
+
+How could it be expected that while religious parties on the continent
+were meeting in a struggle for life and death, the English Parliament
+would approve of the wavering policy of James I, which aimed at
+compromise and had hitherto been without results?[414] Quite the
+contrary: starting with the view that England was the centre of
+Protestantism and must avert the dangers which assailed it, Parliament
+declared itself ready, it is true, to pay the King new subsidies, but
+not until the following year, and on the presumption that he should
+have accepted and ratified the bills for the welfare of the people
+which had passed the House.[415] They thought that the common danger
+to religion arising from the alliance between the Pope and the King of
+Spain had been brought upon England also by the indulgence hitherto
+shown to the recusants. Parliament invited the King to draw the sword
+without further circumlocution for the rescue of the foreign
+Protestants; in the first instance to break with the power whose army
+had carried on the war in the Palatinate, but above all to marry the
+Prince his successor to a lady of the Protestant faith.
+
+The King wished to avoid war because he was anxious lest he should be
+constantly compelled by Parliament, owing to his repeated want of
+subsidies, to make fresh concessions, which would affect and diminish
+the substance of his authority. The Parliament wished for war because
+it expected that such a proceeding would furnish it with great
+opportunities for establishing its power.
+
+As soon as the rival powers encountered each other on this ground, all
+agreement between them was at an end. Parliament interfered still more
+vigorously than before with the affairs which the King reserved for
+himself: it wished to induce him to adopt those very measures which he
+was resolved to avoid. He was expected to break with that power with
+which it was his principal ambition to become most closely connected.
+He was expected to take the sword in order to defend the common cause
+of Protestantism. He was expected to put an end to the indulgence
+which he had hitherto shown to his Catholic subjects; to do what ran
+counter to all the expectations which he had raised at Rome and
+Madrid; and what perhaps, considering the strength of the Catholic
+element in England, was not without danger to the maintenance of quiet
+at home. Meanwhile the payment of the subsidies, which he required at
+once in order to maintain his political position, was indefinitely
+deferred. Although it was not actually stated, yet it was quite clear
+that Parliament made the validity of its grants dependent on his
+compliance with its advice. And on what important matters was that
+advice offered! The King complained that his prerogative was openly
+infringed by it; that Parliament wished to decide on his alliances
+with other sovereigns, and to dictate to him how to conduct the war;
+that it brought under debate questions of religion and state, and the
+marriage of his son: what portion of the sovereign power, he asked,
+was left to him? On the competence which Parliament claimed as its
+hereditary right, he remarked that it had to thank the favour of his
+ancestors and himself for this: that he would protect Parliament, but
+only in proportion to the regard which it showed for the prerogative
+of his crown.
+
+If we had to specify the moment in which the quarrel between the
+Parliament and the Crown once more found its full expression, we
+should choose this.[416] The Parliament, which had dissolution in
+immediate prospect, employed its last moments in making a protest, in
+which it again affirmed that its liberties and privileges were a
+birthright and heirloom of the subjects of the English crown, that it
+certainly was within its power to bring under debate public matters
+affecting the King, the State, the Church, and the defence of the
+country; and that full liberty of speech without any subsequent
+molestation on that account must be secured to every member in the
+exercise of these rights.
+
+The King would not forego the satisfaction of punishing by arrest a
+number of members who were peculiarly hateful to him; he declared the
+protestation null and void, and struck it out of the clerks' book with
+his own hand. In a detailed exposition of his view of these
+transactions, in which he gives the assurance that he will still
+henceforth continue to summon Parliament, he emphatically repudiates
+this protestation, which he affirms to be drawn up in such terms that
+the inalienable rights of the crown are called in question by it,
+rights in the possession of which the crown had found itself in the
+times of Queen Elizabeth of glorious memory. He affirms that as King
+he cannot tolerate any such pretensions.
+
+Parliament demanded the policy of Queen Elizabeth; King James demanded
+her rights. The privileges accorded to the crown and the opposition to
+Spain had formerly gone together: the surrender of the latter under
+King James served to supply Parliament on its part with a motive for
+making an attack upon the former.
+
+The cause of Parliament was of great importance, even when it stood
+alone: deeper impulses and fresh life and vigour were first imparted
+to it by its combination with foreign policy and with religion.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[407] From a letter of Bacon to Buckingham.
+
+[408] Lando, Relatione: 'Se bene procurò S. M. di ristringere e
+captivare fino l'autorità, che hanno li communi d'eleggere li
+deputati, benche in qualche citta e provincia gli è riuscito,
+nell'universale non ha potuto, rifiutati i privati del favorito e dei
+consiglieri li lei.' Lando describes the Parliament as 'republica
+altretanto mal pratica, quanto molto pretendente.'
+
+[409] Chamberlain to Carleton, March 24: 'They find it more than
+Hercules' labour purgare hoc stabulum Augiae of monopolies, patents
+and the like.' (St. P. O.)
+
+[410] Chamberlain to Carleton: 'All men approve E. Coke, who upon
+discovery of those matters exclaimed that a corrupt judge is the
+grievance of grievances.' Chamberlain relates that an officer of the
+Court of Chancery, when accused on account of various irregularities,
+exclaimed 'that he would not sink alone, but draw others after him.'
+
+[411] Buckingham on one occasion very aptly characterises his policy
+and its danger: 'So long as you waver between the Spaniards and your
+subjects, to make your advantage of both, you are sure to do with
+neither.' Hardwicke Papers i. 466.
+
+[412] 'The princes denied their appearance.' (Digby, Recital of his
+Speech, Parl. Hist. v. 483.) So that the notice by Struv, rejected by
+Senkenberg (Fortsetzung Häberlins xxv. § 80) is nevertheless correct.
+
+[413] A gap in Williams' speech at this part, occurring in the
+Journals and in both Parliamentary Histories, is to a certain extent
+filled up by a letter of Chamberlain to Carleton of Nov. 24;
+'intimating that they should forbear needless and impertinent
+discourses, long and extravagant orations which the king would not
+indure.'
+
+[414] Lando, Relatione: 'Non potendosi accordare con spiriti
+discordanti dei proprii impressi di non lasciarsi levare un punto
+dell'autorita.'
+
+[415] John Locke to Carleton, Nov. 29: 'They have put up a petition,
+that this may be a session and laws enacted, that the laws made
+against recusants may be executed, so that the promise of the subsidy
+seemeth yet to be conditional.'
+
+[416] Chamberlain to Carleton on December 22. The Parliament, on
+receiving a message enjoining the speedy continuance of their
+business, answered the King two hours after it had been brought before
+them: 'but with all for fear of surprise gave order to the speaker and
+the whole house to meet at four o'clock: where they conceived sat down
+and entered this proposition enclosed which is nothing pleasing above
+and for preventing where of there came a commission next morning to
+adjourn the Parliament.' Cf. the Commons' protestation: Parl. Hist. v.
+513.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+NEGOTIATIONS FOR THE MARRIAGE OF THE PRINCE OF WALES WITH A SPANISH
+INFANTA.
+
+
+It is a general consequence of the dynastic constitution of the states
+of Europe that marriages between the reigning families are at the same
+time political transactions, and as a rule not only affect public
+interests, but also stir up the rivalry of parties: this effect
+however has hardly ever come more prominently into notice than when it
+was proposed to marry the heir to the throne of England with an
+Infanta of Spain.
+
+We have remarked that the scheme originated in Spain, had already been
+once rejected, and then had been mooted a second time by the leading
+minister of Philip III, the Duke of Lerma. It formed part of Lerma's
+characteristic idea of fortifying the greatness of the Spanish
+monarchy by a dynastic alliance with the two royal families which were
+able to threaten it with the greatest danger, those of France and
+England. This design brought him into contact with a current of policy
+and personal feeling in England which was favourable to him: but at
+the same time the great difficulty which the difference of religion
+presented, came at once into prominence. Not that it would have been
+difficult for King James to make the concessions requisite for
+obtaining the Papal dispensation; on the contrary he was personally
+inclined to do so: but he feared unpleasant embarrassments with his
+allies and with his subjects. Count Gondomar, the ambassador, assured
+the King that he should never be pressed to do anything which violated
+his conscience or his honour, or by which he might run a risk of
+losing the love of his people.[417]
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1622.]
+
+On this, negotiations which had already been opened for the marriage
+of the Prince with a French princess were broken off. Besides, the
+intermarriage with the house of Spain appeared to be far more
+deserving of preference, as being likely to pacify the feelings of
+English Catholics, who were accustomed to side principally with Spain,
+and even to promote the calm of the world, as Spain was a more
+prominent representative of the Catholic principle than France. It was
+thought advisable to leave the conditions of the dispensation to be
+arranged in the sense indicated by negotiation between the Papal see
+and the Spanish crown.
+
+But a new and serious hindrance now arose in consequence of the
+embarrassments caused by the affairs of the Palatinate, in which the
+interests of the two dynasties came into immediate collision with one
+another. It is clear that King James could not marry his son to an
+Infanta of Spain while a Spanish army was taking possession of his
+son-in-law's territory. He therefore made the restoration of the
+Palatinate a condition of the marriage. All his tortuous efforts were
+directed to combine the latter object with the former, and at the same
+time to avoid a disadvantageous reaction upon his domestic policy.
+
+While he invoked the Protestant sympathies of Parliament in order to
+give weight to his demands, he nevertheless checked them again as soon
+as he was in danger of being forced to make war, or even to resume the
+measures against the Catholics, which might displease the Spanish
+court. Whilst he made the Spaniards aware that if he were refused the
+consideration he required, he would throw himself entirely into the
+hands of his Parliament and proceed to extremities, he at the same
+time employed every means of effecting a peaceful accommodation, by
+which he would then at once be saved the necessity of making
+concessions to Parliament. The most active negotiations were opened
+in Brussels with the Infanta Isabella, upon whom the issue seemed most
+to depend. James I had sent thither Richard Weston, the man whom
+Gondomar himself declared to be the most appropriate instrument for
+this affair; and an agreement was concluded with the personal
+co-operation of the Infanta, which held out expectations of the
+restoration of the Elector. On the side of the Palatinate and England
+everything was done to promote the conclusion of this agreement, and
+to ensure its execution. The expelled Elector was induced to recall
+Mansfeld and Christian of Brunswick from the Upper Rhine, where they
+were then moving vigorously forward, lest the treaty should be
+obstructed by their operations.[418] He himself removed to Sedan, in
+order not to arouse the suspicions of the House of Austria by his
+residence in the Netherlands. In the summer of 1622 he had no other
+troops in the Palatinate but the English garrisons; and King James
+engaged that, if the treaty were concluded, he would take arms himself
+against the allies of his son-in-law. But while expectation was
+directed to the conclusion of the contract by which the Elector should
+be re-established in his country, the League advanced against those
+strongholds which the English held in his name. Neither Heidelberg nor
+Mannheim could hold out. The English troops were obliged to bend to
+necessity and to march out, although with the honours of war. Only in
+Frankenthal did they still maintain themselves for a while. When
+Weston at Brussels complained of this conduct he was actually told
+that the League must have everything in their hands first, in order to
+restore everything hereafter. He was astounded at this subterfuge, and
+asked for his recall.
+
+In England the friends of Spain fell into a sort of despair at the
+course of events. For what could follow from it but open war between
+the King of England and the Emperor? But on whose side would Spain
+then be found? Would that power pledge itself to fight to the end
+against every one, even against the Emperor, in behalf of the treaty
+when concluded? To prevent England from coming into closer alliance
+with France, the government of Spain had planned the marriage and
+opened direct negotiations: would it now, when its cause appeared to
+be advancing, withdraw in violation of its word of honour? Even the
+Privy Council represented to the King that he was bringing dishonour
+and danger on his country. The Duke of Buckingham, who also had
+himself been in close agreement with Gondomar, and was considered to
+be the man who held the threads of politics in his hand, regarded the
+increasing discontent as dangerous to his own position.[419]
+
+While affairs were in this situation and these impressions afloat, a
+plan for bringing this uncertainty to an end was embraced by the King,
+the Prince, and the Duke, in those private discussions in which the
+general course of affairs was decided. It was determined that the
+Prince, accompanied by Buckingham, should visit Spain himself, in
+order to bring about the marriage and arrange the conditions. None of
+the Privy Councillors, not even Williams, who on other occasions was
+in their intimate confidence, knew anything about this plan. It
+pleased the King's sense of the romantic, that as he himself had
+formerly brought home his newly married wife from the icy North, so
+now his son should in person win the hand of his bride in the distant
+South. But however much in earnest the King was in the matter, we
+learn that he still contemplated the possibility of failure. He once
+said to the Duke of Soubise, that if the marriage came to pass, he
+would take up the cause of the Huguenots in alliance with Spain: but
+that if he did not succeed in his design they might still reckon upon
+him, for that his son would contract a marriage with a French
+princess, which would procure him great influence at the French
+court.[420]
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1623.]
+
+On March 7, 1623, the Prince of Wales and the Duke of Buckingham
+arrived in Madrid, with an escort including Cottington and Endymion
+Porter, both of whom afterwards enjoyed great influence. Their arrival
+was not altogether welcome to the ambassador in residence there,
+Digby, now Lord Bristol, who would rather have retained this important
+business in his own hands: but the Spanish court and the nation itself
+found a certain satisfaction for their pride in the personal suit
+urged by the heir-apparent of one of the most powerful kingdoms for
+the hand of the younger Infanta.
+
+At first the Prince of Wales could only see the Infanta as she drove
+past along a sort of Corso in the Prado. He was then presented to her,
+but the words which she was to use to him were written down for her
+beforehand; for she was to receive him merely as a foreign prince
+without any reference whatsoever to his suit. Some surprise was
+created when the principal lady of the court one day condescended to
+say to the Prince that the Infanta in conversation gave signs of an
+inclination for him. In the country no doubt was felt that the
+marriage would come to pass, and the prospect was welcomed with joy.
+Often did a 'Viva' resound under the windows of the Prince. Lope de
+Vega dedicated some happily expressed stanzas to him; and splendid
+shows were given in his honour.[421] All that was now wanting was an
+agreement as to the conditions.
+
+This depended however in large part on the resolutions which might be
+arrived at in England. Conditions affecting religion were laid before
+King James, which he might certainly have hesitated to approve. It was
+not only that the Infanta was to be indulged in the free exercise of
+her religion--for how else could the consent of the Spanish clergy or
+a dispensation from the Pope have been hoped for?--nor even that the
+children born from this marriage were to be educated under her eyes
+for the first ten years of their life, for this seemed the natural
+privilege of a mother: but the presumption that the children might
+become Catholics involved wide consequences. It was stipulated that
+the laws against Catholics should not apply to such children, nor
+prejudice their succession. Still more displeasing however were some
+other articles of general import, which were carefully kept back from
+the knowledge of the public. They amounted to this:--that the laws
+against the Catholics should no longer be carried into execution, and
+that the Councillors of the sovereign should be pledged by an oath to
+abstain from enforcing them.[422] The King met with some opposition to
+these articles in the Privy Council. But he said that the question was
+not whether they were advisable, but whether they were not necessary
+at a time when part of the domain under dispute, and the Prince
+himself, were in the hands of the Spaniards. And moreover they did not
+amount to a complete concession to the wishes of the Catholics, for
+they spoke only of tolerating their worship in private, not in public:
+the articles were in harmony with the old ideas of the King. James
+solemnly swore to the first articles, on July 20, in the presence of
+the Spanish ambassador; and immediately after him the members of the
+Council took the same oath. The King alone then pledged himself to
+carry out the second set of articles.
+
+An extensive alteration had already taken place in the treatment of
+the Catholics. Priests and recusants had been discharged from prison
+and enjoyed full liberty. An injunction was issued to the preachers
+and to the Universities to abstain from all invectives against the
+Papacy. Men had to see individual preachers who transgressed these
+orders thrown into prisons which had been just emptied. The families
+which openly expressed their hitherto secret adherence to Catholicism
+were already counted by hundreds. Then came these transactions. What
+was learnt of the articles was enough to spread universal dismay
+among the Protestants, but they expected yet worse things. They
+thought they saw a pronounced Catholic tendency becoming ascendant in
+the conduct of affairs. An universal danger seemed to be hanging over
+the religion which they professed. Every one hastened to church to
+pray against it; the churches had never been more crowded. The second
+ecclesiastic in the country, the Archbishop of York, put the King in
+mind that by his project of toleration he was encouraging doctrines
+which he had himself proved in his writings to be superstitious and
+idolatrous. At this time moreover religious profession and political
+freedom were most closely connected: all these penal laws which the
+King was removing had been passed in Parliament, and were the work of
+the legislative power as a whole. The Archbishop reminded the King in
+conclusion that when he annulled the statutes of parliament by royal
+proclamation, he created an impression that he thought himself at
+liberty to trample on the laws of the land.[423]
+
+The wishes of the King did not lean so decidedly in that direction as
+people assumed. Buckingham and the Prince, who recommended him to take
+the oath, remarked to him, among other observations, that his promise
+that Parliament should repeal the penal laws against the Catholics
+within three years would be fulfilled, if he merely exerted himself to
+the extent of his strength for that object, even if it should prove
+impossible to attain it.[424] In general everything was merely
+preliminary, and depended on further agreement. The Prince entreated
+his father to transmit to him the ratification of the articles, that
+he might decline them or not according to circumstances. He even
+wished that, in order to put an end to the dilatoriness of the
+Spaniards, his father should make an express declaration that any
+longer delay would compel him again to enforce the penal laws against
+the Catholics.[425] All these announcements, which filled the
+Catholics with joy and hope, but the Protestants with dejection,
+mistrust, and anxiety, were however only political agencies, and were
+intended to serve a definite end. The object was in the first instance
+to put an end by this means to all delay in sending the Infanta to
+England.
+
+Although some religious scruples were still awake in the minds of the
+Spaniards yet they presented no further obstacle. The conditions for
+granting a dispensation which had been prescribed by the Pope to the
+Spanish Court, had been accepted; the Spanish ambassadors had been
+satisfied: the only question now was whether the Infanta should be
+conveyed to England at once with the Prince on his return, or in the
+following spring. As formerly the Tudors so now the Stuarts appeared
+to be taking their position as a dynasty in Europe in connexion with
+the Spanish monarchy.
+
+Only one difficulty remained, that connected with the Palatinate; but
+at the present moment it was more serious than ever.
+
+In his negotiations King James started with the supposition, that the
+Spanish court could control the Imperial, and bring it over to its own
+point of view. The inclusion of the German line in this dynastic
+combination was contemplated. A proposal was made that the eldest son
+of the expelled Frederick should contract a marriage with a daughter
+of the Emperor, which would make the task of reconciliation and
+restitution far easier.
+
+The Emperor however had to take other interests into consideration;
+not only those of the Duke of Bavaria, to whom he was so deeply
+pledged, but those of the whole Catholic party, which thought of
+seizing this occasion to establish for ever its ascendancy in the
+Empire. The Emperor, who was also instigated by Rome to this step,
+solemnly transferred the electoral dignity previously held by the
+Elector Palatine to Maximilian of Bavaria in February 1623, with the
+intention of satisfying him, and at the same time of obtaining a
+majority of Catholic votes in the electoral body. It has indeed been
+assumed, both then and at a later time, that Spain, only bent on
+deceiving England, had agreed to all these proceedings. But in fact
+the Spanish ambassador had opposed them most strenuously at Ratisbon
+in the name of his king, as well as in that of the Infanta
+Isabella.[426] He prophesied with accurate foresight new and
+inextricable embarrassments as the consequence. The Papal Nuncio
+complained that the resistance of the ambassador weakened the
+Catholics and emboldened the Protestants. But his remonstrance had no
+effect on the Emperor. After his previous experiences Ferdinand II had
+no more fear of his adversaries, least of all of King James, who would
+certainly not in his old age make his first appearance as a warrior
+and try the doubtful fortune of war. He thought besides that he always
+consulted his security best when he had nothing before his eyes but
+the advantage of the Catholic Church.
+
+The negotiation about these matters took place just at the time when
+the Prince of Wales was in Spain. There no one despaired of finding an
+arrangement with which the Prince could still be satisfied. It was
+thought that, when the Palsgrave Frederick had been reconciled with
+the Emperor, and admitted into his family, the electoral dignity might
+be enjoyed in turn by Bavaria and the Palatinate, or that a new
+electorship might be founded for Bavaria. The Imperial ambassador,
+Count Khevenhiller, however rejected these proposals, for no other
+reason than that King James was not the proper person to make
+arrangements for his grandson. He did not accept the supposition that
+the youth, whose education it was proposed to complete in Vienna,
+would join the Catholic faith, for he said that his mother would never
+allow that. He set aside the expectation that the Imperial court might
+send to Spain a full authorisation to negotiate for the marriage. He
+moreover affirmed that, if the Imperial court wished to secure its
+influence in Germany, it could not allow the opinion to gain ground
+that it depended on Spain and was guided by her.
+
+And in Spain also, after the fall of Lerma, which was brought on by
+this affair, the old aspirations after the supremacy of the world had
+again obtained the upper hand.
+
+It is true that at the moment a feeling prevailed in favour of
+maintaining peace on the very advantageous footing which had then been
+obtained. Cardinal Zapata, Don Pedro of Toledo, and above all Count
+Gondomar, who had at that time been made a member of the Council,
+declared before that body that Spain ought to have no higher political
+aim than to secure her union with England. These were men of
+experience in European affairs, who recollected the evils which had
+sprung from the policy of Philip II. But there were others who were
+again seized with the old ambition, so interwoven with Catholicism,
+and who would not separate themselves from the interests of the
+Emperor at any price--men like the Marquis de Aytona, Don Augustin
+Mexia. And Count Olivarez, under the influence of the Imperial
+ambassador, now espoused the same opinion, a man who, as favourite of
+the King and chief minister, filled the same position in Spain that
+Buckingham did in England. At the decisive meeting of the Council, he
+stated that the King of Spain would not venture to separate from the
+Emperor, even if he had been mortally affronted by him: if he could
+stand in friendly relations with the Emperor and the King of England
+at the same time, well and good; but if not, he must break with the
+King of England without any regard to the marriage: this step was
+demanded of him for the preservation of Christendom, of the Catholic
+religion, and of his family. He added that a marriage between the
+young Count Palatine and a daughter of the Emperor was only to be
+thought of, if the former became a Catholic: that the complete
+restoration of the father was by no means advisable; and that he ought
+to be dealt with as the Duke of Saxony had been dealt with by Charles
+V.[427] Olivarez carried the Council with him in favour of this
+policy. The strictly Catholic point of view, which had been asserted
+by the German line of the house of Austria, was again adopted as the
+rule of policy in Spain.
+
+This was a resolution that decided the destinies of Spain. That power
+again renounced the policy of compromise which it had observed for a
+quarter of a century. The young King Philip IV and his ambitious
+favourite revived the designs of Philip II, or, as the former once
+expressed it, of Charles V: to the restoration of Catholic ascendancy
+in Germany they sacrificed the friendship of King James, which was of
+inestimable advantage to the monarchy, inasmuch as it kept the coasts
+of Spain free from all danger of attack from the English forces.[428]
+Olivarez was too violent, too young, and too ill-informed to have any
+clear conception of the influence of these relations.
+
+But as in great transactions every step has consequences, it is clear
+that the Spanish predilections of King James, and the policy founded
+on them, were thus brought to an end. For maintaining these it was
+necessary not only that they should be advantageous to the Catholics
+in England, but that they should be equally serviceable to the
+Protestant interests in Germany, which in the present instance were
+his own: otherwise he would never have found rest again in his own
+country, or his own family, or perhaps even in his own breast. He had
+asked for the reinstatement of his son-in-law in the electorship as
+well as in the possession of his hereditary dominions, or at least for
+the hearty assistance of Spain in effecting this object.[429] And the
+Prince of Wales shared these views. He once said to Count Olivarez
+that, without the restoration of the Elector Palatine, the marriage
+was impossible, and the friendship of England could not be expected.
+The Spaniards did not think fit to impart to him the resolution which
+had been taken in the Council of State; but still this implied a new
+direction given to the course of affairs which could be followed
+although it was not talked of. The Spaniards contented themselves with
+dwelling on the necessity of sending the youthful Count Palatine to
+Vienna for education: as to his father, who was under the ban, they
+held out indeed a prospect of the restoration of his dominions but not
+of his electoral dignity. The Prince declared that it was not to be
+imagined that his brother-in-law would be content with that and would
+agree to it.[430] And how was even as much as this to be obtained from
+the court of Vienna? It was now certain that in the affair of the
+Palatinate Spain would not interfere with decision. But besides this,
+the resolutions which had been taken in the Spanish Council of State
+must lead to much wider consequences.
+
+The miscarriage of the negotiations has been ascribed to the
+misunderstanding between Olivarez and Buckingham; and it is no wonder
+that such a misunderstanding arose, for the latter was conceited and
+irritable, the former imperious and assuming. But these causes are
+only of a secondary character; the root of the failure lies in the
+political, or in the combination of the religious with the political
+relations of the two countries. While in England Protestantism was
+moving in a direction opposed to the intentions of King James, and
+could hardly be held down, it was met by the Catholic interest in
+Spain and Germany, which was fully conscious of its position. Now
+these were the powerful elements which divided the whole world: the
+strife between them could not be adjusted by political considerations.
+
+It is hardly necessary to state further how Buckingham, who regarded
+the somewhat unmeaning delays of the Spaniards as affronts, and who
+would have had reason to fear for his authority in England in the
+event of his prolonged absence, now urged the return of the Prince.
+Charles concurred with him: King James, who moreover was impatient, as
+he said, to see the two men whom he most loved about him again,
+commanded it; and the Spanish court could not object.
+
+Yet no estrangement arose in consequence, nor was the proposal for the
+marriage withdrawn. The Infanta was treated as Princess of Wales; and
+Philip IV in a letter once styled the Prince of Wales his
+brother-in-law. The Papal dispensation, for which they had long been
+kept waiting, at last arrived; and the marriage ceremony might have
+been performed any day. The other negotiations also still kept
+advancing. King James then once more demanded an express declaration
+with regard to the affair of the Palatinate. He wished to know what
+Spain thought of doing if the Emperor refused to accede to the
+agreement that was to be made between the two powers. The answer of
+the Spaniards was evasive: how could it have been otherwise? But the
+English would not advance further without better security. The Prince
+sent to request the ambassador not to use the full powers, which he
+already had in his hands, until he received fresh orders.[431] King
+James declared that the marriage could not be solemnised till the
+Spanish court consented to take upon itself obligations with regard to
+the Palatinate.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[417] Letter to Gondomar, as it appears, from Buckingham himself,
+Cabala 236. 'You promised that the King should be pressed to nothing
+that should not be agreeable to his conscience, to his honour, and the
+love of his people.'
+
+[418] So writes Richard Weston to Buckingham: 'The prince elector hath
+conformed himself to what was demanded, that the count Mansfelt and
+Duke of Brunswik, the pretended obstacles of the treatie, are now with
+all their forces removed.' Sept. 3, 1622. Cabala 201. How difficult
+this was for him we see from a letter of Nethersole to Carlisle, Oct.
+18, 1622. 'The slowness of resolution of this side may move H. Mai.
+[the King of Bohemia] to precipitate his before the time, which will
+be then to lose the fruits of two long years patience.'
+
+[419] Valaresso: 'Temendo di se stesso e di riuscir l'oggetto di tutta
+la colpa e forse della pena.'
+
+[420] Valaresso: Disp. 19 Luglio 1623.
+
+[421] A true relation of the arrival and entertainment given to the
+Prince Charles: in Somers' Tracts ii. 625.
+
+[422] Arcana quatuor capitula ad religionem pertinentia: in Dumont v.
+ii. 442. Their contents also appear in the Spanish reports.
+
+[423] 'That you now take unto yourself liberty to throw down the laws
+of the land at your pleasure.' Cabala 13.
+
+[424] The Duke and the Prince to the King, 6 June. Hardwicke Papers i.
+419.
+
+[425] Instructions received from His Highness June 7, 1623: in
+Clarendon State Papers I. xviii. App.
+
+[426] Protestation of the Conde Oñate, in Khevenhiller, Ann. Ferd.
+viii. 66.
+
+[427] From Khevenhiller's letter, Ann. Ferd. x. 95.
+
+[428] In a Letter of Pope Urban to Olivarez, this passage occurs:
+'Diceris in Britannico matrimonio differendo religionis dignitatem
+privatis omnibus rationibus praetulisse.'
+
+[429] 'We have expected the total restitution of the palatinate, and
+of the electorship.' James to Bristol, in Halliwell ii. 228.
+
+[430] Prince Charles and the Duke to James, Aug. 30, 1623. Hardwicke
+Papers i. 449.
+
+[431] Prince Charles to the Earl of Bristol. Halliwell 229.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE PARLIAMENT OF 1624. ALLIANCE WITH FRANCE.
+
+
+After the Prince had taken leave of his Spanish escort, and had gone
+on board an English fleet at Santander, whither it had put in to fetch
+him away, contrary winds, or, in the words of a contemporary
+narrative, 'the brothers Boreas and Eurus,' for a while delayed his
+departure. We are assured that people in England never regarded the
+weathercocks and the direction of the smoke and of the clouds with
+more painful anxiety than at that time. Even among the dependents of
+the royal house many almost gave up the Prince as lost; for who, they
+said, could trust the word of the Spaniards? The Protestant part of
+the population thought that he would at least be compelled to abjure
+his religion. At last the wind subsided. On October 5, after an
+absence of almost eight months, the Prince arrived in Portsmouth, and
+the day after in London. The universal joy with which he was received
+was indescribable: all business was at a standstill; the shops were
+shut; nothing was seen but waggons driving backwards and forwards,
+laden with the wood intended for the bonfires which blazed at evening
+in all the open squares, at all corners of the streets, even in the
+inner courts, but were most brilliant and costly at the
+Guildhall.[432] The joyful acclamations of the multitude mingled with
+the sound of the bells; people congratulated each other that the heir
+to the throne had returned as he had gone, and that without the
+Infanta; for this marriage had never been popular; but above all, that
+he returned rather confirmed than shaken in his religion. They
+praised God for his deliverance out of the land of Egypt. Even
+Buckingham, who was not loved at other times, enjoyed a moment of
+universal popularity.
+
+Nevertheless the effect which would have been most welcome to the
+majority, that of banishing all thoughts of an alliance with Catholic
+powers, and of causing a wife to be sought for the Prince among
+Protestants, was certainly not produced, for the King had long been
+revolving another plan. The combination with Spain, although it had
+best corresponded to his wishes and ideas, had nevertheless been only
+an experiment: when it miscarried, he was predisposed to return to the
+thought of an alliance with France. The Prince, on his way through
+France, had already seized the opportunity of seeing the Princess, his
+possible bride, while she was dancing, without being remarked by her;
+and the impression which she made upon him had been by no means
+unfavourable.
+
+Instantly on his return from Spain Buckingham opened communications
+with Mary de' Medici, Queen of France, and that through means of a
+Franciscan monk, who could not be suspected, and who presented himself
+to her while she was at dinner. Buckingham made secret overtures to
+her, intimating that he wished to resume the old negotiations for an
+alliance between the royal families of England and France, for that he
+was a Frenchman at heart.[433] As the Queen expressed herself
+favourably inclined, Henry Rich, who then bore the title of Lord
+Kensington, and afterwards that of Lord Holland, was sent before the
+end of the year 1623 on a secret mission to France in order to set the
+affair in motion. Rich was one of the most intimate friends of
+Buckingham, and to a certain extent resembled him in character.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1624.]
+
+In this affair Buckingham had two circumstances in his favour. It was
+the main ambition of the Queen-mother to see her daughter on the
+throne of the neighbouring kingdom. The preference accorded by the
+English court to an Infanta of Spain over a daughter of France had
+had a painful effect upon her: she was the more gratified when that
+court now resumed the negotiations which had been broken off.
+Nevertheless she did not embark on so delicate an affair, the failure
+of which was still possible, without the necessary reserve. The French
+court could not but ask for religious concessions in favour of the
+Princess, as Spain had for the Infanta: but on the very first approach
+to the subject it hinted that it would not urge the King to such
+strict pledges as had been demanded on the side of the Spaniards.[434]
+The second influence in Buckingham's favour was the political. The
+advance of the alliance, and of the power of the Spaniards, especially
+their establishment in the Palatinate, aroused the jealousy of the
+French. The opinion, which Cardinal Richelieu so often emphatically
+expressed, that France, everywhere enclosed by the power of the
+Spaniards, might some day be prostrated by it, was generally held. The
+interests of his country seemed to be deeply interested when England,
+from whose close connexion with Spain the greatest danger was to be
+apprehended, separated herself from that power, and showed a
+disposition to adopt a policy in harmony with that of France. Henry
+Rich assures us that so universal an agreement had never been known
+among Frenchmen as was shown at that time in the wish to ally
+themselves with England. Already agents of Mansfeld and Brunswick were
+seen at Court: an intended mission to Maximilian of Bavaria was given
+up on the representation of the English ambassador. Envoys from the
+expelled King of Bohemia also soon arrived, in order to gain the
+co-operation of the French in his restoration. The negotiations with
+England actually began: they were directed to an alliance and a
+marriage at the same time: in each case it was made a preliminary
+condition that England should openly and completely break with Spain.
+
+But this condition could not be fulfilled in England quite easily and
+without opposition.
+
+And how indeed could it have been expected that the members of the
+Privy Council, who had followed the King in the direction given to his
+policy in favour of Spain, if not without any reserve, yet with an
+ardour which might be turned to their reproach, would now, as it were,
+turn round, and follow the example of the favourite in entering on
+another path? A commission chosen from their body was appointed in
+order to take into consideration the complaints made by Buckingham
+about the behaviour of the Spanish court. But the report which
+Buckingham made was by no means so convincing as to win their
+concurrence. He rather depended on impressions, which had no doubt in
+his own eyes a certain truth, than on facts which might have served as
+evidence for others as well. The commission declared itself almost
+unanimously against him.[435] Its sentence was, that Philip IV had
+seriously intended to marry his sister to the Prince; and that in the
+affair of the Palatinate he had behaved, if not as a friend, yet at
+any rate not as an enemy. The first part is undoubtedly correct; with
+regard to the second however, neither the members of the Privy Council
+had any suspicion, nor had Buckingham himself any real information,
+that the Spaniards had made the interests of Austria in the Palatinate
+so decidedly their own. The Council was moreover in an ill humour with
+the favourite on account of the arbitrary authority which he arrogated
+to himself. When Lord Bristol came to England in the beginning of the
+year 1624, and then laid all the blame on Buckingham himself, a party
+was formed against the latter, which sought to overthrow him, and was
+even thought to have already secured a new favourite, with whom to
+replace Buckingham, just as he had formerly stepped into the place of
+Somerset. It was remarked that the friends and adherents of Somerset,
+who had always been on the side of Spain, came together and bestirred
+themselves. It was clear, and was generally said, that if relations
+with Spain were not broken off, the minister must fall. As people
+expressed it, 'either the marriage must break or Buckingham.'
+
+In this danger Buckingham resolved on a step of the greatest
+significance, in order to be able at once to attack the Spaniards, and
+to meet his rivals at home. He turned to those who had for many years
+demanded war with Spain on principle, the popular and zealous
+Protestant party. The King assented to his request for the summoning
+of a new Parliament, of which he had in fact for other reasons already
+given notice. As was to be expected from the connexion of affairs, the
+result of the elections corresponded with the views of the last
+Parliament. Men like Coke, who had been called to account for their
+attitude at that time, were re-elected two or three times over. The
+ruling minister now regarded them even as his allies.
+
+What an indescribable advantage however for the supporters of the
+claims of Parliament was this change! As the ill-success of the German
+policy of the King in the year 1621 had turned to their advantage, so
+now they profited by the failure of his negotiations with Spain. The
+political leanings of James I in favour of Spain, which they had
+originally opposed, had led to embarrassments in which the First
+Minister himself invoked their aid.
+
+But not only did party rivalries display themselves at this important
+moment, but a general opposition also arose on constitutional grounds.
+The Earl of Carlisle represented to the King that he had been visited
+by members of Parliament, no mere popular leaders or speakers, but
+quiet men and good patriots, who feared God and honoured the King:
+that he had learned from them that the agitation observed in the
+country had principally arisen because the last grants of Parliament
+had not been met by any favours on the part of the King, but on the
+contrary the expression of opinions displeasing to him on the part of
+certain members had been subsequently punished by their arrest.
+Carlisle reminded the King that nothing could be more hateful to his
+enemies, or more strengthening and encouraging to his friends, than
+the removal of these disagreements; that no king had ever had better
+subjects if he would but trust them; that if he would but show them
+that he relied on their counsel and support, he would win their hearts
+and command their fortunes; and that the people would then work with
+him for the welfare and honour of the State.[436]
+
+These views prevailed when Parliament was opened on the 19th of
+February, 1624. Hitherto it had been one of the principal grievances
+of the King that Parliament wished to have a voice in affairs that
+concerned his state and his family. The new Parliament was opened with
+a detailed account from Buckingham of his negotiations with Spain,
+which affected both these interests, and with a request that
+Parliament would report on the great questions awaiting
+settlement.[437]
+
+The answer of both Houses was, that it was contrary to the honour of
+the King, to the welfare of his people, to the interest of his
+children, and even to the terms of his former alliances, to continue
+the negotiations with Spain any longer: they prayed him to break off
+negotiations on both subjects, with regard to the Palatinate, as well
+as with regard to the marriage. It was hailed as a public blessing
+that the conditions accepted for the sake of the latter would not now
+be fulfilled.
+
+At this moment Buckingham's wishes were on the side of this policy;
+for otherwise he could not have advanced a step in his dealings with
+France. But the King had not so fully made up his mind. He had
+approved the overtures made to France: but when he was now asked to
+break with Spain, the power which he most feared, and whose friendship
+it was the first principle of his policy to cultivate, there was
+something in him which recoiled from the step. Buckingham acknowledged
+for the first time that he was not of the same mind with the King. He
+said that he wished to tread only in one path, whereas the King
+thought that he could walk in two different paths at once; but that
+the King must choose between the Spaniards and his own subjects. He
+asked him whether, supposing that sufficient subsidies of a definite
+amount were at once granted him, and the support of his subjects with
+their lives and fortunes were promised him for the future, so far as
+it might be necessary--whether in that case he would resolve to break
+off the matrimonial alliance with Spain. He asked for a
+straightforward and definite answer, that he might be able to give
+information on the subject beforehand to some members of Parliament.
+It is evident that this was no longer the attitude of a favourite, who
+has only to express the opinions and wishes of his prince. Buckingham
+came forward as a statesman, who opposes his own insight to the aims
+of his sovereign. He says that if he should concur with the King, he
+should be a flatterer; that if he should fail to express his own
+opinion, he should be a traitor. In this matter he could rely on the
+support of the Prince, who, without estranging himself from his
+father, still appeared to be less dependent on his will than
+before.[438] The result was that James I again gave way. He named the
+sum which he should require for the defence of his kingdom, for the
+support of his neighbours, and for the discharge of his own debts.
+Parliament, although it did not grant the whole amount demanded, yet
+granted a very considerable sum: it agreed to pay three full subsidies
+and three fifteenths within a year, if the negotiations were broken
+off. At the beginning of April Buckingham was able to announce to
+Parliament that the King, in consequence of the advice given to him,
+had finally broken off negotiations with Spain on both matters.
+
+Other and further concessions of the greatest extent were coupled with
+this announcement. The King promised that, if a war should break out,
+he would not entertain any proposals for peace without the advice of
+Parliament. It was of still more importance, for the moment at least,
+that he declared himself willing to allow Parliament itself to dispose
+of the sums it had granted. He said that he wished to have nothing to
+do with them: that Parliament itself might nominate a treasurer. These
+likewise were admissions which Buckingham had demanded from the
+King:[439] but it maybe supposed that he had a previous understanding
+on the subject with the leaders of the Parliament. He also
+represented to the King that the removal of the old grievances was an
+absolute necessity. The monopolies to which James had so long clung,
+and which he had so obstinately defended, he now in turn gave up;
+while the penal laws against the Catholics, to which he was averse,
+were revived.
+
+This was an intestine struggle between the different powers in the
+state, as well as a question of policy. Parliament and the favourite
+made common cause against the Privy Council, which was on the side of
+Spain.
+
+Among his opponents in the Privy Council, Buckingham hated none so
+much as the Lord Treasurer Cranfield, then Earl of Middlesex, for
+Cranfield, although raised from a humble station by Buckingham
+himself, had the courage to resist him on the Spanish question.[440]
+By his strict and successful management of business, Cranfield had won
+the favour of the King, who believed that he had found in him a second
+Sully. It seems that Cranfield himself had intended to effect the ruin
+of Buckingham: but Buckingham was too strong for him. Certain
+accusations, which were partly well founded, were made available in
+bringing him to trial by Parliamentary means, and in removing him from
+his office like Bacon; for he had incurred the enmity of many by his
+strictness and incorruptibility. The King professed to regard this
+case as even worse than the former, because Bacon had acknowledged his
+guilt, while Cranfield denied all guilt. The doctrine of the
+responsibility of ministers was by this means advanced still further,
+for it was now becoming more dangerous to fall out with Parliament
+than with the King.
+
+The authority of Parliament in general made important strides. It now
+threw paramount weight into those deliberations which concerned the
+general affairs of the kingdom, war and peace, and the royal family.
+What became of the principle on which the King had hitherto taken his
+stand, that the decision of these matters must be left exclusively to
+his discretion? Parliament again assumed the attitude which three
+years before had led to its dissolution.
+
+It was not possible that James I could look on all this without
+displeasure and uneasiness. Sometimes the thought occurred to him that
+Buckingham had not been the right man to conduct the negotiations with
+Spain. The words escaped him that, if he had sent the Lord Keeper
+Williams with his son instead of Buckingham, his honour would then
+have been saved, and his heart would now beat more lightly. He did not
+approve of the decided turn which was being given to foreign politics.
+He was once heard to say that he was a poor old man, who in former
+times had known something about politics, but who now knew nothing
+more about them.
+
+It seems indeed that he had fancied that he could still continue to
+hold the balance between parties: so at least those who knew James
+understood him. He had no intention of allowing Buckingham's fall, as
+the enemies of that nobleman wished, but he perhaps thought of finding
+a counterpoise for him: he did not wish to let him become lord and
+master of affairs. On the other hand Buckingham, by his connexion with
+the leading men of the Lower House, had already won an independent
+position, in which he was no longer at the mercy of the King. He may
+perhaps be set down as the first English minister who, supported by
+Parliament and by public opinion, induced or compelled the King to
+adopt a policy on which of his own accord he would not have resolved.
+In conjunction with his new friends Buckingham succeeded in breaking
+up the Spanish party, with which he now for the first time came into
+conflict: his adherents congratulated him on his success.[441] In
+court and state a kind of reaction against the previous importance of
+this party set in. The offices which were vacated by the fall of
+Cranfield were conferred on men of the other party, the kind of men
+who had formerly been displaced under the influence of Gondomar.
+Seamen were acquitted who had shown the same disregard for orders as
+Walter Ralegh had once done, and preparations were made to indemnify
+Ralegh's posterity for the loss of property which they had suffered.
+The Spanish ambassadors at court availed themselves of a moment of ill
+humour on the part of the King, to whom indeed they had again obtained
+access, to call his attention to the loss of authority which
+threatened him on account of Buckingham's combination with the leading
+men in the Parliament. But in what they said they mingled so much
+falsehood with the truth that they could be easily refuted; and
+Buckingham successfully resisted this attack also.
+
+People still perceived in the King his old indecision. He consented,
+it is true, that Mansfeld, whom he had formerly helped the Spaniards
+to expel from his strong position on the Upper Rhine, should now be
+supported by English as well as French money in a new campaign to
+recover the Palatinate. But nevertheless he wished at the same time to
+enjoin him as a condition to abstain from attacking any country which
+rightfully belonged to the Archduchess Isabella, or to the crown of
+Spain.[442] So far was he still from undertaking open war against
+Spain, as his subjects hoped and expected.
+
+And though he acceded to the negotiations with France, yet in this
+transaction the very circumstance which displeased the majority of his
+subjects--namely that he was hereby making an alliance with a Catholic
+power--was acceptable to him. For even then he would not have
+consented at any price to have interfered in the general religious
+quarrel merely on religious grounds. He felt no hesitation in
+promising the French, as he had the Spaniards, not only freedom of
+religion in behalf of the future queen, but even relief for his
+Catholic subjects in regard to the penal laws imposed by Parliament.
+Yet he could have wished that they had contented themselves with his
+simple promise. One of his envoys, Lord Nithisdale, was himself of
+this opinion. On the other side it was remarked that perhaps the
+Catholics, of whom he also was one, might be contented with a promise
+from their sovereign, on whom their whole welfare depended, but that
+the French government could not, as it must have a dispensation from
+the Pope, which could not be obtained without a written assurance.
+James I at first declared himself ready to give such a declaration in
+a letter to the king of France, and La Vieuville, who was minister at
+the time, expressed himself content with that. But after his fall and
+Richelieu's accession to power this arrangement was rejected. It was
+in vain that the King's ambassadors held out a prospect that the
+letter should be signed by the Prince and by the chief Secretary of
+State; the French insisted that the King should ratify not only the
+treaty, but also a special engagement which they themselves wished to
+frame and to lay before Urban VIII. The English plenipotentiaries at
+the French court, Holland and Carlisle, were still refusing to agree
+to this, when King James had already given way to the French
+ambassador in England.
+
+The agreement, in the form in which it was at last concluded, was in
+some points more advantageous for England than that with Spain had
+been. While the latter stipulated that the laws which had been passed,
+or might hereafter be passed, in England against the Catholics were
+not to be applied to the royal children, but that these on the
+contrary were still to be secured in their right to the succession, an
+agreement which, as was mentioned, opened a prospect of an alteration
+in the religion of the reigning family; this supposition was avoided
+in the contract with France. But it was agreed on the other hand that
+the future queen was to conduct the education of her children, not
+merely till their tenth year, as had been stipulated with Spain, but
+till their thirteenth. She herself and her household were also to
+enjoy a higher degree of ecclesiastical independence; the
+superintendence of a bishop was even allowed them. It was the ambition
+of the Pope to demand not much less from the French than his
+predecessor had demanded from the Spaniards as the price of bestowing
+a dispensation for the marriage of a Catholic princess with a
+Protestant prince; and it was the ambition of the French court to
+offer him, or at least to appear to offer him, no less. In the
+special assurance above mentioned James gave a promise that his
+Catholic subjects should look forward to the enjoyment of still
+greater freedom than that which would have been conferred on them by
+the agreement with Spain. They were not to be molested for the sake of
+religion, either in their persons or in their possessions, supposing
+that in other respects they conducted themselves as good and loyal
+subjects.[443]
+
+The English ambassadors took exception to single expressions: the King
+himself passed lightly over them. He was mainly induced to do so by
+the absence from the agreement with France of the most offensive and
+burdensome clauses which had been contained in the secret articles of
+the treaty with Spain. On December 12, 1624, the treaty was signed at
+Cambridge by the King, and the special assurance both by the King and
+by the Prince.
+
+James I wished to see his son married. At the Christmas immediately
+following he greeted him according to English fashion with the
+tenderest expressions: he said that he existed only for his sake; that
+he had rather live with him in banishment than lead a desolate life
+without him. He thought that the treaty of marriage which had just
+been concluded would establish his happiness for ever.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1625.]
+
+An alliance between France and England for the recovery of the
+Palatinate was now moreover in contemplation. From the first moment
+the French had acknowledged that this would be to their own interest,
+and had promised to assist in that object to the extent of their
+power. Nevertheless they hesitated to conclude an express agreement
+for this object; for what would the Pope say if they allied
+themselves with Protestants against Catholics? At last they submitted
+a declaration in writing, but this appeared to the English ambassadors
+so unsatisfactory, that they preferred to return it to them. The
+French said that this time they would perform more than they promised.
+Although exceptions of many kinds might be made to their performances,
+yet they were really seriously bent on doing as much as possible for
+the recovery of the Palatinate. Just at that time Richelieu had
+stepped into power, and he expressly directed the policy of France to
+the destruction of the position which the Spaniards had occupied on
+the Middle Rhine. In spite of the obstructive efforts of a party which
+had both ecclesiastical and political objects in view, he concluded
+the arrangements for the marriage of the Princess to the Prince of
+Wales without any delay, even without waiting for the last word of the
+Pope.
+
+By this means the connexion which the King had formed in earlier years
+seemed once more to be revived. The Duke of Savoy and the Republic of
+Venice supported Mansfeld's preparations with subsidies of money. The
+States General took the most lively interest in the warlike movements
+in Germany, on which the Elector of Brandenburg also set his hopes.
+The King of Denmark offered his help in the matter with a readiness
+which created astonishment. While the English ambassadors were busy in
+adjusting the disputes that were constantly springing up afresh
+between him and Sweden, he gathered the estates of Lower Saxony around
+him, in order to check the swift advance of the Catholic League.[444]
+Of the members of the old alliance the princes of Upper Germany alone
+were absent. It was hoped that the Union would be revived by the
+efforts of Lower Germany, and above all that its head, the Elector
+Palatine, would be restored to his country.
+
+Induced by the failure of peaceful negotiations for the restoration
+of his son-in-law, James allowed greater progress to be made in the
+direction of war than he had ever done before. He took an eager
+interest in the preliminaries and preparations for war, even for a
+naval war. But would he ever have proceeded to action? While preparing
+to attack the Emperor and the League did he intend to do anything more
+than make a demonstration against Spain? In truth it may be doubted.
+He never allowed his English troops to attempt anything for the relief
+of Breda, which at that time was still blockaded by the
+Spaniards.[445]
+
+And in his alliance with France he certainly still held fast to his
+original principles.
+
+The marriage of his son to a Catholic princess, and the indulgence
+towards the Catholics to which he thereby pledged himself, express the
+most characteristic tendencies of his policy. Notwithstanding all the
+concessions which he made to Parliament, he still refused to grant
+many of the demands which were addressed to him. The special agreement
+which he made with France corresponded to the conception which he had
+formed of his prerogative. By means of it he imported into relations
+controlled by the law of nations his claim to give by virtue of his
+royal power a dispensation even from laws that had been passed by
+Parliament.
+
+After, as well as before, this event his idea was to control and to
+combine into harmony the conflicting elements within his kingdom by
+his personal will; outside his kingdom, to guide or to regulate events
+by clever policy. This is the important feature in the position and in
+the pacific attitude of this sovereign. But the blame which attaches
+to him is also connected with it. He made each and everything, however
+important it might be in itself, merely secondary to his political
+calculation. His high-flying thoughts have something laboured and flat
+about them; they are almost too closely connected with a conscious,
+and at the same time personal, end; they want that free sweep which is
+necessary for enlisting the interest of contemporaries and of
+posterity. And could the policy of James ever have prevailed? Was it
+not in its own nature already a failure? A great crisis was hanging
+over England when King James died (March 1625). He had once more
+received the Lord's Supper after the Anglican use, with edifying
+expressions of contrition: a numerous assembly had been present, for
+he wished every one to know that he died holding the same views which
+he had professed, and had contended for in his writings during his
+lifetime.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[432] 'True mirth and gladness was in every face, and healths ran
+bravely round in every place.' John Taylor, Prince Charles his Welcome
+from Spaine: in Somers ii. 552.
+
+[433] Mémoires de Richelieu. Ranke, Französische Geschichte v. 133
+(Werke xii. 162).
+
+[434] Kensington to Buckingham: 'Neither will they strain us to any
+unreasonablenesse in conditions for our Catholics.' Cabala 275.
+
+[435] Hacket, Life of Williams 169. 'Scarce any in all the Consulto
+did vote to my Lords satisfaction.'
+
+[436] The Earl of Carlisle to His Majesty, Feb. 14, 1624. He signs
+himself 'Your Majesty's most humble, most obedient obliged creature
+subject and servant.'
+
+[437] Valaresso already observes this, March 8, 1624: 'Nell'ultimo
+parlamento si chiamava felonia di parlare di quello, che hora si
+transmette alla libera consultatione del presente.'
+
+[438] A. Valaresso, Dec. 15, 1623: 'Col re usa qualche minor rispetto;
+agli altri da maggior sodisfattione del solito. Parla con Più liberta
+della Spagna.'
+
+[439] Of all Buckingham's letters to the King, without doubt the most
+remarkable. Hardwicke i. 466: 'Risolve constantly to run one way.'
+
+[440] Valaresso, April 26. 'La persona merita male perche certo fu
+d'affetto Spagnola.' He accuses him of a 'Somma scarsezza di pagare.'
+Chamberlain says of him at his appearance on the scene October 1621:
+'whom the King, in his piercing judgment, finds best able to do him
+service.'
+
+[441] Robert Philips to Buckingham, August 9, 1624. 'You have to your
+perpetual glory already dissolved and broken the Spanish party.'
+
+[442] 'Not to attempt any act of hostility upon any of the lawful
+dominions or possessions of the king of spain or the Archiduchess.' He
+then at any rate supposed certain cases in which this might take
+place. Hardwicke Papers i. 548.
+
+[443] Escrit particulier: 'qu'il permettra a tous ses subjects
+Catholiques Romains de jouir de plus de liberté et franchise en ce qui
+regarde leur religion qu'ils n'eussent fait en vertu d'articles
+quelconques accordés par le traité de mariage fait avec l'Espagne, ne
+voulant que ses subjects Catholiques puissent estre inquiétés en leurs
+personnes et biens pour faire profession de la dite religion et vivre
+en Catholiques pourvu toutesfois qu'ils en usent modestement, et
+rendent l'obéissance que de bons et vrays subjects doivent à leur roy,
+qu'il par sa bonté ne les restreindra pas à aucun sentiment contraire
+à leur religion.' Hardwicke Papers i. 546. The English ambassadors
+complain that the word 'liberté' had been inserted by the French
+without first informing them.
+
+[444] Conway to Carlisle, Feb. 24, 1624-25: 'In contemplation of H.
+Majesty the king of Denmark hath come to the propositions--upon which
+H. M. upon good grounds hath made dispatche to the king of Denmark
+agreeing to the kings of Denmarks propositions.' Hardwicke Papers i.
+560.
+
+[445] Valaresso: 'Non è possibile di rimoverlo di contravenire alle
+tante promesse verso Spagnoli et alle sue prime dichiarationi.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+BEGINNING OF THE REIGN OF CHARLES I, AND HIS FIRST AND SECOND
+PARLIAMENT.
+
+
+The prince who now ascended the throne was in the bloom of life: he
+had just completed his twenty-fifth year. He had been weak and
+delicate in childhood: among the defects from which he suffered was
+that of stammering, which he did not get over throughout life; but he
+had grown up stronger in other ways than had been expected. He looked
+well on horseback: men saw him govern with safety horses that were
+hard to manage: he was expert in knightly exercises: he was a good
+shot with the cross-bow, as well as with the gun, and even learned how
+to load a cannon. He was hardly less unweariedly devoted to the chase
+than his father. He could not vie with him in intelligence and
+knowledge, nor with his deceased brother Henry in vivacious energy and
+in popularity of disposition; but he had learnt much from his father,
+at whose feet he loved to sit; and his brother's tastes for the arts
+and for the experimental sciences, especially the former, had passed
+to him. In moral qualities he was superior to both. He was one of
+those young men of whom it is said that they have no fault. His strict
+propriety of demeanour bordered on maiden bashfulness: a serious and
+temperate soul spoke from his calm eyes. He had a natural gift for
+apprehending even the most complicated questions, and he was a good
+writer. From his youth he shewed himself economical; not profuse, but
+at the same time not niggardly; in all matters precise. All the world
+had been wearied by the frequent proofs which his father had given of
+his untrustworthiness, and by the unfathomable mystery in which he
+enveloped his ever-wavering intentions: they expected from the son
+more openness, uprightness, and consistency. They asked if he would
+not also be more decidedly Protestant. He showed, at least at first,
+that he had a more sensitive feeling with regard to his princely
+honour.[446] He had expected that his personal suit for the hand of
+the Infanta would remove all difficulties on the part of the
+Spaniards, even those of a political character, which obstructed the
+marriage. They had paid him every attention suitable to his rank, but
+in the business which was under discussion they had not given way a
+hair's breadth: it rather appeared as if they wished to avail
+themselves of his presence to impose harder conditions upon him. He
+was deeply affronted at this. When he found himself again among his
+countrymen on board an English ship, he expressed his astonishment
+that he had not been detained after he had been so ill-treated.[447]
+Quiet and taciturn by nature, he knew while in Spain how to disguise
+his real feelings by appearing to feel differently: but we have seen
+how on his return his whole attitude with regard to affairs in
+general, both foreign and domestic, in matters which concerned his
+father and the Parliament alike, assumed an altered character which
+corresponded to the general feeling of the nation far more closely
+than the policy previously pursued.
+
+In the last days of James doubts had still been felt whether he would
+ever allow a marriage to take place between his son and a French
+princess, and large sums had been wagered on the issue. Charles I at
+once put an end to all hesitation. He did not allow himself to be
+induced to defer his marriage even by the death of his father, or by a
+pestilential sickness which then prevailed, or by the lack of the
+desirable preparations in the royal palaces. He wished to show the
+world that he adhered to his policy of opposition to Spain. He even
+allowed the privateering, which his father had formerly suppressed
+with so much zeal, to begin again. The royal navy, for the
+improvement of which Buckingham actively exerted himself, was put in a
+complete state of efficiency, and the money granted by Parliament was
+principally employed for this purpose.
+
+But to enable him to undertake war in earnest he required fresh
+grants. It was almost the first thought of the King after his
+accession to the throne to call a Parliament for this purpose, and
+that the same Parliament which had last sat in the reign of his
+father.[448] He bent, although unwillingly, to the necessity, imposed
+by the constitution, of ordering new elections to be proceeded with,
+for he would rather have avoided all delay: but he entertained no
+doubt that the Parliament, as it was composed after the elections,
+would give him its full support. After what had taken place he
+considered this almost a matter of course.
+
+On June 18/28, 1625, Charles I opened his first Parliament at
+Westminster. He reminded the members that his father had been induced
+by the advice of the Parliament, whose wishes he had himself
+represented to the King, to break off all further negotiations with
+Spain. He said that this was done in their interest: that on their
+instigation he had embarked on the affair as a young man joyfully and
+with good courage: that this had been his first undertaking: what a
+reproach would it be both for himself and for them if they now refused
+him the support which he necessarily required for bringing to a
+successful issue the quarrel which had already begun!
+
+And certainly if war with Spain had been the only question, he might
+have reckoned upon abundant grants: but the matter was not quite so
+simple. Parliament thought above all of its own designs, which it had
+not been possible to effect in the lifetime of James I, but which
+Charles had advocated in the last session. If the new King inferred
+the obligation of Parliament to furnish the money required for a
+foreign war from the share it had had in the counsels which had led
+to that war, Parliament also considered that he was no less bound on
+his part to fulfil the wishes that had been expressed in regard to
+internal policy. In the very first debate which preceded the election
+of the Speaker, this point of view was very distinctly put forward.
+The King was told that in the last session he had sought to remove all
+differences between Parliament and his father, and to induce the
+latter to grant the petitions of Parliament: that if he had not
+succeeded then, that result had been due only to his want of power;
+but now he had power as well as inclination: what he before had only
+been able to will, he now was enabled to effect, and everything
+depended solely on him.[449] It had been especially the execution of
+the Acts of Parliament directed against the Catholics which the
+Parliament demanded, and which the Prince in his ardour against Spain
+had then thought advisable. His father had refused to grant this: it
+was now expected that he should grant it himself. They expected this
+from him as much as he expected from them a subsidy sufficient for
+carrying on the war. It may be asked, however, whether it was possible
+for him to give ear to their wishes. The complication in his fortunes
+arose from his inability to comply.
+
+If Charles I, when Prince of Wales, had wished to identify his cause
+entirely with the aims of Parliament, he would have been obliged to
+marry the daughter of a Protestant prince. But this was prevented by
+the political danger which would then have arisen in the event of a
+breach with Spain. Neither James nor Charles I believed that they
+could withstand this great monarchy without an alliance with France.
+Political and dynastic interests had led to the marriage which had
+just been concluded. But by this a relation with the Catholic world
+had again been contracted which rendered impossible a purely
+Protestant system of government such as Queen Elizabeth desired to
+establish. A dispensation from Rome had been required which expressed
+even without any disguise the hope that the French princess would
+convert the King and his realm to the old faith.[450] The marriage
+could not have been concluded without entering into obligations which
+were in open contradiction to the Acts of Parliament. Those
+obligations were not yet fully known, but what was learnt of them
+caused great agitation. Charles was reminded of a promise, which he
+was said to have given at an earlier time, to agree to no conditions
+on his marriage which might be prejudicial to the Church existing in
+England. Men asked how that promise had been fulfilled; and why any
+secret was made of the compact which had been concluded. Would not the
+Queen's chapel, they asked, now serve to unite the Catholics of
+England; or would they be forbidden to hear mass there? In a forcible
+petition Parliament asked for the execution of the laws issued against
+Papists and recusants.[451]
+
+Charles I was not in a position to be able to regard it. It was not
+that he had any thought of curtailing the rights of the English Church
+or of entering on any other course in great questions of general
+policy than that which had been laid down in conjunction with
+Parliament. His marriage also was a preparation for the conflict with
+Spain; but if it was not so decidedly opposed to the common feeling of
+the country as a Spanish marriage, yet it was far from being in
+accordance with it. The pledges which had been given on that occasion
+prevented the King from adopting exclusively Protestant points of
+view, and from identifying himself completely with his people.
+
+But there was another reason for the King's adherence to his
+agreement. He was as little inclined as his father had been to allow
+the Parliament to exercise any influence on ecclesiastical affairs.
+Much unpleasant surprise was created at that time by the writings of
+Dr. Montague, in which he treated the Roman Church with forbearance,
+and Puritanism with scorn and hatred. Parliament wished to institute
+proceedings against the author. The King did not take him under his
+protection; but on the request of some dignitaries of the English
+Church he transferred the matter to his own tribunal. He regarded it
+moreover as an undoubted element of his prerogative to dispense with
+the statutes passed by Parliament, so that the concessions which were
+expressed in the marriage compact appeared to him quite justifiable.
+
+We see how closely this affected the most important question of
+English constitutional law. The universal competence of Parliament is
+here opposed to the authority of the King, strengthened by his
+ecclesiastical functions. And we understand how Parliament, in spite
+of the urgent need created by itself, hesitated to fulfil the
+expectations of the King.
+
+It could not absolutely refuse to make any grant: it offered him two
+subsidies, 'fruits of its love' as they were termed. But the King had
+expected a far stronger proof of devotion. What importance could be
+attached to such an insignificant sum in prospect of so tremendous an
+undertaking as a war against Spain? The grant itself implied a sort of
+refusal.
+
+But the Lower House also attempted to introduce a most extensive
+innovation in regard to finance. The customs formed one of the main
+sources of the revenue of the crown, without which it could not be
+supported. They had been increased by the last government on the
+ground of its right to tonnage and poundage, although, as we saw, not
+without opposition.[452] The constitutional question was whether the
+customs were properly to be regarded as a tax, and accordingly
+dependent on the grant of Parliament, or whether they were absolutely
+appropriated to the crown by right derived from long prescription: for
+since the time of Edward IV, tonnage and poundage had been granted to
+every king for the whole period of his reign. The controversies
+arising on the subject under James had brought to light the daily
+increasing importance conferred by the growth of commerce on this
+source of revenue, which certainly assured to the crown, if not for
+extraordinary undertakings, yet for the conduct of the ordinary
+business of the state, a certain independence of the grants of
+Parliament. The Lower House was now disinclined, both on principle and
+under the painful excitement of the moment, to renew the grant on
+these terms: it therefore conferred the right to tonnage and poundage
+on the King only for a year. But the import of this restriction was
+plain enough. The popular leaders were not satisfied with granting the
+King very inadequate support for the war, but they sought to make him
+dependent even in time of peace on the goodwill of the Lower House.
+The resolution was rejected by the Upper House, and it appeared to the
+King himself as an affront. For why should he be refused what had been
+secured to his predecessors during a century and a half? The granting
+of supplies for life he regarded as a mere form, which after such long
+prescription was not even necessary. He thought himself entitled, even
+without such a grant, to have the duties levied in his own name as
+before.
+
+These were differences of the most thoroughgoing character, which had
+descended to Charles I with the crown itself from the earlier kings
+and from his father. The change of government, and certain previous
+occurrences caused these differences to come into greater prominence
+than ever; but they received their peculiar character from something
+in his personal relations which had also been transmitted from the
+father to the son.
+
+Or rather, we may say, James I would certainly have been inclined to
+get rid of Buckingham as he had formerly got rid of Somerset: under
+Charles I this favourite occupied a still stronger position than he
+had held before.
+
+Between the two men personally there was a great contrast. In the
+favourite there was nothing of the precision, calmness, and moral
+behaviour of the King. Buckingham was dissolute, talkative, and vain.
+His appearance had made his fortune, and he endeavoured to add to it
+by a splendour of attire, which later times would have allowed only
+in women. Jewels were displayed in his ears, and precious stones
+served as buttons for his doublet. It was affirmed that on his journey
+to France, which preceded the marriage of the King, he had taken with
+him about thirty different suits, each more costly than the last. It
+was for him as much an affair of ambition as of sensual pleasure to
+make an impression upon women, and to achieve what are called
+conquests in the highest circles. He revelled in the enjoyment of
+successes in society. Moments of lassitude followed, when those who
+had to speak with him on business found him extended upon his couch,
+without giving them a sign of interest or attention, especially when
+their proposals were not altogether to his mind. Immediately
+afterwards however he would pass from this state to one of the most
+highly-strained activity, for which he by no means wanted ability: he
+then knew neither rest nor weariness. He was spurred on most of all by
+the necessity of making head alternately against such powerful and
+active rivals as the two ministers who at that time conducted the
+affairs of France and Spain. He was bound to Charles I by a common
+interest in one or two of those employments which fill up daily life,
+for instance by fondness for art and art collections, but principally
+by the companionship into which they had been thrown, first in the
+cabinet of James I, who weighed his conclusions by their assistance,
+and afterwards in their journey to Spain. The Spaniards, who were
+accustomed to treat persons of the highest rank with respect and
+reverence, were greatly scandalised to see how entirely Buckingham
+indulged his own humours in the presence of the Prince. He allowed
+himself to use playful nicknames, such as might have been often
+applied in the hunting-seats of James or in letters to him, but which
+at other times appeared very much out of place. He remained sitting
+when the Prince was standing: in his presence he had indeed the
+audacity to consult his ease by stretching his legs on another chair.
+The Prince appeared to find this quite proper: Buckingham was for him
+not so much a servant as an equal and intimate friend. It would have
+been impossible to say which of the two was the chief cause of the
+alienation which arose between them and the Spaniards. Rumour made the
+favourite responsible for this estrangement: better informed people
+traced it to the Prince himself. The intimacy formed during their
+previous association had been made still closer by the policy which
+they pursued since their return from Spain. Many persons hoped
+notwithstanding that, in spite of appearances to the contrary, an
+alteration would take place with the change of government. But on the
+first entry of Charles I into London, Buckingham was seen sitting by
+him in his carriage in the usual intimate proximity. His share in the
+marriage of the King increased their friendship: they both equally
+agreed even in the subsequent change of policy. Buckingham had allied
+himself most closely with the leaders of the Puritan opposition in
+Parliament: by their support principally he had broken up the party
+favourable to Spain. But in return for these services he had now not
+the least intention of doing justice to their claims. If it had
+depended on him, still greater concessions would afterwards have been
+granted in favour of the Catholics than in fact were made; for
+Catholic sympathies were very strongly represented in his family: he
+himself had far less feeling in favour of Anglican orthodoxy than the
+King. And when the rights of the prerogative were called in question,
+he again espoused them most zealously, seeing that his own power
+rested on their validity. He looked at the Parliamentary constitution
+from the point of view of a holder of power, who wishes to avail
+himself of it for the end before him without deeming himself bound by
+it, so soon as it becomes inconvenient to him. He cared only for
+success in his immediate object: all means of obtaining it seemed
+fair.
+
+The continuance of the session in London was at that time rendered
+impossible by the pestilential sickness already referred to, which
+every day increased in severity. Buckingham, who although pliant and
+adroit yet had no regard whatever for others, wished to keep
+Parliament sitting until it had made satisfactory grants. While the
+members, and even the Privy Council, wished for a prorogation, he
+urged with success that the sitting should only be transferred to
+Oxford. Thither the two Houses very unwillingly went, for there also
+symptoms of the plague were already showing themselves; and each
+member would have preferred to be at home with his family. And when
+Buckingham came before them at Oxford with his proposal for a further
+grant, the ill-humour of the assembly openly broke out. He was
+reproached with the illegality of his conduct in asking for a grant of
+subsidies more than once in a session; the members said that if this
+was the object of their meeting they might well have been at
+home.[453] But they were not content with rejecting the proposal: they
+said that if they must remain together, they would, according to
+former precedent, bring under debate the prevailing abuses and their
+removal.
+
+Buckingham had been warned that by now changing his demeanour he would
+run the risk of forfeiting those sympathies of Parliament, which he
+had won by his Protestant attitude. In the very first session at
+Oxford an event took place which set religious passions in agitation.
+
+Before the departure of the Parliament from London Lord Keeper
+Williams had promised in the King's name that the laws against
+Catholic priests should be observed. Immediately after the Speaker had
+taken his seat at Oxford, a complaint was made that an order for the
+pardon of six priests had been since issued. Williams had had no share
+in it; he had refused to seal it. It had been necessary to complete it
+in the presence of the King, who was induced at the urgent request of
+Buckingham to give his assent in pursuance of the conditions of the
+agreement executed with France. This conduct however, the failure to
+execute laws that had been ratified, especially after a renewed
+promise to the contrary, appeared to the Parliament an attack upon its
+rights and upon the constitution of the country. The ill-feeling was
+directed against Buckingham, whose exceptional position was now the
+general object of public and private hatred.
+
+This was a time in which the power of a first minister in France, who
+came forward as the representative of the monarchy, was winning its
+way amid the strife of factions, and above all in opposition to the
+claims of aristocratic independence. What Concini and Luynes had
+begun, Richelieu with a strong arm carried systematically into effect.
+Something similar seemed to be at hand in England also. It had been
+the fashion of James I to give effect to his will in the state by
+means of a minister, to whom he confided the most important affairs,
+and whom he wished to be dependent solely on the King himself; and
+Charles I, in this as in other matters, followed his father's example.
+Buckingham became more powerful under him than ever. At the meetings
+of the Privy Council the King hardly allowed any one else to speak:
+without taking the votes of the members he accepted Buckingham's
+opinion as conclusive. And yet it was apparent at the same time that
+this opinion did not deserve preference from any worth of its own. The
+public administration, so far as it was influenced by him, and his
+special department, the Admiralty, furnished much occasion for just
+censure; and the general policy on which he embarked appeared
+questionable and dangerous. He was coarsely compared to a mule which
+took its rider into a wrong road. Oxford suggested to men's minds the
+recollection of the opposition which the great nobles had once offered
+to Henry III. People said that they might perhaps have been to blame
+in form, but not in substance. It was wished that Charles I might also
+govern the state by the help of his wise and dignified councillors,
+and not with the aid of a single young man. Parliament, the great men
+of the country, and those who filled the highest offices, were almost
+unanimous against Buckingham. The Lord Keeper Williams told the King
+openly at a meeting of the Privy Council at Oxford, that nothing would
+quiet the apprehensions of his Parliament but an assurance 'that in
+actions of importance and in the disposition of what sums of money the
+people should bestow upon him, he would take the advice of a settled
+and constant council.'[454] The misconduct of the favourite in not
+applying the money granted to the objects for which it was voted, was
+exactly the ground of the complaint urged against him. Not only the
+real importance of the points in dispute, but also the intention of
+driving Buckingham from his position, led Parliament to reject all his
+proposals.
+
+The King's adherence to his resolution of supporting his minister
+greatly affected the state of affairs in England, which even at that
+time presupposed and required an agreement between the Crown and the
+Parliament.
+
+Buckingham attributed the rejection of his proposals in Parliament to
+personal enmity; and this he thought he could certainly overcome.
+Williams, who in the time of James I had been entirely in the
+confidence of the King, was after a time dismissed, not without
+harshness, and was replaced by Thomas Coventry. The post of Lord
+Keeper was again filled by a lawyer who troubled himself less about
+political affairs. Parliament was not prorogued, as the rest of the
+members of the Privy Council wished: the King agreed with Buckingham
+that it must be dissolved. The Duke hoped that new elections, held
+under his influence, would give better results. He did not doubt that
+another Parliament might be hurried away to make extensive grants
+under the pressure of the great interest opposed to Spain. But in
+order to effect this object it appeared to him necessary to exclude
+from the Lower House its most active members, who were his personal
+antagonists. He adopted the odious means of advancing them to offices
+which could not be held compatible with a seat in Parliament. In this
+way Edward Coke, who revived and found arguments for the
+constitutional claims of Parliament, was nominated sheriff of
+Buckinghamshire, and Thomas Wentworth High Sheriff of Yorkshire.
+Francis Seymour, Robert Phillips, and some others, had a similar
+fate.[455] When the lists were submitted as usual the King
+unexpectedly announced these nominations. Some peers, whose views
+inspired no confidence, were not summoned to attend the sittings of
+the Upper House.
+
+Perhaps too much weight has been attributed to the circumstance--but
+yet it proves the discontent which was widely spreading--that at the
+coronation of the King, which took place during these days, the
+traditional question addressed from four sides of the tribune to the
+surrounding multitude, asking whether they approved, was not answered
+from one side at least with the joyful readiness usually
+displayed.[456]
+
+On February 6, 1626, the new Parliament was opened at Westminster. It
+made no great objection to the exclusion of some of the former
+members, as the means by which this had been effected could not be
+regarded as exactly illegal. Among the members assembled an ambition
+was rather felt to prove that their opinions and resolutions were not
+dependent on the influence of some few men. For all Buckingham's
+efforts to prevent it, on this occasion also those opinions were in
+the ascendant which he wished to oppose. In the place of the members
+excluded others arose, and at times they were the very men from whom
+he feared nothing. A great impression was made when a personal friend
+of Buckingham, his vice-admiral in Devonshire, John Eliot, came
+forward as his decided political opponent. He first brought under
+discussion the mismanagement of the money granted, which was laid to
+the charge of the First Minister. With this was connected a
+transaction of great importance which affected the general relation
+between the Parliament and the Crown.
+
+In the year 1624 a council of war, consisting of seven members, had
+been nominated to manage the money then granted. They were now
+summoned to account for it. Although this measure appeared an
+innovation, yet the government could do nothing against it--it had
+even consented to it: but Parliament at the same time submitted to the
+members the invidious question, whether their advice for the
+attainment of the ends in view had always been followed. King James
+had said on a former occasion, that if Parliament granted him
+subsidies, he had to account to it for their disposal as little as to
+a merchant from whom he received money; for he loved to lay as much
+emphasis upon his prerogative as possible. How entirely opposed to the
+prerogative were the claims which Parliament now advanced! It is clear
+that if the members of the council should make the communications they
+were asked for, all freedom of action on the part of the minister and
+of the King himself would be called in question.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1626.]
+
+The members of the new council for war were thrown into great
+embarrassment. They answered that they must first consult the lawyers
+on the subject, and the King conveyed to them his approval of this
+declaration. He informed them that he had had the Act of Parliament
+laid before him: that they were bound to submit to questions only
+about the application of the money, but about nothing else: he even
+threatened them with his displeasure if they should go beyond this.
+The president of the council for war, George Carew, called his
+attention to the probability that the grant of the subsidies which he
+demanded from Parliament might be hindered by such an answer: it would
+be better, he said, that the Council should be sent to the Tower,--for
+it would come to this,--than that the good relations between the King
+and the Parliament should be impaired, and the payment of the
+subsidies hindered. Charles I said that it was not merely a question
+of money, and that gold might be bought too dear. He thanked them for
+the regard which they had shown to him; but he added that Parliament
+was aiming not at them but at himself.[457]
+
+The controversy about tonnage and poundage coincided with this
+quarrel. The grant, as has been mentioned, had been obtained only for
+a short period. Parliament was incensed, that after this had expired,
+the King had the customs levied just as before. 'How,' it was said,
+'did the King wish to raise taxes that had never been voted? Was not
+this altogether contrary to the form of government of the country?
+Whoever had counselled the King to this step, he was without doubt the
+sworn enemy of King and country.'
+
+Parliament declared to the King that if he insisted on those subsidies
+which were absolutely necessary, it would support him as fully as ever
+a prince had been supported by a Parliament, but in Parliamentary
+fashion, or, as they expressed it, 'via parlamentaria.'[458] The
+claims of Parliament included both the right of granting money in its
+widest extent, and the supervision of its application when granted.
+The King considered that a grant was not necessary in respect of every
+source of revenue--for instance, not in respect to tonnage and
+poundage, and was determined to keep the management entirely in his
+own hands, and to submit to no kind of control over it.
+
+Many other questions, in which wide interests were involved, were
+brought forward for discussion in Parliament, especially in regard to
+ecclesiastical matters: the proceedings of the High Commission were
+attacked again. But the question of the widest range of all was the
+decided attempt to alter the government and to overthrow the great
+minister, which gave perhaps the greatest employment to the
+assembly.[459] It was directed against the favourite personally, for
+he had now incurred universal hatred, but at bottom there also lay the
+definite intention of confirming the doctrine of ministerial
+responsibility by a new and signal example.
+
+How quickly was Buckingham overtaken by Nemesis; that is to say, in
+this, as in so many other instances, how soon was he visited by the
+consequences which in the nature of things attended his actions!
+First, owing to his influence the establishment of that council for
+war had been granted which now gave occasion to the demand for
+Parliamentary control: and next, he had allowed the fall of Bacon, and
+had most deliberately overthrown Cranfield by the help of Parliament.
+These were just the transactions which endangered his own existence by
+the consequences of the principles involved in both cases alike.
+
+The King was certainly moved by personal inclination to take the part
+of his minister; but he was also moved by anxiety about the
+application of these principles. He complained that without actually
+established facts forthcoming, on the strength of general rumour,
+people wished to attack the man on whom he bestowed his confidence:
+but Parliament, he said, was altogether overstepping its competence.
+It was wishing to inspect the books of the royal officers, to pass
+judgment upon the letters of his secretary of state, nay, even upon
+his own: it permitted and sheltered seditious speeches within its
+bosom. There never had been a king, he affirmed, who was more inclined
+to remove real abuses, and to observe a truly Parliamentary course;
+but also there had never been one who was more jealous of his royal
+honour. The more violently Buckingham was attacked, the more it
+appeared to the King a point of honour to take him under his
+protection against charges which he considered futile.
+
+The Lower House did not take up all the points in dispute which the
+King proposed for discussion. It excused some things which had
+occurred to the prejudice of the royal dignity, but in the principal
+matter it was immovable. It asserted, and adhered to its assertion,
+that it was the constant undoubted right of Parliament, exercised as
+well under the most glorious of former reigns as under the last, to
+hold all persons accountable, however high their rank, who should
+abuse the power transferred to them by their sovereign and oppress the
+commonwealth. They maintained that without this liberty no one would
+ever venture to say a word against influential men, and that the
+common-weal would be forced to languish under their violence.
+
+The impeachment was drawn up in regular form by eight members, among
+whom we find the names of Selden, Glanvil, Pym, and Eliot. On the 8th
+of May it was carried by 225 votes to 116 to send up to the Lords a
+proposal for the arrest of Buckingham.
+
+In the Upper House, the members of which were by no means more
+favourable to the Duke, and feared the nomination of a large number of
+peers, Lord Bristol independently brought an accusation against
+Buckingham relating to the failure of the Spanish marriage. The
+conduct of which he is accused may rather have shown ambition and
+foolish assumption than any real criminality; and Buckingham's defence
+is not without force. The Lower House, to whom it was communicated,
+nevertheless expressed their opinion that a formal prosecution must
+take place. It seemed that Buckingham must surely but sink under the
+combined weight of various complaints.
+
+But the King would not allow matters to go so far. Without paying any
+regard to the wish of the Lords to the contrary, he proceeded to
+dissolve this Parliament also (June 15, 1626). In the declaration
+which he issued on the subject, he said that he recognised Joab's hand
+in these estrangements: but in spite of them he would fulfil his duty
+as king of this great nation, and would himself redress their
+grievances and defend them with the sword against foreign enemies.
+
+The opposition between Parliament and the Crown did not develop by
+slow degrees. In its main principles at least it appears immediately
+after the accession of Charles I as a historical necessity.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[446] Lando, Relatione 1622: 'Tiene presenza veramente regia fronte,
+sopraciglio grave, negli occhi e nelli movimenti del corpo gratia
+notabile, indicante prudente temperanza--di pensieri maniere costumi
+commendabilissimi attrahenti la benevolenza et l'amore universale.'
+
+[447] Thus Kensington states to the Queen-mother in France: 'He was
+used ill, not in his entertainment, but in their frivolous delayes,
+and in the unreasonable conditions which they propounded and pressed
+upon the advantage they had of his princely person.' Cabala 289.
+
+[448] Consultation at St. James's on the day after he ascended the
+throne (March 28). 'That which was much insisted upon was a
+parliament, H. Majesty being so forward to have it sit that he did
+both propound and dispute it to have no writs go forth to call a new
+one.' Hacket, Life of Williams ii. 4.
+
+[449] Speech of Sir Thomas Edwards, St. P. O. (not mentioned in the
+Parliamentary Histories). It is there said 'He did not only become a
+continual advocate to his deceased father for the favourable graunting
+of our petitions, but also did interpose his mediation for the
+pacefying and removing of all misunderstandings. God having now added
+the posse to the velle, the kingly power to the willing mind, enabled
+him to execute what before he could but will.'
+
+[450] Letter from the Pope to the Princess, Dec. 28, 1624: 'Cogitans
+ad quorum triumphorum gloriam vadis, fruere interim expectatione tui.'
+
+[451] 'Some spare not to say that all goes backward since this
+connivance in religion came in, both in all wealth valour honour and
+reputation.' Letter of Chamberlain, June 25, 1625.
+
+[452] 'Tonnage, a duty upon all wines imported; poundage, a duty
+imposed ad valorem on all other merchandises whatsoever.' Blackstone,
+Commentaries i. 315.
+
+[453] 'Whosoever gave the counsel (of the meeting in Oxford) had the
+intention to set the king and his people at variance.' Nethersole to
+Carleton, Aug. 9, 1625: a circumstantial and very instructive document
+(St. P. O.).
+
+[454] Hacket ii. 20.
+
+[455] Arthur Ingram to Wentworth, Nov. 1625 (Strafford Papers, i. 29),
+names besides Guy Palmer, Edward Alford, and a seventh, who had not
+had a seat in the last Parliament, Sir W. Fleetwood.
+
+[456] Ewis in Ellis, i. 3, 217. The Dutch ambassador present in
+England, Joachimi, to whose letter I referred, does not seem to have
+mentioned it.
+
+[457] A memorial of what passed in speech from H. M. to the Earl of
+Totness, March 8, 1625-26; St. P. O. The King says 'Let them doe what
+they list: you shall not go to the Tower. It is not you that they aim
+at, but it is me, upon whom they make inquisition. And for subsidies
+that will not hinder it; gold may be bought too dear.'
+
+[458] Correro: 'Questo termino di via parlamentaria vuol dire libere
+concessioni secondo la loro dispositione e di haver cognitione in
+qualche maniera delli impieghi.'
+
+[459] 'Ils disent' (so it is said in Ruszdorf, Negotiations i. 596)
+'que tout alloit mal, que les deniers qu'ils ont contribué ont été mal
+employés: il falloit toujours et avant toutes choses redresser et
+regler le gouvernement de l'état.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE COURSE OF FOREIGN POLICY FROM 1625 TO 1627.
+
+
+In reviewing so important a conflict as that which had broken out at
+home, it almost requires an effort of will to bestow deep interest
+upon foreign affairs in turn. But not only is this necessary from the
+connexion between the two, but we should not be able to understand the
+history of England if we left out of consideration its relation to
+those great events of European importance which absorbed even the
+largest share of public attention.
+
+Charles I had undertaken to do what his father avoided to the end of
+his life,--to offer open opposition to the Spanish monarchy and its
+aims. Like Queen Elizabeth he took this step in alliance with France,
+Holland, and the Protestants of Germany and the North, but yet not in
+full agreement with his own people. This was due mainly to the
+circumstance that France had become far more Catholic under Mary de'
+Medici and Louis XIII than it had been under Henry IV. The offensive
+alliance between France and England now developed a character which
+rather irritated than quieted the religious feelings which prevailed
+in England.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1625.]
+
+On the first shocks sustained by the close alliance which had existed
+between the Catholic powers, the Huguenots in France rose in order to
+recover their former rights which had been curtailed. But the French
+government was not at all inclined to give fresh life to these
+powerful and dangerous movements: on the contrary it invoked the
+assistance of England and Holland to put them down. For the great
+strength of the Huguenots lay in their naval resources, and without
+the help of the maritime powers the French government would never
+have been able to overcome them. And so imperative seemed the
+necessity of internal peace in France,[460] if she was to be induced
+to take an active share in the war against Spain, that the English and
+Dutch were actually persuaded to put their crews and vessels at the
+disposal of the French government, which then used them with decisive
+results. The naval power of the Huguenots, which had formed so large
+an element of the fighting strength of the Protestants, was broken by
+the assistance of England and Holland. Queen Elizabeth, in the midst
+of her war with Philip II, would certainly never have been brought to
+this step, and even now it roused the bitterest dislike. It was found
+that the execution of the orders issued met with resistance even on
+board the ships themselves. A light is thrown upon the ill-feeling at
+home, when a member of the Privy Council, Lord Pembroke, tells a
+captain who resisted this mutinous spirit, that the news of the
+insubordination of his crew was the best which he had heard for a long
+time, and that it was welcome even to the King: that he must deal
+leniently with his men, and only see that he remained master of the
+ship.[461] But what an impression must doubtless have been produced on
+the population of England, which still stood in the closest relation
+to the French Reformed! Sermons were delivered from the pulpits
+against these proceedings of the government.
+
+But if the active alliance of France against Spain and Austria was
+secured by this immense sacrifice, what could have appeared more
+natural than to employ the whole strength of that country for the
+restoration of the Count Palatine, which the French saw to be
+advantageous to themselves, and for the support of German
+Protestantism? In pursuance of the stipulations which had been made
+the King of Denmark was already in the field: his troops had already
+fought hand to hand at Nienburg in the circle of Lower Saxony with
+the forces of the League which were pressing forward into that
+country. He was strong in cavalry but weak in infantry: the German
+envoys who were present in England insisted that gallant English
+troops should be sent to his assistance, and that the fleet which was
+ready for service should be ordered to the Weser; for that the support
+which the fleet would give to the King would encourage him to advance
+with good heart. And then, as they added with extravagant hopefulness,
+the King of Sweden, who had already offered his aid, would come
+forward actively, if only he had some security; the Elector of
+Brandenburg, who had just married his sister to the King of Sweden,
+would declare himself; the Prince of Transylvania, who was connected
+with the same family, would force his way into Bohemia: every one
+would withstand the League and compel it to restore the lands occupied
+by it to their former sovereigns, and to the religion hitherto
+professed in them.
+
+But Buckingham had as little sympathy with the German as with the
+French Protestants: his passionate ambition was to make the Spaniards
+directly feel the weight of his hatred. For this purpose he had just
+concluded an offensive and defensive alliance with the United
+Provinces; even the great maritime interests of England were
+themselves a reason for opposing Spain. At all events, in the autumn
+of 1625 he despatched the fleet, not to the Weser, which appeared to
+him almost unworthy of this great expedition, but against the coasts
+of the Spanish peninsula. Orders were given to it to enter the mouth
+of the Guadalquivir, and to alarm Seville, or else to take the town of
+Cadiz, for which object it had on board a considerable number of land
+troops; or, finally, to lie in wait for the Spanish fleet laden with
+silver, and to bring home the cargo as a lawful prize. Buckingham
+proceeded on the supposition that the foundation of the Spanish power
+and its influence would be undermined by the interruption of the
+Spanish trade with America, and that in the next year the Spaniards
+would be able to effect nothing. He did not perceive that this would
+have no decisive influence on that undertaking on which in the first
+instance everything depended, that of the King of Denmark, as
+meanwhile in Rome, Vienna, and Munich, native forces, independent of
+Spain, had been collected. But while he preferred the more distant to
+the more immediate end, it was his fate to achieve neither the one nor
+the other. In December 1625 the fleet returned without having effected
+anything at sea or on the Spanish coasts. On the contrary it had
+suffered the heaviest losses itself.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1626.]
+
+The discredit into which Buckingham fell with those whom he had
+desired to win over, and whose wishes were fixed on the struggle with
+Spain, is exhibited in a very extraordinary enterprise which sprung up
+at this time, and which had for its object the formation of what we
+may almost call a joint-stock war company. A wish was felt to form a
+company for making war on Spain, upon the basis, it is true, of a
+royal charter, but under the authority of Parliament, with the
+intention of sharing the booty and the conquests, as well as the costs
+among the members.[462]
+
+By the late enterprise moreover the means had been wasted which might
+have been used for supporting the German allies of England. Left
+without sufficient subsidies in his quarrel with Parliament, the King
+was unable to pay the arrears due both to the seamen who were
+returning from Spain, and to his troops in Holland. He could not
+repair his fleet; he could hardly defend his coasts: how could he be
+in a position to make any persevering effort for the conduct of the
+war in Germany? The King of Sweden asked for only £15,000 in order to
+set his forces in motion; but at that time this sum could not be
+raised. The King of Denmark was the more thrown on England, as the
+French also made their services depend on what the English would do:
+but Conway, the Secretary of State, declared himself unable to pay the
+stipulated sum. Could men feel astonished that the Danish war was not
+carried on with the energy which the cause seemed to demand?
+Christian IV had not troops enough, and could not pay even those which
+he had. The cavalry, which constituted his main strength, had on one
+occasion refused to fight, because they had not received their pay. He
+himself threw the chief blame on the English for the defeat which he
+now sustained at Lutter; and which was the more decisive, as meanwhile
+Mansfeld also, who wished to turn his steps to the hereditary
+dominions of Austria in order to combine with the Prince of
+Transylvania, had been not only defeated, but almost annihilated. The
+armies which were to have defended the Protestant cause disappeared
+from off the field. The forces of the Emperor and of the League now
+occupied North Germany also on both sides of the Elbe.
+
+To Germany the alliance with England had at that time brought no good.
+It may be doubted whether the Elector Palatine would have accepted the
+crown of Bohemia but for the support which he thought to find in
+England. This affair had a great part in bringing on the outbreak of
+the great religious conflict. But James I sought to retrieve the
+misfortune into which the Elector had fallen, not so much by employing
+his own power, as by developing his relations with the Spaniards; and
+thus he had himself given them the opportunity of establishing
+themselves in the Palatinate, and had caused the Catholic reaction to
+triumph in Upper Germany. Without the instigation of England, and the
+great combination of the powers in East and West hostile to the house
+of Austria, the King of Denmark would not have determined to begin
+war, nor would the circle of Lower Saxony have aided him. On this
+occasion as on others in England the interests of its own power
+outweighed consideration for the allies. The policy of the English had
+formerly been ruled by their friendly relations with Spain: it was now
+ruled by their hostile intentions towards that country. All available
+forces were employed for their purpose, and the movement in Germany
+was left to its fate.
+
+Meanwhile another consequence of the breach with Spain came to light,
+which King James had always feared. In order not to be forced to fight
+both great powers at once, Spain found it advisable to show a
+compliance hitherto unprecedented in the affairs of Italy, in which
+France had interested herself. After this the irritation against the
+ascendancy of the Spaniards evidently abated in France.
+
+For in alliances of great powers it is self-evident that their
+political points of view, if for a moment they coincide, must
+nevertheless in a short time be again opposed to one another. How
+should one power really seek the permanent advantage of another?
+
+At that time also, as on so many occasions, other relations arising
+out of the position of the leading statesmen as members of parties,
+produced an effect on politics. Cardinal Richelieu met with opposition
+from a zealously Catholic party, which gathered round the queen
+mother, and considered the influence of Spain to a certain degree
+necessary. This party seized the first favourable opportunity of
+setting on foot a preliminary treaty of peace, to which Richelieu,
+however long he hesitated, and however much he disliked it, could not
+help acceding.
+
+Quite in keeping with this understanding between the Catholic powers
+was the partial recoil of Protestantism in England from the advances
+which it had made to the Catholic party. The French who surrounded the
+Queen were so numerous, that a strong feeling of opposition on
+religious and national grounds was awakened in them by their contact
+with the English character. They saw in the English nothing but
+heretics and apostates; the Catholics who had formerly been executed
+at Tyburn as rebels they honoured as martyrs. The Queen herself, upon
+whom her priests laid all kinds of penance corresponding to her
+dignity, was once induced to take part in a procession to this place
+of execution. It is conceivable how deeply wounded and irritated the
+English must have felt at these odious demonstrations. To the King it
+seemed insufferable that the household of his consort should take up a
+position of open hostility to the ecclesiastical laws of the land.
+Personally also he felt injured and affronted. We hear complaints from
+him that he was robbed of his sleep at night by these demonstrations.
+He quickly and properly resolved to rid himself once for all of these
+refractory people, whatever might be the consequence. The Queen's
+court was then refusing to admit into it the English ladies whom he
+had appointed to attend on her. The King seized the opportunity: he
+invited his wife to dine with him, for they still had separate
+households; and after dinner he made her understand by degrees that he
+could no longer put up with this exhibition of feeling on the part of
+her retinue, but must send them all home again, priests and laymen,
+men and women alike.[463] This resolution was carried out in spite of
+all the resistance offered by those whom it affected. Only some few
+ladies and two priests of moderate views were left with the Queen; all
+the rest were shipped off to France. There they filled the court and
+the country with their complaints. Those about the Queen-mother
+assumed an air as if the most sacred agreements had been infringed,
+and any measure of retaliation was thought justifiable.
+
+Marshal Bassompierre indeed set out once more for England in order to
+bring about a reconciliation. Though ill received at first, he
+nevertheless won his way by his splendid appearance and by clever talk
+and moderation. In a preliminary agreement leave was given to the
+Queen to receive back a number of priests and some French ladies;[464]
+and Buckingham prepared to go to France to remove the obstacles still
+remaining. But meanwhile the feeling of estrangement at the French
+court had become still stronger. The agreement was not approved: and
+the court would not hear of a visit from Buckingham, as it was thought
+that he would be sure to use the opportunity afforded by his presence
+to stir up the Huguenots. Richelieu thought that the dispute with
+England had been provoked by his enemies in order to break up the
+friendly relations which he had established. But nevertheless he too
+did not wish to see Buckingham in France, for he feared that the
+English minister might side outright with his opponents.
+
+Personal considerations of many kinds co-operated in producing this
+result, but it was not due mainly to their influence. The religious
+sympathies and hatreds at work had incalculable effects. While the
+opposition between the two religions again awoke in all its strength,
+and a struggle for life and death was being fought out between them in
+Germany, an alliance could not well be maintained between two courts
+which professed opposite religious views. The current of the general
+tendencies of affairs has a power by which the best considered
+political combinations are swept into the background.
+
+The paramount importance of religious movements not only prevented a
+combination between France and England, but also brought both Catholic
+powers into closer agreement with one another, as soon as their
+immediate differences had been in some measure adjusted. Father
+Berulle had promoted the marriage of a French princess with the King
+of England in the hope of converting him; but now that he became
+conscious of his mistake, he lent his pen to a project for a common
+attack to be made by the Catholic powers upon England. The domestic
+dissensions in that country, which again aroused Catholic sympathies
+among a part of the population, appeared to favour such a project. An
+agreement on the subject was in treaty for some time. It was at last
+concluded and ratified in France in the form in which it was sent back
+from Spain.[465]
+
+Although it is not clear that people in England had authentic
+information of these negotiations, yet the advances made by the two
+courts to one another, which were visible to every one, could not but
+cause some anxiety in the third. The English were always anxiously
+considering what Philip IV might have in view for the next year; at
+times even in Charles' reign they feared another attack from the
+Belgian coast. What would happen if France lent her aid in such an
+enterprise? It was known at all events that the priests exhorted her
+to do so. That France and Spain should make a joint attack on England
+appeared to be most for the interest of the Catholic world.[466]
+
+Another ground for anxiety in England was from that resolution to
+revive the French naval power, which Richelieu had already taken in
+consequence of his late experiences. He bought ships of war, or had
+them built, and took foreign sailors into his service. Charles I
+perceived this with the greatest displeasure. He regarded it as a
+threat against England, for he thought that the French could have no
+other intention than that of robbing England of the supremacy that she
+had exercised from time immemorial over the sea which bears her name.
+He declared that he was resolved to prevent matters from going so far.
+
+A great effect was produced by a very definite misunderstanding which
+now arose between England and France, and affected naval interests as
+well as the question of religion.
+
+Of all the French Huguenots, who had been compelled by their last
+defeat to seek peace with the King, the citizens of Rochelle felt the
+blow most deeply. They had at that time been hemmed in on all sides,
+and were especially harassed by a fort erected in their neighbourhood.
+They had been assured that at the proper time they would be relieved
+of this annoyance. They had not an express and unequivocal promise;
+but the English ambassador, who had been invited to mediate, had
+guaranteed to them, after conference with the French ministry, such an
+interpretation of the expressions used as would secure the wished-for
+result.[467] But just the contrary took place: they were constantly
+being more closely shut in, and more seriously threatened with the
+loss of that measure of independence which they had hitherto enjoyed.
+They turned to Charles I. They would rather have acknowledged him as
+their sovereign than have submitted to such a loss, and he felt the
+full weight of his obligation to them. But, if he desired to grant
+them assistance, it could only be rendered by open war.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1627.]
+
+When the English resolved to undertake an expedition against the
+Island of Rhé, the prevention of the fall of Rochelle was not the
+only object in view. It was rather considered that nothing could be
+more desirable and advantageous than the command of this island in the
+event of a struggle with the two powers. For Biscay could be reached
+in a voyage of one night from thence, and the communication between
+the Netherlands and the harbours on the north-east coast of Spain
+could at any time be interrupted by the possessors of the island,
+which might be used at the same time for keeping up constant
+communication with the Huguenots, and for giving the French power
+employment at home.[468] The Huguenots had already taken up arms
+again, and Rochelle displayed the English banner on its walls. Charles
+I intended to use Rhé as a station for his fleet, but to cede the
+general sovereignty over it to Rochelle. A successful result here
+might serve to infuse new life into the Protestant cause.
+
+In order to achieve so great an end the King thought it admissible to
+levy a forced loan, and thus to collect those sums which Parliament
+had promised him by word of mouth, but had not yet formally granted.
+We shall have hereafter to consider the resistance which he
+encountered in this attempt, and the various arbitrary acts to which
+he resorted for its suppression; for they formed one of the turning
+points of his history. At first he actually succeeded so far, that a
+fleet of more than a hundred sail was able to put to sea for the
+attack of Rhé and the support of Rochelle. It was considered in
+raising this loan that a war with France had greater claims upon
+popular support than any other. In the present doubtful state of
+affairs a decided advantage gained in such a war might even now have
+exercised great influence upon the internal state of the kingdom.
+
+At this juncture Buckingham assumed a position of extraordinary
+importance. After the repeated failures of the Protestants, his
+undertaking aroused all their hopes. Directed against both the
+Catholic powers, it must, if successful, have directly benefited the
+French Protestants, and indirectly the German Protestants also by the
+effect which it would inevitably have produced. But it was besides one
+enterprise more undertaken by the sole power of the monarch: it was
+carried out independently of any Parliamentary grants properly so
+called. It represented the principle of a moderate monarchical
+Protestantism, combined with toleration for the native Catholics,
+among whom Buckingham endeavoured to find support. His was a position
+of which the occupant must either be a great man or perish.
+Buckingham, who had no equal in restless activity, and was by nature
+not devoid of adroitness and ability, nevertheless had not that
+persevering and comprehensive energy which is required for the
+performance of great actions. He had not gone through the school of
+those experiences in which minds ripen: and for the want of this
+training his native gifts were not sufficient to compensate. He was so
+far fortunate as to gain possession of the Island of Rhé; but Fort
+Martin, which had been erected there a short time before, and on which
+the possession of the island depended, defied his attacks, and he was
+not skilful enough to intercept the support which was thrown into the
+fort in the hour of its greatest danger. The defence of the French
+certainly showed greater perseverance than the attack of the English.
+Buckingham did not know how to awaken among his men that fiery
+devotion which shrinks from no obstacle, and which would have been
+necessary here. And the measures which were arranged at home were not
+so effective as to bring him at the right moment the reinforcement he
+needed. In November 1627 he returned to England without having
+effected his object. He left behind him the French Protestants, and
+Rochelle especially, in the greatest distress.
+
+Charles I had no intention of proving false to the promises which he
+had given them, any more than he wished to allow the King of Denmark
+to sink under his difficulties. But what means did he possess of
+bestowing help either on the former or on the latter?
+
+After the battle of Lutter he had told the Danish ambassador, that he
+would come to the assistance of his uncle, even if he should have to
+pawn his crown. How heavily his position weighed on him at that time!
+While he had undertaken the responsibility of contending for the
+greatest interests of the world, he was obliged to confess, and did so
+with tears in his eyes, that at present he hardly had at his disposal
+the means of defraying the necessary expenses of his daily life.
+
+The King of Denmark advised him to call Parliament together again, and
+make the needful concessions, in order to obtain such subsidies as
+would enable him to give vigorous support to his allies. Charles I in
+the first instance took umbrage at this, because it was good advice
+from an uncle and an elder, as if some blame were thereby cast on him:
+by degrees he became convinced of the necessity of this measure.
+
+It was quite evident from the events of the last few years that the
+King would not be able to maintain the position he had assumed,
+without active support from Parliament.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[460] Z. Pesaro, April 25, 1625: 'Che la conservatione della pace in
+Francia sara il fondamento del beneficio comune, che li rumori civili
+in quella natione sariano il solo remedio che Spagnoli procurano alli
+loro mali.'
+
+[461] 'That the King and all the rest were exceedingly glad of that
+relation which he made of the discontent and mutiny of his compagnie.'
+
+[462] M. A. Correro: 'Trattano di formar una compagnia per la quale
+possino con l'autorità del parlamente e privilegi reggi attaccare con
+una flotte il re di Spagna per dividere l'interesse della spesa e
+l'utile delli bottini e delli acquisti nelli compagni che ne averanno
+parte (27 Mayo 1626).'
+
+[463] Letter to Joseph Mead: Court and Times of Charles I, i. 134.
+
+[464] According to Ruszdorf, who was well acquainted with
+Bassompierre, the latter represented 'hoc facto regem obligatum nihil
+esse intermissurum, quod ad conservationem fortunae illius queat
+conducere.'
+
+[465] Siri, Memorie recondite vi. 261.
+
+[466] Letter to Joseph Mead, March 16, 1626: 'It still holds that both
+France and Spain make exceeding great preparations both for sea and
+land.--The priests of the Dunkirkers are said to preach that God had
+delivered us into their hands.' (Court and Times of Charles I, i.
+205).
+
+[467] I refer for the fuller explanation of these transactions to my
+History of the Popes and my French History. My meaning is very fully
+recognised in an essay in the Revue Germanique, Nov. 1859.
+
+[468] Beaulieu to Pickering. 'It lieth in the way to intercept the
+salt that cometh from Biscaje and serveth almost all France, and what
+so ever cometh out of the river of Bourdeaux: besides it commandeth
+the haven of Rochelle.' (Court and Times of Charles I, i. 257).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+PARLIAMENT OF 1628. PETITION OF RIGHT.
+
+
+In the heat of controversy about the supplies to be granted and the
+liberties to be confirmed by the King in return, it was once harshly
+said in the Lower House during this Parliament that it was better to
+be brought low by foreign enemies than to be obliged to suffer
+oppression at home. The King answered by saying no less abruptly that
+it was more honourable for the King to be straitened by the enemies of
+his country, than to be set at nought by his own subjects.
+
+So much more importance was attached by both sides to domestic than to
+foreign struggles. But after the last failure both parties had come to
+feel how much the honour of the country and religion itself suffered
+from their dissensions. Among the politicians of the time there was a
+school of learned men, who had studied the old constitution of the
+country, and wished for nothing more than its restoration. They were
+seriously bent on establishing an equilibrium between the royal
+prerogative and the rights of Parliament. Among them were found Edward
+Coke, John Selden, and John Glanvil; but Robert Cotton may be regarded
+as the most distinguished of them all, a man who had studied most
+deeply, and who combined with his studies an insight into the present
+that was unclouded by passion. To Cotton we owe a report presented by
+him to the Privy Council, in which he explains that the government
+should proceed on the old royal road of collecting taxes by grant of
+Parliament, and indeed should adopt no other method; while at the same
+time he expresses the conviction that Parliament would be satisfied,
+if its most pressing anxieties were dissipated. He says that he
+himself would not advise the King to sacrifice the First Minister, for
+that such a step had always had ruinous consequences: he thought
+moreover that the old passionate hostility against the Duke need not
+be feared, if he came forward himself as the man who had advised the
+King to reassemble Parliament.[469] We learn that the King did not
+determine to summon it, until the most prominent men had given him an
+assurance that Buckingham should not be attacked. Moderation in the
+attitude of Parliament, and security for the First Minister formed as
+it were the condition under which the Parliament of 1628 was
+summoned.[470]
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1628.]
+
+On March 22, five days after the beginning of the session, the
+deliberations of the Lower House were opened by the remark from the
+Speaker, that they must indeed grant subsidies to the King; but that
+at the same time they must maintain the undoubted rights of the
+country. Francis Seymour, who had now again been returned to
+Parliament, at once expressed himself to the same effect. While he
+acknowledged that every one must make sacrifices for king and country,
+he shewed at the same time that it was a sacred duty to cling to their
+ancestral laws. He proceeded to say that these laws had been
+transgressed, their liberties infringed, their own selves personally
+ill-treated, and their property, with which they might have supported
+the King, exhausted. He proposed therefore to secure the rights, laws,
+and liberties transmitted from their ancestors by means of a petition
+to the King.[471]
+
+Whatever be the tone of opposition which this language betrays, it
+fell far short of that adopted in the former Parliament. Men had come
+to an opinion that certainly no money should be granted unless
+securities could be obtained for their ancient liberties; but at the
+same time that the King should not be induced to grasp directly at
+absolute power, for that this would lead at once to a rebellion of
+uncertain issue.[472] Men were resolved to avoid questions which could
+rouse old passions. This time it was not insisted that the penal laws
+against the Catholics should be made more severe: Parliament waived
+its claim to alter the constitution of the Admiralty, and to appoint
+treasurers to manage the money granted to the King: it showed
+deference for the King, and said nothing of the Duke. But a commission
+was appointed to take into consideration the rights which subjects
+ought to have over their persons and property. Already on April 3
+resolutions were proposed to the House, by which it was intended that
+some of the most obnoxious grievances which had lately arisen should
+be made for ever impossible, such as the collection of taxes that had
+not been granted, and restraints imposed on personal liberty in
+consequence of refusal to pay.[473]
+
+Charles I also now took up this question. Through Coke his Secretary
+of State, who was also a member of the House, he issued an invitation
+to them not to allow themselves to be deterred by any anxiety about
+liberty or property from making those grants, on which, as he said,
+the welfare of Christendom depended; 'upon assurance,' Coke proceeds
+to add, 'that we shall enjoy our rights and liberties, with as much
+freedom and security in his time as in any age heretofore under the
+best of our kings; and whether you shall think fit to secure ourselves
+herein, by way of bill or otherwise, so as it be provided for with due
+respect to his honour and the publick good whereof he doubteth not
+that you will be careful, he promiseth and assureth you that he will
+give way to it.'
+
+This is indeed a very important message. The King approves of an
+inquiry into the violations of old English right and prescription,
+which had taken place in his reign. He consents that a bill to secure
+their observance should be drawn up, and gives hopes beforehand of its
+ratification. Charles I, like James, had constantly been anxious to
+prevent grants from being made dependent on conditions; but something
+very like this occurs when he backs his invitation to a speedy grant
+of subsidies by a promise to approve of the petition submitted to him
+for certain objects.
+
+On this five subsidies were without delay unanimously granted to the
+King, with the concurrence even of members like Pym, who
+systematically opposed him. It was now only necessary that both sides
+should agree on the enactments for doing away with the abuses which
+had been pointed out.
+
+The principal grievance arose from the conduct of the King, who in his
+embarrassments had imposed a forced loan at the rate fixed on the
+occasion of the last subsidies, and had sent commissioners into the
+counties in order to exact payment, just as if he had been armed with
+the authority of Parliament for this object. Many had submitted: but
+not a few others high and low had refused to pay, not from want of
+means but on principle. The King had thought this behaviour a proof of
+personal disaffection, and had had no hesitation in arresting those
+who refused: he had even taken steps to assert his right to do so as a
+matter of principle. Much notice was attracted at that time by a
+sermon preached by one Sibthorp, in which plenary legislative
+authority was ascribed to the King, and unconditional obedience was
+demanded for all his orders if they did not contradict the divine
+commands. Archbishop Abbot had steadfastly refused to allow the
+printing of this sermon, which he regarded as an attack upon the
+constitution: eighteen times in succession an intimate friend of the
+King went to him to urge him to give leave.[474] As the Archbishop
+refused to comply, he received orders to leave London, and was struck
+out of the High Commission: the sermon had been printed with the
+permission of another bishop. So earnestly bent was the King at that
+time on pressing his claim to override the necessity of a
+parliamentary grant in moments of emergency.
+
+He had now however retreated from this position. Abbot had obtained
+permission to resume his seat in the Upper House, and so had Lord
+Bristol. When, in consequence of the above-mentioned declaration in
+Parliament, a project was now decided on for securing the legal
+position of the subject, especially the rights of property and
+personal freedom, which had been infringed by the previous
+proceedings, the King expressed his agreement loudly, explicitly, and
+repeatedly; in general terms he gave up his claim ever to proceed
+again to a forced loan. No one was ever to be arrested again because
+he would not lend money; and in all other cases where arrest was
+necessary the customary forms were to be observed.
+
+At this point however another question arose touching the very essence
+of the supreme power. The Lower House was not yet content that an
+abuse like that which had occurred should be merely removed: it wished
+to destroy it at the root. It was not satisfied with the promise of
+the King that he would never in any case punish by arrest, unless he
+was convinced in his conscience of its necessity. They wished to put
+an end to this discretionary power itself, of which his ministers
+could avail themselves at pleasure. Parliament demanded that
+henceforth no one should be arrested without assignment of the reason
+and observance of the forms of law.
+
+This question led to a discussion of points of constitutional doctrine
+before the House of Lords, between the representatives of the Lower
+House and Sir Robert Heath, the Attorney General, in an argument which
+deserves our whole attention.
+
+The Lower House appealed to that article of Magna Charta, by which the
+arrest of free persons was forbidden except on the judgment of their
+peers, or according to the law of the land: and by the law of the land
+it understood the judicial process and its forms. Sir Robert Heath
+would not admit this interpretation. He thought that the expression in
+no way forbade the King to restrict the liberty of individuals in
+extraordinary cases for reasons of state; and that this restriction
+could not be avoided, when it was desired to trace out some conspiracy
+or treason. If the cause were to be assigned he thought that it must
+be the real cause, which could be proved before a tribunal; but how
+often cases arose of such a kind that arrest would have to be ordered
+under some other pretext, until the ring-leader could be laid hold of!
+It was very true, he said, that such a power might be seriously
+abused, but it was the same with all the rights of the prerogative:
+even the right of making war and peace, and the right of pardon might
+be abused, and yet no man wished to take these from the crown: it
+always was, and must always be presumed, that the King would not
+betray the confidence of God, who had placed him in his office.
+
+Not without good reason did Edward Coke call this the greatest
+question which had ever been argued in Westminster. It was proved to
+him that he himself as judge had followed the interpretation which he
+now condemned. He answered that he was not pope, and made no
+pretensions to infallibility. He now firmly maintained that the King
+had no such prerogative at all.
+
+We can see how opinion wavered from a speech of Sir Benjamin Rudyard,
+who maintains on the one hand that it is impossible to find laws
+beforehand for every case, but that a circle must be drawn within
+which the royal authority shall prevail; while on the other hand he
+lays emphasis also on the danger arising from the plea of mere reasons
+of state, which he said would only too easily come into conflict with
+the laws and with religion itself. The best arrangement according to
+him would be, if Parliament were held so often that the irregular
+power which could not be broken at once, might by degrees 'moulder
+away.' A copy of this speech with observations by Laud is extant in
+the archives. Laud calls attention to the contradiction which lies in
+first acknowledging the necessity of liberty of movement on the part
+of the government, and then notwithstanding considering it to be the
+destination of Parliament by degrees to absorb its power, as it was at
+present exercised.[475]
+
+And certainly it may have been the idea of the moderate members of
+the House of Commons, gradually to break up such a power as that
+exercised by the minister and favourite, by coming to a better
+understanding with the King, and at the same time by strictly limiting
+his arbitrary authority.
+
+The impression however gained ground that even the indispensable
+functions of the supreme authority would be restricted by the
+enactments proposed. The right of arresting persons dangerous and
+troublesome to the government was just then exercised in France to the
+widest extent; Cardinal Richelieu could never have maintained himself
+but for his quick and energetic use of it. In all other states, as
+well republican as monarchical, it was a weapon with which the
+government thought that it could not dispense. Was it to be dropped in
+England alone? And that too at a moment when the opposition of
+factions was constantly becoming more active? In fact the impression
+spread that Parliament, not content with full promises from the King,
+while it checked abuses, was impairing his authority.
+
+In the Upper House, where there was a strong party in favour of the
+King's prerogative, these and similar considerations influenced votes.
+Men were agreed that abuses like those which had occurred must be for
+ever put a stop to. Even the proposals introduced for securing
+individual freedom were not properly speaking rejected: but it was
+desired to limit them by a clause to the effect that the sovereign
+power with which the King was entrusted should remain in his hands
+undiminished for the protection of his people. The Lower House however
+would not accept any such addition: for the provisions of the Petition
+would thus be rendered useless. They foresaw that what those
+provisions forbade would pass as lawful in virtue of the plenitude of
+the sovereign power: yet the expression 'sovereign power' was unknown
+in the English Parliament: that body was familiar only with the
+prerogative of the King, which at the same time was embodied in the
+laws. The Upper House on this declared that it did not think of
+departing from the Oath by which each one of them was pledged to
+maintain the prerogative of the King. Even in the Lower House the
+members were reminded of this, and no one raised his voice against
+it; for who would have been willing to confess that he was
+withstanding the lawful prerogative of the King? The only question was
+as to its extent.
+
+This question now presented itself to the King himself. Was he to
+accept the proposal of the Commons, and to content himself with a
+general reservation of his prerogative? It is very instructive, and
+forms one of the most important steps in his career, that he thought
+it advisable to inform himself first of all what rights in this matter
+he really possessed.
+
+On the 26th of May, just when the heat of the quarrel was most
+intense, he summoned the two Chief Justices, Hyde and Richardson, to
+Whitehall, and submitted to them the question whether or not he had
+the right of ordering the arrest of his subjects without specifying
+the reason at the same time. On this the Judges were assembled by
+their two chiefs in the profoundest secrecy, to pronounce on the
+question. They decided that it certainly was the rule to specify the
+reasons; but that there might be cases in which the secrecy required
+made it necessary for some time to withhold them. A further question
+was then followed by a decision of the same import, that the judges in
+such a case were not bound to give up the prisoner even if a writ of
+habeas corpus were presented. Charles then proceeded to a third
+question, to which no doubt he attached the most importance. If he
+accepted the petition of the Commons, did he surrender for ever the
+right of ordering imprisonment without assigning a cause? The judges
+assembled again, and on the 31st of May, after deliberating together,
+they gave in their answer, signed with their names. Every law, they
+said, had its own interpretation; and so must this petition: and the
+answer must always depend upon the circumstances of the case in
+question, which could not be determined until the case arose; but the
+King certainly did not give up his right beforehand by granting the
+petition.[476]
+
+At a later time and in another epoch these questions were finally
+settled in a different way. The Judges of this time decided them in
+favour of the power of the time. If we might apply a parallel, though
+certainly one borrowed from a very different form of government, we
+might say that the fettah of men learned in the law, the sentence of
+the mufti, was in favour of the King. In this, as in other respects, a
+difference is found to exist between the constitutions of the East and
+those of the West: such a sentence in the West does not finally decide
+a case; but even here, nevertheless, it always carries great weight.
+Charles I felt that according to the existing state of the law, he did
+not exceed his rights by maintaining the prerogative which he had
+hitherto exercised. The last decision raised him even above the
+apprehension of losing it by acceding to a petition which was opposed
+to it.
+
+He could not however resolve on this step without further
+consideration.
+
+To accede to the petition, and at the same time to reserve in his own
+favour the declaration made by the Judges, was an act of duplicity,
+which he wished to escape by giving an assurance couched in general
+terms.
+
+On the 2nd of June he came down to the House in full assembly, and had
+his answer read. Its tenor was, that the laws should be observed and
+the statutes put in force, and his subjects freed from oppression;
+that he the King was as anxious for their true rights and liberties as
+for his own prerogative.
+
+But it is easily intelligible that these words satisfied no one. They
+appeared to one party as dark as the sentence of an oracle; to the
+other they appeared useless; for the King, they said, was already
+pledged to all this by his Coronation Oath: such long sittings and so
+much labour would not have been required to effect such a result as
+this. The answer however was not ascribed to the King, whose
+deliberations remained shrouded in the closest secrecy, and who on the
+contrary was thought to agree with the substance of the petition, but
+to the favourite, who was supposed to find such an agreement dangerous
+for himself.[477] It was remarked that two days before making this
+declaration the King had been at one of the country seats of the
+Duke, and had held confidential conversations with him. It was thought
+that there, under the influence of the Duke, the declaration had been
+drawn up, which contained nothing but words that might easily be
+explained in another sense, and which did not even make any mention of
+the petition at all. It was fancied that Buckingham even wished to
+hinder the King from coming to a genuine understanding with his
+Parliament, which might be disadvantageous to his interests.[478] His
+opponents thought that he was at the root of all previous misfortunes;
+and what might they not still expect from him? He was credited with
+wishing to alter the constitution of England, to excite a war with
+Scotland, and to betray Ireland to the Spaniards. In spite of all that
+the King might have originally expected, they determined to make a
+direct attack upon such a minister. Popular susceptibility knows no
+limits in its anxieties or hopes, in its likings or hatreds. Even
+thoughtful and serious men allowed themselves to entertain the opinion
+that the prosperity of England at home and abroad was as good as lost:
+the former was lost if people were content with the answer given, the
+latter if they refused to make the grants demanded, or even if they
+made them but left the administration in those untrustworthy hands in
+which it was at the present time. On one occasion these feelings gave
+rise to an unparalleled scene in Parliament. Those bearded and sedate
+men wept and cursed. They feared for their country, and each one
+feared for himself, if they did not get rid of the man who possessed
+power, while on the other hand it seemed to them impossible to do so.
+Some could not speak for tears: violent exclamations against the Duke
+prevented the continuance of the debate. But not only were complaints
+heard: the expression was also heard, that men had still hands and
+swords, and could get rid of the enemy of King and country by his
+death. They proceeded at last to deliberate on a protestation which
+was resolved on after that debate, and they had gone so far as to name
+the Duke, and to declare him a traitor, when the Speaker who had
+quitted the House came in again, and brought a message from the King,
+by which the sitting was adjourned to the following day.
+
+No course seemed to be left for Charles I but to dissolve this
+Parliament immediately as he had dissolved its predecessor. But what
+would then have become of the grant of money, which was every day more
+urgently needed? Like the Petition, it would have fallen to the
+ground.
+
+Before the end of the same day, June 5, a meeting of the Privy Council
+was held, in which it was resolved to calm the agitation by accepting
+the Petition of Right. We do not learn if on that occasion the
+scruples of the King were discussed or not; but as his questions to
+the judges already betrayed his inclination to such a course, so now
+he actually resolved to plunge into the contradiction which he had
+wished to avoid, and accept the Petition while at the same time, in
+accordance with the sentence of the Judges, he would reserve for
+himself the future exercise of the right therein denied.
+
+On June 7 the King appeared in the Upper House, where the Commons also
+were assembled. The Lords were in their robes, and the King sat upon
+his throne while the Petition of Right was read. It was directed
+against some temporary grievances, such as forced billeting and the
+application of martial law in time of peace, but principally against
+the exaction of forced loans, or taxes which had not been granted, and
+against the imprisonments which had been so much talked of. The King,
+as had been desired, uttered the formula of assent used by his Norman
+ancestors. His words were greeted with clapping of hands and
+acclamations. The King added that he had meant just as much by his
+first declaration; indeed he knew well that it was not the intention
+of Parliament, nor even in its power, to limit his prerogative: for
+that this would be strengthened by the liberties of the people, and
+consisted in defending those liberties.[479]
+
+The excitement of the House was taken up by the city. The bells were
+rung, and bonfires were kindled; and a rumour obtained credence that
+the Duke of Buckingham himself had fallen, and was expecting his
+reward on the scaffold. Of what an illusion were men the victims! The
+King clung to Buckingham as firmly as ever: in granting the Petition
+he did not mean to surrender a jot of his lawful prerogative. We have
+seen what he thought of his right to make arrests. In resigning his
+claim to levy taxes that had not been granted by Parliament he did not
+mean to be restricted in his claim to tonnage and poundage, for he
+thought that, unless these were collected, the administration of the
+State could not be carried on at all, and in the late controversies
+his right to them had not come under discussion. Some of the higher
+officials, the Recorder and the Solicitor General, confirmed the King
+in this view: and to many of his opponents in Parliament it was
+pointed out that they had previously entertained the same opinion.
+
+The Lower House on its part allowed the bill, by which the grant was
+made, to pass the last stage; but it could not be moved by advice or
+warning to desist from the great Remonstrance, in the composition of
+which the House had been interrupted. In this, mention was made of the
+Arminian opinions which were now making way in England, and which
+appeared to Parliament to involve a tendency in the direction of
+Romanism: but it complained principally of the connivance, which in
+spite of all ordinances was still constantly extended to the
+recusants, so that Catholicism, especially in Ireland, had the fullest
+scope. And the State, it was said, was in just the same plight as
+religion. The government was introducing foreign soldiers, especially
+German troopers, and was meditating the imposition of new taxes in
+order to pay them. In the midst of peace a general was commanding in
+the country. Trustworthy men were being dismissed from their offices;
+Parliament and its rights were contemned: was it intended to 'change
+the frame both of religion and government?'[480] But the source of all
+evil was the Duke of Buckingham. The remonstrants begged the King to
+consider whether it was advisable for himself and for his kingdom to
+allow him to continue in his high offices, and to keep him among his
+confidential advisers.[481]
+
+As we gather, the Lower House attached weight to the circumstance that
+it did not raise a complaint, nor even strictly speaking a protest,
+against the continuance of Buckingham's authority, but simply
+preferred a request that the position of affairs should be taken into
+consideration. But the King was greatly offended even at this. He
+replied that he had hitherto always believed that the members of the
+Lower House understood nothing about the affairs of State, and that he
+was now greatly strengthened in his opinion by the purport of this
+representation.[482] Buckingham prayed the King to cause unsparing
+investigation into the charges raised against him to be made, for that
+such a proceeding would bring his innocence to light. The King offered
+him his hand to kiss, and addressed to him some friendly expressions.
+But the Lower House was incensed afresh at the bad success of its
+representation, and proceeded to adopt an express remonstrance on the
+subject of tonnage and poundage. In order to save himself from again
+receiving such an address, the King declared Parliament to be
+prorogued on June 20.
+
+Although it was assumed just at that time that a genuine understanding
+between the Crown and the Parliament had been brought about in this
+session, yet this assumption is certainly a mistake. At the beginning
+of the session suspicious controversies were intentionally avoided. A
+basis was obtained upon which union between the two parties seamed
+possible: the great Petition of Right was drawn up, on the whole in
+concert with the government. When it was discussed however, a demand
+was set up affecting rights which the King would not forego. He
+surrendered them in his eagerness to obtain the proceeds of the grants
+made to him, but not without secretly reserving his rights in his own
+favour. Then other old differences also came to light again in their
+full strength. An open disagreement broke out: in haste and with
+tempers irritated the two parties separated.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[469] The Danger wherein the Kingdom now standeth and the Remedy,
+written by Sir Robert Cotton. Jan. 1627-8.
+
+[470] Aluise Contarini, Feb. 10, 1628: 'La deliberatione di convocare
+il parlamente è nata--dalle promesse, che hanno fatte molti grandi,
+che non si parlera del duca.'
+
+[471] 'Those rights, laws, and liberties, which our wise ancestors
+have left us.' So run the words in the draught of the speech contained
+in a memorandum in the St. P. O. under the title, 'Speeches of some in
+the Lower House, March 22, 1628.' In Rushworth and in both
+Parliamentary Histories two reports are given which differ from one
+another.
+
+[472] 'Assoluto dominio destruttivo dei parlamenti con azzardo di
+sollevatione.'
+
+[473] 'To draw the heads of our grievances into a petition, which we
+will humbly, soberly, and speedily address unto His Majesty whereby we
+may be secured.'
+
+[474] Abbot's Narration, in Rushworth i. 459.
+
+[475] 'The end is, to make the other power, which he calls irregular
+moulder away.' (St. P. O.) In Bruce's Calendar, 1628-9, p. 92, more
+particular reference is made to this document.
+
+[476] Memorandum of Nicholas Hyde, Chief Justice of the King's Bench,
+in Ellis's Letters, ii. iii. 250.
+
+[477] Nethersole writes to the Queen of Bohemia as early as in April:
+'the duke can neither subdue this parliament, neither by fear nor
+favour,--is almost out of his senses to find that it gained credit
+with His Majesty.' (St. P. O.)
+
+[478] Al. Contarini, 17 Giugno: 'Attribuendone la cagione al duca per
+i suoi interessi di voler il re padrone disgionto dai popoli unito
+solo con lui, et per le pratiche di Spagnoli guidati in generale da
+cattolici et in particolare da Gesuiti che praticano quella cosa.'
+
+[479] Parliamentary History viii. 202.
+
+[480] Parliamentary History viii. 227.
+
+[481] Ruszdorf ii. 547.
+
+[482] Al. Contarini: 'Che sempre suppose ne havessero poca cognitione,
+ma che adesso credeva, che non havessero niente affatto.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ASSASSINATION OF BUCKINGHAM. SESSION OF 1629.
+
+
+For some years nothing had surprised foreigners who came to England so
+much as the wide severance between the government and the nation. Upon
+the one side they saw the King, the favourite, and his adherents; upon
+the other every one else. The King had lost much of the popularity
+which he had enjoyed when he ascended the throne; but a genuine hatred
+was directed against the arbitrary government of the Duke. Although it
+had been repressed out of regard to the King, it had again broken
+loose: the less practical result it produced, the more it filled all
+hearts.
+
+Burdened with this hatred, and with the ground shaking under him,
+Buckingham was nevertheless revolving the largest enterprises in his
+brain. He repelled with scorn the charge of still keeping up an
+intercourse with Spain; that was contrary to his obligations to the
+Protestants. He himself, so he said, had concluded the alliances
+between England and Denmark and the States-General; and he wished also
+to abide by them. Without doubt overtures had been made on the part of
+Spain, and had been responded to on the part of England; but their
+relations had in fact been such as had led to no result. On the
+contrary, negotiations with France, which certainly offered some
+prospect of success, had been opened through the mediation of the
+Venetian ambassadors resident at the two courts. The English were
+ready to waive all other points at issue if the other side would
+resolve to show some indulgence, especially if they would conclude
+some tolerable arrangement with Rochelle. The forces of both powers
+would then undertake the war against the Spanish monarchy, and
+against the advance of the Emperor in Germany. The French army would
+turn its steps to Italy; the English fleet would go to the aid of the
+Danes: it was expected that these attacks would exert an enormous
+influence in all directions.[483] Buckingham was still engrossed with
+designs against Spain, in spite of secret but only pretended overtures
+to that power. He intended to attack the Spanish monarchy at the
+source of its greatness, in the West Indies; and by a combination of
+forces on the Continent to wrest the Palatinate from it, and thereby
+to destroy the position which it had won on the Middle Rhine. A
+strange ambition, although in keeping with the age and with his
+personal character, appears to have been connected with this design.
+It had entered into his head to marry his daughter to the Electoral
+Prince Palatine, and perhaps to give his daughter the appearance of a
+higher rank by getting himself declared independent prince of some
+West Indian conquest--Jamaica had attracted his ambition[484]:--a hope
+not altogether chimerical; for he was still all-powerful with Charles.
+Foreigners were astonished that he undertook the most extensive
+negotiations before he had given his sovereign notice of them. Not
+unlike James I he cherished the hope that the threatening attitude
+which he took up, even if he did not strike a blow, would dispose the
+French to make concessions and would restore the former understanding
+between them. If this were not the case, he was determined to
+undertake the relief of Rochelle with all his energies.
+
+The condition of the English navy was such that he might reasonably
+promise himself success. We have credible information according to
+which Buckingham had made it half as large again as it had been in the
+time of Elizabeth. He had increased it from 14,000 tons burden to
+22,000: he had put the dockyards and magazines at Chatham, Deptford,
+Woolwich, and Portsmouth into good repair; and a number of large
+vessels had been built under his orders. Already in May an English
+squadron had made an attempt to relieve Rochelle: but the commanders
+on that occasion would not undertake the responsibility of exposing
+the ships entrusted to them, to the great danger which threatened them
+if they made the attempt: they were apprehensive of being called to
+account. Buckingham was not fettered by considerations of this kind.
+He had had engines of extraordinary dimensions constructed, which it
+was expected would rend with irresistible power the mole in front of
+the harbour, by which Rochelle was cut off.[485] And who shall say
+that success would have been impossible?
+
+Buckingham felt the hatred which men entertained towards him, but
+thought that he should still turn it into admiration. He wished to
+atone for the faults of his youth, and, as he said, to enter on new
+paths traced on the lines of the ancient maxims and ancient policy of
+England, in order to bring back better days.[486] He had to a certain
+extent made himself the centre of Protestant interests. Every one
+expected that he would proceed without delay to the relief of
+Rochelle, for which all preparations had been made. The destinies of
+the world seemed to hang upon his resolutions. And he had just
+received better tidings from that town: no one had ever seen him
+fuller of strength and energy. At this culminating point of his life
+he was smitten by a sudden and horrible death. As he stepped out of
+the dressing-room in his lodging at Portsmouth, and was crossing the
+hall, in order to mount his carriage and drive to the King, he was
+murdered by a stroke from a dagger.
+
+The murderer might easily have escaped, for the house was full of men,
+among them many Frenchmen, on whom the first suspicion fell. While all
+were crying out for the villain who had murdered the Duke, the
+murderer said, 'No villain did it, but an honourable man. I am the
+man.' Men saw before them a lean man with red hair, and dark
+melancholy features. His name was Felton: he had served in the last
+maritime expeditions, and had formerly been passed over when there was
+a vacancy for promotion. He could not endure to be placed below men
+who had never borne arms, merely because they were in the Duke's
+favour. The strongest impression had been produced on him by the
+Remonstrance,[487] which censured similar transactions, and at the
+same time represented the Duke as the enemy of religion and his
+country. Felton was one of these men, who from the way in which they
+combine religious and political opinions are capable of anything. In
+this respect he may be compared with the assassins of William of
+Orange, Henry III, and Henry IV; except that he came forward in behalf
+of the opposite side, and in his case there is no mention of any
+participation of a minister of religion. A paper was found on him in
+which he pronounced that man cowardly and base who was not ready to
+sacrifice his life for the cause of his God, his king, and his
+country. In his lodging there was another, on which he had put down
+some principles, which he seemed to have drawn from one or two books,
+and which make his intentions somewhat clearer. It is there said that
+a man has no relations which place him under greater obligations than
+those which he has with his country; that the welfare of the people is
+the highest law, and that 'God himself has enacted this law, that
+whatsoever is for the profit or benefit of the commonwealth should be
+accounted to be lawful.'[488] He was believed, and rightly, when he
+affirmed that he had no accomplices: the slight put upon him, he said,
+had inspired him with the thought, the Remonstrance had strengthened
+him in it: 'On my soul,' he repeated, 'nothing but the Remonstrance.
+He thought that he might remove the man out of the way who obstructed
+the public welfare. And he looked with some feeling of sarcasm at
+those who testified their horror of him when he was led by: 'In your
+hearts,' he cried out, 'you rejoice in my deed.' There were some in
+fact who really displayed such a feeling: the crews, who had once
+already wished to mutiny, disguised their sentiments least; over their
+beer and pipes they gave the assassin a cheer. Others lamented most
+that an Englishman should have been capable of assassination. Felton
+himself was afterwards convinced that his principles were false. He
+was told that a man had other still nearer and deeper obligations to
+God, and to his own soul, than to his country; that no one should do
+the smallest evil for the sake of the greatest good,[489] much less
+then a monstrous crime like his in behalf of a cause which to his
+blinded eyes appeared good. He at last thanked his instructors for
+their lesson, and only asked in mercy to be allowed before his
+execution to do penance in sackcloth with ashes on his head, and a
+cord round his neck, in presence of all the world.
+
+In public King Charles never lost his calmness of demeanour for a
+moment. He appeared to accept the event as a dispensation of Heaven;
+but afterwards he shut himself up for two whole days, and gave way to
+his sorrow.
+
+The expedition against Rochelle now put to sea under the command of
+the Earl of Lindsay. But the captains did not properly obey their
+chief: orders which had been planned and issued remained unexecuted:
+the fire-ships, which were intended to break through the defences of
+the enemy, were ill-managed. The intention was then formed of waiting
+for a higher tide, in order to attempt another attack; but meanwhile
+the very last resources of the town were exhausted, and it found
+itself obliged to capitulate. England's position in the world was
+immeasurably lowered when Rochelle was conquered by Richelieu. What
+further schemes of maritime supremacy had Buckingham latterly
+connected with the maintenance of this town! The ideas of Buckingham
+vanished as completely as if they had never been: the ideas of
+Richelieu became the foundation of a new order in the world.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1629.]
+
+Krempe also fell, which had hitherto been deemed impregnable, the spot
+which, with Gluckstadt, was still the principal stay of Danish
+independence, and to which Buckingham's attention had been constantly
+directed. It is thought that about 8000 men would have sufficed to
+relieve it, but as they were not forthcoming, the fortress fell into
+the hands of the enemy in November 1628.
+
+And Charles I, instead of placing himself in a position to repair
+these losses of his allies, embarked on a new domestic quarrel with
+the Parliament.
+
+As the customs had not been fixed by the advice of Parliament, and
+tonnage and poundage had not been regularly granted at all, some
+London merchants had refused to satisfy the Custom House. On this the
+Lords of the Treasury laid their property under seizure. Of course the
+persons affected declared this proceeding also illegal, and filled the
+country with their complaints. On this occasion it was not, as almost
+always hitherto, the want of an immediate subsidy, but the necessity
+of removing this constitutional difficulty, which caused Parliament to
+be assembled in January 1629. People might flatter themselves that
+after the death of Buckingham, who had been the object of the
+principal hostility of that body, an agreement would be more easily
+effected.
+
+The plan drawn up by the Privy Council was in the first instance of a
+conciliatory nature. The right of granting money in general was to be
+acknowledged, even in the case of tonnage and poundage: the levying of
+this tax up to the present time, however, was to be justified, on the
+ground that other kings had collected it before it had been granted.
+If Parliament, after this general acknowledgement of its right, should
+still persist in refusing the present King what former kings had
+enjoyed, he would be exculpated: not the government, but Parliament
+would in that case have to bear the blame of the breach which would
+arise in consequence.[490]
+
+This was the tenor of the King's speech at the opening of the
+discussion on January 23, 1629. He asked for tonnage and poundage,
+less on the strength of his hereditary right to it, than on the plea
+of custom and necessity. He would always consider it as a gift of his
+people; but after their scruples had been removed by this declaration,
+he expected that an end would be put to all difficulties by a grant
+such as had been made to his ancestors. It was offensive to him that
+any one contested his title to a tax, without which his state could
+not be kept up. In the assembled Privy Council he declared that a
+temporary grant was derogatory to his honour. He said that he would no
+longer live from hand to mouth: he had as little disposition to suffer
+from want, or to allow the privileges of his crown to be wrested from
+him, as he had had thought of infringing the liberties of his
+people.[491] Secretary Coke, a member of the House, brought in the
+requisite bill without delay, and proposed the first reading.
+
+The assembly, however, consisted of the very men who had thought that
+through the Petition of Right they had set up a fundamental law for
+ever, but had since then become conscious how little they had effected
+by that means.
+
+An unpleasant impression had already been made on them by the printing
+of the Petition of Right without the expression of simple approval,
+but with the restrictive declarations which the King had at first
+made.[492] But besides this it was seen how little the King intended
+to be bound to the literal meaning of his words, for arrests without
+definite assignment of the reason had again taken place. The Star
+Chamber, which was already regarded as a court of doubtful legality,
+had imposed harsh and arbitrary penalties which awakened loud murmurs.
+The political opinions of one or two clergymen had caused general
+agitation. A preacher named Roger Manwaring gave utterance to extreme
+Royalist views. He defended forced loans, and contested the
+unconditional right of Parliament to grant taxes. From some passages
+of Scripture he deduced the absolute power of the sovereign, so that
+properly speaking no contract at all could, in his opinion, be made
+between king and people.[493] Parliament had called him to account for
+this, and had punished him by fine and suspension; but the King
+remitted the sentence. Another clergyman of kindred views, Montague,
+whom we have already mentioned, had been advanced by the King to the
+bishopric of Chichester, though, as deserves to be noticed, not
+without encountering opposition. For at the elections the old forms
+were still observed. Before the commissary of the Archbishop confirmed
+the election, which had taken place at the King's commands, he invited
+those present, if they knew anything in the life and conduct of the
+bishop-elect which could hinder his confirmation, to declare it. What
+had never been done on any other occasion was done then. An objection
+against Montague was presented in writing on the ground that doctrines
+occurred in his books which were irreconcilable with the existing
+institutions of England. The matter was brought before a court of
+justice, which, however, dismissed the objection as proceeding from a
+man who did not belong to the diocese of Chichester. The royal
+confirmation had then followed.[494] But must it not have been
+irritating to Parliament that the very men were promoted about whom it
+had complained? Its complaints seemed rather to serve as a
+recommendation.
+
+Besides this a Jesuit institution had been discovered in the immediate
+neighbourhood of London, and had then not been prosecuted with all the
+severity which Parliament thought requisite. People complained that
+the number of Papists was increasing every day; that in the counties,
+where before there had been none, they were now reckoned by thousands.
+Mainly at the instigation of Sir John Eliot, the Lower House issued a
+declaration, that it desired to hold the Articles of the English
+Church in the sense in which they were understood by the writers,
+whose authority was recognised in that Church, and not in the sense of
+the Jesuits and Arminians, which was repudiated.
+
+The question of tonnage and poundage came before the House while it
+was labouring under the irritation kindled by this discussion. What
+the government desired, the establishment of this tax on a legal
+footing, was also the wish of Parliament; but Parliament wished the
+matter to be settled in a way different from that intended by the
+King. Parliament desired to make the right of granting taxes a genuine
+reality, and henceforward to fix the duties in detail. The first
+reading of the bill brought forward by the government was rejected, on
+the formal ground that tonnage and poundage were subsidies, for
+granting which a resolution must be taken before a bill on the subject
+could be brought in.[495] Parliament espoused the cause of the London
+merchants, who had certainly suffered in support of its claims, and
+demanded that the proceedings of the Treasury should be reversed. For
+they maintained that the collection of tonnage and poundage was as
+much a breach of the fundamental principles of the realm, as the
+raising of any other tax that had not been granted would be. Or could
+any one, they asked, grant what he did not possess? If tonnage and
+poundage already belonged to the King, he did not need to have it
+granted him. The arrangement proposed by the government was rejected
+altogether: and everything else which was inconsistent with the
+literal meaning of the petition was also declared illegal.
+
+The King was incensed at the political, as well as at the religious
+attitude of the Lower House. A treatise in his own handwriting is
+extant, in which he expresses himself on the latter subject. 'You take
+to yourselfs,' he says, 'the interpretation of articles of religion,
+the deciding of which in doctrinal points only appartaines to the
+clergy and convocation.'[496] He added that His Majesty--for he loved
+to speak of himself in the third person--had a short time before
+announced his intention of maintaining the integrity of the religion
+of the English Church, and its unity, and that after much reflection,
+in agreement with the Privy Council and with the bishops: that as the
+Commons had the same object in view, he was surprised that they were
+not content with this announcement, and that they did not at all
+events state wherein the King's declaration did not content them: for
+that the King was the supreme governor of the English Church after
+God.
+
+At this very time an order was issued to the Treasury, and to the
+collectors of customs at the ports that tonnage and poundage should be
+henceforth levied, just as it had been in the latter years of James I;
+and that every one who refused payment should be punished.
+
+In this way the King embarked afresh on a course of the most
+unequivocal hostility towards his Parliament. But that body did not
+intend to give way. It would not be deterred from drawing up a fresh
+remonstrance, in which it made use of the strongest expressions to
+give point to its claims. In this it was said, that whoever furthered
+Popery or Arminianism, whoever collected or helped to collect tonnage
+and poundage before it was granted, or who even paid it, the same was
+an enemy of the English realm and of English liberty. This was a
+strange combination of ecclesiastical and financial grievances and
+pretensions. But the course of the transactions had established an
+intimate relation between them. In regard to both the Commons again
+took up as hostile an attitude towards the ministers of that day, as
+they had formerly taken up towards the Duke of Buckingham. The Lord
+Treasurer Weston was the special object of their hatred on both
+accounts. For it was said that he was a rebellious Papist--nay even a
+Jesuit:--did not his nearest kinsmen belong to that order?--and that
+he was now giving the King pernicious advice, hostile to the rights of
+the country and the dignity of Parliament. Proceeding on the principle
+that the collection of tonnage and poundage was a breach of the
+constitution, preparations were made for calling to account the
+officers engaged in this process. Nor would men have been content to
+stop at the subordinates; they would have reached even the highest.
+
+In this session the moderation which had been for some time exhibited
+in the former dropped out of sight: the contempt shown to the Petition
+of Right had called forth a spirit of bitter, violent, and unbounded
+opposition. When the King, in order to prevent the formal passing of
+the Remonstrance, proceeded in the first instance to have the session
+adjourned, a scene of tumult and violence was witnessed, to which the
+annals of former Parliaments offered no parallel.
+
+The Speaker of the House, Sir John Finch, one of those men who had
+passed over from the side of the Commons to that of the King,
+announced to the assembled members after the opening of the sitting on
+the 2nd of March, that the King adjourned the House till the 10th. But
+this was the very hour when Sir John Eliot, who had drawn up the new
+Remonstrance had with his friends intended to carry it through
+Parliament. The House declared it illegal for the Speaker to make
+himself the mouthpiece of the royal will: and when he tried to
+withdraw, he was held on his chair by a couple of strong and resolute
+members. The Usher of the Black Rod, whose business it was to declare
+the House adjourned, had already appeared in the ante-room; but the
+doors of the hall were shut. In this tumult the Remonstrance had to be
+read and voted on. The Speaker refused to have anything to do with it,
+although it was declared 'to be his duty to put it to the vote. Sir
+John Eliot and Denzil Holles must have delivered the sense of the
+Remonstrance orally, rather than read it properly through: but even in
+this fashion the majority of the House made known their assent, and in
+this way the immediate object was attained, as well as the
+circumstances allowed. On a threat that the doors should be broken
+through, they were now opened, and the members left the chamber.[497]
+
+An extraordinary act of disobedience, considering that it was intended
+to be the means of securing the legal forms of Parliament! It was the
+last step in this stage of the proceedings. It involved an open breach
+between the two authorities.
+
+In later times the responsibility for this act has been thrown on the
+King. Contemporaries of moderate views, and who favoured the
+Parliament, were of opinion however that the responsibility rather lay
+with those fiery and crafty men who had possessed themselves of the
+control of Parliament. For they thought that the King had seriously
+striven to compose the quarrel: that people might well have accepted
+his first declaration, and that the greater part of the members had
+been inclined to do so; but that the seeming zeal of some few for the
+liberties of the country had, unfortunately for England, prevented
+them from yielding.[498] It is difficult to suppose that the strength
+and depth of the opposition would any longer have permitted an
+adjustment. It was now fully apparent at all events that the King and
+the Lower House could no longer work together.
+
+In the Privy Council the opinion was once more expressed, that
+Parliament should be treated with indulgence. This was the wish of the
+Lord Keeper Coventry: but the Treasurer recommended the strict
+enforcement of the prerogative, and the King sided with this view. Not
+only was the dissolution of Parliament pronounced, but just as Henry
+VIII and Elizabeth had done, Charles I proceeded to punish the members
+who had offended against his dignity in their speeches. He first of
+all decided not to call Parliament together again. He declared that he
+had now abundantly proved that he loved to rule by the help of
+Parliament; that he had been compelled against his wish by the last
+proceedings to desist from the attempt, and that he would not renew it
+until his people had learnt to know him better. He said that he should
+consider it presumption if any time were prescribed to him for
+reassembling Parliament; that Parliament ought to be summoned, held,
+and dissolved, solely at the discretion of the King.
+
+The great advantage of Parliament in this conflict consisted in its
+ability to appeal to legal precedents of past centuries in its favour.
+What had once rendered the continuance of the ascendancy of
+Parliament impossible, the danger into which it had plunged the common
+interests of the kingdom, was now forgotten. The laws of those times
+had not been repealed, but had only been modified and curtailed in its
+own favour by the sovereign power, which had grown strong since that
+time. Every position, new or unusual at the moment, which Parliament
+maintained was, if not laid down in former ordinances, yet at all
+events so logically inferred from them, that it appeared customary and
+in accordance with primitive law. If on the contrary Charles I
+maintained the prerogative which his father had exercised, and which
+Queen Elizabeth and the House of Tudor in general had possessed, he
+was placed in the awkward position of appearing to act without the
+countenance of the laws. He now resolved to govern, at least for a
+time, without the aid of Parliament. Many of his ancestors had done
+exactly the same; but since their time attachment to parliamentary
+government had become part of the national feeling. It now appeared
+not only to represent fully the liberties, but also especially the
+most popular religious tendencies of the country.
+
+Whether under these circumstances the King would have succeeded in
+giving effect to his ideas, even if more peaceful times had ensued,
+was from the beginning extremely doubtful.[499]
+
+NOTES:
+
+[483] Al. Contarini, Aug. 14, 1628. 'Carleton mi soggionse che
+certamente la flotta si volgerebbe in ajuto del re di Danimarca,
+quando Più non fosse necessaria in Francia.'
+
+[484] The first intimation of this design occurs in an anonymous
+letter to the King, which probably belongs to the year 1623: Cabala
+223. In the correspondence of the ambassadors the project is assumed
+as certain.
+
+[485] Ruszdorf: 'Magnos apparatus instituit, quibus sperat structuram
+et molem rumpere'
+
+[486] From the letter of Dudley Viscount Dorchester, in Bruce's
+Calendar.
+
+[487] 'The remonstrance in the last Parliament and that the duke was
+the cause of the public grievances, it came into his mind that it
+would be a good service to God and the Commonwealth to take him away.'
+Relation of the Duke of Buckingham's death. (St. P. O.)
+
+[488] From the report of Duppa (St. P. O.), which admirably
+supplements that which is given in the State Trials iii. 370.
+
+[489] 'That the common good could no way be a pretense to a particular
+mischief.'
+
+[490] Rushworth i. 654: 'To avow a breach upon just cause given, not
+sought by the King.'
+
+[491] Fragmentary memoranda of a sitting of the Privy Council at the
+beginning of February 1628-29. (St P. O.)
+
+[492] Statement of the printer. Parliamentary History viii. 247.
+
+[493] His declaration before the Lords. Parliamentary History viii.
+208.
+
+[494] We learn this from a letter of Nethersole to the queen of
+Bohemia, Jan. 28. (St. P. O.)
+
+[495] Nethersole to the Queen of Bohemia: 'That what at the first
+propounding seemed a very reasonable motion--was at last upon this
+reason that the bill is in truth and is intituled a bill of subsidy.'
+
+[496] Holograph declaration of Charles I. (St. P. O.)
+
+[497] Information in Star Chamber. Rushworth i. 675.
+
+[498] Autobiography of Sir Symond d'Ewes i. 405: 'Being only misled by
+some Machiavellian politics who seemed zealous for the liberty of the
+common wealth.'
+
+[499] Observation of Contarini, March 16, 1629. 'Quello che importa è
+il parlamento si è conservato nell'intero possesso dei suoi privilegi,
+senza cader un tantino: il re per queste due volte ha ceduto sempre
+qualche cosa.'
+
+
+END OF VOL. I.
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcribers note:
+
+The section header 'The Conquest' in Book I Chapter II
+is missing from the original table of contents.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF ENGLAND PRINCIPALLY IN
+THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY, VOLUME I (OF 6)***
+
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+******* This file should be named 28546-8.txt or 28546-8.zip *******
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+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook of A History of England Principally in the
+Seventeenth Century, Volume I (of 6), by Leopold von Ranke</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: A History of England Principally in the Seventeenth Century, Volume I (of 6)</p>
+<p>Author: Leopold von Ranke</p>
+<p>Release Date: April 9, 2009 [eBook #28546]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF ENGLAND PRINCIPALLY IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY, VOLUME I (OF 6)***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>E-text prepared by Paul Dring, Frank van Drogen,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class='center'>
+<br />
+A
+<br />
+<br />
+</p>
+
+<h1>HISTORY OF ENGLAND</h1>
+
+<p class='center'>
+<br />
+<br />
+<small>PRINCIPALLY</small>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<small>BY</small>
+</p>
+
+<h2>LEOPOLD VON RANKE</h2>
+
+<p class='center'>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+VOLUME I
+</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+<p>Once more I come before the public with a work on the history of a
+nation which is not mine by birth.</p>
+
+<p>It is the ambition of all nations which enjoy a literary culture to
+possess a harmonious and vivid narrative of their own past history. And
+it is of inestimable value to any people to obtain such a narrative,
+which shall comprehend all epochs, be true to fact and, while resting on
+thorough research, yet be attractive to the reader; for only by this aid
+can the nation attain to a perfect self-consciousness, and feeling the
+pulsation of its life throughout the story, become fully acquainted with
+its own origin and growth and character. But we may doubt whether up to
+this time works of such an import and compass have ever been produced,
+and even whether they can be produced. For who could apply critical
+research, such as the progress of study now renders necessary, to the
+mass of materials already collected, without being lost in its
+immensity? Who again could possess the vivid susceptibility requisite
+for doing justice to the several epochs, for appreciating the actions,
+the modes of thought, and the moral standard of each of them, and for
+understanding their relations to universal history? We must be content
+in this department, as well as in others, if we can but approximate to
+the ideal we set up. The best-written histories will be accounted the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</a></span>
+best.</p>
+
+<p>When then an author undertakes to make the past life of a foreign nation
+the object of a comprehensive literary work, he will not think of
+writing its history as a nation in detail: for a foreigner this would be
+impossible: but, in accordance with the point of view he would naturally
+take, he will direct his eyes to those epochs which have had the most
+effectual influence on the development of mankind: only so far as is
+necessary for the comprehension of these, will he introduce anything
+that precedes or comes after them.</p>
+
+<p>There is an especial charm in following, century after century, the
+history of the English nation, in considering the antagonism of the
+elements out of which it is composed, and its share in the fortunes and
+enterprises of that great community of western nations to which it
+belongs; but it will be readily granted that no other period can be
+compared in general importance with the epoch of those religious and
+political wars which fill the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.</p>
+
+<p>In the sixteenth century the part which England took in the work of
+emancipating the world from the rule of the western hierarchy decisively
+influenced not only its own constitution, but also the success of the
+religious revolution throughout Europe. In England the monarchy
+perfectly understood its position in relation to this great change;
+while favouring the movement in its own interest, it nevertheless
+contrived to maintain the old historical state of things to a great
+extent; nowhere have more of the institutions of the Middle Ages been
+retained than in England; nowhere did the spiritual power link itself
+more closely with the temporal. Here less depends on the conflict of
+doctrines, for which Germany is the classic ground: the main interest
+lies in the political transformation, accomplished amidst
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span>
+manifold variations of opinions, tendencies, and events, and attended at last by
+a war for the very existence of the nation. For it was against England
+that the sacerdotal reaction directed its main attack. To withstand it,
+the country was forced to ally itself with the kindred elements on the
+Continent: the successful resistance of England was in turn of the
+greatest service to them. The maintenance of Protestantism in Western
+Europe, on the Continent as well as in Britain, was effected by the
+united powers of both. To bring out clearly this alternate action, it
+would not be advisable to lay weight on every temporary foreign
+relation, on every step of the home administration, and to search out
+men's personal motives in them; a shorter sketch may be best suited to
+show the chief characters, as well as the main purport of the events in
+their full light.</p>
+
+<p>But then, through the connexion of England with Scotland, and the
+accession of a new dynasty, a state of things ensued under which the
+continued maintenance of the position taken up in home and foreign
+politics was rendered doubtful. The question arose whether the policy of
+England would not differ from that of Great Britain and be compelled to
+give way to it. The attempt to decide this question, and the reciprocal
+influence of the newly allied countries, brought on conflicts at home
+which, though they in the main arose out of foreign relations, yet for a
+long while threw those relations into the background.</p>
+
+<p>If we were required to express in the most general terms the distinction
+between English and French policy in the last two centuries, we might
+say that it consisted in this, that the glory of their arms abroad lay
+nearest to the heart of the French nation, and the legal settlement of
+their home affairs to that of the English. How often have the French, in
+appearance at least, allowed themselves to be consoled for the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span>
+defects of the home administration by a great victory or an advantageous peace!
+And the English, from regard to constitutional questions of apparently
+inferior importance, have not seldom turned their eyes away from
+grievous perils which hung over Europe.</p>
+
+<p>The two great constitutional powers in England, the Crown and the
+Parliament, dating back as they did to early times, had often previously
+contended with each other, but had harmoniously combined in the
+religious struggle, and had both gained strength thereby; but towards
+the middle of the seventeenth century we see them first come into
+collision over ecclesiastical regulations, and then engage in a war for
+life and death respecting the constitution of the realm. Elements
+originally separate unite in attacking the monarchy; meanwhile the old
+system breaks up, and energetic efforts are made to found a new one on
+its ruins. But none of them succeed; the deeply-felt need of a life
+regulated by law and able to trust its own future is not satisfied;
+after long storms men seek safety in a return to the old and approved
+historic forms so characteristic of the German, and especially of the
+English, race. But in this there is clearly no solution of the original
+controversies, no reconciliation of the conflicting elements: within
+narrower limits new discords break out, which once more threaten a
+complete overthrow: until, thanks to the indifference shown by England
+to continental events, the most formidable dangers arise to threaten the
+equilibrium of Europe, and even menace England itself. These European
+emergencies coinciding with the troubles at home bring about a new
+change of the old forms in the Revolution of 1688, the main result of
+which is, that the centre of gravity of public authority in England
+shifts decisively to the parliamentary side. It was during this same
+time that France had won military and political
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span>
+superiority over all its neighbours on the mainland, and in connexion with it had
+concentrated an almost absolute power at home in the hands of the
+monarchy. England thus reorganised now set itself to contest the
+political superiority of France in a long and bloody war, which
+consequently became a struggle between two rival forms of polity; and
+while the first of these bore sway over the rest of Europe, the other
+attained to complete realisation in its island-home, and called forth at
+a later time manifold imitations on the Continent also, when the
+Continent was torn by civil strife. Between these differing tendencies,
+these opposite poles, the life of Europe has ever since vibrated from
+side to side.</p>
+
+<p>When we contemplate the framework of the earth, those heights which
+testify to the inherent energy of the original and active elements
+attract our special notice; we admire the massive mountains which
+overhang and dominate the lowlands covered with the settlements of man.
+So also in the domain of history we are attracted by epochs at which the
+elemental forces, whose joint action or tempered antagonism has produced
+states and kingdoms, rise in sudden war against each other, and amidst
+the surging sea of troubles upheave into the light new formations, which
+give to subsequent ages their special character. Such a historic region,
+dominating the world, is formed by that epoch of English history, to
+which the studies have been devoted, whose results I venture to publish
+in the present work: its importance is as great where it directly
+touches on the universal interests of humanity, as where, on its own
+special ground, it develops itself apart in obedience to its inner
+impulses. To comprehend this period we must approach it as closely as
+possible: it is everywhere instinct with collective as well as
+individual life. We discern how great antagonistic principles sprang
+almost unavoidably out of earlier times, how they came into conflict,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span>
+wherein the strength of each side lay, what caused the alternations of
+success, and how the final decisions were brought about: but at the same
+time we perceive how much, for themselves, for the great interests they
+represented, and for the enemies they subdued, depended on the
+character, the energy, the conduct of individuals. Were the men equal to
+the emergency, or were not circumstances stronger than they? From the
+conflict of the universal with the special it is that the great
+catastrophes of history arise, yet it sometimes happens that the efforts
+which seem to perish with their authors exercise a more lasting
+influence on the progress of events than does the power of the
+conqueror. In the agonising struggles of men's minds appear ideas and
+designs which pass beyond what is feasible in that land and at that
+time, perhaps even beyond what is desirable: these find a place and a
+future in the colonies, the settlement of which is closely connected
+with the struggle at home. We are far from intending to involve
+ourselves in juridical and constitutional controversies, or from
+regulating the distribution of praise and blame by the opinions which
+have gained the day at a later time, or prevail at the moment; still
+less shall we be guided by our own sympathies: our only concern is to
+become acquainted with the great motive powers and their results. And
+yet how can we help recognising manifold coincidences with that conflict
+of opinions and tendencies in which we are involved at the present day?
+But it is no part of our plan to follow these out. Momentary
+resemblances often mislead the politician who seeks a sure foothold in
+the past, as well as the historian who seeks it in the present. The Muse
+of history has the widest intellectual horizon and the full courage of
+her convictions; but in forming them she is thoroughly conscientious,
+and we might say jealously bent on her duty. To introduce the interests
+of the present time into the work
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span>
+of the historian usually ends in restricting its free accomplishment.</p>
+
+<p>This epoch has been already often treated of, if not as a whole, yet in
+detached parts, and that by the best English historical writers. A
+native author has this great advantage over foreigners, that he thinks
+in the language in which the persons of the drama spoke, and lets them
+be seen through no strange medium, but simply in their natural form. But
+when, too, this language is employed in rare perfection, as in a work of
+our own time,&mdash;I refer not merely to rounded periods and euphony of
+cadence, but to the spirit of the narrative so much in harmony with our
+present culture, and the tone of our minds, and to the style which by
+every happy word excites our vivid sympathy;&mdash;when we have before us a
+description of the events in the native language with all its attractive
+traits and broad colouring, a description too based on an old familiar
+acquaintance with the country and its condition: it would be folly to
+pretend to rival such a work in its own peculiar sphere. But the results
+of original study may lead us to form a different conception of the
+events. And it is surely good that, in epochs of such great importance
+for the history of all nations, we should possess foreign and
+independent representations to compare with those of home growth; in the
+latter are expressed sympathies and antipathies as inherited by
+tradition and affected by the antagonism of literary differences of
+opinion. Moreover there will be a difference between these foreign
+representations. Frenchmen, as in one famous instance, will hold more to
+the constitutional point of view, and look for instruction or example in
+political science. The German will labour (after investigation into
+original documents) to comprehend each event as a political and
+religious whole, and at the same time to view it in its universal
+historical relations.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span>
+I can in this case, as in others, add something new to what is already
+known, and this to a larger extent as the work goes
+on.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
+
+<p>In no nation has so much documentary matter been collected for its later
+history as in England. The leading families which have taken part in
+public business, and the different parties which wish to assert their
+views in the historical representation of the past as well as in the
+affairs of the present, have done much for this object; latterly the
+government also has set its hand to the work. Yet the existing
+publications are far from sufficient. How incredibly deficient our
+knowledge still is of even the most important parliamentary
+transactions! In the rich collections of the Record Office and of the
+British Museum I have sought and found much that was unknown, and which
+I needed for obtaining an insight into events. The labour spent on it is
+richly compensated by the gain such labour brings; over the originals so
+injured, and so hard to decipher, linger the spirits of that long-past
+age. Especial attention is due to the almost complete series of
+pamphlets of the time, which the Museum possesses. As we read them,
+there are years in which we are present, as it were, at the public
+discussion that went on, at least in the capital, from month to month,
+from week to week, on the weightiest questions of government and public
+life.</p>
+
+<p>If any one has ever attempted to reconstruct for himself a portion of
+the past from materials of this kind,&mdash;from original
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</a></span>
+documents, and party writings which, prompted by hate or personal friendship, are
+intended for defence or attack, and yet are withal exceedingly
+incomplete,&mdash;he will have felt the need of other contemporary notices,
+going into detail but free from such party views. A rich harvest of such
+independent reports has been supplied to me for this, as well as for my
+other works, by the archives of the ancient Republic of Venice. The
+'Relations,' which the ambassadors of that Republic were wont to draw up
+on their return home, invaluable though they are in reference to persons
+and the state of affairs in general, are not, however, sufficient to
+supply a detailed and consecutive account of events. But the Venetian
+archives possess also a long series of continuous Reports, which place
+us, as it were, in the very midst of the courts, the capitals, and the
+daily course of public business. For the sixteenth century they are only
+preserved in a very fragmentary state as regards England; for the
+seventeenth they lie before us, with gaps no doubt here and there, yet
+in much greater completeness. Even in the first volume they have been
+useful to me for Mary Tudor's reign and the end of Elizabeth's; in the
+later ones, not only for James I's times, but also far more for Charles
+I's government and his quarrel with the Parliament. Owing to the
+geographical distance of Venice from England, and her neutral position
+in the world, her ambassadors were able to devote an attention to
+English affairs which is free from all interested motives, and sometimes
+to observe their general course in close communication with the leading
+men. We could not compose a history from the reports they give, but
+combined with the documentary matter these reports form a very welcome
+supplement to our knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>Ambassadors who have to manage matters of all kinds, great and small, at
+the courts to which they are accredited, fill their letters with
+accounts of affairs which often contain little
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[Pg xiv]</a></span>
+instruction for posterity, and they judge of a man according to the support which he
+gives to their interests. This is the case with the French as well as
+with other ambassadors in England. Nevertheless their correspondence
+becomes gradually of the greatest value for my work. Their importance
+grows with the importance of affairs. The two courts entered into the
+most intimate relations: French politicians ceaselessly endeavoured to
+gain influence over England, and sometimes with success. The
+ambassadors' letters at such times refer to the weightiest matters of
+state, and become invaluable; they rise to the rank of the most
+important and instructive historical monuments. They have been hitherto,
+in great part, unused.</p>
+
+<p>In the Roman and Spanish reports also I found much which deserves to be
+made known to the readers of history. The papers of Holland and the
+Netherlands prove still more productive, as I show in detail at the end
+of the narrative.</p>
+
+<p>A historical work may aim either at putting forward a new view of what
+is already known, or at communicating additional information as to the
+facts. I have endeavoured to combine both these aims. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>Note to the third edition.</i>&mdash;In the course of my
+researches for this work the representation of the seventeenth century
+has occupied a larger space than I at first thought I should have been
+able to give it; it forms the chief portion of the book in its present
+form. I have therefore allowed myself the unwonted liberty of altering
+the title so as to make this clear. Still the representation of the
+sixteenth century, which is not now mentioned in the title, has not been
+abridged on this account. The history of the Stuart dynasty and of
+William III make up the central part of the edifice; what is given to
+the earlier, as well as the later times may, if I may be allowed the
+comparison, correspond to its two wings.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>TRANSLATORS' PREFACE.</h2>
+
+<p>'The History of England, principally during the Seventeenth Century,'
+which is here laid before the reader in an English form, is one of the
+most important portions of that cycle of works on which Leopold von
+Ranke has long been engaged. His History of the Popes, his History of
+the Reformation in Germany, his French History, his work on the Ottomans
+and the Spanish Monarchy, his Life of Wallenstein, his volume on the
+Origin of the Thirty Years' War, and other smaller treatises, all aim at
+delineating the international relations of the states of Europe. His
+History of England may well be regarded as the concluding portion of
+this series; for the relations of England, first with France, and then
+with Holland, eventually determined the course of European politics.</p>
+
+<p>The book however is more than a history of this period, for Professor
+Ranke, according to his custom, has prefixed to it a luminous and
+interesting sketch of the earlier part of our history, presented, as all
+summaries ought to be, in the form of studies of the most important
+epochs. And at the end of the work are Appendices, which supply not only
+happy examples of historical criticism in the discussions on the chief
+contemporary writers of the period, but also a mass of original
+documents, most of which have never before been published. Above all,
+the critiques on Clarendon
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[Pg xvi]</a></span>
+and Burnet, and the correspondence of
+William III with Heinsius, will well repay careful study; and the
+Appendices throw light on some of the more important details connected
+with the history of the time, besides shewing the student how a great
+master has found and used his materials.</p>
+
+<p>The present translation was undertaken with the author's sanction, and
+was intended in the first instance for the use of students in Oxford.
+Its publication has been facilitated by a division of labour, the eight
+volumes of the original having been entrusted each to a separate hand.
+The translators are Messrs. C. W. Boase, Exeter College; W. W. Jackson,
+Exeter College; H. B. George, New College; H. F. Pelham, Exeter College;
+M. Creighton, Merton College; A. Watson, Brasenose College; G. W.
+Kitchin, Christchurch; A. Plummer, Trinity College. The task of
+oversight, of reducing inequalities of style, and of supervising the
+Appendices and Index, has been performed by the editors, C. W. Boase and
+G. W. Kitchin. Notwithstanding the disadvantages incident to a
+translation, it is hoped that the work in its present shape will be
+welcomed by a large number of English readers, and will help to increase
+the deserved renown of the author in the country to the history of which
+he has devoted such profound and fruitful study. </p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class='centered'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" width="70%" cellspacing="2" summary="CONTENTS">
+<tr>
+<td class='c' colspan='3'><h2>CONTENTS.</h2></td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='c' colspan='3'><h3>BOOK I.</h3></td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='c' colspan='3'>THE CHIEF CRISES IN THE EARLIER HISTORY OF ENGLAND.</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td><td> &nbsp; </td><td class='rn'><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap"><a href="#INT_I">Introduction</a></span></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td class='rn'>3</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">Chap. I.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BI_I_I">The Britons, Romans, and Anglo-Saxons</a></td><td class='rn'>5</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td><td class='l'><a href="#BI_I_II">The Anglo-Saxons and Christianity</a></td><td class='rn'>10</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">II.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BI_II">Transfer of the Anglo-Saxon crown to the Normans and Plantagenets</a></td><td class='rn'>22</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td><td class='l'><a href="#BI_II_I">The Conquest</a></td><td class='rn'>28</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">III.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BI_III_I">The crown in conflict with Church and Nobles</a></td><td class='rn'>39</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td><td class='l'><a href="#BI_III_II">Henry II and Becket</a></td><td class='rn'>41</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td><td class='l'><a href="#BI_III_III">John Lackland and Magna Charta</a></td><td class='rn'>47</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">IV.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BI_IV">Foundation of the Parliamentary Constitution</a></td><td class='rn'>58</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">V.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BI_V">Deposition of Richard II. The House of Lancaster</a></td><td class='rn'>74</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='c' colspan='3'><h3>BOOK II.</h3></td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='c' colspan='3'>ATTEMPTS TO CONSOLIDATE THE KINGDOM INDEPENDENTLY IN ITS TEMPORAL AND SPIRITUAL RELATIONS.</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap"><a href="#INT_II">Introduction</a></span></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td class='rn'>91</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">Chap. I.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BII_I">Re-establishment of the supreme power</a></td><td class='rn'>93</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">II.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BII_II_I">Changes in the condition of Europe</a></td><td class='rn'>104</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td><td class='l'><a href="#BII_II_II">Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolsey in their earlier years</a></td><td class='rn'>109</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">III.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BII_III">Origin of the Divorce Question</a></td><td class='rn'>120</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">IV.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BII_IV">The Separation of the English Church</a></td><td class='rn'>134</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">V.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BII_V">The opposing tendencies within the Schismatic State</a></td><td class='rn'>151</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">VI.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BII_VI">Religious Reform in the English Church</a></td><td class='rn'>171</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">VII.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BII_VII">Transfer of the Government to a Catholic Queen</a></td><td class='rn'>186</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">VIII.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BII_VIII">The Catholic-Spanish Government</a></td><td class='rn'>199
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[Pg xvii]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='c' colspan='3'><h3>BOOK III.</h3></td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='c' colspan='3'>QUEEN ELIZABETH. CLOSE CONNEXION OF ENGLISH AND SCOTTISH AFFAIRS.</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap"><a href="#INT_III">Introduction</a></span></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td class='rn'>221</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">Chap. I.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIII_I">Elizabeth's accession. Triumph of the Reformation</a></td><td class='rn'>222</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">II.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIII_II">Outlines of the Reformation in Scotland</a></td><td class='rn'>238</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">III.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIII_III">Mary Stuart in Scotland. Relation of the two Queens to each other</a></td><td class='rn'>254</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">IV.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIII_IV">Interdependence of the European dissensions in Politics and Religion</a></td><td class='rn'>280</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">V.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIII_V">The fate of Mary Stuart</a></td><td class='rn'>300</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">VI.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIII_VI">The Invincible Armada</a></td><td class='rn'>316</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">VII.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIII_VII">The later years of Queen Elizabeth</a></td><td class='rn'>330</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='c' colspan='3'><h3>BOOK IV.</h3></td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='c' colspan='3'>FOUNDATION OF THE KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN. FIRST DISTURBANCES UNDER THE STUARTS.</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap"><a href="#INT_IV">Introduction</a></span></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td class='rn'>359</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">Chap. I.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIV_I_I">James VI of Scotland: his accession to the throne of England</a></td><td class='rn'>361</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td><td class='l'><a href="#BIV_I_II">Origin of fresh dissensions in the Church</a></td><td class='rn'>361</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td><td class='l'><a href="#BIV_I_III">Alliance with England</a></td><td class='rn'>364</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td><td class='l'><a href="#BIV_I_IV">Renewal of the Episcopal Constitution in Scotland</a></td><td class='rn'>368</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td><td class='l'><a href="#BIV_I_V">Preparations for the Succession to the English Throne</a></td><td class='rn'>375</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td><td class='l'><a href="#BIV_I_VI">Accession to the Throne</a></td><td class='rn'>381</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">II.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIV_II">First measures of the new reign</a></td><td class='rn'>386</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">III.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIV_III">The Gunpowder Plot and its consequences</a></td><td class='rn'>403</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">IV.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIV_IV">Foreign policy of the next ten years</a></td><td class='rn'>418</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">V.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIV_V">Parliaments of 1610 and 1614</a></td><td class='rn'>436</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">VI.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BIV_VI">Survey of the literature of the epoch</a></td><td class='rn'>450
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[Pg xviii]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td> &nbsp; </td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='c' colspan='3'><h3>BOOK V.</h3></td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='c' colspan='3'>DISPUTES WITH PARLIAMENT DURING THE LATER YEARS OF THE REIGN OF JAMES I AND THE EARLIER YEARS OF THE REIGN OF CHARLES I.</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap"><a href="#INT_V">Introduction</a></span></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td class='rn'>467</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">Chap. I.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BV_I">James I and his administration of domestic government</a></td><td class='rn'>469</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">II.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BV_II">Complications arising out of the affairs of the Palatinate</a></td><td class='rn'>484</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">III.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BV_III">Parliament of the year 1621</a></td><td class='rn'>497</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">IV.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BV_IV">Negotiations for the marriage of the Prince of Wales with a Spanish Infanta</a></td><td class='rn'>509</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">V.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BV_V">The Parliament of 1624. Alliance with France</a></td><td class='rn'>522</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">VI.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BV_VI">Beginning of the reign of Charles I, and his First and Second Parliament</a></td><td class='rn'>537</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">VII.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BV_VII">The course of foreign policy from 1625 to 1627</a></td><td class='rn'>554</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">VIII.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BV_VIII">Parliament of 1628. Petition of Right</a></td><td class='rn'>566</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class='r'><span class="smcap">IX.</span></td><td class='l'><a href="#BV_IX">Assassination of Buckingham. Session of 1629</a></td><td class='rn'>580</td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="INT_I" id="INT_I"></a>FIRST BOOK.</h2>
+
+<p class='center'><br />
+THE CHIEF CRISES IN THE EARLIER HISTORY OF ENGLAND.
+</p>
+
+<p>As we turn over the pages of universal history, and follow the shifting
+course of events, we perceive almost at the first glance one
+comprehensive process of change going on, which, more than any other,
+governs the external fortunes of the world. Through long periods of time
+the historic life of the human race was active in Western Asia and in
+the lands bordering on the Mediterranean which look towards the East:
+there it laid the foundations of its higher culture. We may rightly
+regard as the greatest event that meets us in the whole course of
+authentic history, the fact that the seats of the predominant power and
+culture have been transplanted to the Western lands and the shores of
+the Atlantic Ocean. Not merely the abodes of the ancient civilised
+nations, but even the capitals which were the medium of communication
+between East and West, have fallen into barbarism; even the great
+metropolis, from which first political, and then spiritual, dominion
+extended itself in both directions over widespread territories, has not
+maintained its rank. It was due to this tendency of things, combined
+with a certain geographical cause, that neither could the medieval
+Empire attain its full development, nor the Papacy continue to subsist
+with unimpaired authority. From age to age the political and
+intellectual life of the world transferred itself ever more and more to
+the nations dwelling further West, especially since a new hemisphere was
+opened up to their impulses of activity and extension. So it was that
+the chief interests of the Pyrenean peninsula drew towards its ocean
+coasts; that there grew up on either side of the Channel which separates
+the Continent from Britain, the two great capitals in which modern
+activity is chiefly concentrated; that Northern Germany, together with
+the races which touch on the North Sea and the Baltic, developed a life
+and a system of their own; it is in these regions latterly that the
+universal spirit of the human race chiefly works out its task, and
+displays its activity in moulding states, creating ideas, and
+subjugating nature.</p>
+
+<p>Yet this transmission, this transplanting, is not the work of a blind
+destiny. While civilisation in the East succumbed and died out before
+the advance of races incapable of culture, it was welcomed in the West
+by races possessing the requisite capacity, which by their inborn force
+gave it new forms and indestructible bases for its outward existence.
+Nor have the nations and kingdoms arisen each from its mother earth, as
+it were in obedience to some inward impulse of inevitable necessity, but
+amid constant assimilation and rejection, ever repeated wars to secure
+their future, and a ceaseless struggle with opposing elements that
+threatened their ruin.</p>
+
+<p>The object of universal history is to place before our eyes the leading
+changes, and the conflicts of nations, together with their causes and
+results. Our purpose is to depict the history of one of the chief of the
+Western nations, the English, and that too in an age which decisively
+modified both its inner constitution and its outward position in the
+world, but it cannot be understood unless we first pourtray, with a few
+quick touches, the historical events under the influence of which it
+became civilised and great. </p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BI_I_I" id="BI_I_I"></a>
+THE BRITONS, ROMANS, AND ANGLO-SAXONS.</p>
+
+<p>The history of Western Europe in general opens with the struggle between
+Kelts, Romans, and Germans, which determined out of what elements modern
+nations should be formed.</p>
+
+<p>Just as it is supposed that Albion in early times was connected with the
+Continent, and only separated from it by the raging sea-flood which
+buried the intermediate lands in the abyss, so in ethnographic relations
+it would seem as if the aboriginal Keltic tribes of the island had been
+only separated by some accident from those which occupied Gaul and the
+Netherlands. The Channel is no national boundary. We find Belgians in
+Britain, Britons in Eastern Gaul, and very many names of peoples common
+to both coasts; there were tribes which, though separated by the sea,
+yet acknowledged the same prince. Without being able to prove how far
+natives of the island took part in the expeditions of conquest, which
+pouring forth from Gaul inundated the countries on the Danube and Italy,
+Greece and Western Asia, we yet can trace the affinity of names and
+tribes as far as these expeditions extend. This island was the home of
+the religion that gave a certain unity to the populations, which, though
+closely akin, nevertheless contended with each other in ceaseless
+discord. It was that Druidic discipline which combined a priestly
+constitution with civil privileges, and with a very peculiar doctrine of
+a political and even moral purport. We might be tempted to suppose that
+the atrocity of human sacrifice was first introduced among them by the
+Punic race. For they were from primeval times connected
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>with the
+Carthaginians and Phoenicians, who were the first to traverse the outer
+sea, and sought in the island a metal which was very valuable for the
+wants of the ancient world. Distant clans might retain in the mountains
+their original wildness, but the southern coasts ranked in the earliest
+times as rich and civilised. They stood within the circle of the
+relations that had been created by the expeditions of the Keltic tribes,
+by the mixture of peoples thence arising, by the war and commerce of the
+earliest age.</p>
+
+<p>In the great war between Rome and Carthage, which decided the destiny of
+the ancient world, the Keltic tribes took part as allies of the Punic
+race. If Carthage had conquered, they would have maintained in most, if
+not all, the lands they had occupied, and especially in their own homes,
+their old manners and customs, and their religion in its existing form.
+It was not merely the supremacy of the one city or the other, but the
+future of Western Europe that was at stake when Hannibal attacked the
+Romans in Italy. Rome, which had already grown strong in warring against
+the Gauls, won the victory over the Carthaginians. Thenceforth one after
+another of the Keltic nations succumbed to the superiority of the Roman
+arms, which at last invaded Transalpine Gaul, and struck its military
+power to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>From this point the reaction against the Keltic enterprises necessarily
+extended itself also to Britain.</p>
+
+<p>The great general who conquered Gaul did not feel sure of being able to
+accomplish his task unless he also obtained influence over the British
+tribes, from which those of the Continent constantly received help and
+encouragement, unless he established among them the authority of the
+Roman name.</p>
+
+<p>It was an important moment in the world's history, well worthy of
+remembrance, when Caesar first trod the soil of Albion. Already repulsed
+from the steep chalk cliffs of the island, he found the flat shore on
+which he hoped to disembark occupied by the enemy, some in their
+war-chariots, others on horseback and on foot; his ships could not reach
+the shore; the soldiers hesitated, encumbered with their armour as they
+were, to throw themselves into a sea with which they were not familiar,
+in presence of an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+enemy acquainted with the ground, active, brave, and
+superior in numbers; the general's order had no effect on them; when
+however an eagle-bearer, calling on the gods of Rome, threw himself into
+the flood, the men would have thought themselves traitors had they
+allowed the war-standard, to which an almost divine worship was paid, to
+fall into the hands of the enemy; fired by the danger that threatened
+their honour, and by the religion of arms, from one ship after another
+they followed him to the fight; in the hand-to-hand combat in the water
+which ensued they gained the superiority, supported most skilfully by
+their general wherever it was necessary; the moment they reached the
+land, the victory was won.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<p>We cannot reckon it a slight matter, that Caesar, though not at the
+first, yet at the second and better prepared expedition, succeeded in
+carrying away with him hostages from the chief tribes. For this very
+form was the one customary in that century and among those tribes, by
+which he bound them and their princes to himself.</p>
+
+<p>It was the first step towards the Roman supremacy. But Gaul and West
+Germany had first to be subdued, and the Empire securely concentrated in
+one hand, before&mdash;a century later&mdash;the conquest of the island could be
+really attempted.</p>
+
+<p>Even then the Britons still fought without helmet or shield, as did the
+Gauls of old before Rome. In Britain, just as on the Lombard plains, the
+war-chariot was their best arm; their defective mode of defence
+necessarily yielded to the organised tactics of the legion. How easily
+did the Romans, pushing forward under cover of their mantelets, clear
+away the rude entrenchments by which the Britons used formerly to secure
+themselves against attack. The Druids on Mona trusted in their gods,
+whose will they thought to ascertain from the quivering fibres of human
+sacrifices; and for a moment the sight of the crowd of fanatics
+collected around them checked the attack, but only for a moment: as soon
+as they came to blows they were instantly scattered, and their holy
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+places perished with them. For this is the greatest result of the Roman
+wars, that they destroyed the rites which contradicted the idea of
+Humanity. Yet once more an injured princess&mdash;Boadicea&mdash;united all the
+sympathies which the old constitution and religion could awaken. Dio has
+depicted her, doubtless according to the reports which reached Rome. A
+tall form, with the national decoration of the golden necklace and the
+chequered mantle, over which her rich yellow hair flowed down below her
+waist. She called on her peoples to defend themselves at any risk, since
+what could befall those to whom each root gave nourishment, each tree
+supplied shelter: and on her gods, not to let the land pass into the
+possession of that insatiable, unjust foe of foreign race. So truly does
+she represent the innate characteristics of the British race, when
+oppressed and engaged in a desperate defence. She is earnest, rugged,
+and terrible; the men who gathered round her were reckoned by hundreds
+of thousands. But the Britons had not yet learnt the art of war. A
+single onslaught of the Romans sufficed to scatter their disorderly
+masses with a fearful butchery. It was the last day of the old British
+independence. Boadicea would not, any more than Cleopatra, adorn a Roman
+triumph; she fell by her own hand.</p>
+
+<p>Within a few dozen years the Roman eagles were masters of Britain as far
+as the Highlands: the Keltic clan-life and the religion of the Druids
+withdrew into the Caledonian mountains, and the large islands off that
+coast; in the conquered territory the religion of the arms that had won
+the victory, and the might of the Great Empire, were supreme. The work
+which was begun by superiority in war was completed by pre-eminence in
+civilisation. It seemed an advantage and an improvement to the sons of
+the British princes, to adopt the Roman language, and knowledge, and
+mode of life; they delighted in the luxury of colonnades, baths, feasts,
+and city life. Men like Agricola used these modes of Romanising Britain
+by preference. Just as the Britons exchanged their rude shipbuilding and
+their leathern sails for the discoveries of a more advanced art of
+navigation, so they learnt to carry on their agriculture in Roman
+fashion; in later times Britain
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+was considered as the granary of the
+legions in Germany. Most of the cities in the land betray by their very
+names their Roman origin; London, though it existed earlier, owes its
+importance to this connexion. It was the emporium destined as it were by
+nature for the peaceful commerce that now arose between the Western
+provinces of the Empire. Once in the third century an attempt was made
+to make the island independent, but it failed the moment the marts on
+the opposite coast fell into the hands of the Emperor who was
+universally recognised. Britain seemed an integral part of the Roman
+Empire. It was from York that Constantine marched forth to unite its
+Eastern and Western halves once more under one government.</p>
+
+<p>But soon after him an epoch began in which the third great nationality,
+at first thought to be part of the Keltic race, then driven back or
+taken into service by the Romans, but always maintaining its peculiar
+original independence&mdash;the German, rose to supremacy in the West. In the
+fifth century it had become everywhere master in the
+militarily-organised Roman frontier districts: encouraged by the
+embarrassments of the authorities it advanced into the peaceful
+provinces.</p>
+
+<p>It is of importance to remark what the fate of Britain was in these
+struggles.</p>
+
+<p>From the Romanised territory an Augustus, called Constantine, set up by
+the revolted legions, invaded Gaul, not merely to check the inroads of
+the barbarians, but at the same time to possess himself of the Empire.
+He at one time held a great position, when the legions of Gaul and
+Aquitaine also took his side, and Spain saluted him Emperor. But the
+authority of Honorius the generally recognised Emperor could not be so
+easily set aside: discontented followers of the new Augustus again went
+over to the old one: before them and the barbarians combined Constantine
+fell, and soon after paid for his attempt with his life.</p>
+
+<p>The result, then, was that Honorius restored his authority to a certain
+extent everywhere on the Continent, but not in Britain. To the towns
+which had taken up arms while Constantine was there he gave the right of
+self-defence&mdash;he could do nothing for them. The Roman Empire was not
+exactly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> overthrown in Britain&mdash;it ceased
+to be.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
+
+<p>At this time, when the connexion between Rome and Roman Britain was
+broken off, the Germans possessed themselves of the latter country.</p>
+
+<p class='sect'><a name="BI_I_II" id="BI_I_II"></a>The Anglo-Saxons and Christianity.</p>
+
+<p>Germans had been long ago settled in this as in so many other provinces
+of the Western and Eastern Empires. Antoninus had brought over German
+tribes from the Danube, Probus others from the Rhineland. In the legions
+we find German cohorts, and very many others joined them as free allies.
+In the civil wars between the Emperors we hear of one side relying on
+the Franks, the other on the Alemanni in their service; Constantine the
+Great is called to be Caesar by help of the chiefs of the Alemanni. But
+besides this, German seafarers, who appeared under the name of Saxons,
+after they had learnt shipbuilding and navigation from the Romans,
+settled on the opposite coasts of Britain and Gaul, and gave their name
+to both. Not then for the first time, nor at the invitation of the
+Britons, as the Saga declares,<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>
+did the descendants of Wodan make
+their first trial of the sea in light vessels. Alternating between
+piracy and alliance&mdash;now with a usurper and now with the lawful Emperor,
+between independence and subjection, German seafarers had long ago
+filled all seas and coasts with the terror of their name. In the North
+too they are mentioned together with Scots and Attacotti. When now the
+Roman rule over the island and the surrounding seas came to an end, to
+whom could it pass? To the peaceful Provincials, if they could indeed
+gird on the sword, or to the old companions in arms of the Romans?
+There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+is no doubt that the same general impulse which urged on the
+German peoples, in the great revolution of affairs, into the Roman
+provinces, led the enterprising inhabitants of the German and Northern
+coasts, Frisians, Angles, and Jutes, as well as Saxons, into Britain. A
+fearful war broke out, in which it may be true to say the ruined towns
+became the sepulchres of their inhabitants, but no man found the quiet
+time necessary for depicting its details. After it had filled a century
+and a half with its horrors, and men again lifted up their eyes, they
+found the island divided between two great nationalities, which had
+separated themselves as opposing forces. The natives had as good as
+abandoned the civilisation they had learnt from Rome, and leant on their
+kinsfolk in North Gaul, and the Scots in Ireland and the Highlands; they
+occupied the west of the island. The Germans were settled in the east,
+in the greatest part of the south, and in the north, in most of the old
+Roman settlements,&mdash;but they were far from forming a united body. Not
+seven or eight merely, but a large number of little tribal kingdoms,
+occupied or fought for the ground.</p>
+
+<p>If we wish to point out in general the distinction between the
+Anglo-Saxon and other German settlements, it lies in this, that they
+rested neither on the Emperor's authorisation whether direct or
+indirect, nor on any agreement with the natives of the land. In Gaul
+Chlodwig assumed and carried on the authority of the Roman Empire;&mdash;in
+Britain it went wholly to the ground. Hence it was that here the German
+ideas could develop in their full purity, more so than in Germany
+itself, over which the Frankish monarchy, which had also adopted Roman
+tendencies, had gained influence.</p>
+
+<p>Just as the natives who would not submit were driven out of the German
+settlements, so within their boundaries the germs of Christianity, which
+had already spread in the island, were as good as annihilated. Among the
+victorious Germans the Northern heathenism existed in full strength. In
+many names of places, at the water-springs, the watersheds, in the
+designations of the days of the week, the names of the gods of Germany
+and the North appear; the kings trace their descent directly from them
+as their immediate ancestors; the Sagas and poems about them symbolise
+those battles with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+the elements, the storm, the sea, and the powers of
+nature, which are peculiarly characteristic of the Northern mythology.
+With this, however, arose the question, so important for the history of
+the world, whether the great territory already won for the ideas of the
+universal culture and religion of mankind should be again lost.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the end of the 6th century the epoch began in which, as the
+German invaders of Gaul had already done, so now those of Spain and
+Italy, whether Arians or heathens, came over to the Catholic faith of
+the Provincials. This took place under the mediation of the chief
+Pontiff, who had raised the city, from which the Empire took its name,
+to be the metropolis of the Faith. Lombards and Visigoths became as good
+Catholics as the Franks already were. The relationship of the royal
+families, which held all Germans in close connexion, and the zeal of
+Rome, which could not possibly suffer the loss of a province that it had
+once possessed, now combined to call forth a similar movement among the
+Anglo-Saxons, yet one which worked itself out in a very different way.
+Since among the natives a peculiar form of church-life, not unconnected
+with the Druidic discipline, had arisen, with which Rome would hold no
+communion, and which rejected all demands of submission, the spiritual
+enmity of the missionary was united to the national enmity of the
+conqueror. When a king still heathen, while attacking the Britons,
+directed his weapons against the monks of Bangor, who (collected on a
+height) were offering up prayers against him, and massacred them to the
+number of twelve hundred, the followers of the Roman Mission saw in this
+a punishment decreed by God for apostasy, and the fulfilment of the
+prophecies of their apostle.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>
+On the other hand British Christian
+kings also made common cause with the heathen Angles, and wasted with
+fire and sword the provinces that had been converted by Rome. Had not in
+the vicissitudes of internal war the native church organisation of the
+North<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+won influence over the Anglo-Saxons, heathenism would never have
+been conquered; it would have always found support among the Britons.</p>
+
+<p>When this however had once taken place, the whole Anglo-Saxon name
+attached itself to the Roman ritual. Among the motives for this change
+those which corresponded to the naive materialistic superstition of the
+time may have been the most influential, yet there were other motives
+also which touched the very essence of the matter. Men wished to belong
+to the great Church Communion which then in still unbroken freedom
+comprehended the most distant nations.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
+They preferred the bishops
+whom the kings appointed (with the authorisation of the Roman See), to
+those over whom the abbot of the great monastery on the island of Iona
+exercised a kind of supremacy. Here there was no question of any
+agreement between the German king and the bishops of the land, as under
+the Merovingians in Gaul; they even avoided restoring the bishops' sees
+which had flourished in the old Roman times in Britain. The primitive
+and independent element manifests itself in the decision of the princes
+and their great men. In Northumberland, Christianity was introduced by a
+formal resolution of the King and his Witan: a heathen high priest girt
+himself with the sword, and even with his own hand threw down his idols.
+The Anglo-Saxon tribes in fact passed over from the popular religion and
+mythology of the North and of Germany, which would have kept them in
+barbarism, to the communion of the universal religion, to which belonged
+the civilisation of the world. Never did a race show itself more
+susceptible of such an influence: it presents the most remarkable
+example of how the old German ideas, which had now taken living root in
+this soil, and the Roman ecclesiastical culture, which was vigorously
+embraced, met and became intertwined. The first German who made the
+universal learning, derived from antiquity, his own, was an Anglo-Saxon,
+the Venerable Beda; the first German dialect in which men wrote history
+and drew up laws, was likewise the Anglo-Saxon.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+Despite all their reverence for the threshold of the Apostles they admitted foreign
+priests no longer than was indispensable for the foundation of the new
+church: in the gradual progress of the conversion they were no longer
+needed, we soon find Anglo-Saxon names everywhere in the church: the
+archbishops and leading bishops are as closely related to the royal
+families, as the heathen high priests had been before.</p>
+
+<p>It was exactly through the co-operation of both principles, originally
+so foreign to one another, that the Anglo-Saxon nature took firm and
+lasting form.</p>
+
+<p>The Kelts had formerly lived under a clan system which, extending over
+vast districts, yet displayed in each spot characteristic weaknesses
+which the hostility of every neighbour rendered fatal. Then the Romans
+had introduced a military administrative constitution, which displaced
+this tribal system, while it also subjected Britain to the universal
+Empire, of which it formed only an unimportant province. A
+characteristic form of life was first built up in Britain by the
+Anglo-Saxons on the ruins of the Roman rule. The union into which they
+entered with the civilised world was the freely chosen one of the
+religion of the human race; they had no other connexion to control them.
+Their whole energies being concentrated on the island, they gave it for
+the first time, though continually at war with each other, an
+independent position.</p>
+
+<p>Their constitution combines the ideas of the army and the tribe: it is
+the constitution of armies of colonists bringing with them domestic
+institutions which had been theirs from time immemorial. A society of
+freemen of the same stock, who divided the soil among themselves in such
+a manner that the number of the hides corresponded to that of the
+families (for among no people was there a stronger conception of
+separate ownership), they composed the armed array of the country, and
+by their union maintained that peace at home which again secured each
+man's life and property. At their head stands a royal family, of the
+highest nobility, which traces its origin to the gods, and has by far
+the largest possessions; from it, by birth and by election combined,
+proceeds the King; who then, sceptre in hand, presides in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+the court of justice, and in the field has the banner carried before him; he is the
+Lord, to whom men owe fidelity; the Guardian, to whom the public roads
+and navigable rivers belong, who disposes of the undivided land. Yet he
+does not stand originally so high above other men that his murder cannot
+be expiated by a wergeld, of which one share falls to his family&mdash;not a
+larger one than for any other of its members,&mdash;and the other to the
+collective community, since the prince belongs to the former by birth,
+to the latter by his office. Between the simple freeman and the prince
+appear the eorls, ealdormen, and thanes, in some instances raised above
+the mass by noble birth or by larger possessions, natural chiefs of
+districts and hundreds, in others promoted by service in the King's
+court and in the field, sometimes specially bound to him by personal
+allegiance: they are the Witan who have elected him out of his family
+(in a few instances they depose him); they concur in giving laws, they
+take part in making peace. Now the bishops take place by their side.
+They appear with the ealdormen in the judicial meetings of the counties:
+if the Gerefa neglects his duty, it is for them to step in; yet they
+have also their own spiritual jurisdiction. It is a spiritual and
+temporal organisation of small extent, yet of a certain self-sufficing
+completeness. Many of the present shires correspond to the old kingdoms,
+and bear their names to this day. The bishops' sees often coincide with
+the seats of royalty; for the kings wished each to have a bishop to
+himself in his little territory, since they had to endow the bishopric.
+How many regulations still in force date from these times!</p>
+
+<p>The Anglo-Saxons always had an immediate and near relation to the
+kingdom of the Franks.</p>
+
+<p>It was with the daughter of a Frankish prince that the first impulse
+towards conversion came into a Saxon royal house. By the Anglo-Saxons
+again the conversion of inner Germany was carried out, in opposition to
+the same Scoto-Irish element which they withstood in Britain. Carl the
+Great thought it expedient to inform the Mercian King Offa of the
+progress of Christianity among the Saxons in Germany: he looked on him
+as his natural ally. Both kingdoms had moreover
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+a common interest as against the free British populations on their western marches, who were
+allied with each other across the sea: decisive campaigns of Carl the
+Great and King Egbert of Wessex coincide in point of time, and may have
+supported each other.</p>
+
+<p>Similarly, we may suppose that Egbert, who lived a number of years as an
+exile at Carl's court, and could not have remained uninfluenced by his
+mode of government and improved military tactics, was then also incited
+and enabled, after his return, to subdue the little kingdoms and unite
+them with Wessex: by the side of the 'Francia' of the continent he
+created in the island a united 'Anglia.' But still there subsisted a yet
+greater difference. Sprung from the stock of Cerdic, Egbert belonged to
+the popular royalty which we find throughout at the head of the invading
+Germans; he is, so far, more like the Merovingians whom Carl's
+predecessors overthrew, than like Carl himself; and he was almost
+entirely destitute of that strong groundwork of military institutions on
+which the Carolingians supported themselves. His rise depended much more
+on the fact that the old families in Mercia, Northumbria, and Kent had
+disappeared, and the succession in general had become doubtful; after
+Egbert had conquered the claimants to the throne in a great and bloody
+battle, he was recognised by the Witans of the several kingdoms as their
+common prince, and his family as that which in fact it now was,&mdash;the
+leading one of all. After the example of Pipin's family, whose alliance
+with the Papacy was the most important historical event of the epoch and
+founded Western Christendom, the descendants of Cerdic also got
+themselves anointed by the popes&mdash;for the religious movement still had
+the predominance over every other. The amalgamation of the tribes and
+kingdoms found its expression in the Church, through the prestige and
+rank of the Archbishop of Canterbury, almost earlier than it did in the
+State; the unity of the Church broke down the antipathies of the tribes,
+and prepared the way for that of the kingdoms. In the midst of this work
+of construction, so incomplete as yet, but so full of hope, of these
+birthpangs of a new life, the very existence of the country was
+threatened by the rise of a new Great
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+Power. For so may we well designate the influence which the Scandinavian North exercised by land
+over Eastern Europe, and at the same time over all the Western coasts by
+sea.</p>
+
+<p>Only a part of the German peoples had been influenced by the idea of the
+Empire or the Church; the inborn heathenism of the rest, irritated by
+the losses it had sustained and the dangers that continually threatened
+it, roused itself for the most formidable onslaught that the civilised
+world has ever had to withstand from the heroic and barbarous children
+of Nature.</p>
+
+<p>The mischief they wrought in Britain, from the middle of the ninth
+century onwards, is indescribable.</p>
+
+<p>The Scoto-Irish schools, then in their most flourishing state (they
+trained John Scotus Erigena, of all the scholars of that time the man
+who had the widest intellectual range), fell before the Danish, not the
+Anglo-Saxon assaults; an element of intellectual activity which might
+have been of the greatest importance was thus lost to the Western world.
+But the Northmen persecuted the Romano-English forms as bitterly as they
+did the Irish. In the places where those Anglo-Saxon scholars had been
+trained, who then enlightened the West, the Northmen planted the banner
+which announced utter destruction; with twofold rapacity they threw
+themselves on the more remote abbeys which seemed to derive protection
+from their inaccessibility, and to guarantee it by their dignity; in
+searching for the treasures which they believed had been placed in them
+for security, they destroyed the monuments and means of instruction
+which were really there; in Medeshamstede, where there was a rich
+library, the flames raged for fourteen days. The half-formed union of
+the various districts into one kingdom seems to have crippled rather
+than strengthened the power of local resistance: the Danes became
+masters of Kent and of East-Anglia, of Northumberland, and even of
+Mercia; at last Wessex too, after already suffering many losses, was
+invaded; from both sides at the same moment, from the inland and from
+the coast, the deluge of robber-hordes poured over its whole extent.</p>
+
+<p>Things had come to such a point that the Anglo-Saxon community seemed
+inevitably devoted to the same ruin
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+which had overtaken first the
+Britons and then the Romans, they seemed doomed to make way for another
+reconstruction. Britain would have become an outpost of the restored
+heathenism, which could then have been with difficulty repulsed from the
+Eastern and Western Frankish empires, afflicted as they were by similar
+attacks, and governed by the discordant and weak princes who then ruled
+them. At this moment of peril King Alfred appeared. It was not merely
+for his own interests, nor merely for those of England, but for those of
+the world, that he fought. He is rightly called 'the Great;' a title
+fairly due only to those who have maintained great universal interests,
+and not merely those of their own country.</p>
+
+<p>The distress of the moment, and the deliverance from it, have been kept
+in imperishable remembrance by popular sagas and church legends. It is
+well worth the trouble to trace out in the authenticated traditions,
+brief as they are, the causes that decided the event. We may state them
+as follows:&mdash;Since the attacks of the Vikings were especially ruinous,
+from their occupation of the strong places whence they could command and
+plunder the open country, one step in the work of liberation was taken
+when Alfred, for the first time, wrested from them a stronghold which
+they had seized, deep in the west. Then he, too, occupied strong
+positions, and knew how to defend them. With the bravest and most
+devoted of his nobles, and of the population that had not yet submitted,
+he established a hill-fortress on a height rising like an island out of
+the standing waters and marshlands in the still only slightly cultivated
+land of Somersetshire; this not only served him as an asylum, but also
+as a central point from which he too ranged through the land far and
+wide, like the enemy, except that his object was to guard it, and make
+it ring once more with the already forgotten name of the King. Around
+his banners gathered, with reviving courage, the population of the
+neighbouring districts also: the Saxons could again appear in the open
+field; from their advancing shield-wall the disorderly onsets of the
+Vikings recoiled, the victory was theirs. Hereupon, moreover, as if the
+decision between the two religions depended on the result of the war,
+the leader of the heathens
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+came over to Christianity, and took an
+Anglo-Saxon name. The Danes attached themselves to the principles and
+the powers which they had come forth to destroy.</p>
+
+<p>King Alfred is a marvellous phenomenon: suffering from a disease which
+sometimes broke out with violence, and which he never ceased to feel for
+a single day of his life, he not merely withstood the extreme of peril
+at that moment so big with ruin, but also founded a system of resistance
+throughout the kingdom, in which his arms so worked together by sea and
+land that each new band of Vikings betook themselves again to their
+ships, and those that had already penetrated into the country, gave way
+step by step. We remark with interest how, under Alfred and his
+children, his son who succeeded him, and his manlike daughter, the
+protecting fortresses advance from place to place, and provide free
+space for the Anglo-Saxon community. The culture already existing, the
+whole future of which had been saved by Alfred, attained in him its
+fullest development. How many years had passed since the hour when an
+illuminated initial letter gave him his first taste for a book, before
+he could master even the elementary branches of knowledge! then he
+devoted his whole efforts to instil new life into the studies that had
+almost perished, and to give them a national character. He not merely
+translated a number of the later authors of antiquity, whose works had
+contributed most to the transmission of scientific culture; in the
+episodes which he interweaves in them he shows a desire for knowledge
+that reaches far beyond them; but especially we find in them a
+reflective and thoughtful mind, solid sense at peace with itself, a
+fresh way of viewing the world, a lively power of observation. This King
+introduced the German mind with its learning and reflection into the
+literature of the world; he stands at the head of the prose-writers and
+historians in a German tongue&mdash;the people's King of the most primeval
+kind, who is also the teacher of his people. We know his laws, in which
+extracts from the books of Moses are combined with restored legal usages
+of German origin; in him the traditions of antiquity are interpenetrated
+by the original tendencies of the German mind. We completely weaken the
+impression<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+made on us by this great figure, so important in his first
+limited and arduous efforts, by comparing him with the brilliant names
+of antiquity. Each man is what he is in his own place.</p>
+
+<p>Though the Anglo-Saxon monarchy wanted that element of authority which
+the kings of other German tribes drew from the Roman government by
+transmission or succession, yet it had strengthened itself, like the
+others, by union with the Church. Alfred, too, was at Rome in his
+boyhood: it stood him in good stead that he had been anointed, and, as
+men said, adopted by a Roman pope. In the reconquest of the land, Church
+ideas had played an important part. It was impossible to drive out the
+invading foes, they could only be held in check; never would they have
+submitted to the Anglo-Saxon commonwealth had they not at the same time
+been converted to Christianity. Nothing, moreover, contributed more to
+this than the effort, which was then the order of the day in the
+Christian world, to base the organisation of the Church on monasticism:
+from Italy this tendency spread to Germany, from South France to North,
+from thence to England, where it produced its greatest effect. Now the
+power of conversion is inherent only in sharply-defined doctrines; and
+it was precisely this tendency that penetrated the Northern natures: the
+sons of the Vikings became the champions of monachism; to the fury with
+which the fathers had destroyed the monasteries succeeded in the sons a
+zeal to restore them. And in what good stead this stood the Anglo-Saxon
+kings! The kingly power obtained, through the splendour which the union
+with religion bestowed on its victorious arms, a reverential recognition
+by the old native population as well as by the invaders.</p>
+
+<p>Alfred's grandson had regained Northumbria by a somewhat doubtful title,
+and had then maintained his right in a great battle, renowned in song;
+his great-grandson, Edgar, in one of his charters thanks the grace of
+God which had permitted him to extend his rule further than his
+predecessors, over the islands and seas as far as Norway, and over a
+great part of Ireland. We are not to look on it as a mere piece of
+vanity, when he seeks after new titles for his power, when
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+he calls himself Basileus and Imperator; the former is the title of the Eastern,
+the latter of the Western emperors; he will not yield the precedence to
+either the one or the other, though the latter are so closely related to
+him by blood. We cannot express the feeling of a supreme power,
+independent of men, derived from the grace of God, the King of kings,
+more strongly than it was expressed by Edgar under Dunstan's influence;
+the ruling motives of life in Church and State make it conceivable that
+a monkish hierarch, such as Dunstan, shared, as it were, the King's
+power, and shaped the course of the authority of the state.</p>
+
+<p>It was still the ancestral Anglo-Saxon crown which glittered on Edgar's
+head, but, if we may so say, its splendour had at the same time received
+a monkish and hierarchic colouring. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The words of some MSS. in Caesar's Commentaries, iv. 25,
+'deserite, milites, si vultis, aquilam, atque hostibus prodite,' might
+well be taken for the genuine words, originally noted down in his
+Ephemerides (journal).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a>
+&#914;&#961;&#949;&#964;&#964;&#945;&#957;&#953;&#945;&#957; &#956;&#949;&#957;&#964;&#959;&#953; &#959;&#7985;
+&#929;&#969;&#956;&#945;&#953;&#959;&#953; &#945;&#957;&#945;&#963;&#969;&#963;&#945;&#963;&#952;&#945;&#953; &#959;&#965;&#954;&#949;&#964;&#953;
+&#949;&#963;&#967;&#959;&#957;, &#945;&#955;&#955;' &#959;&#965;&#963;&#945; &#8017;&#960;&#959; &#964;&#965;&#961;&#945;&#957;&#957;&#959;&#953;&#962;
+&#945;&#960;' &#945;&#965;&#964;&#959;&#965; &#949;&#956;&#949;&#957;&#949;. Procop. de bello Vand. I. No.
+2. p. 318 ed. Bonn. Compare Zosimus, vi. 4. on, we may assume, the
+better authority of Olympiodorus.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> The simplest form of the Saga occurs in Gildas, with very
+few historical ingredients. Nennius enlarges it with Anglo-Saxon
+traditions. Beda has combined both with some notices from the real
+history. Since the departure of the Romans was rightly fixed about 409,
+and Gildas said the Britons had rest for forty years, Beda settled that
+the Saxons arrived in 449.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Beda, Hist. Eccl. ii. 2. Some have wished to consider the
+remark, that Augustine had been then long dead, as a later
+interpretation, 'ad tollendam labem caedis Bangorensis;' this, however,
+is against the spirit of that age.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> 'Omnem orbem, quocunque ecclesia Christi diffusa est per
+diversas nationes et linguas uno temporis ordine.' Beda, Hist. Eccl.
+iii. 14.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BI_II" id="BI_II"></a>
+TRANSFER OF THE ANGLO-SAXON CROWN TO THE NORMANS AND PLANTAGENETS.</p>
+
+<p>In the families of German national kings we not unfrequently find among
+the women a hideous mixture of ambition, revenge, and bloodthirstiness,
+which brings kings and kingdoms to ruin. In England it appears, despite
+of Christianity and monastic discipline, in its most atrocious form
+after the death of Edgar. His eldest son, for some years his successor,
+was treacherously murdered by his stepmother (who wished to advance her
+own son to the throne), at a visit which he paid her as he returned from
+hunting. It was that Edward whose innocence and leaning towards the
+Church have gained him the name of Martyr. The son of the murderess did
+ascend the throne, but the guilt of blood seemed to cleave to the crown;
+he met with the obedience of his father's times no more. The Anglo-Saxon
+magnates seized the occasion which this crime, or the subsequent
+vacillation of the government between violence and weakness, offered
+them, to aim at an independent position, and to indulge in a personal
+policy, each man for himself.</p>
+
+<p>At this very moment the Danes renewed their invasions.</p>
+
+<p>Little did Edgar and those around him understand their position, when
+they attributed the peace they enjoyed to their own military power, in
+the splendid and extensive display of which they took delight. In
+reality it was the state of the world at large that brought this peace
+about. First of all, it was due to the settlement of the Normans in
+North Gaul, under the condition that they should be of one religion and
+one realm, and should fulfil the natural duty
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+of keeping off fresh incursions: the current of Northern invasion thus lost its aim and
+direction. But it was of still more decisive effect at the first that
+the energetic family which arose in North Germany, and even assumed the
+imperial authority, not content with warding off the Danes, sought them
+out in their own country instead, and carried the war against heathenism
+into the North. The Saxons beyond the sea were indebted for the peace
+which they enjoyed chiefly to the great and splendid deeds of arms of
+their kindred on the mainland. How much all depended on this became very
+clear when Otto II, in the full glow of great enterprises, met with an
+unlooked for and early death. Within the empire two able women and their
+advisers succeeded in maintaining peace; but in Denmark, as in other
+neighbouring countries, the hostile elements got the upper hand. The
+Danish king's son, Sven Otto, abandoned the religion which he regarded
+as a yoke laid on him by the German conquerors; he could not destroy the
+order of things established in Denmark, but he revived the old
+sea-king's life, and threw himself with the old superiority of the
+Viking arms on the English coasts.</p>
+
+<p>Ethelred on this attack fell into the greatest distress, mainly because
+he was not sure of his great nobles. How often did the commanders of the
+fleet desert it at the moment of action, and the leaders of the inland
+levies go over to the enemy! Ethelred sought for safety by an alliance
+with the Duchy of Normandy, then daily rising to greater power. Thus
+supported, he proceeded to unjustifiable outrages against his domestic
+as well as his foreign foes. The great nobles whom he suspected were
+mercilessly killed or exiled, and their children blinded. The Danes who
+remained in the land he caused to be murdered all on one day.</p>
+
+<p>The consequences of this deed necessarily recoiled upon himself. When
+Sven some years after again landed with redoubled enmity, which was to a
+certain extent justified, he experienced no effectual resistance
+whatever; Ethelred had to fly before him and quit the island. But now
+that Sven too, who had been already saluted by many as King, died in the
+first enjoyment of his victory, a question
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+arose which extended far beyond the personal relations and embarrassments of the moment.</p>
+
+<p>The influence always exercised by the Witans of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms
+in determining the succession to the throne remained much the same when
+they were all fused into a single kingdom; even among the descendants of
+Alfred, the great men designated the sovereign. In the disturbed state
+of things in which they now found themselves, the lawful King having
+fled, and the other, who had put himself into actual possession of the
+supreme authority, being dead, they framed the largest conception of
+their right. They formally made conditions with Ethelred for his return,
+and he consented to their demands through his
+son.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>
+Since he, however,
+did not fulfil his promise&mdash;for how could he have altered his
+nature?&mdash;they held themselves released from their engagement to maintain
+this family on the throne. Sven's son, Canute, had taken his father's
+place among the Danes; he had been long ago baptised, he was of a
+character which commanded confidence, and possessed at the time
+overwhelming power. After Ethelred's death the lay and spiritual chiefs
+of England decided to abandon the house of Cerdic for ever, and to
+recognise Canute as their King. How many jarls and thanes of Danish
+origin do we find around the kings under all the last governments. Edgar
+was especially blamed for the very reason that he took them under his
+protection. But they had been subjected only by war; no hereditary
+sentiment of natural loyalty attached them to the West Saxon royal
+house. The ecclesiastical aristocracy was besides determined by
+religious considerations; to them these disasters and crimes seemed
+sufficient proof of the truth of those prophecies of coming woe which
+Dunstan was believed to have uttered. They repaired to Canute at
+Southampton, and concluded a peace with him, the conditions of which
+were that they would abandon the descendants of Ethelred for ever, and
+recognise Canute as their King; he, on the other hand, promised to
+fulfil the duties of a King truly, in both spiritual and temporal
+relations.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
+Yet once more, Ethelred's eldest son, Edmund
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+Ironsides, who was himself half a Dane by birth, roused himself to a vigorous
+resistance: London and a part of the nobility took his side; he gained
+through force of arms a settlement by which, though indeed he lost the
+best part of the land and the capital itself, he maintained the crown;
+he died however, soon after, and then the whole country recognised
+Canute as King. The last scion of the royal house in the land was
+banished, and all the claims of the family to the crown again declared
+void. The Anglo-Saxon magnates undertook to make a money payment to the
+Danish host; in return they received the pledge from the King's hand,
+and the oath by his soul taken by his chiefs.<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>
+It was a treaty between
+the Anglo-Saxon and the Danish chiefs, by which the former received the
+King of the latter as also their own.</p>
+
+<p>This extremely important event links the centuries together, and
+determines the future fortunes of England. The kingly house, whose right
+and pre-eminence was connected with the earliest settlements, which had
+completed the union of the realm and delivered it from the worst
+distress, was at a moment of moral deterioration and disaster excluded
+by the spiritual and temporal chiefs, of Anglo-Saxon and Danish origin.
+They had first tried to limit it, to bind it by its own promise; when
+this led to nothing, they annihilated its right by a formal resolution
+of the realm, and procured peace by raising to the throne another
+sovereign who had no right by birth. Canute did not owe the crown to
+conquest, though his greater power contributed to the result, but to
+election, which now appeared as the superior right: hitherto the Witan
+had always exercised it within the limits of the royal family; this time
+they disregarded that family altogether.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+Canute decreed or allowed some bloody acts of violence, in order to
+strengthen the power that had fallen to his lot; but afterwards he
+administered it with a noble spirit answering to his position. He became
+the leading sovereign of the North: men reckoned five or six kingdoms as
+subject to him. England was the chief of them all, even for him; it was
+in possession of the culture and religion which he wished should prevail
+in the rest: the missionaries of the North went forth from Canterbury.
+England itself, however, gained a higher position in the world by its
+union with a power which ruled as far as Norway and North America, and
+carried on commerce with the East by the Baltic. In Gothland the great
+emporium of the West, Arabic as well as Anglo-Danish coins are found;
+the former were carried from the North as far as England. Canute
+favoured the Anglo-Saxon mode of life; he liked to be designated the
+'successor of Edgar;' he confirmed his legislation; and it was his
+intention, at least, to rule according to the laws: as he even submitted
+himself to the military regulations of the Huskarls, so he commanded
+right and law to be administered in civil matters without respect to his
+own person.</p>
+
+<p>But a union of such different kingdoms could only be a transitory
+phenomenon. Canute himself thought of leaving England again independent
+under one of his sons.</p>
+
+<p>With this object he had married Ethelred's widow Emma. For, according to
+Anglo-Saxon ideas, the Queen was not merely the King's wife, but also
+sovereign of the land, in her own right. It was settled that the
+children of this marriage should succeed him in England. Probably Canute
+did not wish the inheritance of the crown in his house to depend merely
+on the goodwill of the Witan.</p>
+
+<p>After Canute's death we can observe a wavering between the principles of
+election and birthright. The magnates again elected, but limited their
+choice to the King's house. After the extinction of the Danish-Norman
+family, they came back to the English-Norman one; they called the son of
+Ethelred and Emma, Edward the Confessor, to the throne of his fathers,
+though, it is true, without leaving him much power. This lay rather in
+the hands of the Earls Godwin of Kent and Leofric of Mercia; especially
+in the former,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+whose wife was related to Canute, did the Anglo-Saxon
+spirit of independence energetically manifest itself. He was once
+banished, but returned and recovered all his offices. When however,
+Edward too died without issue, the dynastic question once more came
+before the English magnates. It might have seemed most consistent to
+recall the Aetheling Edgar a member of the house of Cerdic from exile,
+and to carry on the previous form of government under his name. But the
+thoughts of the English chiefs no longer turned in that direction. Not
+very long before a king from the ranks of the native nobility had
+ascended the throne of the Carolingians in the West Frank empire; in the
+East Frank, or German empire, men had seen first the mightiest duke,
+then one of the most distinguished counts, attain the imperial dignity.
+Why should it not be possible for something similar to happen in England
+also? The very day on which Edward the Confessor died, Godwin's son,
+Harold, was elected by the magnates of the kingdom, and crowned without
+delay<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>
+(Jan. 5, 1066). The event now happened which was only implied
+in what occurred at Canute's accession: the house of Cerdic was
+abandoned, and the further step taken of raising another native family
+to its throne.</p>
+
+<p>It was not this time a pressing necessity that brought it about; but we
+cannot deny that, if carried through, it opened out an immeasurable
+prospect.</p>
+
+<p>For such would have been the case, if the attempt to found a Germanic
+Anglo-Saxon kingdom under Harold, and maintain it free from any
+preponderating foreign influence had been successful. By recalling Edgar
+the influence of Normandy, against which the antipathies of the nation
+had been awakened under the last government, would have been renewed.
+But just as little were those claims to be recognised which the Northern
+kings put forward for the re-establishment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> of their supremacy. Even as
+regards the Papacy, the government began to adopt an independent line of
+conduct.</p>
+
+<p>The question now was, whether the Anglo-Saxon nation would be unanimous
+and strong enough to maintain such a haughty position on all sides.</p>
+
+<p>The first attack came from the North; it was all the more dangerous,
+from the fact that an ambitious brother of the new King supported it:
+only by an extreme effort were these enemies repelled. But, at the same
+moment, an attack was threatened from another enemy of infinitely
+greater importance&mdash;Duke William of Normandy. It was not only this
+sovereign, and his land, but a new phase of development in the history
+of the world, with which England now entered into conflict.</p>
+
+<p class='sect'><a name="BI_II_I" id="BI_II_I"></a>The Conquest.</p>
+
+<p>Out of the antagonism of nationalities, of the Empire and the Church, of
+the overlord and the great chiefs, in the midst of invasions of foreign
+peoples and armies, the local resistance to them and their occupations
+of territory, a new world had, as it were, been forming itself in
+Southern Europe, and especially in Gaul. Still more decidedly than in
+England had the invading Vikings in France attached themselves to the
+national element, even in the second generation they had given up their
+language; they discovered at the same time a form which reconciled the
+membership in the kingdom, and the recognition of the common faith, with
+provincial freedom. In France no native power successfully opposed and
+checked the advancing Normans, such as that which the Danes had
+encountered in England. On the contrary they exercised the greatest
+influence over the foundation of a new dynasty. A system developed
+itself over the whole realm, in which, both in the provincial
+authorities and in the lower degrees of rank, the possession of land and
+share in public office, feudalism and freedom, interpenetrated each
+other, and made a common-weal which yet harmonised with all the
+inclinations that lend charm and colouring to individual life. The old
+migratory impulse and spirit of warlike enterprise set before itself
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+religious aims also, which lent it a higher sanction; war for the
+Church, and conquest (which meant for each man a personal occupation of
+land) were combined in one. Starting from Normandy, where great warlike
+families were formed that found no occupation at home (for these young
+populations are wont to multiply quickest), North French love of war and
+habits of war transplanted themselves to Spain and to Italy. How must it
+have elevated their spirit of enterprise when in the latter country the
+Papacy, which had just thrown off the supremacy of the emperor, and
+entered on a new stage in the development of its power, made common
+cause with their arms, and a practised Norman warrior, Robert Guiscard,
+appeared as Duke of Apulia and Calabria 'by grace of God and of S. Peter
+and, under his protection, of Sicily also in time to come'!<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>
+The Pope
+gave him lands in fief, which had hitherto belonged to the Greek Empire,
+and which the Germans had been unable to conquer; he promised, in
+return, to defend the prerogatives of S. Peter. Between the hierarchy
+which was striving to perfect its supremacy, and the warlike chivalry of
+the 11th century, an alliance was formed like that once concluded with
+the leaders of the Frankish host. The ideas were already stirring from
+which proceeded the Crusades, the foundation of the Spanish kingdoms,
+and the creation of the Latin Empire at Constantinople. In the princely
+fiefs of the French Crown, and above all in Normandy, they seized on
+men's minds. Chivalrous life and hierarchic institutions, dialectic and
+poetry, continual war at home and ceaseless aspirations abroad, were
+here fused into a living whole.</p>
+
+<p>In the Germanic countries also this close alliance of hierarchy and
+chivalry now sought to win influence, but here it met with a strenuous
+resistance. In England, Edward the Confessor had tried to prepare the
+way for it: Godwin and his house opposed it. And when the former named
+the Norman Robert Archbishop of Canterbury, and the latter drove him
+out, the English quarrels became connected with those of Rome; Stigand,
+the archbishop put in by Godwin, received<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> his pallium from Pope
+Benedict X, who had been elected in the old tumultuous manner once more
+by the neighbouring Roman barons, but had to succumb to Hildebrand's
+zeal for a regular election by the cardinals, on which the emancipation
+of the Papacy depended. It seemed, then, intolerable at Rome that there
+should be a primate of the English Church, connected by his Church
+position with a phase of the supreme priesthood now condemned and
+abolished: it is very intelligible that this priesthood in its present
+form took up a hostile position towards the England of that time. In
+this, moreover, it found an ally ready to act in Duke William of
+Normandy, who wished to be regarded as the born champion of the
+Anglo-Saxon dynasty, and as the natural successor to its rights. Once
+already his father had collected a fleet to restore the exiled
+Aethelings, and was only kept back from an invasion by unfavourable
+weather. There had often since been rumours, that Edward had destined
+Duke William to be his successor; men asserted that Harold had
+previously recognised this right, and that in return William's daughter,
+and a part of the land as an independent possession, had been promised
+him.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>
+In his own position William had cleared the ground for himself
+with a strong hand. He had beaten his feudal lord in the open field, and
+thus not only recovered a frontier fortress lost during his minority,
+but also strengthened the independence of the duchy. At the same time
+William had vanquished his rebellious vassals in arms, banished them,
+deprived them of their possessions, and got rid, with the Pope's
+consent, of an archbishop who was allied with them. Death freed him from
+another mighty opponent, the Duke of Brittany, who threatened him with a
+great maritime expedition. It throws a certain light on his policy, to
+see how he made himself master of the county of Maine in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> 1062. On the
+ground that Count Heribert, whom he had supported in his quarrel with
+Anjou, had become his vassal and made him his heir,<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
+he overran
+Maine, and put his adherents in possession of the fortresses which
+commanded the land. However we may decide as to the details told us
+about his relations to Edward and Harold, it seems undeniable that
+William had received provisional promises from both&mdash;for Harold loved to
+side with Edward. He was not the man to put up with their being broken.
+The system, however, which through Harold's accession gained the upper
+hand in England, was in itself hostile to the Norman one: and that a
+king of England like the present might some day become dangerous to the
+duke, amidst all the other hostilities which threatened him, is clear.
+To these motives was now added the approbation of the Roman See. The
+Pope's chief Council deliberated on the enterprise, above all did the
+archdeacon of the Church, Hildebrand, declare himself in its favour. He
+was reproached&mdash;then or at a later time&mdash;with being the author of
+bloodshed; he declared that his conscience acquitted him, since he knew
+well, that the higher William mounted, the more useful he would be to
+the Church.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>
+Alexander II now sent the duke the banner of the Church.
+As a few years before Robert Guiscard had become duke, so now a Norman
+duke was to become king, in the service of the Church. The Normans were
+still divided in their views as to the enterprise, but when this news
+arrived, all opposition ceased, for in the service of S. Peter and the
+Church men believed themselves secure of success; then lay and spiritual
+vassals emulously armed ships and men; in the harbour of S. Valery,
+which belonged to one of those who had been last gained over, the Count
+of Ponthieu, the fleet and the troops gathered together.<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>
+The Count
+of Flanders, the duke's father-in-law, secretly favoured the enterprise;
+another of his nearest relations, Count Odo of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>Champagne, brought up
+his troops in person; Count Eustace of Boulogne armed, to avenge on
+Godwin's house an affront he had once suffered at Dover; a number of
+leading Breton counts and lords attached themselves to William in
+opposition to their duke, who cherished wholly different projects. To
+the lords and knights of North France were joined many of lower rank,
+whose names show that they came from Gascony, Burgundy, the duchy of
+France, or the neighbouring districts belonging to the German Empire. Of
+their own free will they ranged themselves round William, to vindicate
+the right which he claimed to the English crown, but each man naturally
+entertained brilliant hopes also for himself. William is depicted as a
+man of vast bodily strength, which none could surpass or weary out, with
+a strong hardy frame, a cool head, an expression in his features which
+exactly intimated the violence with which he followed up his enemies,
+destroyed their states, and burnt their houses. Yet all was not
+passionate desire in him. He honoured his mother, he was true to his
+wife. Never did he undertake a quarrel without giving fair notice, and
+certainly never without having well prepared for it beforehand. He knew
+how to keep up a warlike spirit in his vassals: there were seen with him
+only splendid men and able leaders; he kept strict discipline. So also
+he had seized the moment for his enterprise, at which the political
+relations of Europe were favourable to him. The two great realms, which
+might otherwise have well interposed, the East Frank (or the
+Roman-German) as well as the West Frank, were under kings not yet of
+age: the guardianship of the latter lay with the Count of Flanders, who
+thought he did enough in not standing openly by his son-in-law, of the
+former with great bishops devoted heart and soul to the hierarchic
+system.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>
+Harold, on the other hand, had no friend or ally, in North
+or East, in South or in West. To encounter the combined efforts of a
+great European coalition he had only himself and his Anglo-Saxons to
+rely on. Harold is depicted as coming forth
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> perfect from the hands of
+nature, without blemish from head to foot, personally brave before the
+enemy, gentle among his own people, and endowed with natural eloquence.
+His enemy's passion for, and knowledge of, war were not in him; the
+taste of the Anglo-Saxons was directed more to peaceful enjoyments than
+to ceaseless wars. At this moment too they were weakened by great losses
+in the last bloody war; many of the most trustworthy and bravest had
+fallen, others wavered in their fidelity; Harold had not been able to
+put even the coasts in a state of defence; William landed without
+resistance, to demand his crown from him. When reminded of his promise
+Harold was believed to have answered in the very spirit of Anglo-Saxon
+independence, that he had no right to make any such promise without the
+consent of the Anglo-Saxon chiefs and people. And not to meet the
+invading foe instantly at the sword's point would have seemed to him
+disgraceful cowardice. And so William and Harold, the North French
+knights and the national war-array of the Anglo-Saxons, encountered at
+Hastings. Harold fell at the very beginning of the fight. The Normans,
+according to their wont, knew how to separate their enemies by a
+pretended flight, and then by a sudden return to surround and destroy
+them in isolated bodies. It was the iron-clad, yet rapidly moving
+cavalry, which decided the battle.<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
+
+<p>William expected, now that his rival had fallen, to be recognised by the
+Anglo-Saxons as their King. Instead of this the chiefs and the capital
+raised Edgar the Aetheling, grandson of Edmund Ironsides, to the throne:
+as though William would retire before a scion of the old West-Saxon
+house, of which he professed to be the champion. He held firmly to the
+transfer made to him by the last king without regard to any third
+person, ratified as it was by the Roman See, and marched on the capital.</p>
+
+<p>Edgar was a boy, and the magnates were at variance as to who should have
+the authority to exercise guardianship over him. When William appeared
+before the city, and threatened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> the walls with his siege-machines, it
+too lost courage. The embassy which it sent him was amazed at the
+grandeur and splendour of his appearance, was convinced as to the right
+which King Edward had transferred to him,<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>
+and penetrated by the
+danger which a resistance, in itself hopeless, would bring on the city.
+Aldermen and people abandoned Edgar, and recognised William as King.
+There is an old story, that the county of Kent, on capitulating, made
+good conditions for itself. To the nobles also, who submitted by
+degrees, similar terms may have been accorded, but their position was
+almost entirely altered. We need notice only this one point. Their chief
+right, which they exercised to a perhaps unauthorised extent, was that
+of electing the King; they had now elected twice, but the first election
+was annulled by defeat in the open field, the second by increasing
+superiority in arms; they had to recognise the Conqueror, who claimed by
+inheritance, as their King, whether they would or no. There is something
+almost symbolic of the resulting state of things in the story of
+William's coronation, which was now celebrated by the tomb of Edward the
+Confessor at Westminster. For the first time the voices of the
+Anglo-Saxons and the Normans were united to greet him as King, but the
+discordant outcry of the two languages seemed a sign of conflict to the
+troops gathered outside, and made the warlike fury, so hardly kept under
+control, boil up again in them; they set the houses of London on fire.
+Whilst all hurried from the church, the ceremony it is said was
+completed by shuddering priests in the light of the flames: the new King
+himself, who at other times did not know what fear was, trembled.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
+
+<p>By this coronation-acclaim, two constituent elements of the world, which
+had been fundamentally at conflict with each other, became indissolubly
+united.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+That against which the Anglo-Saxons had set themselves to guard with all
+their strength during the last period, the inroad of the Norman-French
+element into their Church and their State, was now accomplished in
+fullest measure. William's maxim was, that all who had taken arms
+against him and his right had forfeited their property; those who
+escaped, and the heirs of those who had fallen, were deprived alike. In
+a short time we find William's leading comrades in the war, as earls of
+Hereford, Buckingham, Shrewsbury, Cornwall; his valiant brothers were
+endowed with hundreds of fiefs; and when the insurrection which quickly
+broke out led to new outlawries and new confiscations, all the counties
+were filled with French knights. From Caen came over the blocks of
+freestone to build castles and towers, by which they hoped to bridle the
+towns and the country. It is an exaggeration to assume a complete
+transfer of property from the one people to the other; among the tenants
+in chief about half the names are still Anglo-Saxon. At first, those who
+from any even accidental cause had not actually met William in arms were
+left in possession of their lands, though without hereditary right:
+later, after they had conducted themselves quietly for some time, this
+too was given back to them. In the next century it excited surprise that
+so many great properties should have remained in the hands of the
+Anglo-Saxons.<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>
+ It would have been altogether against William's plan,
+to treat the Anglo-Saxons as having no rights. He wished to appear as
+the rightful successor of the Anglo-Saxon kings: by their laws he would
+abide, only adding the legal usages of the Normans to those of the
+Danes, Mercians, and West Saxons; and it was not merely through his
+will, but also by its higher form, and connexion with the ideas of the
+century, that the Norman law gained the upper hand. But however much we
+may deduct from the usual exaggerations, this fact remains, that the
+change of ownership which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> took place, like the change in the
+constitution and the general state of things, was of enormous extent:
+the military and judicial power passed entirely into the hands of the
+victors in the war. And in the Church alterations no less thoroughgoing
+ensued. Under the authority of Papal legates, the great office-holders
+of the English Church, who had been opposed to the newly arisen
+hierarchic system, were mercilessly deprived of their places. The King
+was afterwards personally on tolerably good terms with Stigand, the
+Archbishop of Canterbury, but was not inclined on his account to oppose
+the Church. The archbishopric, and with it the primacy of England,
+passed to the man in whom the union of the Church authority and
+orthodoxy of that which we may call the especially hierarchic century
+was most vividly represented, the man who had been the chief agent in
+establishing the dogma of Transubstantiation, the great teacher of Bec,
+Lanfranc. In most of the bishoprics and abbeys we find Normans of
+kindred tendency. It was precisely in the enterprise against England
+that the hierarchy concluded its compact with the hereditary feudal
+state, which was all the more lasting in that they were both still in
+process of formation.</p>
+
+<p>In this way was England attached by the strongest ties to the Continent,
+and to the new system of life and ecclesiastico-political constitution
+which had then gained the upper hand in Latin Europe. Under the next
+three successors of the Conqueror, none of whom enjoyed a completely
+legal recognition, it sometimes appeared as though England would again
+tear herself away from Normandy: such variances were not without
+influence on home affairs: in the general relations of the country they
+wrought no change at all. On the contrary, these were developed on a
+still larger scale, owing to the complicated family connexions which so
+peculiarly characterise that epoch. From the county of Anjou which, like
+the dominion of the Capets, had been formed in the struggle against the
+invasion of the Normans, a sovereign arose who had the right to rule the
+Norman conquests, the son of the Conqueror's granddaughter, Henry
+Plantagenet. He had become, though not without appeal to the sword,
+which his father wielded powerfully on his behalf, master of Normandy,
+and had the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>n married Eleanor of Poitou, who brought him a great part of
+South France: he then succeeded more by fair means than by force in
+establishing his right to the throne of England. Henry was the first to
+establish in France the power of the great vassals, by which the crown
+was long in danger of being overthrown. The Kings of Castille and
+Navarre submitted to his arbitration. And under a sovereign whose
+grandfather had been King of Jerusalem, and one of the mightiest rulers
+of that Western kingdom established in the East, the tendencies, which
+had led so far, could not fail to extend themselves to the utmost in all
+their spheres of action? The hierarchic and chivalrous spirit of
+Continental Europe, which under the Normans had seized on England, was
+much strengthened by the accession of the Plantagenets. It thus came to
+pass that after the disastrous loss of Jerusalem, the knights of Anjou
+and of Guienne, from Brittany (for Henry had added this province also to
+his family possessions) and from Normandy, gathered together in London,
+and took the Cross in company with the English. England formed a part of
+the Plantagenet Empire&mdash;if we may apply this word to so anomalous a
+state&mdash;and contributed to its extension, even though no interest of its
+own was involved. But towards such a result the relations which this
+alliance established between England and Southern Europe had long
+tended. Not seldom was the military power of the provinces over the sea
+employed for enterprises that aimed at the direct advantage of England
+itself. Whether and when the German element without this influence would
+have become master of the British group of islands none could say. The
+English dominion over Ireland in particular is derived from Henry II,
+and his alliance at that time with the Papacy; he crossed thither under
+the Pope's authorisation: at the Pope's word the native kings did homage
+to him as their lord.<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>
+And the foreign-born Plantagenets struck
+living root in England itself. As Henry II's mother was the daughter of
+a princess descended from the West-Saxon house, he was hailed by the
+natives as their lawfully-descended King; in accordance with Edward the
+Confessor's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> prophecy, that from the severed bough should spring up a
+new tree: they traced his descent without scruple back to Wodan. This
+King, moreover, has impressed his mark deeply on English life; to this
+day justice is administered in England under forms established by him.</p>
+
+<p>The will of destiny cannot be gainsaid. Just as Germany without its
+connexion with Italy, so England without its connexion with France,
+would never have been what it is. More than all, the great commonwealth
+of the western nations, whose life pervades and determines the history
+of each separate state, would never have come into existence. But on
+this ground first, amidst continual warfare, was gradually accomplished
+the formation of the nationalities. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Se in omnibus eorum voluntati consensurum, consiliis
+acquieturum.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> Florentius Wigorniensis: 'Post cujus (Aethelredi) mortem
+episcopi abbates duces et quique nobiliores Angliae, in unum congregati
+pari consensu in dominum et regem Canutum sibi elegere&mdash;ille juravit,
+quod et secundum deum et secundum seculum fidelis eis esse vellet
+dominus.' The oath which Ethelred had taken was, however, only 'secundum
+deum.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Florentius, 593: 'Accepto pignore de manu sua nuda cum
+juramentis a principibus Danorum, fratres et filios Eadmundi omnino
+despexerunt eosque esse reges negaverunt.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> In Ingulphus (Savile Script. 511) it is said expressly:
+per Archiepiscopum Eboracae, Aedredum (Aldredum). But it is surprising
+that the Bayeux Tapestry expressly names Stigand (Lancelot: Description
+de Tapisserie de Bayeux, in Thierry, I). Yet Harold could not possibly
+have meant, by passing over the Archbishop of Canterbury, to declare him
+to be incompetent, since he had been appointed by his party.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Juramentum fidelitatis Roberti Guiscardi: 1059 in
+Baronius, Annales Eccles. ix. 350.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> The simplest statement occurs in the Carmen de bello
+Hastingensi, p. 352, according to which Edward promised the succession,
+and sent ring and sword to the duke by Harold; but as early as in
+William of Jumièges we have the tale of Harold's captivity in Ponthieu,
+and the promise made him, and the chief outlines of what in Guilielmus
+Pictaviensis, and Ordericus Vitalis, lies before us with further
+embellishments, and to which the Bayeux Tapestry (itself, too, a kind of
+historical memorial of the time) adds some further traits.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Guilielmus Pictaviensis, Gesta Wilhelmi ducis, in Duchesne
+189, already relates this in reference to the English affair.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Gregorii Registrum, vii. 23; Mansi, xx. 306.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> William of Jumièges, Hist. vii. 34. 'Ingentem exercitum ex
+Normannis et Flandrensibus ac Francis ac Britonibus aggregavit.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Guilielmus Pictaviensis 197 assures us that help was
+promised from Germany in the name of Henry IV.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> William of Malmesbury, Gesta Regum, III. § 245. 'Magis
+temeritate et furore praecipitati quam scientia militari Wilhelmo
+congressi.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> 'Contulit Eguardus quod rex donum sibi regni Monstrat et
+adfirmat vosque probasse refert.' So Guido (Carmen de bello Hastingensi,
+737) makes Ansgard on his return speak to the citizens.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Ordericus Vitalis 503. In Guido the ceremony is described
+with the greatest calmness, as though it passed undisturbed; but the
+conclusion of his work seems wanting.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Dialogus de Scaccario, i. 10. 'Miror singularis
+excellentiae principem, in subactam et sibi suspectam Anglorum gentem
+hac usum misericordia, ut non solum colonos indempnes servaret, verum
+ipsis regni majoribus feudos suos et amplas possessiones relinqueret.'
+In Madox, History of the Exchequer, ii. 391. In Domesday Book the memory
+of Edward the Confessor is always treated with the greatest respect.
+Ellis, Introduction to Domesday Book, i. 303.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> 'Ut illius terrae populus te sicut dominum veneretur.'
+Breve of Hadrian IV.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BI_III_I" id="BI_III_I"></a>
+THE CROWN IN CONFLICT WITH CHURCH AND NOBLES.</p>
+
+<p>Highly as we may estimate the due appreciation and expression of those
+objective ideas, which are bound up with the culture of the human race,
+still the spiritual life of man is built up not so much on a devout and
+docile receptivity of these ideas as on their free and subjective
+recognition, which modifies while it accepts, and necessarily passes
+through a phase of conflict and opposition.</p>
+
+<p>In England the authority both of Church and State now came forward with
+far more strength than before. The royal power was a continuation of the
+sovereignty inherited from Anglo-Saxon times, but, leaning on its
+continental resources, and supported by those who had taken part in the
+Conquest, it developed itself much more durably. The clergy of the land
+were far more closely and systematically bound to the Papacy; thus it
+had become more learned and more active. The one sword helped the other;
+just at this very time, the King and the Archbishop of Canterbury were
+depicted as the two strong steers that drew the plough of England.</p>
+
+<p>But yet, below all this there existed a powerful element of opposition.
+After the new order of things had existed more than eighty years, among
+a portion of the Anglo-Saxon population the design was started of
+putting a violent end to it, of destroying at one blow all those
+foreigners who seemed its representatives, just as the Danes had all
+been murdered on one day.</p>
+
+<p>It was an evil thought, and all the more atrocious because manifold ties
+had been already gradually formed between the two populations. How could
+they ever become fused into one nation if the one was always plotting
+the destruct<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>ion of the other?</p>
+
+<p>It was not merely by alliances of blood and family, but even still more
+by great common political and ecclesiastical interests that the English
+nationality, which contains both elements, was founded. And, in truth,
+the leading impulse towards it was that the conquerors, no less than the
+conquered, felt themselves oppressed by the yoke which the two supreme
+authorities laid on them, and hence both combined to oppose them. But
+centuries elapsed before this could be effected. The first occasion for
+it was given when the two authorities quarrelled with each other, and
+alternately called on the population to give its voluntary aid.</p>
+
+<p>For, as the authorities which represent the objective ideas are of
+different origin, they have never in our Western Europe remained more
+than a short time in complete harmony with each other. Each retains its
+natural claim to be supreme, and not to endure the supremacy of the
+other. The one has always more before its eyes the unity of the whole,
+the other the needs and rights of the several kingdoms and states.
+Amidst their antagonism European life has moulded itself and made
+progress.</p>
+
+<p>Close as their union was at the time of the Conquest of England, yet
+even then their quarrel broke out. Though the Conqueror pledged himself
+again to pay a tribute which the Anglo-Saxon kings had formerly charged
+themselves with, and which had been long unpaid, yet this was not
+sufficient for the Roman See: Gregory VII demanded to be recognised as
+feudal lord of England. But this was not what William understood, when
+he had allowed the papal banner to wave over the fleet that brought him
+to England. It was not from the Pope's authorisation that he derived his
+claim to the English crown, as if this had been merely transferred to
+him by the Papal See, but from the Anglo-Saxon kings, as whose heir and
+legal successor he wished to be regarded. He answered the Pope that he
+could enter into no other relation to him than that in which his
+predecessors in England had stood to previous popes.</p>
+
+<p>For the first time the popes had to give up altogether the attempt to
+make kings their feudal dependents; they attemp<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>ted, however, an almost
+deeper encroachment into the very heart of the royal power, when they
+then formed the plan of severing the spiritual body corporate, which
+already possessed the most extensive temporal privileges, from their
+feudal obligation to the sovereigns. The English kings opposed them in
+this also with resolution and success. Under the influence of the father
+of scholasticism, Anselm of Canterbury, Primate of England, a
+satisfactory agreement was arranged long before the Concordat was
+obtained in Germany. In general there was little to fear, as long as the
+Archbishop of Canterbury had a good understanding with the Crown; and
+this was the case in the first half of the 12th century, if not on all
+points, yet, at least on all leading questions. Far-reaching differences
+did not appear until the higher ecclesiastics embraced the party of the
+Papacy, which happened in England through Thomas Becket.</p>
+
+<p class='sect'><a name="BI_III_II" id="BI_III_II"></a>Henry II and Becket.</p>
+
+<p>It was precisely from him that this would have been least expected. He
+had been the King's Chancellor, or if we may avail ourselves of a
+somewhat remote equivalent expression, his most trusted cabinet
+minister, and had as such, in both home and foreign affairs, rendered
+the most valuable services. The introduction of scutage is attributed to
+him, and he certainly had a large share in the acquisition of Brittany.
+It was through the direct influence of the King that he was elected
+archbishop.<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>
+But from that hour he seemed to have become another man.
+As he had hitherto rivalled the courtiers in splendour, pleasure, and
+pomp, so would he now by strictness of life equal the sanctity of the
+saints; as hitherto to the King, so did he now attach himself to the
+interests of the Church. It might, so we may suppose, be some
+satisfaction to his self-esteem, that he could now confront his stern
+and mighty sovereign as Archbishop 'also by the grace of God,' for so he
+designates himself in his letter to the King; or he might feel himself
+bound to recover the possessi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>ons of his Church, which had been wrested
+from it by the Crown or the high nobility. But, as spiritually-minded
+men are moved more by universal ideas than by special interests, so for
+Becket the determining impulse without doubt lay above all in the
+sympathy which he devoted to the hierarchic movement in general.</p>
+
+<p>Those were the times in which the attempt of the Emperor Frederic I to
+call a council, and in it to decide on a contested papal election, had
+created general excitement among the peoples and churches of Southern
+Europe, which would only consent to be led by a pope independent of the
+empire. Driven from Italy, Alexander III, the Pope rejected by the
+Emperor, found a cordial reception in France; and here he now collected
+on his side a papal council in opposition to the imperial one, in which
+the cardinals, whose election the Emperor was trying to annul, and the
+bishops of Spain and South Italy, and those of the collective Gaulish
+dioceses (more than a hundred in number), and the English bishops also,
+gathered around him, and laid the Pope elected by the Emperor under the
+anathema. It was inevitable that the idea of the Church, as independent
+of the temporal power, should here find its strongest expression. Some
+canons were passed which prohibited the usurpation of ecclesiastical
+property by the laity, and made it a crime in the bishops to allow
+it.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
+
+<p>Thomas Becket was welcomed in this council with a seductive kindness;
+but besides this, what is harder than to set oneself against the common
+feeling of one's own order, when moderation already appears to be
+apostasy? He returned to England filled with the ideas of hierarchic
+independence; in preparing to carry it through, he necessarily brought
+on the conflict which had hitherto been avoided.</p>
+
+<p>The Plantagenet King, whose whole heart was in the work of securing the
+obedience of the manifold provinces that had fallen to his lot; who
+hastened ceaselessly from one to the other (when people thought him far
+away in South<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> France, he had already recrossed the sea to England),
+ever occupied in extending his inherited power by institutions of a
+legal and administrative nature, was not inclined to give way to the
+Church in this attempt. He would neither make the election of the higher
+clergy free, nor allow their excommunication to be valid without State
+control; he not only maintained the right of the lay courts to try
+ecclesiastics for heinous offences, which else often remained
+unpunished; but, even in the sphere of spiritual jurisdiction, he
+claimed to hear appeals in the last instance without regard to the Pope.
+In all this the lay and spiritual nobility agreed with him; in a Council
+at Clarendon they framed 'constitutions,' in which they declared these
+rules to be the law of the realm, as it had always been observed, and
+ought to be observed henceforth.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
+
+<p>Becket did not possess the inflexible obstinacy which distinguishes most
+of the champions of the hierarchy. As the accordant voice of Europe
+moved him to take up the hierarchic principles, so now the accordant
+voice of his country's rulers made an impression on him: he listened to
+the ecclesiastics who entreated him not to draw the King's displeasure
+on them, and to the laymen, who prayed him not to bring on them the
+necessity of executing it on the ecclesiastics: he virtually accepted
+the Constitutions of Clarendon. But then again he could not prevail on
+himself to observe them. Only when his vacillation endangered him
+personally, so that he could expect nothing else to follow but a
+condemnation by a new assembly of the royal court, did he come to a
+decision. Then he took the hierarchic side resolutely; in contradiction
+to the Constitutions, he appealed to the Pope. It is a remarkable day in
+English history, that 14th October 1164, on which Thomas Becket, after
+reading mass, appeared before the court without his archiepiscopal
+dress, but cross in hand. He forbade the earl, who wished to announce
+the judgment to him, to speak, since
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+no layman had power to sit in
+judgment on his spiritual father;<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a>
+he again put himself under the
+protection of God and the Roman Church, and then passed from the court,
+no man venturing to lay hands on him, still armed with his cross, to a
+church close by, from whence he escaped to the Continent. By this he
+brought into England the war of the two powers, which had already burst
+into flame in Italy and Germany. The archbishop and primate rejected the
+supreme judicial authority of the Curia Regis; only in the chief pontiff
+at Rome did he recognise his rightful judge: by undertaking to bring
+into full view the complete independence of the spiritual principle on
+this ground also, he broke down that unity of authority, which had, been
+hitherto maintained in the English realm, and entered into open war with
+his King.</p>
+
+<p>Henry II was, like most of the sovereigns of that age, above all things
+a warrior; you could see by his stride that he spent his days on
+horseback; and he was an indefatigable hunter. But yet he found time
+besides for study; he took pleasure in solving, in the company of
+scholars, the difficulties of the theologico-philosophical problems
+which then largely occupied men's minds; there is no doubt that he also
+fully understood these politico-ecclesiastical questions. He was by no
+means a good husband, rather the contrary, but, in other things, he
+could control himself; he was moderate in eating and drinking. Success
+did not make him overweening, but all the more prudent:<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a>
+ill-success
+found him resolute; yet it was remarked that he was more severe in
+success, milder in adversity. If contradicted, he showed all the
+excitability of the Southern French nature; he passed from promises to
+threats, from flatteries to outbursts of wrath, until he met with
+compliance. His administration at home witnesses to a noble conception
+of his mission and to a practical understanding; from his lion-like
+visage shone forth a pair of quiet eyes, but how suddenly did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> they
+flame up with wild fire, if the passion was roused that slumbered in the
+depths of his soul! It was the passion of unlimited power; an ambition
+for which, as he once said, the world appeared to be too small. He never
+forgave an opponent; he never reconciled himself with an enemy or took
+him again into favour.</p>
+
+<p>He would of himself have been much inclined to abandon Alexander III,
+and attach himself to the Pope set up by the Emperor: his ambassadors
+took part in a German diet at which the most extreme steps were approved
+of. But Henry was not sufficiently master of his clergy nor, above all,
+of his people for this; the solemn curse of Thomas Becket wrought on men
+from far away. Was there really any foundation for what men then said,
+that the King thought it better that his foe should be in the country
+rather than out of it? An apparent reconciliation was brought about,
+which, however, left the main questions undecided, each side only
+consenting generally to a peace with the other. Becket did not allow
+himself to be hindered by it, on his return to England, from
+excommunicating leading ecclesiastics who had supported the King's
+party. But at this Henry's deep-seated wrath awoke. Beset by the exiles
+with cries for protection, he let the complaint escape him in the
+presence of his knights, that among so many to whom he had shown favour
+there was not one who had courage enough to avenge the insults offered
+to him.<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>
+As opposed to the Church sympathies which through the clergy
+wrought on all people, the temporal state was mainly kept together by
+the reciprocal relations of the feudal lord and sovereign to his vassals
+and knights, and of them to him: to spiritual reverence was opposed
+personal devotion. But these feelings, too, as they have their
+justification, so they have their moral limitations; they are as capable
+of exaggeration and excess as all others. Enflamed by the King's words
+which seemed to touch the honour of knighthood, four of his knights
+hastened to Canterbury, and sought out the man, who dared to bid
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>the
+King defiance in his own kingdom; as Becket refused to recall the
+excommunication, they murdered him horribly in the cathedral. When
+required to obey the King, Becket was wont to reserve the rights of the
+Church and the priesthood; for this reservation he died.</p>
+
+<p>Henry II by calling forth, intentionally or not, this brutal act of
+violence in the ecclesiastical strife, drew on himself the catastrophe
+of his life.</p>
+
+<p>By Becket's murder the ideas of Church independence gained what was yet
+wanting to them, a martyr: his death was more advantageous to them than
+his life could ever have been. The belief that the victim wrought
+miracles, which were ascribed to him in increasing measure, at first
+slight, then more and more surprising ones, viz. cures of incurable
+diseases,&mdash;who does not know the resistless nature of this illusion,
+bound up as it is with the nearest needs of man in every form?&mdash;made him
+the idol of England. Henry II had to live to see the man who had refused
+him the old accustomed obedience, reverenced among his people with
+almost divine honours as one of the greatest saints that had ever lived.
+The great Hohenstaufen in the unsuccessful struggle with the Papacy was
+at last brought to declare that all he had hitherto done rested on an
+error; and in like manner, but one far more humiliating and painful,
+Henry II had to do penance, and receive the discipline of the scourge,
+at the tomb of the man who had been murdered by his loyal subjects. On a
+hasty glance it seems as though his Constitutions were established, but
+a more accurate inquiry shows that the articles which displeased the
+Pope were left out. The hierarchic ideas gained the day in England also.</p>
+
+<p>It was precisely the Church quarrel that fed the discords which broke
+out in the King's own house. His eldest son found a pretence for his
+revolt, and essentially promoted it, by alleging that the murderers of
+the glorious martyr were unpunished; he on his side promised the clergy
+to make good all existing injuries, since what belonged to the Church
+should not serve man's ostentation. The example of the elder wrought on
+the younger sons too, who, to withstand their father, recognised the
+supremacy <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+of the King of France. Henry's last years were filled with
+depression, and even with despair; when dying he was believed to have
+bequeathed his curse to his children. In the cloisters his death was
+ascribed to the intercession and merits of S. Thomas.</p>
+
+<p>For with the acceptance of the hierarchic ideas the prestige of their
+martyr grew day by day. In the crusade of 1189 men saw him appear in
+dreams, and declare that he was appointed to protect the fleet, to calm
+the storms.</p>
+
+<p>It was under these auspices that the chivalry of the Plantagenet realm
+took part in the Third Crusade: King Richard (in whom the ideas of
+Church and Chivalry attained their highest splendour) at their head gave
+back to the already lost kingdom of Jerusalem, in despite of a very
+powerful foe, a certain amount of stability: as he served the hierarchic
+views with all his power, there was no question under him as to any
+dispute between Church and State. But this power itself could not be
+increased owing to his absence. Whilst he fought for the Church far
+away, elements of resistance were stirring in his realm which had been
+there long ago, and soon after his death came to the most violent
+outbreak.</p>
+
+<p class="sect"><a name="BI_III_III" id="BI_III_III"></a>John Lackland and Magna Charta.</p>
+
+<p>Despite all the community of interests between the sovereigns of the
+Conquest and their vassals, grounds of hostility between them had never
+been altogether wanting. The Conqueror's sons had to make concessions to
+the great lords, because their succession was not secure; they needed a
+voluntary recognition, the price of which consisted in a relaxation of
+the harsh laws with which the monarchy had at first fettered every
+department of life. But when the great nobles had managed, or decided,
+contests for the throne, Were they likely to feel bound unconditionally
+to obey the man whom they had raised? Besides Henry II in his
+ecclesiastical quarrel needed the consent of his vassals; his
+court-Assemblies were no longer confined to proclamations of ordinances
+from the one side only; consultations were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> held, leading to decisions
+that concerned them all.</p>
+
+<p>But what is now surprising is the fact, that even the associates in the
+Conquest, and much more their descendants, claimed the rights which the
+Anglo-Saxon magnates had once possessed. They, too, appealed incessantly
+to the <i>Laga</i>, the laws of Edward the Confessor, by which was meant the
+collection of old legal customs, the observation of which had been
+promised from the first. Following the precedent of their kings, the
+families that had risen through the Conquest regarded themselves as the
+heirs of the fallen Anglo-Saxon chiefs, into whose place they had
+stepped. The rights of the old Witan and of the vassals of the new
+feudal state became fused together.</p>
+
+<p>We must now lay greater weight than is commonly done on the incidents
+that occurred during King Richard's absence. He had entrusted the
+administration of the realm to a man of low origin, William, bishop of
+Ely, who carried it on with great energy, and not without the pomp and
+splendour, which grace authority, but arouse jealousy. Hence lay and
+spiritual chiefs combined against him: with Earl John, the brother of
+the absent King, at their head, they banished the hated bishop by the
+strong hand, and of their own authority set another in his place. The
+city of London, which had been already allowed the election of its own
+magistrates by Henry II, had then formed a so-called <i>Communia</i> after
+the pattern of the Flemish and North French towns; bishops, earls, and
+barons, swore to support the city in it.<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></p>
+
+<p>These first attempts at an opposition by the estates obtained fresh
+weight when on Richard's death a contest again arose about the
+succession. Earl John claimed it for himself, but Arthur, an elder
+brother's son, seemed to have a better right, and had been moreover
+recognised at once in the South French provinces. The English nobles
+fortified their castles, and for some time assumed an almost threatening
+position; they only acknowledged John on the assurance that each and all
+should have their rights.<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>
+John's possession of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>crown was
+therefore derived not merely from right of inheritance, but also from
+their election.</p>
+
+<p>A strong territorial confederacy had thus gradually grown up,
+confronting the royal power with a claim to independent rights; events
+now happened that roused it into full life.</p>
+
+<p>King John incurred the suspicion of having murdered Arthur, who had
+fallen into his hands, to rid himself of his claims; he was accused of
+it by the peers of France, and pronounced guilty; on which the
+Plantagenet provinces which were fiefs of the French crown went over to
+the King of France at the first attack. The English nobility would at
+least not fight for a sovereign on whom such a heinous suspicion lay: on
+another pretence it abandoned him.</p>
+
+<p>But then broke out a new quarrel with the Church. The most powerful
+pontiff that ever sat in the Roman See, Innocent III, thought good to
+decide a disputed election at Canterbury by passing over both
+candidates, including the King's, and caused the election of, or rather
+himself named, one of his friends from the great school at Paris,
+Stephen Langton. As King John did not acknowledge him, Innocent laid
+England under an Interdict.</p>
+
+<p>Alike careless and cruel, naturally hasty and untrustworthy, of doubtful
+birthright, and now rejected by the Church, John must have rather
+expected resistance than support from the great men of the realm. He
+tried to assure himself of those he suspected by taking hostages from
+their families; he confiscated the property of the ecclesiastics who
+complied with the Pope's orders, and took it under his own management;
+he employed every means which the still unlimited extent of the supreme
+authority allowed, to obtain money and men; powerfully and successfully
+he used the sword. But in the long run he could not maintain himself by
+these means. When a revolt broke out in Wales at the open instigation of
+the Pope, and the King's vassals were summoned to put it down, even
+among them a general discontent was perceptible; John had reason to
+dread th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>at if he came near the enemy with such an army he might be
+delivered into their hands or killed: he did not venture to carry out
+the campaign. And meanwhile he saw himself threatened from abroad also.
+King Philip Augustus of France armed, to attack his old opponent at home
+(whom he had already driven from in those provinces over which he
+himself was feudal sovereign), and to carry out the Pope's
+excommunication against him. He boasted, probably with good grounds, of
+having the English barons' letters and seals, promising that they would
+join him. He would have restored all the fugitives and exiles; the
+Church element would have raised itself all the more strongly, in
+proportion to its previous depression; a general revolt would have
+accompanied his attack, the English government according to all
+appearance would have been lost.</p>
+
+<p>King John knew this well: to avoid immediate ruin he seized on a means
+of escape which was completely unexpected, but quite decisive&mdash;he gave
+over his kingdom in vassalage to the Pope.</p>
+
+<p>What William I had so expressly rejected was now accepted in a moment of
+extreme pressure, from which such a step was the only means of escape.
+The moment the Pope was recognised as feudal lord of England, not only
+must his hostility cease, but he would be bound to take the realm under
+his protection. He now forbade the King of France, whom he had before
+urged on to its conquest, to carry out the invasion, which was already
+prepared.</p>
+
+<p>It appears as if the barons had originally agreed with the King's
+proceeding, although they did not entirely approve its form. They
+maintained that they had risen up for the Church's rights,<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a>
+and saw
+in the Pope a natural ally. They thought to gain their own purpose all
+the more surely now that Stephen Langton received the see of Canterbury,
+a man who, while he represented the Papal authority, at the same time
+zealously made their interests his own. At the very m<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>oment when the
+archbishop absolved the King from the excommunication, he made him swear
+that he would restore the good laws, especially those of King Edward,
+and would do all according to the legal decisions of his courts. It may
+be regarded as the first time that a Norman-Plantagenet king's
+administration was acted on by an obligatory engagement, when King John,
+on the point of taking the field against some barons whom he regarded as
+rebels, was hindered by the archbishop who reminded him that he would
+thus be breaking his last oath, which bound him to take judicial
+proceedings. The tradition that a forgotten charter of Henry I was
+produced by the archbishop (who was certainly, as his writings show, a
+scholar of research), and recognised as a legal document which gave them
+a firm footing, may admit of some doubt; there is no doubt that it was
+Stephen Langton who gathered around him the great nobles and bound them
+by a mutual engagement, to defend, even at the risk of life, the old
+liberties and rights which they derived from Anglo-Saxon times.</p>
+
+<p>It was, in fact, of considerable importance that the primate, on whose
+co-operation with the King the Norman state originally rested, united
+himself in this matter as closely as possible with the nobles; among all
+alike, without regard to their origin, whether from France or from
+England, had arisen the wish to limit the crown, as it had been limited
+in the Anglo-Saxon period.</p>
+
+<p>Here, however, they had to discover that the Pope was minded to protect
+the King, his vassal, not only against attacks from abroad, but also
+against movements at home. The engagements which the barons had formed,
+when he released them from their oath of fidelity to the King, he now
+declared to be invalid and void. The legate in England reported
+unfavourably on their proceedings, and it was seen that he was
+intimately allied with the King. The war was still raging on the
+continent, and the King had been again defeated, at Bouvines, July 27,
+1214; he had returned disheartened, but not without bodies of
+mercenaries, both horse and foot, which excited anxiety in the allied
+nobles. This feeling was strengthened by the fact that, after the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> death
+of a chancellor connected with them by family, and on good terms with
+them, he raised a foreigner, Peter des Roches, to that dignity, and it
+was believed that this foreigner would lend a hand to any attempt at
+restoring the previous state of things. Acts of violence of the old
+sort, and the King's lusts, which brought dishonour into their families,
+added to their indignation. In short, the barons, far from breaking up
+their alliance, confirmed it with new oaths. While they pressed the King
+to accept the demands which they laid before him, they sent one of the
+chief of their number, Eustace de Vescy, to Rome, to win the Pope to
+their cause, by reminding him of the gratitude due to them for their
+services in the cause of the Church. As lord of England, for they did
+not hesitate to designate him as such, he might admonish King John, and,
+if necessary, force him to restore unimpaired the old rights guaranteed
+them by the charters of earlier Kings.<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
+
+<p>But not so did Innocent understand his right of supreme lordship in
+England; he did not side with those who had helped to win the victory
+for him over the King, but with the King himself, to whose sudden
+decision he owed its fruits&mdash;the acknowledgment of his feudal
+superiority. He blamed the archbishop for concealing the movements of
+the barons from him, and for having, perhaps, even encouraged them,
+though knowing their pernicious nature: with what view was he stirring
+questions of which no mention had been made either under the King's
+father or brother? He censured the barons for refusing the scutage,
+which had been paid from old times, and for their threat of proceeding
+sword in hand. He repeated his command to them to break up their
+confederacy, under threat of excommunication.</p>
+
+<p>As one step lower the primate and nobles, so in the highest sphere
+Innocent and John were in alliance. The Papacy, then in possession of
+supremacy over the world, made common cause with royalty. Would not the
+nobles, some from reverence for the supreme Pontiff's authority, others
+from <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+a sense of religious obligation, yield to this alliance? Such was
+not their intention.<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></p>
+
+<p>The King proffered the barons an arbitration, the umpire to be the Pope,
+or else an absolute reference of the whole matter to him, who then by
+his apostolic power could settle what was right and lawful. They could
+not possibly accept either the one or the other, after the known
+declarations of the Pope. As they persevered in their hostile attitude,
+the King called on the archbishop to carry out the instructions of a
+Papal brief, and pronounce the barons excommunicated. Stephen Langton
+answered that he knew better what was the true intention of the holy
+father. The Pope's name this time remained quite powerless. Rather it
+was preached in London that the highest spiritual power should not
+encroach on temporal affairs; Peter, in the significant phrase of the
+time, could not be Constantine as well.<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a>
+Only among the lower
+citizens was there a party favourable to the King, but they were put
+down at a blow by the great barons and the rich citizens. The capital
+threw its whole weight on the side of the barons. They rose in arms and
+formally renounced their allegiance to the King; they proclaimed war
+against him under the name of 'the army of God.' Thus confronted by the
+whole kingdom, in which there appeared to be only one opinion, the King
+had no means of resistance remaining, no choice left.</p>
+
+<p>He came down&mdash;15th June, 1215&mdash;from Windsor to the meadow at Runnymede,
+where the barons lay encamped, and signed the articles laid before him,
+happy enough in getting some of them softened. The Great Charter came
+into being, truly the 'Magna Charta,' which throws not merely all
+earlier, but also the later charters into the shade.</p>
+
+<p>It is a document which, more than any other, links together the
+different epochs of English history. With a renewal of the earliest
+maxims of German personal freedom it combines a settlement of the rights
+of the feudal Estates: on this <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>twofold basis has the proud edifice of
+the English constitution been erected. Before all things the lay nobles
+sought to secure themselves against the misuse of the King's authority
+in his feudal capacity, and as bound up with the supreme jurisdiction;
+but the rights of the Church and of the towns were also guaranteed. It
+was especially by forced collections of extraordinary aids that King
+John had harassed his Estates: since they could no longer put up with
+this, and yet the crown could not dispense with extraordinary resources,
+a solution was found by requiring that such aids should not be levied
+except with the consent of the Great Council, which consisted of the
+lords spiritual and temporal. They tried to set limits to the arbitrary
+imprisonments that had been hitherto the order of the day, by definite
+reference to the law of the land and the verdict of sworn men. But these
+are just the weightiest points on which personal freedom and security of
+property rest; and how to combine them with a strong government forms
+the leading problem for all national constitutions.</p>
+
+<p>Two other points in this document deserve notice. In other countries
+also at this epoch emperors and kings made very comprehensive
+concessions to the several Estates: the distinctive point in the case of
+England is, that they were not made to each Estate separately, but to
+all at the same time. While elsewhere each Estate was caring for itself,
+here a common interest of all grew up, which bound them together for
+ever. Further, the Charter was introduced in conscious opposition to the
+supreme spiritual power also; the principles which lay at the very root
+of popular freedom breathed an anti-Romish spirit.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it was far from possible to regard them as being fully established.
+There were also conditions contained in the Charter, by which the legal
+and indispensable powers of the King's government were impaired: the
+barons even formed a controlling power as against the King. It could not
+be expected that King John, or any of his successors, would let this
+pass quietly. And besides, was not the Pope able to do away with the
+obligation of which he disapproved? We still possess the first draft of
+the Charter, which presents considerable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+variations from the document
+in its final form, among others the following. According to the draft
+the King was to give an assurance that he would never obtain from the
+Pope a revocation of the arrangements agreed on; the archbishop, the
+bishops, and the Papal plenipotentiary, Master Pandulph, were to
+guarantee this assurance. We see to what quarter the anxieties of the
+nobles pointed, how they wished above all to obtain security against the
+influences of the Papal See. Yet this they were not able to obtain.
+There was no mention in the document either of the bishops or of Master
+Pandulph; the King promised in general, not to obtain such a revocation
+from any one; they avoided naming the Pope.<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
+
+<p>In reality it made no difference, whatever might be promised or done in
+this respect. Innocent III was not the man to accept quietly what had
+taken place against his declared will, or to yield to accomplished
+facts. On the authority of the words 'I have set thee over the nations
+and over the kingdoms,' which seemed to him a sufficient basis for his
+Paramount Right, he gave sentence rejecting the whole contents of the
+Charter; he suspended Stephen Langton, excommunicated the barons and the
+citizens of London, as the true authors of this perverse act, and
+forbade the King under pain of excommunication to observe the Charter
+which he had put forth.</p>
+
+<p>And even without this King John had already armed, to annul by force of
+arms all that he had promised. A war broke out which took a turn
+especially dangerous to the kingdom, because the barons called the heir
+of France to the English throne and did him homage. So little were the
+feelings of nationality yet developed, that the barons fought out the
+war against their King, supported by the presence and military Power of
+a foreign prince. For the interests of the English crown it was perhaps
+an advantage that King John died in the midst of the troubles, and his
+rights passed to his son Henry, a child to whom his father's iniquity
+could not be imputed.<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>
+In his name a royalist party was formed by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+the joint action of Pembroke, the Marshal of the kingdom and the Papal
+Legate, which at last won such advantages in the field, that the French
+prince was induced to surrender his claim, which he himself hardly held
+to be a good one&mdash;the English were designated as traitors by his
+retinue,&mdash;and give back to the barons the homage they had pledged him.
+But he did so only on the condition that not merely their possessions,
+but also the lawful customs and liberties of the realm should be secured
+to them.<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>
+At a meeting between Henry III and the French prince at
+Merton in Surrey, it was agreed to give Magna Charta a form, in which it
+was deemed compatible with the monarchy. In this shape the article on
+personal freedom occurs; on the other hand everything is left out that
+could imply a power of control to be exercised against the King; the
+need of a grant before levying scutage is also no longer mentioned. The
+barons abandoned for the time their chief claims.</p>
+
+<p>It is, properly speaking, this charter which was renewed in the ninth
+year of Henry III as Magna Charta, and was afterwards repeatedly
+confirmed. As we see, it did not include the right of approving taxes by
+a vote.</p>
+
+<p>Whether men's union in a State in general depends on an original
+contract, is a question for political theorists, and to them we leave
+its solution. On the other hand, however, it might well be maintained
+that the English constitution, as it gradually shaped itself, assumed
+the character of a contract. So much is already involved in the first
+promises which William the Conqueror made at his entry into London and
+in his agreement with the partisans of Harold. The same is true of the
+assurances given by his sons, especially the second one: they were the
+price of a very definite equivalent. More than any that had gone before
+however does Magna Charta bear this character. The barons put forward
+their demands: King John negociates about them, and at last sees himself
+forced to accept them. It is true that he soon takes arms
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> to free
+himself from the obligation he has undertaken. It comes to a struggle,
+in which, however, neither side decidedly gains the upper hand, and they
+agree to a compromise. It is true the barons did not expressly stipulate
+for the new charter when they submitted to John's son (for with John
+himself they could certainly have never been reconciled), but yet it is
+undeniable that without it their submission would never have taken
+place, nor would peace have been concluded.</p>
+
+<p>As, however, is generally the case, the agreement had in it the germs of
+a further quarrel. The one side did not forget what it had lost, the
+other what it had aimed at and failed to attain. Magna Charta does not
+contain a final settlement, by which the sovereign's claims to obedience
+were reconciled with the security of the vassals; it is less a contract
+that has attained to full validity, than the outline of a contract, to
+fill up which would yet require the struggles of centuries. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> He says himself later, 'terror publicae potestatis me
+intrusit,' in Gervasius, 497.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Canones Concilii Turonensis, Article III, 'ut laici
+ecclesiastica non usurpent;' and Article I of those previously omitted
+in Mansi, XXI. 1178 seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Concilium Clarendoniae, 8 Cal. Febr. MCLXIV, Article VIII,
+de appellationibus. 'Si archiepiscopus defuerit in justitia exhibenda,
+ad dominum regem perveniendum est postremo; ita quod non debeat ultra
+procedi absque assensu domini regis.' Wilkins, i. 435.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Rogeri de Hoveden Annales ed. Savile, 283. 6. 'Prohibeo
+vobis ex parte omnipotentis dei et sub anathemate, ne faciatis hodie de
+me judicium, quia appellavi ad praesentiam domini papae.' None, however,
+of the accounts we have can be looked on as quite accurate.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> 'Ambigua fata formidans.' Knyghton de eventibus Angliae,
+2391.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> Gervasius 1414 'se ignobiles et ignavos homines
+nutrivisse, quorum nec unus tot sibi illatas injurias voluerit
+vindicare.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> 'Episcopi comites et barones regni&mdash;juraverunt quod ipsi
+eam communiam et dignitatem civitatis Londinensis custodirent.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Hoveden, p. 450, 'quod redderet unicuique illorum ius
+suum, si ipsi illi fidem servaverint et pacem.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> 'Quod ipsi audacter pro libertate ecclesiae ad mandatum
+suum se opposuerint,&mdash;honores quos ei (Papae) et romanae ecclesiae
+exhibuistis, id per eos coactus fecistis.'&mdash;Mauclerc, literae ad legem,
+in Rymer, Foedera, i.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Mauclerc, literae de negotio Baronum, in Rymer, Foedera,
+i. 185: 'Magnates Angliae&mdash;instanter domino Papae supplicant, quod cum
+ipse sit dominus Angliae vos&mdash;compellat, antiquas libertates suas&mdash;eis
+illaesas conservare.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Literae Johannis regis, quibus quae sit baronum contumacia
+narrat. Apud Odiham, 29 die Maii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> In Matthew Paris: 'Quod non pertinet ad papam ordinatio
+rerum laicarum.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> Articuli magnae cartae libertatum, § 49. Magna carta regis
+Johannis. In Blackstone, the Great Charter, 9, 23.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> Matthew Paris. 'Nobiles universi et castellani ei multo
+facilius adhaeserunt, quia propria patris iniquitas filio non debuit
+imputari.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Forma pacis inter Henricum et Ludovicum, in Rymer, i. 221.
+'Coadiutores sui habeant terras suas&mdash;et rectas consuetudines et
+libertates regni Angliae.'</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BI_IV" id="BI_IV"></a>
+FOUNDATION OF THE PARLIAMENTARY CONSTITUTION.</p>
+
+<p>There is a very accurate correspondence in this epoch also between the
+general history of the Western world and events in England: these last
+form but a part of the great victory of the hierarchy and its advance in
+power, which marks the first half of the 13th century. By combining with
+the vassals the Popes had overcome the monarchy, and had then in turn
+overcome the vassals by combining with the monarchy and its endangered
+rights. It must not be regarded as a mere title, an empty word, if the
+Pope was acknowledged to be feudal Lord of England: his legates, Gualo,
+Pandulph, Otho, and with them some native prelates, devoted to him
+(above all that Peter des Roches, who, by his conduct when Bishop of
+Winchester, through the mistrust awakened, incurred almost the chief
+responsibility of the earlier troubles), spoke the decisive word in the
+affairs of the kingdom and crushed their opponents. It was reported that
+Innocent IV was heard to say, 'Is not the King of England my vassal, my
+servant? At my nod he will imprison and punish.'<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a>
+Under this
+influence the best benefices in the kingdom were given away without
+regard to the freedom of election or the rights of patrons, and in fact
+mostly to foreigners. The Pope's exchequer drew its richest revenues
+from England; there was no end to the exactions of its subordinate
+agents, Master Martin, Master Marin, Peter Rubeo, and all the rest of
+them. Even the King surrounded himself with foreigners. To his own
+relations and to the relations of his Provençal wife fell the most
+profitable places, and the advantages arising from his paramount feudal
+rights; they too exercised much influence on public affairs, and that in
+the interests of the Papal power, with which they were allied. Riotous
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+movements occasionally took place against this system, but they were
+suppressed: men suffered in silence as long as it was only the exercise
+of rights once acknowledged. But now it happened that the Popes in their
+war with the last of the Hohenstaufen, whom they had resolved to
+destroy, proposed to employ the resources of England and in a very
+different manner than before. They awoke Henry III's dynastic ambition
+by promoting the elevation of his brother to be King of the Romans, and
+destining his younger son Edmund for the crown of Naples and Sicily.
+King Henry pledged himself in return to the heaviest money-payments. It
+began to appear as if England were no longer a free kingdom, using its
+resources for its own objects: the land and all its riches was at the
+service of the Pope at Rome; the King was little more than a tool of the
+hierarchy.</p>
+
+<p>It was at this crisis that the Parliaments of England, if they did not
+actually begin, yet first attained to a definite form and efficiency.</p>
+
+<p>The opposition of the country to the ecclesiastico-temporal government
+became most conspicuous in the year 1257, when Henry, happy beyond
+measure in his son's being raised to royal rank by the Apostolic See,
+presented his son to the Great Council of the nation, already wearing
+the national costume of Naples, and named the sum, to the payment of
+which he had pledged himself in return. The Estates at once refused
+their consent to his accepting the crown, which they considered could
+not be maintained owing to the untrustworthiness of the Italians, and of
+the Romish See itself, and the distance of the country; the money-pledge
+excited loud displeasure. Since they were required to redeem it, they
+reasonably enough gave it to be understood that they ought to have been
+consulted first. It was precisely the alliance of the Pope and the King
+that they had long felt most bitterly; they said truly, England would by
+such a joint action be as it were ground to dust between two millstones.
+As, however, despite all remonstrances, the demands were persevered
+with,&mdash;for the King had taken on himself the debts incurred by Pope
+Alexander IV in the Neapolitan war, and the Pope had already
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> referred
+to England the bankers entrusted with the payments,&mdash;a storm of
+opposition broke out, which led to what was equivalent to an overthrow
+of the government. The King had to consent to the appointment of a
+committee for reforming the realm, to be named in equal proportions by
+himself and by the barons; from this, however, was selected a council of
+fifteen members, in which the King's opponents had a decisive majority.
+They put forth Statutes, at Oxford, which virtually stripped the King of
+his power; he had to swear to them with a lighted taper in his hand. The
+Pope without hesitation at once condemned these ordinances; King Louis
+IX of France also, who was called in as arbiter, decided against them:
+and some moderate men drew back from them: but among the rest the zeal
+with which they held to them was thus only inflamed to greater violence.
+They had the King in their power, and felt themselves strong enough to
+impose their will on him as law.</p>
+
+<p>Without doubt they had the opinion of the country on their side. For the
+first time since the Conquest the insular spirit of England, which was
+now shared even by the conquerors themselves, manifested itself in a
+natural opposition to all foreign influence. The King's half-brothers
+with their numerous dependents were driven out without mercy, their
+castles occupied, their places given to the foremost Englishmen. The
+Papal legate Guido, one of the most distinguished members of the Curia,
+who himself became Pope at a later time, was forbidden to enter England.
+Most foreigners, it mattered not of what station or nationality, were
+forced to quit the realm: it went hard with those who could not speak
+English. The leader of the barons, Simon de Montfort, was solemnly
+declared Protector of the kingdom and people; he had in particular the
+lower clergy, the natural leaders of the masses, on his side. When he
+was put under the ban of the Church his followers retorted by assuming
+the badge of the cross, since his cause appeared to them just and
+holy.<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+At this very juncture it was that the attempt was made to form a
+Parliamentary Assembly corresponding to the meaning of that word.</p>
+
+<p>The Statutes or Provisions of Oxford contain the first attempt to effect
+this, by enacting that thrice every year the newly formed royal Council
+should meet together with twelve men elected by the Commonalty of
+England, and consult on the affairs of the kingdom.<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>
+There is no
+doubt that these twelve belonged to the nobles and were to represent
+them: the decisive point lies in the fact that it was not a number of
+nobles summoned by the King, but a committee of the Estates chosen by
+themselves that was placed by the side of the Council. The Council and
+the twelve persons elected formed for some years an association that
+united the executive and legislative powers.</p>
+
+<p>But this continued only as long as the King acquiesced in it. When he
+had the courage to resist, it is true that in the first encounter which
+ensued, he was himself taken prisoner: but his partisans were not
+crushed by this; and soon after his wife, who had collected about her a
+considerable body of mercenaries, in concert with the Pope and the King
+of France, thought herself strong enough to invade England. Simon felt
+that he needed a greater, in other words, a broader, basis of support.
+And the design he then conceived has secured him an imperishable memory.
+He summoned first of all representatives of the knights of the shires,
+and directly afterwards representatives of the towns and the Cinque
+Ports, to form a Parliament in conjunction with the nobles of the realm.
+This was not an altogether new thing in the European world; we know that
+in the Cortes of Aragon, as early as the 12th century, by the side of
+the high nobility and the ecclesiastics there appeared also the Hidalgos
+and the deputies of the Commons; and Simon de Montfort might well be
+aware of this, since his father had been in so many ways connected with
+Aragon. In England itself under King<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span> John men had come very near it
+without however carrying it through: not till afterwards did the
+innovation appear a real necessity. In opposition to the one-sided power
+exercised by the foreigners, nothing was so much insisted on in daily
+talk and in the popular ballads as the propriety of calling the natives
+of the land to counsel, since to them its laws were best known. This
+justifiable wish met with adequate satisfaction now that the Commons
+were summoned; the public feeling against the foreigners, on which Simon
+de Montfort necessarily relied, thus found expression. The assembly
+which he called together doubtless sympathised with his party views. As
+he invited only those nobles to it who remained true to him (they were
+not more than twenty-three in number), so he appears to have summoned
+those only of the towns which adhered to him unconditionally. But the
+arrangement involved more than was contemplated from his point of view.</p>
+
+<p>Amid the storms he had called forth Simon de Montfort perished: the King
+was freed, the royal authority re-established. A new Papal legate
+entered London in the full splendour of his office, Cardinal Ottoboni;
+Guido having meanwhile himself obtained the tiara, and using every means
+to subdue the unbending spirits, from which danger even to the Church
+was dreaded.<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a>
+Yet the old state of things was not restored: neither
+the rule of foreigners, nor the absolute dependence on the Papal policy.
+The later government of Henry III has a different character from the
+earlier: the legate himself confirmed Magna Charta in the shape finally
+accepted. It is not merely at the great national festivals that we find
+representatives of the towns present, whom the King has summoned; it is
+beyond a doubt that one of the most important statutes of the time was
+passed with their consent.<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a>
+Yet regulations for the summons of
+representatives from the towns were as little fixed by law
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+as those for
+voting the taxes. It would by no means harmonise with the constitution
+of Romano-German states, that organic institutions should come into full
+force in mere antagonism to the highest authority. They must coincide
+with the interests of that authority, as was the case in England under
+Henry's warlike son Edward I.</p>
+
+<p>Without doubt Edward, who once more revived in the East the reputation
+of the Plantagenet Kings for personal valour, would have preferred to
+fight there for the interests of Christendom, he even speaks of it in
+his will; or else he would have wished to recover from the French crown
+the lands which his father had inherited, and which had passed into
+French possession; but neither the one nor the other was possible;
+another object was assigned to his energy and his ambition, one more
+befitting an English king: he undertook to unite the whole island under
+his sceptre.</p>
+
+<p>In Wales, the conquest of which had been so often attempted and so often
+failed, there lived at this time Prince Llewellyn, whose personal
+beauty, cunning, and high spirit fitted him to be a brilliant
+representative of the old British nationality. The bards, reviving the
+old prophecies, promised him the ancient crown of Brutus; but when he
+ventured out of the mountains, he was overpowered and fell in a
+hand-to-hand conflict. The English crown was not to fall to his lot, but
+Edward transferred the title of Prince of Wales to his own son. The
+great cross of the Welsh, the crown of Arthur, fell into his hands: he
+no longer tolerated the bards: their age passed away with the Crusades.</p>
+
+<p>From Wales Edward turned his arms against Scotland. There Columban had
+in former days anointed as king a Scottish prince, who was also of
+Keltic descent; how the German element nevertheless got the upper hand
+not merely in the greatest part of the country, but also in the ruling
+family, is the great problem of early Scottish history: a thoroughly
+Germanic monarchy had arisen, but one which after it had once given a
+home to the Anglo-Saxons who fled before the Normans, thought its honour
+concerned in repelling all English influences. A disputed succession
+gave Edward I an opportunity of reviving the claims of his predecessors
+to the overlordship
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+of Scotland: he gave the Scotch a king, whom the
+Scotch rejected simply because he was the English King's nominee. The
+war, which sometimes seemed ended&mdash;there were times at which Edward
+could regard himself as the Lord of all Albion,&mdash;ever blazed out again;
+above all, the support the Scotch received from the King of France
+brought about complications which filled all Western Europe with trouble
+and war; but it was in the home politics of England that their effect
+was destined to be greatest.</p>
+
+<p>Compelled to make incessant efforts, which exhausted the resources of
+the crown, Edward appealed to the voluntary assistance of his subjects.
+He laid down to them the principle, that their common perils should be
+met with their united strength, that what concerns all must also be
+borne by all. In the war against Wales he had gathered together the
+representatives of the counties and the towns, to hear his demands and
+to act accordingly; chiefly to vote him subsidies. After the victory he
+had called an assembly of nobles, knights, and towns, to take counsel
+with them about the treatment of the captives and the country. Similarly
+he drew together the representatives of the towns in order to decide the
+affairs of Scotland. With especial emphasis did he call for their united
+help against Philip the Fair of France, who thought to destroy the
+English tongue from off the earth: knights and towns were pledged to
+help in carrying out the resolutions thus adopted by common consent.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of all this appealing to free participation in public matters,
+Edward I did not refrain from the arbitrary imposition of taxes, and
+those the most oppressive: the eighth, even the fifth part of men's
+income. For the campaign in Flanders he summoned the under-tenants as
+well as the tenants in chief. We find instances of arbitrary seizure of
+whatever was necessary for the war.</p>
+
+<p>King Edward excused this by his maxim that the interests of the land
+must be defended with the resources of the land,<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a>
+but we can conceive
+how, on the boundary line between two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> different systems, acts of
+violence, which combined the arbitrariness of the one with the
+principles of the other, caused a general agitation. In the year 1297
+the spiritual lords under their archbishop, as well as the temporal ones
+(who denied the obligation to serve beyond the sea) under the Constable
+and Marshal, set themselves energetically to oppose the King. The
+people, which had the most to suffer from the arbitrary exactions, took
+their side with cordial approval. They set forth all the grievances of
+the country, and insisted on their immediate and final redress.</p>
+
+<p>To avoid the pressure, the King had already quitted England, to carry on
+his campaign in Flanders: the demand was laid before the Councillors
+whom he had left behind as assessors to his son, who was named Regent.
+They however were in great perplexity, partly from the trouble of this
+agitation itself, but mainly from the revolt in Scotland which had
+broken out in a formidable manner. William Walays, like one of those
+Heyduck chiefs who rise in Turkey against the established order of
+things, the right of which they do not recognise, had come down from the
+hill country, at the head of the fugitives and exiles, a robber-patriot,
+of gigantic bodily strength and innate talent for war. His successes
+soon increased his band to the size of an army; he beat the English in a
+pitched battle, and then swept over the borders into the English
+territory. If the royal commissioners would oppose a strong resistance
+to this inroad, they must needs ratify a provisional concession of the
+demands brought forward. The King, who had meanwhile reached Flanders,
+which the French had entered from two sides, could not possibly yield to
+the Scottish movement&mdash;whether he wished to carry on the war or make a
+truce: nothing therefore remained to him but to confirm the concessions
+made by his councillors.</p>
+
+<p>It is not absolutely certain how far these had gone; one word of
+discussion may be allowed on the matter.</p>
+
+<p>The historians of the time have maintained that the right of voting the
+taxes was granted to the Estates, and in fact conjointly to the nobles
+whether spiritual or temporal, and the representatives of the counties
+and towns: the copy of a statute is extant, in which this is very
+expressly stated.<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+But since the statute does not exist in an
+authentic shape, and is not to be found in the Rolls of the Realm, we
+cannot safely base any conclusion on it. As to the date too at which it
+may have been passed, our statements waver between the twenty-eighth and
+the thirty-fourth year of Edward. On the other hand we find in the
+collection of charters an undoubted charter of confirmation given at
+Ghent and dated 5 November 1297, in which not merely are the Great
+Charter of Henry III and the Forest Charter confirmed, but also some new
+arrangements of much importance guaranteed, and confirmed by
+ecclesiastico-judicial regulations.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a>
+According to it the grants of
+taxes and contributions which had been hitherto made to the King for his
+wars were not to be regarded as binding for the future. He reserves only
+the old customary taxes: to the higher clergy, the nobility, and the
+commons of the land the assurance is given, that under no circumstances,
+however pressing, should any tax or contribution or requisition&mdash;not
+even the export duty on wool&mdash;be levied except by their common consent
+and for the interests of all.<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>
+In the Latin text all sounds more open
+and less reserved: but even the words of the authentic document include
+a very essential limitation of the prerogative of the crown, which
+hitherto had alone exercised the right of estimating what the state
+needed and of fixing the payments by this standard. The King was averse
+at heart to the limitation even in this form. When he came back from
+Flanders after concluding a truce with France, and army and people were
+met together at York, to carry out a great campaign against Scotland, he
+was pressed to confirm on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span> English soil the concessions which he had
+granted on foreign ground.<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a>
+He held it advisable that the campaign
+should be first carried through; four of his confidential friends swore
+in his stead (since an oath in person was thought unbecoming to the
+King), that, the campaign ended, the confirmation should not be wanting.
+The enterprise was most successful, it led to a great victory over the
+Scots, and it was the leaders of the English aristocracy who did the
+best service there; nevertheless, when they met together next Lent
+(1299) in London, the King strove to avoid an absolute promise: he
+wished to expressly reserve the undefined 'rights of the crown.' But
+this delay aroused a general storm: and as he was quite convinced that
+he could not, under this condition, reckon on further support in the war
+which still continued, he at last submitted to what was unavoidable, and
+allowed his clause to drop.<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p>
+
+<p>I do not know whether I am mistaken in ascribing to these concessions a
+different character from that of the earlier ones. It was not a
+sovereign defeated and reduced to the deepest humiliation who made them,
+nor did the barons obtain articles which aimed at securing their own
+direct supremacy: the concessions were the result of the war, which
+could not be carried on with the existing means. When Edward I laid
+stress on the necessity of greater common efforts, the counter-demand
+which was made on him, and to which he yielded, merely implied that a
+common resolution should be previously come to. His concessions included
+a return for service already done, and a condition for future service.
+It did not abase the royal authority; it brought into clear view the
+unity of interests between the crown and the nation.</p>
+
+<p>Another great crisis united them for the second time. As Edward led the
+forces of England year by year across the Tweed, to compel the Scots to
+acknowledge his overlordship by the edge of the sword, the Pope who
+assumed himself to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+be the Suzerain of the kingdoms of the world,
+Boniface VIII, met him with the assertion that Scotland belonged to the
+Church of Rome, the King therefore was violating the rights of that
+Church by his invasions. To confront the Pope, King Edward thought it
+best, as did Philip the Fair of France about the same time, to call in
+his Estates to his aid, since without them no answer to the claim was
+possible. The Estates then in a long letter not merely maintain the
+right of the English crown, but also reject the Pope's claim to decide
+respecting it as arbiter, as incompatible with the royal dignity: even
+if the King wished it, yet they would never lend a hand to anything so
+unseemly and so unheard of.<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a>
+The King, without regard to the Pope,
+continued his campaigns against Scotland with unabated energy.</p>
+
+<p>It marks the character of Edward I that he nevertheless did not break
+with the Papacy on this account; so too he still raised taxes that had
+not been voted, and held Parliaments in the old form: when
+representatives of the counties and towns were summoned it is not always
+clear whether they were elected or named.<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a>
+Edward I could not free
+himself from the habits of arbitrary rule and the old ideas connected
+with them. But with all this it is still undeniable that under him the
+monarchy took a far more national position than before; it no longer
+stood in a hostile attitude as against the community of the land, but
+belonged to it.</p>
+
+<p>And his successors soon saw themselves forced to complete still further
+the foundations of a new state of things, which had been thus laid.</p>
+
+<p>Under Edward II the old ambition of the barons to take a preponderant
+part in the government reappeared once more with the greatest violence.
+The occasion was afforded by the weakness of this sovereign, who allowed
+his favourite, the Gascon Gaveston, a disastrous influence on affairs.
+Discontented with this, the King's nearest cousin, Thomas of Lancaster,
+placed himself at the head of the great nobles, as indeed he was
+believed to have sworn to his father in law<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span> (whose rich possessions
+passed to him, and who feared a return of the foreign influences), that
+he would adhere to the interest of the barons, which was also that of
+the country. In the fourth year of his government Edward was obliged to
+accept all the regulations made by a Committee of the Nobles called the
+'Ordainers.'</p>
+
+<p>Without advice of the nobles he was forbidden either to begin a war, or
+to fill up high offices of State, or even to leave the country: the
+officers of the crown were to be responsible to them. Gaveston had to
+pay for his short possession of influence by death without mercy.</p>
+
+<p>It was long before the King found men who had the courage to defend the
+lawful authority of the crown. At last the two Hugh Despencers undertook
+it: under their leadership the barons were defeated, and Thomas of
+Lancaster in his turn paid for his enterprises with his life. For in
+England, if anywhere, the assumption of power led inevitably to the
+scaffold.</p>
+
+<p>It is hardly needful to say that the regulations of the Ordainers were
+now revoked. But must not some means be also thought of, to prevent
+similar acts of violence for the future? It was deemed necessary to
+declare even the form, under cover of which they had been ratified,
+invalid for all time. And so an enactment was now made, in which the
+first definite idea of the Parliamentary Monarchy becomes visible. It
+was declared that never for the future should any ordinance affecting
+the King's power and proceeding from his subjects be valid, but only
+that should be law which was discussed, agreed on, and enacted in
+Parliament by the King with the consent of the prelates, the earls and
+barons, and the commonalty of the realm.<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a>
+For it was above all things
+necessary to withdraw the legislative authority for ever from the
+turbulent grandees. The monarchy opposed to them its alliance with the
+commonalty of the realm, as it was expressed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+by the representatives of
+the knights and the commons. Among the founders of the English
+constitution these Hugh Despencers, through whom the legislative power
+was first transferred to the united body of King Lords and Commons, take
+a very important position.</p>
+
+<p>This thought was however rather one left for the future to carry out,
+than one which swayed or contented the English world at the time. Edward
+II fell before a new attack of the revolted barons, with whom even his
+wife was allied: he had to think it a piece of good fortune that, on the
+ground of his own abdication, his son was acknowledged as his successor.
+The latter however could only obtain real possession of the royal power
+by overthrowing the faction to which his father had succumbed. While he
+restored the memory of the two Despencers, who had been condemned and
+executed by the barons, he also decided to carry on a Parliamentary
+government; it is the first that existed in England.</p>
+
+<p>For the general course of the development it is significant that the
+rights of Parliament in relation to the voting of taxes, and now also to
+legislation as a whole, were acknowledged before an appropriate form was
+found for its consultations. In the first years of Edward III its four
+constituent parts, prelates, barons, knights, and town deputies, held
+their debates in four different assemblies; but gradually the two first
+were fused into an Upper, the two last into a Second House, without any
+definite law being laid down to that effect: the nature of things led to
+the custom, the custom in course of time became law.</p>
+
+<p>That which had been already preparing under the first Edward came under
+the third for the first time into complete operation, viz. the
+participation of the Estates in the management of foreign affairs and of
+war.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1333 the Parliament advised the King to break the peace with
+Scotland, which the barons had concluded of their own authority
+according to their own views, not to put up with any more outrages, and
+not merely to take back the lost border-fortress of Berwick, but to
+force the Scots to acknowledge the supremacy of England.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+In the year 1337 and afterwards the Parliament more than once approved
+the King's plan of asserting the claim he had through his mother on the
+French throne by force of arms and through alliances with foreign
+princes,<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a>
+and promised to support him in it with their lives and
+properties; it was all the more ready for this, as France had been
+repeatedly threatening England with a new Conquest. In the year 1344 the
+Peers, each in his own name, called on the King to cross the sea and not
+let himself be hindered by any one, not even by the Pope, from appealing
+to the judgment of God by battle. The clergy imposed on themselves a
+three-years' tenth, the counties a fifteenth, the towns two tenths; the
+great nobles followed him in person with their squires and horsemen,
+without even alluding to their old remonstrances. So that splendid army
+made its appearance in France, in which the weapons of the yeomen vied
+with those of the knights, and which, thanks chiefly to the former, won
+the victory of Cressy. Whilst the King made conquests over the French,
+his heroic Queen repelled the Scotch. In these wars the now united
+nation, which put forth all its strength, came for the first time to the
+feeling of its power, to a position of its own in the world and to the
+consciousness of it. The King of Scotland at that time, and the King of
+France some years later, became prisoners in England.</p>
+
+<p>A period followed in which England seemed to have obtained the supremacy
+in Western Europe. The Scots purchased their King's freedom by a truce
+which bound them to long and heavy payments, for which hostages were
+given as a security. A peace was made with the French by which Guienne,
+Gascony, Poitou, and such important towns as Rochelle and Calais were
+surrendered to the English. The Prince of Wales, who took up his
+residence at Bordeaux, mixed in the Spanish quarrels with the view of
+uniting Biscay to his territories in South France. As the result of
+these circumstances and of the well-calculated encouragement of Edward
+III, we find that English commerce prospered immensely and, in emulous
+alliance with that of Flanders, began to form another great centre for
+the general commerce<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+of the world. It was still chiefly in the hands of
+foreigners, but the English made great profits by it. Their riches
+gained them almost as much prestige in the world as their bravery.<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a>
+The more money-resources the towns possessed, and the more they could
+and did support the King, the greater became their influence on the
+affairs of the realm. No language could be more humble than that of
+these 'poor and simple Commons,' when they address themselves to 'their
+glorious and thrice gracious King and lord.'<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a>
+But for all that their
+representations are exceedingly comprehensive and pressing; their grants
+are not to take effect, unless their grievances are redressed; they
+never leave out of sight the interests of their staple; they assail the
+exactions of the officials or the clergy with great zeal. The regard
+paid to them gives the whole government a popular character.</p>
+
+<p>On an attempt of the King to exercise the legislative power in his great
+council, they remonstrated; they had no objection to the ordinances
+themselves, but insisted that valid statutes could only proceed from the
+lawfully assembled Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>Now too the relations to the Papal See came again into consideration.
+Seated at Avignon under the influence of the French crown, the Popes
+were natural opponents of Edward III's claims and enterprises; they
+sometimes thought of directing the censures of the Church against him.
+On the other hand, the complaints in England against the encroachments
+and pecuniary demands of the Curia were louder than ever, without
+however coming to a rupture on these points. But at last Urban V renewed
+the old claim to the vassalage of England; he demanded the feudal
+tribute first paid by King John, and threatened King and kingdom, in
+case they were not willing to pay it, with judicial proceedings.<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>
+We know the earlier kings had seen in the connexion with Rome a last
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+resource against the demands of the Estates: on the King's side it
+required some resolution to renounce it. But the very nature of the
+Parliamentary government, as Edward III had settled it, involved a
+disregard of these considerations for the future. It was before the
+Parliament itself that he laid the Papal demands for their consent and
+counsel. The Estates consulted separately: first the spiritual and lay
+lords framed their resolution, then the town deputies assented to it.
+The answer they gave the Pope was that King John's submission was
+destitute of all validity, since it was against his coronation-oath, and
+was made without the consent of the Estates; should the Pope try to
+enforce satisfaction of his demand by legal process or in any other
+manner, they would all&mdash;dukes earls barons and commons&mdash;oppose him with
+their united force.<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a>
+The clergy only assented to the declaration of
+invalidity; to threaten the holy father with their resistance, they
+considered unbecoming. But the declaration of the lay Estates was in
+itself sufficient for the purpose: the claim was never afterwards raised
+again.</p>
+
+<p>The Estates had often been obliged to contend against the King and the
+Roman See at the same time; now the King was allied with them against
+the Papacy. Now that the Parliamentary constitution was established in
+its first stage, it is clear how much the union of the Crown and the
+Estates in opposition to external influence had contributed to it. It
+was destined however shortly to undergo yet other tests. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> Matthew Paris, Historia Major ann. 1253, p. 750.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> In Henr. Knyghton, 2445. According to Matthew Paris they
+swore, not to let themselves be held back by anything&mdash;'quin regnum, in
+quo sunt nati homines geniales et eorum progenitores, ab ingenerosis et
+alienigenis emundarent.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> 'Les XXIV ont ordene, ke treis parlemens seient par an,&mdash;a
+ces treis parlemens vendrunt les cunseillers le rei eslus,&mdash;ke le commun
+eslise 12 prodes hommes ke vendrunt as parlemens&mdash;pur treter de besoigne
+le rei et del reaume.' On the explanation of this passage, the 'Report
+on the dignity of a peer' 102 contains matter wellweighed on all sides.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> Letter of Clement IV to Louis IX, in Rainaldus, 1265, p.
+167. 'Quid putas&mdash;per talia machinamenta quaeri? Nisi ut de regno illo
+regium nomen aboleatur omnino: nisi ut Christianus populus a devotione
+matris ecclesiae et observantia fidei orthodoxae avertatur.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> 'Convocatis discretioribus regni tam ex majoribus quam
+minoribus.' Statute of Marleberge, 1267.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> 'Nostrae voluntatis fuit ut de bonis terrae ipsa terra
+conservaretur.' In Knyghton, ii, 2501.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Statutum de tallagio non concedendo, or Nova additio
+cartarum; in Hemingburgh, articuli inserti in magna charta.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> 'Carta confirmationis regis Edwardi I,' in the collection
+of charters prefixed to the collection of the Statutes in the 'Statutes
+of the Realm,' p. 37.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> 'Avuns graunte&mdash;as Arceevesques etc. e as Countes&mdash;e a
+toute la communauté de la terre que mes pur nule busoigne tieu manere
+des aydes mises ne prises de nre Roiaume ne prendrums fors ke par commun
+assent de tout le Roiaume e a commun profist de meismes le Roiaume,
+sauve les auncienes aydes e prises due e acoustumees.' The Articulus
+insertus in Magna Charta, according to the other statements, runs,
+'nullum Tallagium vel auxilium imponatur seu levetur sine voluntate
+atque assensu communi Archiepiscoporum Episcoporum et aliorum liberorum
+hominum in regno nostro.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> Hemingburgh: eo quod confirmaverat eas in terra aliena.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> Matthew of Westminster, 433. 'Procrastinatis quampluribus
+diebus demum videns rex quod non desisterent ab inceptis nec
+adquiescerent sibi in necessitatibus suis, respondit se esse paratum
+concedere et ratificare petita.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> At Lincoln, 21 Feb. 1301. In Rymer, Rainaldus, Spondanus.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> Report 183; Hallam, Additional Notes 332.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> Revocatio novarum ordinationum, 1323, 29 May, Statutes of
+the Realm I. 189, 'les choses, qui serount à establir&mdash;soient tretées
+accordees et establies en parlaments par notre Sr. le Roi et par lassent
+des Prelats Countes et Barouns et la communalté du roialme.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> Speech of W. Shareshall 1351, Parliamentary History (1762)
+i. 295.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> We know the letter of the Duke of Guelders, in which he
+praised equally 'lanae commoda,&mdash;divitias in comparatione ad alios reges
+centuplas,' and the 'probitas militaris, arcuum asperitas,' in Twysden
+ii. 2739.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> Report 324.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> 'Est en volunté de faire procès devers le roy et son
+roialme pur le dit service et cens recoverir.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> 'Qu'ils resisteront et contre esteront ove toute leur
+puissance.' Edw Coke first published the document, Institutes iv. 13. In
+Urban V's letter to Edward in Rainaldus 1365, 13, the demand is not so
+clearly expressed, but mention is made in it of the Nuncio's overtures;
+it is to these that the resolution of the Parliament referred.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BI_V" id="BI_V"></a>
+DEPOSITION OF RICHARD II. THE HOUSE OF LANCASTER.</p>
+
+<p>England did not long maintain herself in the dominant position she then
+occupied; the plan of extending her rule into Spain proved ruinous to
+the Prince of Wales. Not merely was his protégé overpowered by the
+French 'Free Companies,' which had gathered round his opponent: a
+Castilian war-fleet succeeded in destroying the English one in sight of
+the harbour of Rochelle. On this, their natural inclination towards the
+King of France awoke in the nobles and towns of South France; without
+great battles, merely by the revolt of vassals tired of his rule, Edward
+III again lost all the territories conquered with such great glory,
+except a few coast towns. Then a gloom settled down around the aged
+conqueror. He saw his eldest son, who, though obliged to quit France, in
+England enjoyed the fullest confidence and had every prospect of a great
+future, sicken away and die. And he too experienced, what befalls so
+many others, that misfortune abroad raised him up opponents at home. In
+the increasing weakness of old age, which gave rise to many
+well-grounded grievances, he could not maintain the independence of the
+royal power, with the re-establishment of which he had begun his reign.
+He was forced to receive into his Council men whom he did not like. He
+was still able to effect thus much, that the succession to the kingdom
+came to the son of the Prince of Wales, Richard II. But would he, a boy
+of eleven, be able to take the helm of the proud ship? Men saw factions
+arise that grouped themselves round the King's uncles, who were not
+fully disposed to defend his authority.</p>
+
+<p>The great question for English history now was, whether the
+Parliamentary constitution, whilst it limited the King's
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+prerogative,
+would also give him security. For the Commons had been at last admitted
+into the King's Council chiefly in order that they might withstand the
+violence of the factions. The situation however was not without its
+complications, for with the political movement one of yet wider aim was
+connected.</p>
+
+<p>When the kingdom was at the very height of its power there arose in a
+college at Oxford the man who began that contest against the Papal
+supremacy which has never since ceased. John Wiclif attached himself
+first of all to the political movements of his time. One of his earliest
+writings was directed against the feudal supremacy of the Popes over
+England. He supported the Parliament's complaints of Romish Provisions
+and exactions of money, with great learning and at great length. Had his
+activity confined itself to these subjects, he would be hardly more
+remembered than perhaps Marsilius of Padua. What gave him quite a
+special significance was the fact that he brought into clear view the
+contradiction between the ruling form of the Church and the original
+documents of the Faith. From the claim of the Popes to be Christ's
+representatives, he drew the conclusion that they ought also to observe
+the Gospel which comes from the God-Man, follow His example, and give up
+their worldly power.<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a>
+The leading Church dogma, that most closely
+connected with the hierarchic system, the dogma of Transubstantiation,
+he attacked as being one which equally contradicted Scripture and
+Reason. He urges his proofs with the acuteness of a skilful Schoolman,
+but throughout he shows a deep inner religious feeling. We may
+distinguish in him two separate tendencies. His appeal to Scripture, his
+attempt to make it accessible to the people, his treatment of dogmatic
+and religious questions which he will allow to be decided only by
+Revelation,&mdash;all this makes him an evangelic man, one of the chief
+forerunners of the German Reformation. But, as he himself felt, his
+strength lay rather in destruction than in construction. In asserting
+the doctrine that the title to office
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+depends for its validity on
+personal worth, that even the rule of temporal lords rests on the favour
+in which they stand with God, and in raising subjects to be the judges
+over their oppressive masters, he entered on a path like that which the
+Taborites and the leaders of the peasants in Germany afterwards
+took.<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a></p>
+
+<p>And these were precisely the doctrines for which his scholars, who
+traversed the land to make them known, found a well prepared soil in the
+people of England. How could the rise of popular elements fail to call
+forth a kindred effort also among the lower classes? The belief arose
+that Nature intended all men to be equal. The country people spoke of
+their primitive rights, traces of which were found in the memorials of
+the Conqueror's times, and which had then been taken from them. When
+now, instead of seeing these respected, they were subjected to new
+impositions, and this with harshness and insolence, they rose in open
+revolt. So overpowering was the attack which they directed against the
+capital and the King's palace, that Richard II found himself forced to
+grant them a charter which secured them personal freedom. Had they
+contented themselves with this, they might have done best for themselves
+and perhaps for the crown, but when they demanded yet further and more
+extreme concessions, they roused against themselves the whole power of
+the organised State, for which they were as yet no match. The Mayor of
+London himself struck down with his dagger the leader of the bands, Wat
+Tyler, because he seemed to threaten the King; the Bishop of Norwich was
+not hindered by his spiritual character from levelling his lance against
+the insurgents;<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a>
+after which he accompanied the leaders, who were
+taken and condemned to death, to the scaffold, with words of comfort; in
+other places the lay nobles did their best. When therefore in the next
+Parliament the King brought forward the proposal to declare the serfs
+free by a united resolution,&mdash;for the p<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>revious charter that had been
+wrung from him was considered invalid,&mdash;both Lords and Commons rejected
+it, as tending to disinherit them and prove pernicious to the kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>It is not to be supposed that a movement like this, which the lower
+class of citizens in the towns had joined, just as in the German peasant
+war, and which was mainly directed against the landed gentry, could be
+stifled by one defeat: it continued to ferment uninterruptedly in men's
+hearts.</p>
+
+<p>Still less did the condemnation passed by Convocation on the deviations
+from the teaching of the Church effect their suppression. On the basis
+of Wiclif's doctrines grew up the sect of the Lollards, which condemned
+the worship of images, pilgrimages, and other external church
+ceremonies, designated the union of judicial authority with spiritual
+office as unnatural&mdash;'hermaphroditism'&mdash;rejected excommunication with
+abhorrence, and made secret and systematic war against the whole Church
+establishment.</p>
+
+<p>But further besides these feuds there was one within the State system
+itself which now became most conspicuous.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the general ferment how necessary had a strong and
+resolute hand become! But Richard's government had shown itself somewhat
+weak; by many it was suspected of having meant to turn the disturbances
+to its own advantage. The commons, who mainly represented the lower
+gentry and the upper citizens, abandoned him, and attached themselves to
+the nobles, just as these revived their old jealousy against the crown.
+For the almost inevitable result of success in suppressing a popular
+agitation is to heighten the self-confidence of an aristocracy.
+Impatient at being excluded from all share in the government, and
+strengthened in his ambition by the military disasters of the last
+years, the youngest of Richard's uncles, Thomas of Gloucester, put
+himself at the head of the grandees, whose plans the commons, instead of
+opposing, now on the contrary adopted as their own. The great questions
+arose, which have so often since then convulsed the European world, as
+to the relation of a Parliamentary assembly to the Monarchy, and their
+respective rights.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+The first demand of the English Parliament was that the ministers of
+State should be named by it, or at least should be responsible to it.
+Much as this demand itself implies, yet even more extensive views were
+behind. The Peers told the King plainly that if he would not rule
+according to the common law and with their advice, it was competent for
+them to depose him, with consent of the people, and to raise another of
+the royal house to the throne;<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a>
+they threatened him openly with the
+fate of Edward II.</p>
+
+<p>Richard could do nothing but submit. Eleven lords were appointed to
+restore order in the country; Richard had to swear to carry out all they
+should ordain (November 1386). There remained but one way by which to
+oppose this open violence: the King collected the chief judges at
+Nottingham, and laid the question before them, whether the Commission
+now forced upon him did not contravene the royal power and his
+prerogative. The judges were far from so interpreting the Constitution
+of England as to allow that the King is unconditionally bound by the
+commands of Parliament. They affirmed under their hand and seal that the
+appointment of that Commission against the King's will contravened his
+legal prerogative; those by whom he had been forced to accept it, and
+who had revived the recollection of the statute against Edward II, they
+declared to be guilty of high treason. But Parliament itself saw in this
+sentence not a judgment but an intolerable outrage. At its next sitting
+it summoned the judges before its tribunal, and in its turn declared
+them to be themselves guilty of high treason. Chief Justice Tresilian
+died a shameful death at Tyburn. The King lived to find yet harsher laws
+laid upon him: his uncle Gloucester was more powerful than he was
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>He was not however disposed to bear this yoke for ever. He first freed
+himself from the war with France, which tied his hands; by his marriage
+with Charles VI's young daughter he sought to win that king over as an
+ally on his own side;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+at home too he gained himself friends; when all
+was prepared, he struck a sudden blow (July 1397), which no one would
+have expected from him. He removed his leading opponents (above all his
+uncle Gloucester, and Arundel Archbishop of Canterbury), banished them
+or threw them into prison: then he succeeded in getting together a
+Parliament in which his partisans had the upper hand. It moreover
+completely adopted the ideas of the judges as to the Constitution; it
+revoked the statutes which had been forced on the
+King,<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a>
+and gave
+effect to the sentence of Nottingham. By making the King a very
+considerable grant for his lifetime, it freed him from the necessity of
+summoning it anew; he rose at once to a high pitch of self-confidence:
+he was believed to have said that the laws of England consisted in his
+word of mouth.</p>
+
+<p>In England, just as in France at the same epoch, political opinions and
+parties ebbed and flowed in ceaseless antagonism. Richard's success was
+only momentary. He too, like so many of his ancestors, had incurred a
+grievous suspicion; the crime laid to his charge was that his uncle, who
+died in prison, had been murdered there by his command. Besides his
+absolute rule was not free from arbitrary acts of many kinds; among the
+great nobles each trembled for his own safety; the clergy, never on good
+terms with Richard, were impatient at being deprived of their Primate,
+who was to them 'the tower in the protecting bulwark of the Church.' In
+the capital too men were against a rule which seemed to put an end to
+popular influence; it needed only the return of an exile, the young
+Henry of Lancaster (whom the King would not allow to take possession of
+his inheritance by deputy, and who in conformity with the feeling of the
+time broke his ban to do himself right); all men then deserted the King;
+the nobles could now think of carrying out the threat which they had
+once hurled against him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+Richard was compelled to call a Parliament, and at the moment it met to
+pronounce his own abdication. The Parliament was not contented with
+accepting this; it wished to put an end to all doubt for the future, and
+to establish its own right for ever.</p>
+
+<p>A long list of articles was drawn up, from which it was concluded that
+the King had broken his coronation oath and forfeited his crown; the
+assembled Estates, when severally and conjointly consulted, held them
+sufficient to justify them in proceeding to the King's deposition. They
+named Proctors, two for the clergy, two for the high nobility&mdash;one for
+the earls and dukes, the other for the barons and bannerets, two for the
+knights and commons&mdash;one for the Northern, the other for the Southern
+counties. They sat as a court of justice before the vacant throne, with
+the Chief Justice in their midst: then the first spiritual commissioner,
+the Bishop of S. Asaph, rose, and in the place and name and under the
+authority of the Estates of the realm announced the sentence of
+deposition against the late King, and forbade all men to receive any
+further commands from him. Some opposition was raised; it is said that
+the Bishop of Carlisle very expressly denied the right of subjects to
+sit in judgment on their hereditary
+sovereign;<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a>
+but how could this
+have had any effect against the Parliament's claim which had been
+formulated so long?</p>
+
+<p>As the crown was now regarded as vacant, Henry of Lancaster arose,&mdash;in
+the name of God, as he said, whilst he made the sign of the cross on his
+forehead and breast,&mdash;to claim it for himself, in virtue of his birth
+and the right which accrued to him through God and the help of his
+friends. It was not properly speaking an election that now took place:
+the spiritual and lay lords, as well as the other members of the
+Parliament, were asked what their opinion of his claim was: the answer
+of all was that the Duke should be their King. When, conducted by the
+two archbishops, he ascended the vacant throne, he was greeted with the
+joyous acclaim
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+of those assembled. The Archbishop of Canterbury made a
+speech full of unction, the drift of which was, that henceforth it would
+not be a child, such as the late sovereign had been, self-willed and
+void of understanding, but a Man that would rule over them, in the full
+maturity of his understanding, and resolved to do not so much his own
+will as the will of God.<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></p>
+
+<p>Thus did the spiritual and lay nobility, in and with the Parliament,
+make good their claim to dispose of the crown. They went to work against
+Richard II with less reserve than against Edward II. In the latter case
+the Queen had taken part in the movement; they had set the son in his
+father's stead. But this time they did not wait for the actual
+consummation of the King's marriage; they raised a prince to the throne
+who had openly opposed him in the field, and was not even the next in
+succession. For there were still the descendants of an elder brother
+left, who according to English usage had a prior right. The Parliament
+held itself competent to settle on its own authority even the succession
+to the crown. It enacted that it should belong to the King's eldest son,
+and after him to his male issue, and on their failure to his brothers
+and their issue. The proposal formally to exclude succession in the
+female line did not pass; but for a long while to come the actual
+practice had that effect.</p>
+
+<p>Besides the motives involved in the extension of the Power of the
+Estates in and for itself there was yet another reason for such a
+proceeding. And this arose out of the growth, and increasing urgency, of
+the religious divisions. The Lollards preached, and taught in schools,
+according to their views: in the year 1396 in a petition to Parliament
+they traced all the moral evils and defects of the world to the fact
+that the clergy were endowed with worldly goods, and showed the
+advantage which would arise from the application of these to the service
+of the state and the prosecution of
+war.<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a>
+They seem to have flattered
+themselves that by this they would
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+win over the lay lords, but they
+were completely mistaken. For these remarked on the contrary that their
+own property had no better legal foundation than that of the
+clergy,<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>
+and only attached themselves to the rights of the Church all the more
+zealously.</p>
+
+<p>That which would have been impossible under Richard II's vacillating
+government, the first Lancaster now undertook: in full agreement with
+the Estates he a few days after his accession announced to Convocation
+that he purposed to destroy heretics and heresies to the best of his
+power.<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a>
+In the next Parliament a statute was drawn up in which
+relapsed heretics were condemned to the flames. And still more
+remarkable than this mode of punishment, which was that of the
+Church-law, is the regulation of the procedure in this statute. In
+former times the sentence had been pronounced by the archbishop and the
+collective clergy of the province, and the King's consent had to be
+asked before it was executed. The decision was now committed to the
+bishop and his commissary, and the sheriff was instructed to inflict the
+punishment without further appeal, and to commit the guilty to the fire
+on the high grounds in the country, that terror might strike all the
+bystanders. It is clear how much the power of the bishops was thus
+extended. Soon after, on the proposal of the lay lords, at whose head
+the Prince of Wales is named, a further statute passed, in which to
+spread the rumour that King Richard was yet alive, and to teach that the
+prelates ought to be deprived of their worldly goods, are treated as
+offences of equal magnitude and threatened with a similar punishment;
+the object being alike in both,&mdash;to raise a tumult. And in fact, when
+Henry V himself had ascended the throne, an outbreak did occur, in which
+these causes co-operated. The Lollards were strengthened in their
+resistance to the government of the house of Lancaster by the rumour
+that their rightful King was yet alive. Henry
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+V was obliged to crush
+them in open battle, and then force them to remain quiet by a new
+statute, which enacted the confiscation of their goods as
+well.<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a>
+His alliance and friendship with the Emperor Sigismund was based on the
+fact, that he regarded the Hussites as only the successors of the
+Lollards.</p>
+
+<p>This orthodox tendency was now moreover combined with a strict
+Parliamentary government. Under the Lancasters there is no complaint as
+to illegal taxes; they allowed the moneys voted by the Parliament to be
+paid over to treasurers named by itself and accountable to it; that
+which earlier Kings had always rejected as an affront, the claim of
+Parliament to exercise a sort of supervision over the King's household,
+the Lancasters admitted; the royal officers were bound by oath to
+observe the statutes and the common law; the prerogative, hitherto
+exercised by the Kings, of softening the severity of the statutes by
+proclamations contravening their purpose was expressly abolished.</p>
+
+<p>The Lancasters owed their rise to their alliance with the clergy and the
+Parliament: a fact which determined the character and manner of their
+government. The most manifold results might be expected, even beyond the
+borders of England, from their having by this very alliance won for
+themselves a great European position.</p>
+
+<p>Nowhere was greater interest taken in Richard's fate than at the French
+court. Louis Duke of Orleans, whose voice was generally decisive there,
+once challenged the first Lancaster to a duel, and when he refused it
+pressed him hard with war. That Owen Glendower could once more maintain
+himself as Prince in Wales was entirely due to his French auxiliaries.
+That we find Henry IV more secure of his throne in his later years than
+in his earlier is a phenomenon the explanation of which we seek in vain
+in English affairs alone: it results from the fact that his powerful
+foe, Louis of Orleans, was murdered in the year 1407 at the instigation
+of John Duke of Burgundy, and that then the quarrel of the two
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> parties,
+which divided France, burst out with increased violence, and remained
+long undecided. From the French there was no longer anything to fear:
+they emulously sought the alliance of the highest power in England;
+there even arose circumstances under which the Lancasters could think of
+renewing the claims of Edward III, from whom they too were descended.</p>
+
+<p>At the time that Henry V ascended the English throne, the Orleanists had
+again gained the preponderance in France: they unfurled the Oriflamme
+against the Duke of Burgundy, who was now in fact hard pressed. Henry
+negociated with them both. But while the Orleanists made difficulties
+about granting him the independent possession of the old English
+provinces, Burgundy declared himself ready to acknowledge him as
+King.<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a>
+The common interests moreover of home politics allied him with
+this house.</p>
+
+<p>Henry could reckon on the sympathies of a part of the population of
+France, when he led the power of England across the sea. A successful
+battle in which he destroyed the flower of the French nobility gave him
+an undoubted superiority. The vengeance which the Orleanists wreaked
+even under these circumstances on the Duke of Burgundy, who was now
+murdered in his turn, brought the Burgundian party over completely to
+his side, together with the greater part of the nation. Things went so
+far that Charles VI of France decided to marry his daughter to the
+victorious Lancaster and to acknowledge him, as his heir after his
+death, as his representative during his life.</p>
+
+<p>It was a very extraordinary position which Henry V now occupied. The two
+great kingdoms, each of which by itself has earlier or later claimed to
+sway the world, were (without being fused into one) to remain united for
+ever under him and his successors. Philip the Good of Burgundy was bound
+to him by ties of blood and by hostility to a common foe: as heir of
+France Henry sat in the Parliament
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+by which the murderers of the last
+duke, who were also the chief opponents of the new state of things, were
+prosecuted. Another promising connexion was opened to him by the
+marriage of the youngest of his brothers with Jaqueline of Holland and
+Hainault, who possessed still more extensive hereditary claims. Henry
+recommended the eldest to Queen Johanna of Naples to be adopted as her
+son and heir. The King of Castile and the heir of Portugal were
+descended from his father's sisters. The pedigrees of Southern and
+Western Europe alike met in the house of Lancaster, the head of which
+thus seemed to be the common head of all.</p>
+
+<p>In England Henry did not neglect to guard the rights of the National
+Church; but at the same time no one exerted himself more energetically
+to close the schism: the solemn condemnation of Wiclif's doctrines by
+the General Council of Constance served to vouch for his attitude in
+religious matters: the English Church obtained in it a place among the
+great National Churches.</p>
+
+<p>Henry V found himself in the advantageous position of a potentate raised
+to power by a usurpation for which he was not however personally
+responsible. He could spare and reinstate Richard II's memory, as much
+as in him lay, though he owed the crown to his overthrow. That he
+furthered and advanced also in France the municipal and parliamentary
+interests, which were his mainstay in England, procured him the
+obedience which was there paid him, and a European influence. In his
+moral character Henry ranks above most of the Plantagenets. He had no
+favourites and let no unjust acts be imputed to him. He was stern
+towards the great and careful for the common people; at his first word
+men could tell what they had to expect from him. The French were
+frightened at the keenness of his expression, but they reverenced his
+high spirit, his bravery and truthfulness. 'He transacts all his affairs
+himself; he considers them well before he undertakes them; he never does
+anything fruitlessly. He is free from excesses, and truthful: he never
+makes himself too familiar. On his face are visible dignity and supreme
+power.'<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a>
+He possessed in full measure the bold impulses
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+of his ancestors, their attention to the general affairs of Western
+Christendom. In the war with the Lollards he was once wounded; that he
+recovered from his wound was designated as the work of divine
+Providence, which had destined him to be the conqueror of the Holy Land.
+He informed himself about its state as it was then constituted under the
+Mameluke rule: a Chronicle of Jerusalem and a History of Godfrey of
+Bouillon were two of the books he loved most to read. And without doubt
+such an undertaking would have been the true means, if any such means
+were possible, of uniting more closely, by common undertakings successes
+and interests, the realms already bound together under one sceptre. The
+Ottomans had not yet extended themselves in the East with their full
+force: something might yet have been effected there; for the King of
+France and England, who was yet young in years, a great future seemed to
+be at hand.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes it seems as though fortune were specially making a mock of
+man's frailty. In this fulness of power and of expectations, Henry V was
+attacked by a disease which men did not yet know how to cure and to
+which he succumbed. His heir was a boy, nine months old.</p>
+
+<p>Of the two surviving brothers of the deceased King, the younger ruled
+England under the already established predominance of the Estates of the
+Realm, while the elder governed France with an increased participation
+on the part of the Estates: their efforts could only be directed towards
+preserving these kingdoms for their nephew Henry VI. We might almost
+wonder that this succeeded so well for a time: in the long run it was
+impossible. The feeling of French nationality, which had already met the
+victor himself with secret warnings, found its most wonderful expression
+in the Maid who revived in the French their old attachment to their
+native King and his divine right; the English, when she fell into their
+hands, with ungenerous hate inflicted on her the punishment of the
+Lollards: but the Valois King had already gained a firm footing. It was
+Charles VII who understood how to appease
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+the enmity of Burgundy, and
+in unison with the great men of his kingdom to give his power a peculiar
+organisation corresponding to its character, so that he was able to
+oppose to the English troops better armed than their own, and make the
+restoration of a firm peace even desirable for them. But this reacted on
+England in two ways. The government, which was inclined for peace, fell
+into as bitter a quarrel as any that had hitherto taken place with the
+national bodies politic, which either did not recognise this necessity,
+or attributed the disasters incurred to bad management. The man most
+trusted by the King fell a victim to the public hate. But, besides this,
+there arose&mdash;awakened by these events and in a certain analogy with what
+happened in France&mdash;the recollection of the rights which had been set
+aside by the accession of the house of Lancaster. Their representative,
+Richard Duke of York, had hitherto kept quiet; for he was fully
+convinced that a right cannot perish merely because it lies dormant.
+Cautiously and step by step, while letting others run the first risk, he
+at last came forward openly with his claim to the crown. Great was the
+astonishment of Henry VI, who as far as his memory reached had been
+regarded as King, to find his right to the highest dignity doubted and
+denied. But such was now the case. The nation was split into two
+parties, one of which held fast to the monarchy established by the
+Parliament, while the other wished to recur to the principle of
+legitimate succession then violated. Not that political conviction was
+the leading motive for their quarrel. First of all we find that the
+opponents of the government&mdash;though themselves of Parliamentary
+views&mdash;rallied round the banners of the hitherto forgotten right of
+birth. Every man fought, less for the prince whose device he bore, the
+red or the white rose, than for his own share in the enjoyment of
+political power. On both sides there arose chiefs of almost independent
+power, who clad their partisans in their own colours, at whose call
+those partisans were ready any moment to take arms: they appointed the
+sheriffs in the counties and were lords of the land. But when blood had
+once been shed, no reconciliation of the parties was possible. Ha, cried
+the victor to the man who begged for mercy, thy father
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> slew mine, thou
+must die by my hand. In vain did men turn to the judges: for the
+statutes contradicted each other, and they could no longer decide where
+the right lay. From the Parliaments no solution of these questions could
+be expected; each served the victorious party, whose summons it obeyed,
+and condemned its opponent. As the resources on each side were tolerably
+equal, even the battles were not decisive: the result depended less upon
+real superiority than on accidental desertions or accessions, and most
+largely on foreign help. After the English had failed, during the
+antagonism of Valois and Burgundy, in establishing their supremacy on
+the Continent, the quarrel&mdash;quieted for a moment&mdash;which broke out again
+between Louis XI and Charles the Bold in the most violent manner,
+reacted on them with all the more vehemence. King Louis would not endure
+that a good understanding should exist between Edward IV and Duke
+Charles, to whom Edward had married his sister: he drew the man who had
+hitherto done the most for the Yorkist interests, the Earl of Warwick,
+over to his own side; and scarcely had the latter appeared in England
+when Edward IV was forced to fly and Henry VI was reinstated. Louis had
+prepared church-thanksgivings to God for having given the English a king
+of the blood of France and a friend to that country. But meanwhile
+Edward was helped by Charles the Bold, to whom he had fled, though not
+openly in arms, yet with ships which he hired for him, with considerable
+sums of money, and even with troops which he allowed to join
+him.<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a>
+To these, his Flemish and Easterling troops, it was chiefly attributed that
+Edward gained the upper hand in the field and recovered his throne. But
+what a state of things was this! The glorious crown of the Plantagenets,
+who a little while before strove for the supremacy of the world, was
+now&mdash;stained with blood and powerless as it was&mdash;tossed to and fro
+between the rival parties.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> 'I take it as a holesome counsell, that the Pope leeve his
+worldly lordship to worldly lords as Christ gafe him and move all his
+clerks to do so.' Wickleffs Bileve, in Collier i. Rec. 47.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> 'Quod nullus est dominus civilis, nullus est episcopus,
+nullus est praelatus, dum est in mortali peccato&mdash;quod domini temporales
+possunt auferre bona temporalia ab ecclesia habitualiter delinquente vel
+quod populares possunt ad eorum arbitrium dominos delinquentes
+corrigere.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> Walsingham: 'Antistes belliger velut aper frendens
+dentibus.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> 'Si rex ex maligno consilio&mdash;se alienaverit a populo suo
+nec voluent per jura regni et statuta et laudabiles ordinationes cum
+salubri consilio dominorum et procorum regni gubernare et
+regulari&mdash;extunc licitum est eis cum communi assensu et consensu populi
+regem ipsum de regali solio abrogare et propinquiorem aliquem de stirpe
+regia loco ejus sublimare.' In Knyghton ii. 2683.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> 'Comme chose fait traitoirousement et encontre sa regalie,
+sa coronne et sa dignitée&mdash;le roy de lassent de touts les s<sup>rs</sup> et
+c&#333;&#275;s ad ordeine et establi que null tiel commission ne autre
+sembleable jammes ne soit purchacez pursue ne faite en temps advenir.'
+Statutes of the Realm II. 98.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> Hayward, Life of King Henry IV, gives a detailed copy of
+this speech, which however can possess no more claim to authenticity
+than the words that Shakespeare puts into the Bishop's mouth.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> Le record et procès de la renonciation du roi Richard avec
+la deposition. Twysden, ii. 2743.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> Conclusiones Lollardorum porrectae pleno parliamento.
+Wilkins iii. 222. From the document in 229 we see that these doctrines
+had penetrated into Oxford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> The temporal possessions with which the prelates are as
+rightly endowed as it has been or might be best advised by the laws and
+customs of our kingdom; and of which they are as surely possessed as the
+lords temporal are of their inheritances.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> Convocatio 6 die Oct. 1389 ... modus procedendi contra
+haereticos. Wilkins iii. 238, 254.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> He imputes to them, 'l'entent de adnuller la foie
+chretienne auxi a destruer le roi mesme et tous maners estates dicell
+royaume et auxi toute politie et les leies de la terre.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> Treaty of 23rd May 1414. Certainly Duke John in September
+1414 concluded the treaty of Arras which is based on the assumption of
+his having no understanding with England; but he never ratified it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> 'De diligence portoit le gonphanon de ses besoignes.'
+Chastellain, Chronique du duc Philippe, ch. 98.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> Chastellain, Chronique des derniers ducs de Bourgogne, ch
+191. 'Le duc cognossoit bien, que ceste mutacion en Angleterre étoit
+pratiquée pour le desfaire et non pour autre fin.'</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="INT_II" id="INT_II"></a>BOOK II.</h2>
+
+<p class='center'><br />ATTEMPTS TO CONSOLIDATE THE KINGDOM INDEPENDENTLY IN ITS TEMPORAL AND
+SPIRITUAL RELATIONS.
+</p>
+
+<p>We may regard it as the chief result of the Norman-Plantagenet rule,
+that England became completely a member of the Romano-German family of
+nations which formed the Western world. In however many ways the
+invading nobility had mingled with the native houses, it yet held fast
+to its ancient language; even now it is part of the ambition of the
+great families to trace their pedigree from the Conquerors. Attempts had
+been made, sometimes of a more political, sometimes of a more doctrinal
+nature, to break loose from the hierarchy, which prevailed throughout
+these nations; but they had only increased its strength; the native
+clergy saw that its safety lay in the strictest adherence to the maxims
+of the Universal Church. Similarly the character of the Estates in
+England was akin to that of those in North France and especially in the
+Netherlands; on this rests the sympathy which the enterprises of Edward
+III and Henry V met with; for it was indeed the feeling of these
+centuries, that the members of any one of the three Estates felt
+themselves quite as closely bound to the members of the same Estate in
+other lands as to their own countrymen of the other Estates. There was
+but one Church, one Science, one Art in Europe: one and the same mental
+horizon enclosed the different peoples: a romance and a poetry varying
+in form yet of closely kindred nature was the common possession of all.
+The common life of Europe flowed also in the veins of England: an
+indestructible foundation for culture and progressive civilisation was
+laid. But we saw to what point matters had come notwithstanding, as
+regards the durability of its internal system and its power. The
+Plantagenets had extended the rule of England over Scotland and Ireland:
+in the latter it still subsisted, but only within the narrow limits of
+the Border Pale; in the former it was altogether overthrown. The best
+result that had been effected in home politics, the attempt to unite the
+Powers of the country in Parliament had, after a short and brilliant
+success, led to the deepest disorder by disregarding the rights of
+birth. The degraded crown above all had thus become the prize of battle
+for Pretenders allied with France or Burgundy. But it could not possibly
+remain thus. The time was come to give the English realm an independent
+position and internal order corresponding at once to its insular
+situation and to the degree of culture it had attained.</p>
+
+<p>The first who attempted this with some success was Edward IV, of the
+house of York, who in the war of the Roses had remained master of the
+field.</p>
+
+<p>But everywhere there began once more an era of autocratic princes. </p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BII_I" id="BII_I"></a>
+RE-ESTABLISHMENT OF THE SUPREME POWER.</p>
+
+<p>Edward IV was a most brilliant figure, the handsomest man of his time,
+at least among the sovereigns, so that the impression he thus made was
+actually a power in politics; we find him incessantly entangled in love
+affairs: he was fond of music and enjoyment of all kinds, the pleasures
+of the table, the uproar of riotous company: his debauched habits are
+thought to have shortened his life, and many a disaster sprung from his
+carelessness; but he had also Sardanapalus' nature in him: with quickly
+awakening activity he always rose again out of his disasters; in his
+battles he appeared the last, but he fought perhaps the best; and he won
+them all. In the history of European Monarchy he is not unworthy to be
+ranked by the side of Ferdinand the Catholic, Charles the Bold, Louis
+XI, and some others who regained prestige for their dignity by the
+energy of their personal character.</p>
+
+<p>In itself we must rate it as important that he made good the birthright
+of the house of York, independent as it was of the maxims of Parliament,
+or rather contradictory to them, and maintained the throne. He deemed
+himself the direct successor of Richard II; the three kings who had
+since worn the crown by virtue of Parliamentary enactments were regarded
+by him as usurpers. We have Fortescue's contemporary treatise in praise
+of the laws of England, which (written for a prince who never came to
+the throne) contains the idea of Parliamentary right which the house of
+Lancaster upheld: but Edward IV did not so apprehend it. He allowed the
+lawfulness of his accession to be recognised by Parliament, because this
+was of use to him: but otherwise he paid little regard to its
+established rights.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+We find under him for five years no meeting of
+Parliament; then a Parliament that had met was prorogued some four or
+five times without completing any business, till it at last agreed to
+raise the customs duties, included under the names of Tonnage and
+Poundage; a revenue which being voted to the Kings for life (and this
+came gradually to be regarded as a mere formality) gave their government
+a strong financial basis. Other Parliaments repaid their summons with
+considerable grants, with large and full subsidies: yet Edward IV was
+not content even with these. Under him began the practice, by which the
+wealthy were drawn into contributions for his service in proportion to
+their property, of which the King knew how to obtain accurate
+information; these contributions were called Benevolences because they
+were paid under the form of personal freewill offerings, though none
+dared to refuse them:<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a>
+we may compare the imposts which in the
+Italian republics the dominant parties were wont to inflict on their
+opponents. Though holding Church views in other points, and at any rate
+a persecutor of the Lollards, he did not however allow the clergy to
+enter on their temporalities without heavy payments: he created
+monopolies in the case of some especially profitable articles of trade.
+In short, he neglected no means to render the administration of the
+supreme power independent of the money-grants of Parliament. He made
+room for the royal prerogative as understood by the old kings, as well
+as for the right of birth.</p>
+
+<p>But yet he had not established a secure position, since the party of the
+enemy was still very powerful, and after his early death a quarrel broke
+out in his own house which could not fail to destroy it.</p>
+
+<p>To the characteristic traits of the Plantagenets, their world-wide
+views, their chivalry abroad, their versatility at home, the ceaseless
+war they waged with each other and with others
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+for power, their
+inextinguishable love of rule, belongs also the way in which those who
+held power rid themselves of foes within their own family. As formerly
+King John had murdered in prison Arthur the lawful heir to the throne,
+so Richard II imprisoned and murdered his uncle Thomas of Gloucester,
+who was dangerous to himself. Richard II, like Edward II, died by the
+hand of a relative who had wrested the crown from him; of the details of
+his death we have not even a legend left. Another Gloucester, who had
+for many years guarded the crown for the infant Henry VI, was, at the
+very moment when he might become dangerous to the new government, found
+dead in his bed. So Henry VI perished in the Tower the day before Edward
+IV made his entry into London. Edward IV preferred to have his brother
+Clarence, though already under sentence of death, privately killed. But
+the most atrocious murder of all was that of the two infant sons of
+Edward IV himself; they were both murdered at once, as was fully
+believed, at the behest of their uncle Richard III, who had put himself
+in possession of the throne. I know not whether the actual character of
+Richard answered to that type of inborn wickedness which commits crime
+because it wills it as crime, such as following the hints of the
+Chronicle<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a>
+a great poet has drawn for us in imperishable traits, and
+linked with his name: or whether it was not rather the love of power,
+that animated the whole family, which in Richard III grew step by step
+into a passion that made him forget all laws human and divine: enough,
+he did such deeds that the world's abhorrence weighs justly on him.</p>
+
+<p>But it was owing to the internal discord of the ruling family that
+throughout the course of its history a path was made for political and
+national development, and so it was now: these crimes opened a way out
+of the disorders of the time. For as Richard, while continuing to
+persecute the house of Lancaster, struck still harder blows against the
+chief members of that of York, he gave occasion to the principal persons
+of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+both parties, who were equally threatened, and had the same interest
+in opposing the usurper, to draw nearer to each other.</p>
+
+<p>The widowed Queen Elizabeth, who was lingering out her life in a
+sanctuary, was brought into secret connexion through the mediation of
+distinguished friends with the mother of the man who now came forward as
+head of the Lancasters, Henry Earl of Richmond, and it was determined
+that Henry and Elizabeth's daughter, in whom the claims of both lines
+were united, should marry each other, a prospect which might well
+prepare the way for the immediate combination of the two parties. Henry
+of Richmond at their head was then to confront the usurper and chase him
+from the throne. The fugitives scattered about in the sanctuaries and
+churches called him to be their
+captain.<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a></p>
+
+<p>The question arises&mdash;it has been often answered in the negative&mdash;whether
+Henry was rightfully a Lancaster, and whether he had any well-grounded
+claims on the English crown. He loved to derive his family from the hero
+of the Welsh, the fabulous Arthur. His grandfather, Owen Tudor, a
+Welshman, was brought into connexion with the royal house by his
+marriage with Henry V's widow, Catharine of France: for unions of royal
+ladies with distinguished gentlemen were then not rare. And Owen Tudor
+of course obtained by this a higher position, but there could be no
+question of any claim to the crown. This was derived simply from the
+fact that the son of this marriage, Edmund Tudor Earl of Richmond,
+married a lady of the house of Somerset, descended by her father from
+John of Gaunt, the ancestor of the Lancasters, by his third marriage
+with Catharine Swynford. It has been said that this marriage, in itself
+of an irregular nature, was only recognised as legitimate by Richard II
+on the condition that the issue from it should have no claim to the
+succession&mdash;and so it is in fact stated in the often printed Patent. But
+the original of the document still exists, and that in two forms, one of
+which is in the Rolls of Parliament, the other
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+on the Patent Rolls. In
+the first the limitation is wanting, in the second it exists, but as an
+interpolation by a later hand. It may be taken as admitted that Richard
+II in legitimising the marriage did not make this condition, and that it
+was first inserted by Henry IV (who took offence at the legitimisation
+of his half-brothers) at the ratification. But the legitimisation once
+effected could not possibly be limited in a one-sided manner by a later
+sovereign. I think no objection can be made to the legality of Henry
+VII's claim, which then passed over to his
+successors.<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a>
+The limitation belonged to those proceedings of one-sided caprice by which
+Henry IV tried to secure for his direct descendants the perpetual
+possession of the crown. It was not from him, but from his father, the
+founder of the family, that the Earls of Richmond derived their claim.</p>
+
+<p>Now that the banner of a true Lancaster appeared again in the field, and
+the discontented Yorkists, ill-treated by Richard, joined him, it might
+certainly be hoped that the usurper would be overthrown, and that a
+strong power would emerge from the union of both lines. Yet the issue
+was even then very doubtful.</p>
+
+<p>As in the earlier civil wars, so now too the help of a foreign power was
+necessary. With French help the Earl of Richmond led about 2000 men, of
+which not more than perhaps 800 were English, to
+Wales;<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a>
+in his further advance he was joined by proportionately considerable
+reinforcements; yet he did not number more than 5000 men under his
+banners, badly clothed and still worse armed, when Richard with his
+chivalry came upon him in overwhelming numbers. Henry would have been
+lost, had he not found partisans in Richard's ranks. Even before the
+engagement the desertion from Richard began: then in the middle of the
+battle the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+chief division of his army passed over to Henry. Richard
+found the death he sought: for he was resolved to be King or die: on the
+battlefield itself Henry was proclaimed King.</p>
+
+<p>There is no doubt that he owed to his union with the house of York,
+whose right was then generally regarded as the best, not only his
+victory, but the joyous recognition also which he experienced
+afterwards: yet his whole nature revolted against basing his state on
+this union: he cherished the ambition of ruling only through his own
+right.</p>
+
+<p>At the first meeting of Parliament, which he did not call till he was
+fully in possession and crowned King, he was met by a very genuinely
+English point of law. It arose from the fact that many members of the
+Lower House had been attainted by the late government. How could they
+make laws who were themselves beyond the pale of law? Who could cleanse
+them from the stain that clove to them? This objection could be raised
+against Henry himself. In this perplexity recourse was had to the
+judges: and they decided that the possession of the crown supplied all
+defects, and that the King was already King even without the assent of
+Parliament.<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a>
+In the general disorder things had gone so far, that it
+was necessary to find some power outside the continuity of legal forms,
+from which they might start afresh. The actual possession of the throne
+formed this time the living centre round which the legal state could
+again form itself. By exercising the authority inherent in the
+possession of the crown, the King could effect the revocation of the
+sentences that weighed on his partisans and on a large portion of the
+Parliament. After the legal character of that Assembly had been
+established, it proceeded to recognise Henry's rights to the crown in
+the words used for the first of the Lancastrian house.</p>
+
+<p>In the papal bull which ratified Henry's succession, three grounds are
+assigned for it: the right of war, the undoubted nearest right to the
+succession, and the recognition by Parliament. On the first the King
+himself laid great stress:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+he once designates the issue of the battle
+as the decision of God between him and his foes. He thus avoided any
+mention of the marriage with Edward IV's daughter, which he did not
+complete till he was acknowledged on all sides. The papal bull declared
+that the crown of England was to be hereditary in Henry's descendants,
+even if they did not spring from the Yorkist marriage.</p>
+
+<p>We can easily understand this: Henry would not tolerate by his side in
+the person of his wife a joint ruler of equal, and even better, right
+than his own; but we can understand also that this proceeding drew on
+him new enmities. At the very outset the widowed Queen gave it to be
+understood that her daughter was rather lowered than raised by the
+marriage. The whole party of York moreover felt itself contemned and
+insulted. To the ferment of displeasure and ambition into which it fell
+must be attributed the fact that a pair of adventurers, who acted the
+part of genuine descendants of the house of York, Lambert Simnel and
+Perkin Warbeck, supported from abroad, found the greatest sympathy and
+recognition in England. The first Henry VII had to meet in open battle,
+the second he got into his hands only by a great European combination.</p>
+
+<p>But he did not wish to have always to encounter open disturbance. He was
+entirely of the opinion which his chancellor gave, that enmities of such
+a sort could not be extinguished by the sword of war, but only by
+well-planned and stringent laws which would destroy the seed of
+rebellion, and by institutions strong enough to administer those laws.
+Above all he found it intolerable that the great men kept numerous
+dependents attached to them under engagements which were publicly
+paraded by distinctive badges. The lower courts of justice and the
+juries did not do the service expected from them in dealing with the
+transgressions of the law that came before them. Uncertainty as to the
+supreme authority, and the power which the great party-leaders
+exercised, filled the weaker, who had to sit in judgment on them, with
+dread of their sure revenge. To put an end to this disorder Henry VII
+established the Starchamber. With consent of the Parliament, from which
+all hostile pa<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>rty-movements
+were excluded, he gave his Privy Council,
+which was strengthened by the chief judges, a strong organisation with
+this end in view. It was to punish all those personal engagements, the
+exercise of unlawful influence in the choice of sheriffs, all riotous
+assemblies, lastly to have power to deal with the early symptoms of a
+tumult before it came to an outbreak, and that under forms which were
+not usual in the English administration of justice. This powerful
+instrument in the hands of government might be much abused, but then
+seemed necessary to keep in check unreconciled enemies and the spirit of
+faction that was ever surging up again. We see the prevailing state of
+things from the fact, that the King's councillors themselves, to be
+secured against acts of violence, passed a special law, which
+characterised attacks on them as attacks on the King himself. But then,
+like men who stood in the closest connexion with the King and his State,
+they used their authority with unapproachable severity. The internal
+tranquillity of England has been thought to be mainly due to the
+erection of this court of justice.<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a></p>
+
+<p>Since Henry laid so much stress on his being a Lancaster, it might have
+been expected that he would revive the rights of the Parliament. But in
+this respect he followed the example of the house of York. He too
+imposed Benevolences, like Edward IV, and that to a yet greater extent;
+he made an ordinance that what was voluntarily promised should be
+exacted with as much strictness as if it were an ordinary tax. Another
+source of financial gain, which has brought on him still worse
+reproaches, was his commission against infractions of the law. It was
+inevitable that in the fluctuation of authority and of the statutes
+themselves innumerable illegalities should have taken place. And they
+were still always going on. The King took it especially ill that men
+omitted to pay the dues which belonged to the crown in right of its
+feudal superiority. All these negligences and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span> failures were now visited
+and punished with the severity of the old Norman system, and at the same
+time with the officiousness of party-men of the day, who saw their own
+advantage in it. This proceeding pressed very many heavily on private
+persons and communities, and ruined families, but it filled the King's
+coffers. One of his maxims was that his laws should not be broken under
+any circumstances, another that a sovereign who would enjoy
+consideration must always have money: in this instance both worked
+together.</p>
+
+<p>If we look at the lists of his receipts we find that they consist, as in
+other kingdoms, of the crown's revenue proper, which was considerably
+increased by the escheated possessions of great families which had
+become extinct, the customs duties settled on him for life, the tenth
+from the clergy, and the feudal dues. It was estimated that they
+produced nearly the same revenue as that of the French kings at this
+time, but it was remarked that the King of England only spent about
+two-thirds of his income. He did not need a Parliamentary grant,
+especially as he kept out of dangerous foreign entanglements. In his
+last thirteen years he never once called a Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>This precisely corresponded to the idea of his government. After all had
+become doubtful owing to the alternate fluctuations of parties he had
+established his personal claim by the fortune of arms, and made it the
+central point of his government. Was he to allow it to be again
+endangered by the ceaseless ebb and flow of popular opinion? He founded
+a supreme court independent of popular agitation, a finance system
+independent of the grants of a popular assembly.</p>
+
+<p>But he thus found himself under the disadvantage of having to apply
+compulsion unceasingly: his government bore throughout the bitter and
+hateful character of a party-government. With untiring jealousy he
+watched the secret opponents who still looked out for some movement from
+abroad, as a signal for fresh revolt: he kept diaries of their doings
+and conduct: it was said he availed himself of the confessional for this
+purpose: men whose names were from time to time solemnly cursed at S.
+Paul's on account of past treasons<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>, so that they counted for open
+enemies, became useful to him as spies. If the decision lay between
+services received and suspicious conduct, the latter easily weighed down
+the balance, to the ruin of the victim. William Stanley, who had played
+the most important part in the battle which decided the fate of the
+crown, and was regarded as almost the first man in the realm after the
+King, had at the appearance of Perkin Warbeck (who gave himself out as
+Edward's younger son, Richard of York) let slip the words, 'he would
+take his side, if he were the person he gave himself out to be.' He had
+to atone for these words by his death, since he had intimated a doubt as
+to the King's lawful right, which might mislead others into sedition.
+Gradually the movements ceased: the high nobility showed a loyal
+submission to the King: yet it did not attach itself to him, it let him
+and his government alone. The King's principle was, to execute the laws
+most strictly, yet he was not cruel by nature; if men implored his
+mercy, he was ready to grant it. The contracted position of a sovereign,
+who maintains his authority with the utmost strictness, does not however
+exclude a paternal care for the country. Henry clipped his people's
+wings, to accustom them to obedience, and then was glad when they grew
+again. We find even that he made out a sketch of how the land should be
+cultivated so that every man might be able to live. The people did not
+love him, but it did not exactly hate him either: this was quite enough
+for Henry VII.</p>
+
+<p>A slight man, somewhat tall, with thin light-coloured hair, whose
+countenance bore the traces of the storms he had passed through; in his
+appearance he gave the impression of being a high ecclesiastic rather
+than a chivalrous King. He was in this almost the exact opposite of
+Edward IV. He too certainly arranged public festivities and spared no
+expense to make them splendid, since his dignity demanded it, but his
+soul took no pleasure in them, he left them as soon as ever he could; he
+lived only in business. In his council sat men of mark, sagacious
+bishops, experienced generals, magistrates learned in the law: he held
+it to be his duty and his interest to hear their advice. And they were
+not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span> without influence: one or two were noted as able to restrain his
+self-seeking will. But the main affairs he kept in his own hands. All
+that he undertook he conducted with great foresight and as a rule he
+carried it through. Foreigners regarded him as cunning and deceitful; to
+his own people his successful prudence seemed to have something
+supernatural about it. If he had personal passions, he knew how to keep
+them under; he seemed always calm and sober, sparing of words and yet
+affable.</p>
+
+<p>He directed almost his chief energies to this object, to keep off all
+foreign influences from his well-ordered kingdom. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> Historiae Croylandensis Continuatio II. 'Concessae sunt
+decimae ac quintodecimae multiplices in coetibus clericorum et laicorum,
+habentibus in faciendis concessionibus hujusmodi interesse. Praeterea
+haereditarii ac possessionati omnes de rebus immobilibus suarum
+possessionum partem libere concedebant. Cumque nec omnia praedicta
+sufficere visa sunt, inducta est nova et inaudita impositio oneris, ut
+per benevolentiam quilibet daret id quod vellet, imo verius quod
+nollet.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> At least Sir Thomas More has not invented the nature and
+manner of the murder; it is derived from a confession of the persons
+concerned in it in Henry VII's time. 'Dightonus traditionis hujus
+principale erat instrumentum' (Bacon 212). Tyrel too seems to have known
+of it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> 'Videntes, quod si novum conquestionis suae capitaneum
+invenire non possent brevi de omnibus actum foret.' Hist. Croyl. 568.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> I take this from Nicolas, Observations on the state of
+historical literature, 1830, p. 178. Hume's objection, that the mother's
+right came before the son's, is done away with by the fact that men had
+in general never yet seen reigning Queens.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> How the world regarded it then we ascertain from the words
+of the Chroniques de Jean Molinet, ed. Buchon, iii. 151. 'Le Comte de
+Richmond fut couronne et institué Henri VII, par le confort et puissant
+subside du roi de France.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> 'A quo tempore Rex coronam assumpserat, fontem sanguinis
+fuisse expurgatum&mdash;ut regi opera parlamentaria non fuisset opus.' So
+Bacon, Henricus VII. 29.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> Edw. Coke: 4 Inst. cap. ix. 'It is the most honourable
+court, our Parliament excepted, that is in the Christian world.&mdash;In the
+judges of the same are the grandees of the realm: and they judge upon
+confession or deposition or witness.&mdash;This court doth keep all England
+in quiet.'</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BII_II_I" id="BII_II_I"></a>
+CHANGES IN THE CONDITION OF EUROPE.</p>
+
+<p>For the history of the world the decisive event of the epoch was the
+rapid rise of the French monarchy, which after it had freed itself from
+the English invasions, became master of all the hitherto separate
+territories of the great vassals, and lastly even of Brittany, and
+rapidly began to make its preponderance felt on all sides.</p>
+
+<p>Considered in itself no one would have been more called on to oppose
+this than the King of England, who even still bore the title of King of
+France. In fact Henry did once revive his claim on the French crown, on
+Normandy and Guyenne, and took part in a coalition, which was to have
+forced Charles VIII to give up Brittany; he crossed to Calais and
+threatened Boulogne. But he was not in earnest with these comprehensive
+views in his military enterprise, any more than Edward IV had once been
+in a similar one. Henry VII was contented when a considerable money
+payment year by year was secured to him, as it had been to Edward. The
+English called it a tribute, the French a pension. It was acceptable to
+the King, and advantageous for his home affairs, just at that
+moment&mdash;1492&mdash;to have a sum of money at his free disposal.</p>
+
+<p>And no one could have advised him to attach himself unconditionally to
+the house of Burgundy. Duke Charles' widow was still alive, who found it
+unendurable that the house of York, from which she sprang, should be
+dethroned from its 'triumphant majesty, which shone over the seven
+nations of the world'&mdash;for so she expressed herself. With her the
+fugitive partisans of the house of York found refuge and protection: by
+herself and her son-in-law Maximilian of Austria the pretenders
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+were fitted out who contested the crown with Henry VII. Henry could not
+really wish Brittany to pass to his sworn foe, so that he might be
+threatened from this quarter also at every moment. For how could he
+delude himself with the hope that a transitory alliance would prevail
+over a dynastic antipathy?</p>
+
+<p>At this crisis Ferdinand the Catholic of Spain offered him an alliance
+and connexion by marriage.</p>
+
+<p>That which induced this sovereign to do so was above all Charles VIII's
+invasion of Italy, and his conquest of Naples, to which the crown of
+Aragon had just claims. His plan was to oppose to the mighty
+consolidated power of France a family alliance with the
+Austro-Burgundian House, with Portugal, above all with England: he hoped
+that this would react on Italy, always wont to adhere to the most
+powerful party. Ferdinand offered the King of England a marriage between
+his youngest daughter Catharine and the Prince of Wales. In the English
+Privy Council many objections were made to this; they did not wish to
+draw the enmity of France on themselves and would have rather seen the
+prince united to a princess of the house of Bourbon, as was then
+proposed. It was on Henry VII's own responsibility that the offer was
+accepted. In September 1496 an agreement was come to about the
+conditions: on 15th August 1497 the ceremony of betrothal took place in
+the palace at Woodstock.<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a></p>
+
+<p>The motive which impelled Henry to his decision is sufficiently clear;
+it was his relation to Scotland, on which the Spaniards already
+exercised influence.</p>
+
+<p>There the second pretender, Perkin Warbeck, had found a warm reception
+from the young and chivalrous James IV: he there married a lady of one
+of the chief houses: accompanied in person by this sovereign he made an
+attempt to invade England, which only failed owing to the unfavourable
+time of the year. The Spanish ambassador Pedro de Ayala
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+then out of
+regard to Henry secured Perkin's withdrawal from Scotland. But in 1497
+the danger revived in a yet greater degree. Warbeck landed in Cornwall
+where all the inhabitants rallied round him, and a revolt already once
+suppressed broke out again; at this moment James IV, urged on by the
+nobles of the land, crossed the border with a splendid army: the
+co-operation of the two movements might have placed the King in a
+serious difficulty. Again it was the Spanish ambassador who made James
+IV determine not to let himself be urged on further; but rather to give
+him the commission, to adjust his differences with England. Henry VII
+was set free to suppress the revolt in Cornwall; Perkin Warbeck was
+taken in his flight.</p>
+
+<p>As the object of the Spaniards was to sever Scotland from her old
+alliance with France, and that too by means of a family alliance, it was
+an essential point in their mediation that Henry VII, as he betrothed
+his son Arthur to a Spanish Infanta, should similarly betroth his
+daughter Margaret to James IV. The understanding with Spain and that
+with Scotland went hand in hand.</p>
+
+<p>And on another side too the alliance with Spain was very useful to the
+King of England. Ferdinand had married his elder daughter Juana to
+Maximilian's son the Archduke Philip: Philip could not possibly uphold
+the Yorkist interests so zealously as his father or his grandmother. It
+was an event of importance that at Whitsuntide 1500 a meeting took place
+between the English and the Austro-Burgundian Court in the neighbourhood
+of Calais. Henry applied himself to win over those whom he knew to be
+his enemies: but at the same time he wished it to be remarked that the
+Archduke showed him the honour which belongs to a lawful King. If there
+were still Yorkist partisans in England, who placed their hopes in the
+house of Burgundy, they would find that they had nothing more to hope
+from that quarter.</p>
+
+<p>So the Spanish alliance served the prudent and circumspect politician,
+to secure him from any hostile action on the side of Scotland and the
+Netherlands. When Catharine in 1501 came to England for her marriage,
+she was received with additional joy because it was felt that her near
+connex<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>ion
+with the Burgundian house promised good relations with the
+Netherlands.<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a></p>
+
+<p>But never was a more eventful marriage concluded.</p>
+
+<p>We do not know whether the Prince of Wales had really consummated it
+when he died before he was yet sixteen. But the two fathers were so well
+satisfied with an alliance which increased the security of the one and
+gained the other great consideration in the world, that they could not
+bring themselves to give up the family connexion, by which it was so
+much strengthened. The thought occurred to Ferdinand&mdash;a very unusual one
+in the rest of the European world, though not indeed in Spain&mdash;of
+marrying the Infanta to Henry, brother of the deceased prince, who was
+now recognised as Prince of Wales. With his condolence for the loss he
+united a proposal for the new marriage. In England from the beginning
+men did not hide from themselves that as regarded the future succession,
+which ought not to be contested from any side, the matter had its
+delicate points. The solution which Henry found shows clearly enough the
+natural tactics of the old politician. He obtained from the Roman Court
+a dispensation for the new marriage, which expressly included the case
+of the first marriage having been consummated. But it almost appears as
+though he did not fully trust this authorisation. High as the prestige
+of the supreme Pontiff still stood in the world, there were yet cases in
+which canonists and theologians doubted as to his dispensing power; men
+could not possibly have forgotten that, when Richard III wished to marry
+his niece Elizabeth, a number of doctors disapproved of such a marriage,
+even if the Pope should sanction it. At any rate Henry VII instigated,
+or at least did not oppose, his son's solemnly entering a protest, after
+the marriage ceremony between him and Catharine was performed, against
+its validity (on the ground of his being too young), the evening before
+he entered his fifteenth year, in the presence of the Bishop of
+Winchester, his father's chief
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+Secretary of State. Hence all remained
+undecided. Catharine lived on in England: her dowry did not need to be
+given up; the general influence of the political union was saved; it
+could however be dissolved at any moment, and there was therefore no
+quarrel on this account with France, whence from time to time proposals
+proceeded for a marriage in the opposite interest. The prince kept
+himself quite free, to make use of the dispensation or not.</p>
+
+<p>For the King himself too, whose wife died in 1503, many negociations
+were entered into on both sides. The French offered him a lady of the
+house of Angoulême; he preferred Maximilian's daughter, Margaret of
+Austria, not indeed for her personal qualities, however praiseworthy
+they might be; he stipulated after his usual fashion for the surrender
+of the fugitive Edmund de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk, who was regarded as
+the chief representative of the house of York, and (as once previously
+in France) had at that time found a refuge in the Netherlands. Philip,
+who after the death of his mother-in-law wished to take possession of
+his wife's kingdoms in Spain, was on his voyage from Flanders driven by
+a storm on the English coasts: he was Henry's guest at Windsor,
+Richmond, and London. Here then the King's marriage with Philip's sister
+was concerted, and with it the surrender of Suffolk. Philip strove long
+against this: when he yielded, he at least got a promise that Henry VII
+would spare the life of the earl, whom he accused of treason. He kept
+his word: the prisoner was not executed till after his death.</p>
+
+<p>Margaret had no inclination to wed herself with the harsh and
+self-seeking King, who was growing old: he himself, when Philip shortly
+after his arrival in Castile was snatched away by an early death, formed
+the idea of marrying his widow Juana, though she was no longer in her
+right mind. He opened a negociation about it, which he pursued with zeal
+and apparent earnestness. The Spaniards ascribe to him the project of
+marrying himself to Ferdinand's elder daughter, and his son to the
+younger, and making the latter marriage, which he was purposely always
+putting off, the price of his own. One should hardly ascribe such a
+folly to the prudent and wise sovereign at his years and with his
+failing stren<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>gth.
+That he made the proposals admits of no doubt: but we
+must suppose that he wished purposely to oppose to the pressure of the
+Spaniards for the marriage of his son with the Infanta a demand which
+they could never grant. For how could they let the King of England share
+in Juana's immense claims of inheritance? Henry wished neither to break
+off nor to complete his son's marriage; for the one course would have
+made Spain hostile, while the second might have produced a quarrel with
+France. Between these two powers he maintained an independent position,
+without however mixing in earnest with their affairs, and only with the
+view of warding off their enmity and linking their interests with his
+own. His political relations were, as he said, to draw a brazen wall
+round England, within which he had gradually become complete lord and
+master. The crown he had won on the battlefield, and maintained as his
+own in the extremest dangers, he bequeathed to his son as an undoubted
+possession. The son succeeded the father without opposition, without a
+rival&mdash;a thing that had not happened for centuries. He had only to
+ascend the throne, in order to take the reins of government into his
+hand.</p>
+
+<p class='sect'><a name="BII_II_II" id="BII_II_II"></a>
+Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolsey in their earlier years.</p>
+
+<p>But that the political situation should continue as it was could not be
+expected. What has not seldom in the history of great kingdoms and
+states formed a decisive turning point now came to pass: to the father
+who had founded and maintained his power with foresight and by painful
+and continuous labour, succeeded a son full of life and energy, who
+wished to enjoy its possession, and feeling firm ground under his feet
+determined to live in a way more after his own mind. Henry VIII too felt
+the need of being popular, like most princes on their accession: he
+sacrificed the two chiefs of the fiscal commission, Empson and Dudley,
+to the universal hate. In general his father's point of view seemed to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+him too narrow-hearted, his proceedings too cautious.</p>
+
+<p>The first great question which was laid before him concerned his
+marriage: he decided for it without further delay. No doubt that in this
+political reasons came chiefly into account. France had been ever
+growing mightier, it had just then struck down the republic of Venice by
+a great victory; men thought it would one day or another come into
+collision with England, and held it prudent to unite themselves
+beforehand with those who could then be useful as allies. At that time
+this applied to the Spaniards above all
+others.<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a>
+Yet, unless
+everything deceives us, political considerations only coincided with the
+prince's inclinations. The Infanta was in the full bloom of her age; the
+prince, was even younger than herself and against his will had been kept
+apart from any association with her, might well be impressed by her:
+besides she had known how to conduct herself with tact and dignity in
+her difficult position; with a blameless earnest mien she combined
+gentleness and loveable qualities. The marriage was carried out without
+delay; in the ceremonies of her husband's coronation Catharine could
+actually take part as Queen. How fully did these festivities again
+breathe the ancient character of chivalrous splendour. Men saw the
+King's champion, with his own herald in front, in full armour, ride into
+the hall on his war-steed which carried the armorial bearings of England
+and France; he challenged to single combat any one who would dare to say
+that Henry VIII was not the true heir of this realm; then he asked the
+King for a draught of wine, who had it given him in a golden cup: the
+cup was then his own.</p>
+
+<p>Henry VIII had a double reason for confidence on his throne,&mdash;the blood
+of the house of York also flowed in his veins. In European affairs he
+was no longer content with keeping off foreign influences, he wished to
+take part in them like his ancestors with the whole power of England.
+After the dangers which had been overcome had passed out of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span> memory
+of those living, the old delight in war awoke again.</p>
+
+<p>When France now began to encounter resistance in her career of victory,
+first through Pope Julius II, then through King Ferdinand, Henry did not
+hesitate to make common cause with them. It marks his disposition in
+these first years, that he took arms especially because men ought not to
+allow the supreme Priest of Christendom to be
+oppressed.<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a>
+When King
+Louis and the Emperor Maximilian tried to oppose a Council to the Pope,
+Henry VIII dissuaded the latter from it with a zeal full of unction. He
+drew him over in fact to his side: they undertook a combined campaign
+against France in which they won a battle in the open field, and
+conquered a great city, Tournay. Aided by the English army Ferdinand the
+Catholic then possessed himself of Navarre, which was given up to him by
+the Pope as being taken when it was in league with an enemy of the
+Church. Louis's other ally, the Scottish King James IV, succumbed to the
+military strength of North England at Flodden, and Henry might have
+raised a claim to Scotland, like that of Ferdinand to Navarre: but he
+preferred, as his sister Margaret became regent there, to strengthen the
+indirect influence of England over Scotland. On the whole the advantages
+of his warlike enterprises were for England small, but not unimportant
+for the general relations of Europe. The predominance of France was
+broken: a freer position restored to the Papacy. Henry VIII felt himself
+fortunate in the full weight of the influence which England had won over
+European affairs.</p>
+
+<p>It was no contradiction of the fundamental ideas of English policy, when
+Henry VIII again formed a connexion with Louis XII, who was now no
+longer formidable. He even gave him his younger sister to wife, and
+concluded a treaty with him, by which he secured himself a money
+payment, as his predecessors had so often done before. Yet he did not
+for this break at all with Ferdinand the Catholic, though he had reason
+to complain of him: rather he concluded a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+new alliance with him, only
+in a less close and binding manner. He would not have endured that the
+successor of Louis XII (who died immediately after his marriage), the
+youthful and warlike Francis I, after he had possessed himself of Milan,
+should have also advanced to Naples. For a moment, in consequence of
+these apprehensions, their relations became less close: but when the
+alarm proved to be unfounded, the alliance was renewed, and even Tournay
+restored for a compensation in money. Many personal motives may have
+contributed to this, but on the whole there was sense and system in such
+a policy. The reconquest of Milan did not make the King of France so
+strong that he would become dangerous, particularly as on the other side
+the monarchy which had been prepared by the Spanish-Netherlands'
+connexions now came into existence, and the grandson of Ferdinand and
+Maximilian united the Spanish kingdoms with Naples and the lordship over
+the Netherlands.</p>
+
+<p>To this position between the two powers it would have lent new weight
+and great splendour if the German princes could have been induced to
+transfer to the King of England the peaceful dignity of a Roman-German
+Emperor. He bestirred himself about this for a moment, but did not feel
+it much when it was refused him.</p>
+
+<p>But now since the empire too was added to the possessions in Spain,
+Italy, and the Netherlands, and hence redoubled jealousy awakened in
+King Francis I, which held out an immediate prospect of war, the old
+question came up again before King Henry, which side England was to take
+between them, and that in a more pressing form than ever. A special
+complication arose from the fact that yet another person with separate
+points of view now took part in the politics of the age.</p>
+
+<p>In another point Henry VIII departed from his father's tactics and
+habits; he no longer sat so regularly with his Privy Council and
+deliberated with them. He had been persuaded that he would best secure
+himself against prejudicial results from the discords that reigned among
+them, by taking affairs more into his own hand. A young ecclesiastic,
+his Almoner<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+Thomas Wolsey, had then gained the greatest influence over
+him; he had been introduced alike into business and into intimacy with
+the King by Fox, Bishop of Winchester, who wished to oppose a more
+youthful ability to his rivals in the Privy Council. In both relations
+Wolsey was completely successful. It stood him in good stead that
+another favourite, Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, who had married
+Henry's sister (Louis XII's widow), and was the King's comrade in
+knightly exercises and the external show of court-life, for a long time
+remained in intimate friendship with him. Wolsey was conversant with the
+scholastic philosophy, with Saint Thomas Aquinas; but that did not
+hinder him from cooperating also in the revival of classical studies,
+which were just coming into notice at Oxford: he had a feeling for the
+efforts of Art which was then attaining a higher estimation, and an
+inborn talent for architecture, to which we owe some wonderful
+works.<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a>
+The King too loved building; the present of a skilfully cut
+jewel could delight him; and he sought honour in defending the
+scholastic dogmas against Luther's views; in all this Wolsey seconded
+and supported him, he combined state-business with conversation. He
+freed the King from the consultations of the Privy Council, in which the
+intrinsic importance of the matter always weighs more than one's own
+will; Henry VIII first felt himself to be really King when business was
+managed by a favourite thoroughly dependent on him, trusted by him, and
+in fact very capable. Wolsey showed the most many-sided activity and an
+indefatigable power of work. He presided in court though he was not
+strong in law; he mastered the department of finance; the King named him
+Archbishop of York, the Pope Cardinal-Legate, so that the whole control
+of ecclesiastical matters fell into his hands; foreign affairs were
+peculiarly his own department. We have a considerable number of his
+political writings and instructions remaining, which give us an idea of
+the characteristics of his mind. Ve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>ry
+circumstantially and almost
+wearisomely do they advance&mdash;not exactly in a straight line&mdash;weighing
+manifold possibilities, multiplied reasons: they are scholastic in form,
+in contents sometimes fantastic even to excess, intricate yet acute,
+flattering to the person to whom they are addressed, but withal filled
+with a surprising self-consciousness of power and talent. Wolsey is
+celebrated by Erasmus for his affability, and to a great scholar he may
+have been accessible, but to others he was not so. When he went to walk
+in the park of Hampton Court, no one would have dared to come within a
+long distance of him. When questions were asked him he reserved to
+himself the option of answering or not. He had a way of giving his
+opinion so that every man yielded to him; especially as the possession
+of the King's favour, which he enjoyed, made it impossible to oppose
+him. If the government was spoken of, he was wont to say, 'the King and
+I,' or 'we,' or at last 'I.' Just because he was of humble origin, he
+wished to shine by splendid appearance, costly and rare furniture,
+unwonted expenditure. Early one morning his appointment as Cardinal
+arrived, that same morning at mass he displayed the insignia of his new
+dignity. He required outward tokens of reverence, and insisted on being
+served on bended knee. He had many other passions, of which the chief
+was ecclesiastical ambition pervaded by personal vanity.</p>
+
+<p>It gave him high satisfaction that both the great powers emulously
+courted the favour and friendship of his King, of which he seemed to
+have the disposal.</p>
+
+<p>In June 1520 took place within the English possessions on French soil
+the meeting between Henry VIII and Francis I, which is well designated
+as the Field of the Cloth of Gold. It was properly a great tournament,
+proclaimed in both nations, to which the chief lords yet once more
+gathered in all their splendour. With the festivities were mingled
+negociations in which the Cardinal of York played the chief part.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately before this in England, and just afterwards on the
+continent, Henry VIII met Charles V also, with less show but greater
+intimacy; the negociations here took
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+the opposite direction.</p>
+
+<p>In 1521, when war had already broken out between the two great powers,
+the cardinal in his King's name undertook the part of mediator. There in
+Calais he sat to a certain degree in judgment on the European powers.
+The plenipotentiaries of both sovereigns laid their cases before him:
+with apparent zeal and much bustle he tried at least to conclude a
+truce: he complained once of the Emperor, that he disregarded his good
+advice though weighty and to the point: on which the latter did come a
+step nearer him. It was a magnificent position if he understood and
+maintained it. The more powerful both princes became, the more dangerous
+to the world their enmity should be, the more need there was of a
+mediating authority between them. But the purity of intention which is
+required to carry out such a task is seldom given to men, and did not
+exist in Wolsey. His ambition suggested plans to him which reached far
+beyond a peace arbitration.</p>
+
+<p>When he promoted that first interview with Francis I against the will of
+the great men and of the Queen of England, the Emperor's ambassadors,
+who were thrown into consternation by it, remarked that the French King
+must have promised him the Papacy, which however, they add, is rather in
+the Imperial than in the royal gift. It does not appear that the Emperor
+went quite so far at once, he only warned the cardinal against the
+untrustworthy promises of the French, and sought to bring him to the
+conviction&mdash;while making him the most advantageous offers&mdash;that he could
+expect everything from him.<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a>
+Clear details he reserved till they met
+in person; and then he in fact drew him over completely to his side.
+Under Wolsey's influence King Henry, immediately on the outbreak of the
+war, gave out his intention of making common cause with the Emperor. For
+he had not, he said, so little understanding as not to see that the
+opportunity was thus offered him of carrying out his predecessors'
+claims and his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+own, and he wished to use it. Only he preferred not to
+commence war at once, since he was not yet armed, and since a broader
+alliance should be first formed. The cardinal hoped to be able to draw
+the Pope, the Swiss, and the Duke of Savoy, as well as the Kings of
+Portugal, Denmark, and Hungary, into it. What an impression then it must
+have made on him, when Pope Leo X, without being pressed, at once allied
+himself with the Emperor! Wolsey's attempt at mediation&mdash;no room for
+doubt about it is left by the documents that lie before us&mdash;was only
+meant as a means of gaining time. At Calais Wolsey had already given the
+imperial ambassadors, in the presence of the Papal Nuncio, the most
+definite assurances as to the resolution of his King to take part in the
+war against France. Before he returned to England to call the Parliament
+together, which was to vote the necessary ways and means, he visited the
+Emperor at Bruges. At the last negociations, being at times doubtful
+about his trustworthiness, Charles V held it doubly necessary to bind
+him by every tie to himself. He then spoke to him of the Papacy, and
+gave him his word that he would advance him to that
+dignity.<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a></p>
+
+<p>The opportunity for this came almost too soon. When Leo X died, just at
+this moment, Wolsey's hopes rose in stormy impatience. When the Emperor
+renewed his assurance to him, he demanded of him in plain terms to
+advance his then victorious troops to Rome, and put down by main force
+any resistance to the choice proposed. Before anything could be done,
+before the ambassador whom Henry VIII despatched at once to Italy
+reached it, the cardinals had already elected, and elected moreover the
+Emperor's former tutor, Hadrian. But was not this a proof of his
+irresistible authority? Hadrian's advanced age made it clear that there
+would be an early vacancy: and to this Wolsey now directed his hopes. He
+gave assurance that he would administer the Papacy for the sole
+advantage of the King and the Emperor: he thought then to overpower the
+Fre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>nch,
+and after completing this work he already saw himself in spirit
+directing his weapons to the East, to put an end to the Turkish rule. At
+his second visit to England the Emperor renewed his promise at Windsor
+castle; he spoke of it in his conferences with the
+King.<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a>
+Altogether the closest alliance was concluded. The Emperor promised to marry
+Henry's daughter Mary, assuming that the Pope would grant him the
+necessary dispensation. Their claims to French territories they would
+carry out by a combined war. Should a difficulty occur between them,
+Cardinal Wolsey was fixed on as umpire.</p>
+
+<p>So did the alliance between the houses of Burgundy and Tudor come to
+pass, the basis of which was to be the annihilation of the power of the
+Valois, and into which the English minister threw his world-wide
+ambition. From England also a declaration of war now reached Francis I.
+Whilst the war in Italy and on the Spanish frontiers made the most
+successful progress, the English, in 1522 under Howard Earl of Surrey,
+in 1523 under Brandon Earl of Suffolk, both times in combination with
+Imperial troops, invaded France on the side of the Netherlands,
+invasions which, to say the least, very much hampered the French.
+Movements also manifested themselves within France itself, which awoke
+hopes in the King that he might make himself master of the French crown
+as easily as his father had once done of the English. Leo X had already
+been persuaded to absolve the subjects of Francis I from their oaths to
+him. It was in connexion with this that the second man in France, the
+Constable of Bourbon, slighted in his station, and endangered in his
+possessions, resolved to help himself by revolting from Francis I. He
+wished then to recognise no other King in France but Henry VIII: at a
+solemn moment, after receiving the sacrament, he communicated to the
+English ambassador, who was with him, his resolution to set the French
+crown on King Henry's head: he reckoned on a numerous party declaring
+for him. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+And in the autumn of 1523 it looked as if this project would
+be accomplished. Suffolk and Egmont pressed on to Montdidier without
+meeting with any resistance: it was thought that the Netherland and
+English forces would soon occupy the capital, and give a new form to the
+realm. Pope Hadrian was just dead at Rome; would not the united efforts
+of the Emperor and the King of England succeed, by their influence on
+the conclave, especially now that they were victorious, in really
+raising Wolsey to the tiara?</p>
+
+<p>This however did not happen. In Rome not Wolsey but Julius Medici was
+elected Pope; the combined Netherland and English troops retreated from
+Montdidier; Bourbon saw himself discovered and had to fly, no one
+declared for him. This last is doubtless to be ascribed to the vigilance
+and good conduct of King Francis, but in the retreat of the troops and
+in the election of the Pope other causes were at work. In the conclave
+Charles V certainly did not act with as much energy for Wolsey as the
+latter expected: Wolsey never forgave him. But he too has been accused
+of having basely abused the confidence of the two sovereigns: he had
+kept up friendly connexions all along with Francis I and his mother, and
+they likewise had given him pensions and presents: he had purposely
+supported the Earl of Suffolk so ill that he was forced to
+retreat.<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a>
+Of all the complaints raised against him, not so much before the world
+as among those who were behind the scenes, this was exactly the most
+hateful and perhaps the most effectual.</p>
+
+<p>In 1524 the English took no active part in the war. Not till February
+1525, when the German and Spanish troops had won the great victory of
+Pavia and King Francis had fallen captive into the Emperor's hands, did
+their ambitious projects and thoughts of war reawaken.</p>
+
+<p>Henry VIII reminded the Emperor of his previous promises, and invited
+him to make a joint attack on France itself
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+from both sides: they would
+join hands in Paris; Henry VIII should then be crowned King of France,
+but resign to the Emperor not merely Burgundy but also Provence and
+Languedoc, and cede to the Duke of Bourbon his old possessions and
+Dauphiné. The motive he alleges is very extraordinary: the Emperor would
+marry his daughter and heiress, and would at some future time inherit
+England and France also and then be monarch of the
+world.<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a>
+Henry declares himself ready to press on with the utmost zeal, provided he can
+do it with some security, and himself undertake the conduct of the war
+in the Netherlands and the support of Bourbon. The letter is from
+Wolsey, full of copious and pressing conclusions; but should not the
+far-reaching nature of its contents have been a proof even to him that
+it could never be taken in earnest?</p>
+
+<p>Charles V could not possibly enter into the plan. He had lent it a
+hearing as long as it lay far away, but when it came actually close to
+view, it was very startling for him. The union of the crowns of France
+and England on the head of Henry VIII would in itself have deranged all
+European relations, above all it would have raised that untrustworthy
+man, who was still all powerful in his Council, to a most inconvenient
+height of power. The Spanish kingdoms too were pressing for the
+settlement of their succession. He was in the full maturity of manly
+youth: he could not wait for Mary of England who had barely completed
+her tenth year: he resolved to break off this connexion, and give his
+hand to a Portuguese princess, who was nearly of his own age.</p>
+
+<p>It could not be otherwise but that to the closest union, which was
+broken at the moment when it might well have been able to attain its
+object, the bitterest discord should succeed. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> Zurita Anales de Aragon v. 100. The Spanish ambassador who
+then negociated the marriage was Doctor Ruyz Gonzales de Puerta. But the
+idea was much older: in 1492 at the first alliance mention was made of
+it (v. II); in the recently published Journal of an English Embassy to
+Spain, there appears in March 1489, 'donne Katherine al notre princess
+de Angleterre.' Memorial of Henry VII, 180.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> Zurita v. 221. 'La princesa fue recibida con tanta alegria
+communemente de todos, que affirmavan aver de ser esta causa, no solo de
+muy grande paz y presperidad de sodo a' quel reyno, pero de la union del
+y de los estados de Flandes.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> Zurita vi. 193. 'Por que el rey Luys cada dia se yva
+haziendo mas poderoso y no teniendo el rey de Inglaterra confederation y
+adherencia con los que avian de ser enemigos forçosos del rey de
+Francia, quedava aquel reyno en grande peligro.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> He accepts the doctrine: 'Christi vicarium nullum in
+terris judicem habere nosque ei debere vel dyscholo auscultare.' Lettres
+de Louys XII, iii. 307.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> As it is said in Cavendish, Cardinalis Eboracensis:&mdash;
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'My byldynges somptious, the roffes with gold and byse<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Craftely entaylled as conning could devise,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With images embossed most lively.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> In an opinion given at Corunna it is said that he must be
+persuaded, 'qu'il prende pour agreable et accepte ce que l'empereur lui
+a offert, luy traynant d'une souppe en miel parmy la bouche, que n'est
+le (que du) bien, que l'empereur luy veut (20 April 1520).' Monumenta
+Habsburgica ii. 1. 177, 183.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> In a letter to his ambassador, the Bishop of Badajoz, the
+Emperor mentions 'les propos, que luy (au cardinal) avons tenu a Bruges
+touchants la papalité.' Monumenta Habsburgica ii. 1. 501.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> Wolsey mentions in his letter to the King 'the conference
+and communications, which he (the Emperor) had with your grace in that
+behalf.' In Burnet iii. Records p. 11.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> Du Bellay au Grandmaistre 17 October 1529, in Le Grand,
+Histoire du divorce iii. 374: 'Que il avait toujours en tems de paix et
+de guerre intelligence secrette a Madame, de la quelle la dicte guerre
+durant, il avoit eu des grants presens, qui furent cause, que Suffolc
+estant a Montdidier il ne le secourut d'argent comme il devoit dont
+advint que il ne print Paris.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> The Instructions to Tunstall and Wingfield (30 March
+1525), hitherto known only from the extract in Fiddes, are now printed
+in the State Papers vi. 333. Compare my German History, Bk. IV. ch. 2,
+but the statement there made needs revision in accordance with the
+newly-found documents.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BII_III" id="BII_III"></a>
+ORIGIN OF THE DIVORCE QUESTION.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it is not a matter of such very great weight whether the Emperor
+did his best for Wolsey in the conclave, or Wolsey his best for the
+Emperor in the campaign of 1523. That the result did not correspond to
+the expectations on either side was quite enough to bring about an
+estrangement. What could the Emperor do with an English minister who was
+not in a condition to support warlike enterprises properly? what could
+the English do with an ally who appropriated to himself exclusively the
+advantages of the victory they had won? Henry VIII, while trying to win
+the French crown, had only weakened it, and thereby given the house of
+Burgundy a preponderance in European affairs, by which all other powers,
+and himself as well, felt themselves threatened.</p>
+
+<p>After the battle of Pavia a feeling prevailed throughout the world that
+the rule of Spain and Burgundy would be intolerable, if France were no
+longer independent. The ministers of the Pope in Rome first came to a
+consciousness of this: as the best means of restoring the balance, they
+looked to the dissolution of the alliance between Henry VIII and Charles
+V. The Pope's Datary, Giberti, made approaches to the English Court,
+though still with timid caution, in order in the first place only to
+propose a reconciliation between England and
+France.<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+To his joy he remarked that Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolsey were more
+inclined to this plan than he had expected. If not before yet certainly
+since his alienation from the Emperor, the cardinal had entered into
+secret negociations with the mother of the King of France: the last
+proposals to the Emperor had been only an attempt to turn the success of
+his arms to the advantage of England also: when he rejected them, the
+cardinal entered into the French connexion with increased zeal. Before
+the end of the summer of 1523 peace between England and France was
+effected with the sympathising co-operation of Rome.</p>
+
+<p>In it the Regent Louise accepted the conditions laid down by the
+cardinal: she did not neglect to secure him by a considerable pension.
+From the beginning she had on her side also tried to excite his
+world-wide ambition; for Francis I and Henry VIII, if once they became
+friends, would do noble deeds to their own-undying renown and to the
+glory of God, and the direction of their enterprises would fall to the
+cardinal.<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a></p>
+
+<p>Even after Henry VIII abandoned him, the Emperor still kept the upper
+hand. He extorted the Peace of Madrid; the League of the Italian princes
+with France, by which its execution was to have been hindered, and to
+which England lent her moral support without actually joining it, led
+Charles V to new victories, to the conquest of Rome, and hence to a
+position in the world which now did really threaten the freedom of all
+other nations. The necessary result was that France and England drew
+still more closely together. Cardinal Wolsey appeared in France; a close
+alliance was concluded and (not without considerable English help) an
+army sent into the field, which in fact gained the upper hand in Italy
+and restored to the Pope, who had escaped to Orvieto, some feeling of
+independence. Soon the largest projects were formed on this side also,
+in which the two Kings expected to have the Pope entirely with them. The
+French declared their wish to conquer Naples and never restore it to the
+Emperor, not even under the most favourable conditions.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span> Wolsey thought
+that the Pope might pronounce the deposition of the Emperor in Naples
+and even in the Empire, for which certain German electors could be won
+over; he boasted that he would bring about such a revolution as had not
+been seen for a century.</p>
+
+<p>It was at this crisis in the general situation, and when an attempt was
+being made to direct politics towards the annihilation of the Emperor,
+that the thought occurred of dissolving Henry VIII's marriage with the
+Emperor's aunt, the Infanta Catharine.</p>
+
+<p>It is very possible, as a contemporary tradition informs us, that Wolsey
+was instigated to this by personal feelings. His arrogant and wanton
+proceedings, offensive by their excesses, and withal showing all the
+priestly love of power, were hateful to the inmost soul of the pure and
+earnest Queen. She is said to have once reproached him with them, and to
+have even repelled his unbecoming behaviour with a threatening word, and
+he on his part to have sworn to overthrow
+her.<a name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a>
+But this personal motive first became permanently important when joined with a more
+general one. The Queen was by no means so entirely shut out from the
+events of the day as has been asserted; in moments of difficulty we find
+her summoning the members of the Privy Council before her to discuss the
+pending questions with them. When Wolsey began a life and death struggle
+with the Emperor, the influence of the Queen, whose most lively
+sympathies were with her nephew, stood not a little in his way; it was
+his chief interest to remove her.</p>
+
+<p>It was indeed the feeling of the time, that family unions and political
+alliances must go hand in hand. At the very first proposal for a
+reconciliation between England and France, Giberti had advised the
+marriage of the English princess Mary, who had been rejected by the
+Emperor, with a French prince, and there had been much negociation about
+it. But owing to the extreme youth of the princess it was soon felt
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+that this would not lead to the desired end. If a definitive rupture was
+to take place between England and the Burgundo-Spanish power, Henry
+VIII's marriage with Catharine must be dissolved and room thus made for
+a French princess. This marriage however was itself the result of that
+former state of politics which had led to the first war with France.
+Wolsey formed the plan of marrying his King, in Catharine's stead, with
+the sister or even with the daughter of Francis I who was now growing
+up:<a name="FNanchor_90_90" id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a>
+then only would the alliance between the two powers become
+indissoluble. When he was in France in 1527, he said to the Regent, the
+King's mother, that within a year she would live to see two things, the
+most complete separation of his sovereign from Spain, and his
+indissoluble union with
+France.<a name="FNanchor_91_91" id="FNanchor_91_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a></p>
+
+<p>But to these motives of foreign policy was now added an extremely
+important reason of home policy: this lay in the precarious state of the
+Succession.</p>
+
+<p>When the King several years before was congratulated on the birth of his
+daughter, with an intimation that the birth of a son might have been
+still more acceptable, he replied quickly, they were both still young,
+he and his wife, why should they not still have a son? But gradually
+this hope had ceased, and as hitherto no Queen had ever reigned in her
+own right in England, the opinion gained ground that at the King's death
+the throne would fall vacant. It had a little before created a party
+among the people for the Duke of Buckingham, when he maintained that he
+was the nearest heir to the crown, and would not let it be taken from
+him. He had been executed for this: Mary's right to the succession met
+with no further opposition; but even so it was still always a doubtful
+future that lay before the country. People wished to marry Mary at one
+time to the Emperor, at another to the King or a prince of France: so
+that her claim to the inheritance of the crown
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+should pass to the house
+of Burgundy or to that of Valois. But how dangerous this was for the
+independence of the country! Henry would surely not have lost himself in
+Wolsey's intrigues, had he had a son and heir, to represent the
+independent interests of England.</p>
+
+<p>In other times relations of this kind would have probably been reckoned
+as in themselves sufficient reason for a divorce: but not so in that
+age. The very essence of marriage lies in this, that it raises the
+union, on which the family and the order of the world rests, above the
+momentary variations of the will and the inclination; by the sanction of
+the Church it becomes one of that series of religious institutions which
+set limits on every side to individual caprice. No one yet dared so far
+to deny the religious character of marriage, as to have avowed mere
+political views in wishing for a separation, either before the world, or
+even to himself. But now there was no want of spiritual reasons which
+might be brought forward for it. The King's own confessor revived the
+doubts in him which had once been raised before his marriage with his
+brother's widow. And when the King was then reminded that such a
+marriage had been expressly forbidden in the books of Moses, and
+threatened with the punishment of childlessness, how could it fail to
+make an impression on him, when this threat seemed to be strictly
+fulfilled in his case? Two boys had been born to him from this marriage,
+but both had died soon after their birth. Even within the Catholic
+Church it had been always a moot point whether the Pope could dispense
+with a law of Scripture. The divine punishment inflicted on the King, as
+he thought, seemed to prove that the Pope's dispensation (encroaching as
+it did on the region of the divine power), on the strength of which the
+marriage had been concluded, had not the validity ascribed to it.
+Scruples of this sort cannot be said to be a mere pretence; they have
+something of the half belief, half superstition, so peculiarly
+characteristic of the spirit of the age and of that of the King. And
+none could yet foresee what results they implicitly involved.</p>
+
+<p>It still appeared possible that the Pope would revoke the dispensation
+given by one of his predecessors, especially
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+as some grounds of
+invalidity could be found in the bull itself. Wolsey's idea was that the
+Pope, in the pressing necessity he was under of ranging England and
+France against the preponderance of the Emperor, could be brought to
+consent to recall the dispensation, and this would make the marriage
+null and void from the beginning. Always full of arrogant assumption of
+an influence to which nothing could be impossible, Wolsey assured the
+King that he would carry the matter
+through.<a name="FNanchor_92_92" id="FNanchor_92_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a></p>
+
+<p>When tidings of this proposal first reached Rome, those immediately
+around the Pope took special notice of the political advantages that
+might accrue from it. For hitherto there was a doubt whether Henry VIII
+was really so decidedly in favour of France as was said: a project like
+this, which would make him and the Emperor enemies for ever, left no
+room for doubt about it. When the Pope saw himself secure of this
+support in reserve, his word, in a matter which concerned the highest
+personal and civil interests, acquired new weight even with the
+Emperor.<a name="FNanchor_93_93" id="FNanchor_93_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a></p>
+
+<p>It is undeniable that the Pope at first expressed himself favourably. It
+appeared to make an especial impression on him, that the want of a male
+heir might cause a civil war in England, and that this must be
+disadvantageous to the Church as
+well.<a name="FNanchor_94_94" id="FNanchor_94_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a>
+He only asked not to be
+pressed as long as he was in danger of experiencing the worst
+extremities from the overwhelming power of the Emperor. In the spring of
+1528, when the French army advanced victoriously into the Neapolitan
+territory and drove back the Emperor's forces to the capital, Wolsey's
+request for full powers to inquire into the affair in England was taken
+into earnest consideration by the Pope. It was at Orvieto, in the Pope's
+working room, which was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+also his sleeping-chamber: a couple of
+cardinals, the Dean of the Roman Rota, and the English plenipotentiaries
+sat round the Pope, to talk over the case thoroughly. One of the
+cardinals declared himself against the Commission demanded by Wolsey,
+since such a grant contravened the usage of the last centuries in the
+Roman tribunals; the Pope answered, that in a matter concerning a King
+who had done such service to the Holy See, they might well deviate from
+the usual forms; he actually delegated this Commission to Cardinal
+Campeggi, whom the English esteemed as their friend, and to Wolsey.</p>
+
+<p>By this nothing was yet effected: it even appears as though Clement VII
+had given tranquillising promises to the Emperor; the Bishop of Bayonne
+declared that the Pope's intention was thus to keep both sides dependent
+on him&mdash;but it was at all events one step on the road once taken, which
+aroused hope in England that it would lead to the desired end.</p>
+
+<p>But let us picture to ourselves the enormous difficulty of the case. It
+lay above all in the inner significance of the question itself. In his
+first interview with Henry VIII Campeggi remarks that the King was
+completely convinced of the invalidity of the Papal dispensation, which
+could not extend to Scripture precepts. No argument could move him from
+this; he answered like a good theologian and jurist. Campeggi says, an
+angel from heaven would not make him change his opinion. He could not
+but see that Wolsey cherished the same view.</p>
+
+<p>But was it possible for the Roman court to yield in this and to revoke a
+dispensation, which involved the very substance of its spiritual
+omnipotence? It would have thus only strengthened, and in reality
+confessed, the antagonism against its authority which was based on Holy
+Scripture. Campeggi could not yield a hair's breadth.</p>
+
+<p>The only solution lay&mdash;and Campeggi was authorised to attempt it&mdash;in
+inducing Queen Catharine to renounce her place and dignity. Soon after
+his arrival he represented to her at length how much depended on it for
+her and the world, and promised her that in return not only all else
+should be secured to her that she could desire, but above all that
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+succession of her daughter also should be guaranteed. The wish, in which
+both Pope and King agreed, that she should enter a convent, Campeggi at
+first did not mention to her; he thought she would herself seek for some
+expedient. But she avoided this. Campeggi had spoken to her in the name
+of the Pope: she only said she thought to abide till death in obedience
+to the precepts of God and of the Church: she would ask for counsellors
+from the King, would consult with them, and then communicate to the Holy
+Father what her conscience bade her. Her consent still remained
+possible. This gained, the legate would have no need to mention further
+the validity or invalidity of the dispensation. He was still hoping for
+it, when Wolsey came to him one morning early (26 Oct. 1528) and told
+him the Queen had asked the King for leave to make her confession to him
+(Campeggi), and had obtained it. A couple of hours later the Queen
+appeared before him. She told him of her earlier marriage, which was
+never really consummated; that she had remained as unchanged by it as
+she had been from her mother's womb; and this destroyed all grounds for
+the divorce. Campeggi was however far from drawing such a conclusion; he
+advised her in plain terms to make a vow and enter a convent, repeating
+the motives stated before, to which he now added the example of a Queen
+of France. But his words died away without effect. Queen Catharine
+declared positively that she would never act thus; she was called by God
+to her marriage, and resolved to live and die in it. A judgment might be
+pronounced in this matter; if the marriage was declared to be invalid,
+she would submit, she would then be as free as the King; but without
+this she would hold fast to her marriage union. She protested, in the
+strongest terms conceivable, that they might kill her, they might tear
+her limb from limb, yet she would not change her mind; had she two
+lives, she would lay them both down in such a cause. It would be better,
+she said, for the Pope to try to divert the King from his design; he
+would then be able to trust all the more in the inclination of her
+kinsman the Emperor to help in bringing about a peace.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+In the presence of the counsellors given her at her wish, both legates
+repeated two days later in a formal audience their admonition to the
+Queen not to insist on a definite decision; but already Campeggi had
+little hope left; he was astonished that the lady, usually so prudent,
+should in the midst of peril so obstinately reject judicious
+advice.<a name="FNanchor_95_95" id="FNanchor_95_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a></p>
+
+<p>The question between King and Queen was, we might say, also of a
+dogmatic nature. Had the Pope the right to dispense with the laws of
+Scripture or had he not? The Queen accepted it as it had been accepted
+in recent times, especially as the presupposed conditions of a marriage
+had not been fulfilled in her case. The King rejected it under all
+circumstances, in agreement with scholars and the rising public opinion.</p>
+
+<p>But into this question various other general and personal reasons now
+intruded themselves. If the question were answered in the negative
+Wolsey held firmly to the view of forming an indissoluble union between
+France and England, of securing the succession by the King's marriage
+with a French princess, of restoring universal peace; to this he added
+the project, as he once actually said in confidential discourse, of
+reforming the English laws, doubtless in an ecclesiastical and monarchic
+sense; if he had once accomplished all this, he would retire, to serve
+God during the rest of his life.</p>
+
+<p>But he had already (and a sense of it seems almost to be expressed in
+these last words so unlike his usual mode of thought) ceased to be in
+agreement with his King. Henry VIII wished for the divorce, the
+establishment of his succession by male offspring, friendship with
+France, and Peace: but he did not care for the French marriage. He was
+some years younger than his wife, who inclined to the Spanish forms of
+strict devotion, and regarded as wasted the hours which she spent at her
+dressing table. Henry VIII was addicted to knightly exercises of arms,
+he loved pleasant company, music, and art; we cannot call him a gross
+voluptuary, but he was not faithful to his wife: he already had a
+natural son; he was ever entangled in new
+connexi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>ons
+of this kind. Many
+letters of his survive, in which a tincture of fancy and even of
+tenderness is coupled with a thorough sensuousness; just in the fashion
+of the romances of chivalry which were then being first printed and were
+much read. At that time Anne Boleyn, a lady who had lately returned from
+France, and appeared from time to time at Court, saw him at her feet;
+she was not exactly of ravishing beauty, but full of spirit and grace
+and with a certain reserve. While she resisted the King, she held him
+all the faster.<a name="FNanchor_96_96" id="FNanchor_96_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a></p>
+
+<p>The reasons of home and foreign policy mentioned above, and even the
+religious scruples, have their weight; but we cannot shut our eyes to
+the fact that this new passion, nourished on the expectation of the
+divorce which was not unconditionally refused by the spiritual power,
+gave the strongest personal impulse to carry the affair through.</p>
+
+<p>The position of parties in the State also influenced it. Wolsey who had
+diminished the consequence of the great lords, and kept them down, and
+offended them by his pride, was heartily hated by them. Adorned though
+he was with the most brilliant honours of the Church, yet for the great
+men of the realm he was nothing but an upstart: they had never quite
+given up the hope of living to see his fall. But if he brought the
+French marriage to pass, as he designed, he would have won lasting
+support and have become stronger than ever. Besides the great men took
+the Burgundian side, not that they wished to make the Emperor lord of
+the world, but on the other hand they did not want a war with him:
+merchants and farmers saw that a war with the Netherlands, where they
+sold their wool, would be an injury to all. When Wolsey flattered the
+Pope with the hope of an attack on the Netherlands, he was, the Bishop
+of Bayonne assures us, the only man in the country who thought of it. He
+felt keenly the universal antipathy which he had awakened, and spoke of
+the efforts and devices he would have need of,
+to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+maintain himself.</p>
+
+<p>It was therefore just what the nobles wanted, that Wolsey fell out with
+the King in a matter of such engrossing nature, and that they found
+another means of access to him.</p>
+
+<p>The Boleyns were not of noble origin, but had been for some time
+connected with the leading families. Geoffrey the founder of the house
+had raised himself by success in business and good conduct to the
+dignity of Lord Mayor of London. His son William married the daughter of
+the only Irish peer who had a seat and vote in the English Parliament,
+Sir Thomas Ormond de Rochefort, Earl of Wiltshire. His titles passed
+through his daughter to his grandsons, of whom one, Thomas Boleyn, was
+created Viscount Rochefort, and married the daughter of the Duke of
+Norfolk; his daughter was Anne Boleyn: she took high rank and an
+especially distinguished position in English society because her uncle,
+Thomas Duke of Norfolk, was Henry VIII's chief lay minister (he held the
+place of High Treasurer) and was at the same time the leading man of the
+nobility. He had the reputation of being versed in business, cultivated,
+and shrewd; he was Wolsey's natural opponent. That the King showed an
+inclination to his niece, against the cardinal's views, was for him and
+his friends a great point
+gained.<a name="FNanchor_97_97" id="FNanchor_97_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a>
+It was soon seen that Anne's
+influence had obtained the recall of an opponent of Wolsey, who had
+insulted him and was banished from the
+Court.<a name="FNanchor_98_98" id="FNanchor_98_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a>
+It was of the greatest
+importance for home affairs, that the King was inclined to make Anne
+Boleyn his wife. The English kings in general did not think marriages in
+their own rank essential. Henry's own grandfather, Edward IV, had
+married a lady of by no means distinguished origin. It was seen
+beforehand that, if this happened, Wolsey could not maintain himself,
+and authority would again fall into the hands of the chief families.
+Even the cardinal's old friend, the Earl of Suffolk, now joined this
+combination: the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+whole of the nobility sided with it.</p>
+
+<p>But besides this the chief foreign affairs took a turn which made it
+impossible to carry out Wolsey's political ideas. In the summer of 1528
+the attacks of the allies on Naples were repulsed, and their armies
+annihilated. In the spring of 1529 the Emperor got the upper hand in
+Lombardy also. How utterly then did the oft-proposed plan, of depriving
+him of the supreme dignity, sink into nothingness: he was stronger than
+ever in Italy. The Pope was fortunate in not having joined the allies
+more closely; the relations of the States of the Church with Tuscany
+made a union with the Emperor necessary; he had a horror of a new
+quarrel with him. And as the Emperor now took up the interests of his
+mother's sister in the most earnest manner, and protested against
+proceeding by a Commission granted for England, the Pope could not
+possibly let the affair go on unchecked. When the English ambassadors
+pressed him, he exclaimed to them (for apart from this he would gladly
+have shown more favour to the King) that he felt himself as it were
+between anvil and hammer. Divers proposals were made, one more
+extraordinary than the other, if only the King would give up his
+demand;<a name="FNanchor_99_99" id="FNanchor_99_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a>
+but this was no longer possible. The two cardinals, Campeggi
+and Wolsey, had to begin judicial proceedings: King and Queen appeared
+before the Court, Articles were put forward, witnesses heard: the
+Correspondence shows that the King and Anne Boleyn expected with much
+confidence a speedy and favourable
+decision.<a name="FNanchor_100_100" id="FNanchor_100_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a>
+Wolsey too did not yet
+abandon this hope. It was thought at the ti<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>me that he did not do all he
+might have done for it, that in fact he no longer favoured it, seeing as
+he did that it would turn out to the advantage of his
+rivals.<a name="FNanchor_101_101" id="FNanchor_101_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a>
+But it was in truth his fate, that the consequences of the design which
+originated with him recoiled on his own head. If it succeeded, it must
+be disadvantageous to him: if it failed, he was lost. The exhortations
+he addressed to the French Court, to exert yet once more its whole
+influence with the Papal Court for this matter, sound like a cry of
+distress in extreme peril. He had only undertaken it to unite France and
+England; the thing was reasonable and practicable, the Pope would not
+wish by refusing it to offend both crowns at once; he would value it
+more highly than if he himself were raised to the Papacy. But he had now
+to find that King Francis, as well as Pope Clement, was seeking a
+separate peace with the Emperor. Wolsey had given Henry the strongest
+assurances on this point, that such a thing would never happen, France
+would never separate herself from him. But yet this now happened, and
+how could any influence from that quarter on the Roman Court be still
+expected in favour of England, in a matter which was so highly offensive
+to the Emperor! The legates received from Rome distinct instructions to
+proceed slowly, and in no case to pronounce a
+decision.<a name="FNanchor_102_102" id="FNanchor_102_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a>
+While King Henry and those around him were eagerly expecting it, the cardinals
+(using the holidays of the Roman Rota as a pretence) announced the
+suspension of their proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>It appeared in an instant into what a violent ebullition of wrath, which
+unsettled every thing, the King fell in consequence; it seemed as if all
+his past way of governing had been a mistake. In contradiction to many
+of the older traditions of English history he had hitherto ruled chiefly
+through ecclesiastics to the disgust of the lay lords: now he betook
+himself to the latter, to complain of the proceedings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span> of the two
+cardinals. These were still in the hall where they had sat, when Suffolk
+and some other lords appeared, and bade them bring the matter to an end
+without delay, even if it were by a peremptory decree, that might be
+issued on the next day, on which the holidays would not have begun. But
+the prorogation was in fact only the form under which the cardinals
+fulfilled their orders from Rome; they could not possibly recall it.
+Suffolk broke out into the exclamation that cardinals and legates had
+never brought good to England. The two spiritual lords looked at each
+other with amazement. Had they any feeling that his words contained a
+declaration of war on the part of the lay element in the State against
+ecclesiastical and foreign influences in general? Wolsey, at any rate,
+could not shut his eyes to the significance of such a war. He often said
+that what Henry VIII took in hand he could not be brought to give up by
+any representations; he had sometimes tried it, he had fallen at his
+feet, but it had been always in vain.</p>
+
+<p>Henry contained himself yet a while, as hopes had been given him that
+the proceedings might be resumed. But when a Breve came, by which
+Clement VII recalled his Commission and evoked the question of the
+divorce to Rome, he saw clearly that the influence of the Emperor in the
+Pope's Council had quite gained the upper hand over his own on this
+point. He was resolved not to submit to it. Had he not, before the mayor
+and aldermen of London, declared with a certain solemnity his resolution
+to carry through the divorce for the good of the land? his passion and
+his ambition had joined hands for this purpose before the eyes of the
+country. To prevent the need of recoiling, he formed a plan of
+incalculable importance, the plan of separating his nation and his
+kingdom from the spiritual jurisdiction of the Roman See. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> 'Giberto al Vescovo di Bajusa. 3 Luglio. Ci sono avisi
+d'Ingliterra de' 14 del passalo che mostrano gli animi di la e
+massimamente Eboracense non dico inclinati ma accesi di desiderio di
+concordia con Francia'.... Lettere di principi I. 168.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> 'Le dit Cardinal sera conducteur, moderateur et gouverneur
+de toutes les entreprises.' The Regent's Instructions in Brinon,
+Captivité de François I. 57.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> Riccardus Scellejus de prima causa divortii (Bibliotheca
+Magliabecch. at Florence). 'Catharina ita stomachata est, ut de Vulseji
+potentia minuenda cogitationem susciperet, quod ille cum sensisset, qui
+ab astrologo suo accepisset, sibi a muliere exitium imminere, de regina
+de gradu dejicienda consilium inivit.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> Lodovico Falier, Relatione di 1531 'avendo trattato, di
+dargli a sorella del Cristianissimo adesso maritata al re di Navarra,
+gli promese di far tanto con S. Sta che disfacesse le nozze.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_91_91" id="Footnote_91_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> Du Bellay au Grandmaistre 21 October 1528; after Wolsey's
+own narrative in Le Grand, Histoire du divorce de Henri VIII, iii. 186.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_92_92" id="Footnote_92_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> He says so himself. Bellay's letter in Le Grand iii. 318.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_93_93" id="Footnote_93_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> In Sanga to Gambara, 9 February 1528. L. d. p. ii. 85. 'La
+cosa che V. S. sa, che non potrà seguire senza gran rottura, fa S. S.
+facile a creder che posse essere ciò che dice (Lotrec).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_94_94" id="Footnote_94_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> 'Considering the nature of men, being prone into
+novelties&mdash;the realm of England would not only enter into their
+accustomed divisions, but also would owe or do small devotion unto the
+church: wherefore his Holiness was right well content and ready to
+adhibit all remedy that in him was possible as in this time would
+serve.' Knight to the Cardinal, 1 Jan. 1528, in Burnet i. Collect. p.
+22.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_95_95" id="Footnote_95_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> Incorrupta. Campeggi's letters to Sanga, 17, 26, 28 Oct.
+1528. Laemmer, Monumenta Vaticana, 18 Oct. p. 25 seq. He gives his
+motive for communicating what the Queen said to him in confession as
+being her own wish. The archives too have long kept their secret.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_96_96" id="Footnote_96_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> According to Ricc. Scellejus, she prays the King, 'ne
+pergat suam oppugnare castitatem, quae dos erat maxima, quam posset
+futuro offerre marito, quaque violanda reginam etiam dominam
+proderet,&mdash;quoniam se illi fidelitatis sacramento obligasset.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_97_97" id="Footnote_97_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> It seemed helpful to their working against the cardinal.
+Particularities of the life of Queen Anne, in Singer's Cavendish ii.
+187.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_98_98" id="Footnote_98_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> Du Bellay in Le Grand iii. 296. 'Le duc de Norfolk et sa
+ande commencent deja à parler gros (28 Jan. 1520).'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_99_99" id="Footnote_99_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> In a letter of Sanga to Campeggi (Lettere di diversi
+autori eccellenti p. 60), we read the following words: 'In quanto alla
+dispensa di maritar il figliolo con la figliola del re, se con haver in
+questa maniera stabilita la successione S. M. si rimanesse del primo
+pensiero della dissolutions S. Bne inclineria assai Più.' This looks as
+if a marriage between Henry VIII's natural son and Mary was spoken
+of.&mdash;So I wrote previously. The thing is quite true. Campeggi writes 28
+Oct. to Sanga. 'Han pensato si maritar la (la figliola) con dispensa di
+S. Sta al figlio natural del re, a che haveva pensato anch'io per
+stabilimento della successione.' (Monumenta Vaticana p. 30.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_100_100" id="Footnote_100_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> Sanga to Campeggi 2 Sept. 1528 in the Lettere di diversi
+autori eccellenti, Venetia 1556, p. 40. 'V. Sra. vedra l'esito che ha
+havuto l'impresa del regno.&mdash;Bisogna che S. Bne vedendo l'imperatore
+vittorioso non si precipiti a dare all'imperatore causa di nuova
+rottura.... Sia almanco avvertita di non lasciarsi costringere a
+pronuntiare senza nuova et expressa commissione di qua.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_101_101" id="Footnote_101_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> Falier says so very positively.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_102_102" id="Footnote_102_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> Sanga 29 May. 'S. Bne ricorda che il procedere sia lento
+et in modo alcuno non si venghi al giudicio.' Of the same date is
+Bellay's letter in which those exhortations of Wolsey to the French
+Court are contained.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BII_IV" id="BII_IV"></a>
+THE SEPARATION OF THE ENGLISH CHURCH.</p>
+
+<p>Already at Orvieto Stephen Gardiner had told the Pope that, if the King
+did not obtain justice from him, he would do himself justice in his own
+kingdom. Later it was plainly declared to the Pope that, if they saw the
+Emperor had the ascendancy in his Council, the nobility of England with
+the King at their head would feel themselves compelled to cast off
+obedience to Rome. It seems as though the Roman Court however had no
+real fear of this. For the King, so they said, would do himself most
+damage by such a step.<a name="FNanchor_103_103" id="FNanchor_103_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a>
+The Papal Nuncio declared himself positively
+convinced, that it was necessary to deal with the English sharply and
+forcibly, if one would gain their respect.</p>
+
+<p>But these tendencies were more deeply rooted among the English than was
+remembered at Rome. They went back as far as the Articles of Clarendon,
+the projects of King John, the antipapal agitation under Edward III; the
+present question which involved an exceptionable and personal motive,
+exposed to public disapprobation, nevertheless touched on the deepest
+interests of the country. The wish to make the succession safe was
+perfectly justifiable. According to Clement VII's own declarations, the
+English were convinced that he was only hindered by regard for the
+Emperor from coming to a decision which was essential to them. His
+vacillation is very intelligible, very natural: but it did not
+correspond to the idea of the dignity with which he was clothed. There
+was to be an independent supreme Pontiff for this very
+reason,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+that right might be done in the quarrels of princes, without respect of
+persons, according to the state of the case. It clashed with the idea of
+the Papacy that alterations of political relations exercised such a
+decisive influence as they did in this matter. There was indeed
+something degrading for the English in their being made to feel the
+reaction of the Emperor's Italian victory, and his preponderance, in
+their weightiest affairs.</p>
+
+<p>Henry VIII had now made up his mind to throw off that ecclesiastical
+subjection, which was politically so disadvantageous; the circumstances
+were very favourable. It was the time at which some German
+principalities, and the kingdoms of the North, had given themselves a
+constitution which rested on the exclusion of the hierarchic influences
+of Rome: the King could reckon on many allies in his enterprise.
+Moreover he had no dangerous hostilities to fear, as long as the
+jealousy lasted between the Emperor and King Francis. Between them Henry
+VIII needed only to revert to his natural policy of neutrality.</p>
+
+<p>And the accomplishment of the affair was already prepared in the country
+itself, through no one more than through Cardinal Wolsey.</p>
+
+<p>The dignity of legate, which was granted him by Pope Leo, and then
+prolonged for five, for ten years, and at last for life, gave him a
+comprehensive spiritual authority. He obtained by it the right of
+visiting and reforming all ecclesiastical persons and institutions, even
+those which possessed a legal exemption of their own. Some orders of
+monks, which contended against it, were reduced to obedience by new
+bulls. But from the visitation of the monasteries Wolsey proceeded to
+their suppression: he united old convents (such as that one which has
+brought down to recent times the name of an Anglo-Saxon king's daughter,
+Frideswitha, from the eighth century) with the splendid colleges which
+he endowed so richly, for the advancement of learning and the renown of
+his name, at Oxford and at Ipswich. His courts included all branches of
+the ecclesiastical and mixed jurisdiction, and the King had no scruple
+in arming him with all the powers of the crown which were necessary for
+the government of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>Church. What aspirations then arose are shewn by
+the compact which Wolsey made with King Francis I to counteract the
+influence which the Emperor might exert over the captive Pope. When it
+was settled in this, that whatever the cardinal and the English prelates
+should enact with the King's consent should have the force of law, does
+not this imply at least a temporary schism?</p>
+
+<p>When Clement became free, he named Wolsey his Vicar-General for the
+English Church: his position was again to be what it had been from the
+beginning, the expression of the unity between the Pope and the Crown.
+But now how if this were dissolved? The victorious Emperor exercised a
+still greater influence over the Pope when free than he had ever done
+over him when captive. Under these circumstances Wolsey submitted to the
+supreme spiritual power, the King resolved to withstand it: it was
+exactly on this point that open discord broke out between them. For a
+time the cardinal seemed still to maintain his courage; but when on St.
+Luke's day&mdash;the phrase ran that the evangelist had disevangelised
+him&mdash;the great seal was taken from him, he lost all self-reliance.
+Wolsey was not a Ximenes or a Richelieu. He had no other support than
+the King's favour; without this he fell back into his nothingness. He
+was heard to wail like a child: the King comforted him by a token of
+favour, probably however less out of personal sympathy than because he
+could not be yet quite dispensed
+with.<a name="FNanchor_104_104" id="FNanchor_104_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a>
+The High Treasurer, Norfolk,
+who generally acted as first minister, received the seals, and held them
+till some time afterwards Thomas More was named Chancellor. While these
+administered affairs in London, Suffolk, as President of the Privy
+Council, was to accompany the King in person. The chief direction of the
+administration passed over to the two leading lay lords.</p>
+
+<p>Henry VIII's resolution to call the Parliament together was of almost
+greater importance for the progress of events than the alteration in the
+ministry.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+During the fourteen years of his administration Wolsey had summoned
+Parliament only once, and that was when, in order to carry on the war in
+alliance with the Emperor against France, he needed an extraordinary
+grant of money. But his opening discourses were received with silence
+and dislike. Never, says a contemporary who was present, was the need of
+money more pressingly represented to a Parliament and never was there
+greater opposition; after a fortnight's consultation the proposal only
+passed at a moment when the members of the King's household and court
+formed the majority of thosepresent.<a name="FNanchor_105_105" id="FNanchor_105_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a>
+The Parliament and the
+country always murmured at Wolsey's oppressive and lavish finance
+management;<a name="FNanchor_106_106" id="FNanchor_106_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a>
+a later attempt to raise taxes that had not been voted
+doubled the outcry against him. His fall and the convocation of a
+Parliament seemed a return to parliamentary principles in general, which
+in themselves exactly agreed with the view taken by the King in the
+present questions.</p>
+
+<p>In the first years of Henry VIII the Parliament had wished to do away
+with some of the most startling exemptions of the clergy from the
+temporal jurisdiction, for instance in reference to the crimes of felony
+and murder; the ecclesiastics had on the other hand extended their
+jurisdiction yet further, even to cases that had reference solely to
+questions of property. Hence the antagonism between the two
+jurisdictions had revived at that time with bitter keenness. It is
+noticeable that the temporal claims were upheld by a learned Minorite,
+Henry Standish, who declared it to be quite lawful to limit the
+ecclesiastical privileges for the sake of the public good; especially in
+the case of a crime that did not properly come before any spiritual
+court. Both sides then applied to the King: the ecclesiastics reminded
+him that he ought to uphold the rights of Holy Church, the laymen that
+he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+should maintain the powers of jurisdiction belonging to the crown.
+The King's declaration was favourable to the laymen; he recommended the
+clergy to acquiesce in some exceptions from their decretals. But the
+contest was rather suspended than decided. Wolsey's government followed,
+in which the spiritual courts extended their powers still further, and
+in reality exercised an offensive control over all the relations of
+private life. Even the ecclesiastics did not love his authority: they
+acquiesced in it because it was ecclesiastical: the laity endured it
+with the utmost impatience.</p>
+
+<p>It was inevitable that at the first fresh assembly of a Parliament these
+contests about jurisdiction should be mentioned. The Lower House began
+its action with a detailed charge against the spiritual courts, not
+merely against their abuses and the oppression that arose from them, but
+against their very existence and their legislation; the clergy made laws
+without the King's foreknowledge, without the participation of any
+laymen, and yet the laity were bound by them. The King was called on to
+reconcile his subjects of the spiritual and temporal estate with each
+other by good laws, since he was their sole head, the sovereign, lord
+and protector of both parties.</p>
+
+<p>It was a slight phrase.<a name="FNanchor_107_107" id="FNanchor_107_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a>
+'the sole head of his subjects spiritual
+and temporal,' but one of the weightiest import. The very existence of
+the clergy as an order had hitherto depended precisely on their claim to
+a legislative power independent of the temporal supremacy as being their
+original right: on its universal maintenance rested the Papacy and its
+influence on the several countries. Were the clergy now to leave it to
+the King, who however only represented the temporal power, to adjust the
+differences between their legislation and that of the state? Were they,
+like the laity, virtually to recognise him as their Head?</p>
+
+<p>It is clear that they would thus sever themselves from the great union
+under one spiritual Head, from the
+constitution<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+of the Latin Church.
+Whoever it was that introduced the word 'Head,' no doubt had this in
+view. The King and the laity took it up, they wished only to induce the
+clergy themselves to come to a resolution in this sense.</p>
+
+<p>The chief motive which was to serve this purpose is connected with the
+lordship which the Popes possessed in England in the thirteenth century,
+or rather with the reaction against it which went on throughout the
+fourteenth. This is most distinctly expressed in the statutes of 1393,
+which threatened with the severest penalties all participation in any
+attempt, to the injury of the King's supremacy, to obtain a
+church-benefice from Rome; and this too even where the King had given
+his consent to it. Clergy and laity were thus allied against the
+encroachments of the Roman Curia. Wolsey was now accused of having
+transgressed thisstatute:<a name="FNanchor_108_108" id="FNanchor_108_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a>
+he had in virtue of his legatine power
+given away benefices, and established a jurisdiction by which that of
+the King was encroached on; he was found guilty of this in regular form.
+He anticipated the full effect of this sentence by submitting without
+any defence and surrendering all his property to the King. It was then
+that York House in Westminster, with its gardens and the land adjoining,
+the Whitehall of later times, passed into the possession of the
+crown.<a name="FNanchor_109_109" id="FNanchor_109_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a>
+He still kept his archbishopric; we find him soon after at
+Caywood, the palace belonging to it, and in fact even busied once more
+with his buildings. At times the King again thought of his old
+counsellor, and to many it quite seemed as though he might yet recover
+power. In those days the general belief was, that Anne Boleyn had
+exerted her whole influence against it. But most of the other persons of
+distinction in court and state were also opposed to Wolsey. Did he then
+really, as was imputed to him, try to gain a party among the clergy, and
+move the Pope to pronounce excommunication against the
+King?<a name="FNanchor_110_110" id="FNanchor_110_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a>
+A pretext at any rate was found for arresting him as a traitor:
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+but as he
+was being brought to the Tower, he died on the way. He wished, so far as
+we know, to starve himself to death; it was at that time supposed that
+in his wish to die he was aided by help from others.</p>
+
+<p>Neither for his mental nor for his moral qualities can Wolsey be
+reckoned among men of the first rank; yet his position and the ability
+which he showed in it, his ambition and his political plans, what he did
+and what he suffered, his success and his fall, have won him an
+imperishable name in English history. His attempt to link the royal
+power with the Papacy by the closest ties rent them asunder for ever. No
+sooner was he dead than the clergy became subject to the Crown&mdash;a
+subjection which could forebode nothing less than this final rupture.</p>
+
+<p>The whole clergy was so far involved in Wolsey's guilt that it had
+supported his Legatine Powers, and so had shared in the violation of the
+statutes. It shows the English spirit of keeping to the strict letter of
+the law, that the King, though he had for years given his consent and
+help in all this, now came forward to avenge the violation of the law.
+To avert his displeasure the Convocation of Canterbury was forced to
+vote him a very considerable sum of money, yet even this did not satisfy
+him. Rather it seemed to him the fitting and decisive moment for forcing
+the clergy, conformably with the Address of the Commons, to accept the
+Anglican point of view. He demanded from Convocation the express
+acknowledgment that they recognised him as <i>the Protector and the
+Supreme Head of the Church and Clergy of England</i>; he commanded the
+judges not to issue the Act of Pardon unless this acknowledgment were at
+once incorporated with the bill for the money payment. It is not hard to
+see what made him choose this exact moment for so acting; it was the
+serious turn which the affair of his Divorce had taken at Rome. He had
+once more made application to the Curia to let it be decided in England;
+the Cardinals discussed the point in their Consistory, Dec. 22, 1530,
+but resolved that the question must come of right before the Assessors
+of the Rota, who should afterwards report on it to the Sacred
+College.<a name="FNanchor_111_111" id="FNanchor_111_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a>
+What their sentence would be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+was the less doubtful, since
+the Curia was now linked closer than ever with the Emperor, who had just
+closed the Diet of Augsburg in the way they wished, and was now about to
+carry out its decrees. The traces of a new alliance with Rome, which was
+imputed to Wolsey as an act of treason, must have contributed to the
+same result. The King wished to break off this connexion by a
+Declaration, which would serve him as a standing-ground later on, and
+show the Court of Rome that he had nothing to fear from it. On Feb. 7,
+1531, the King's demand was laid before both Houses of Convocation. Who
+could avoid seeing its decisive significance for the age? The clergy,
+which had without much trouble agreed to the money-vote, nevertheless
+strove long against a Declaration which altered their whole position.
+But a hard necessity lay on them. In default of the Pardon, which, as
+the judges repeatedly assured them, depended on this Declaration, they
+would have found themselves out of the protection of the King and the
+Law. They sent two bishops, to get the King's demand softened by a
+personal appeal; Henry VIII refused to hear them. They proposed that
+some members of both Houses should confer with the Privy Council and the
+judges; the answer was that the King wished for no discussion, he wanted
+a clear answer. Thus much however they ascertained, that the King would
+be content with a mode of statement in which he was unconditionally
+recognised as the protector and sovereign of the Church and clergy of
+England, but as its supreme head only so far as religion allows. This
+was comprehended in the formula <i>in so far as is permitted by the law of
+Christ</i>, an expression which men might assent to on opposite grounds.
+Some might accept it from seeing in it only the limitation which is set
+to all power by the laws of God; others from thinking that it excluded
+generally the influence of the secular power on what were properly
+spiritual matters. When the clause was laid before them, at the morning
+sitting of Feb. 11, it was received with an ambiguous silence; but on
+closer consideration, it was so evidently their only possible resource,
+that in the afternoon, first the Upper House of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+Convocation, and then
+the Lower, gave their consent. Then the King accepted the money-bill,
+and granted them in return the Act of
+Pardon.<a name="FNanchor_112_112" id="FNanchor_112_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a></p>
+
+<p>The clergy had yet other causes for seeking the King's protection. The
+writings of the Reformers, which attacked good works and vows, the Mass
+and the Priesthood, and all the principles on which the ecclesiastical
+system rested, found their way across the Channel, and filled men's
+minds in England also with similar convictions. The only safeguard
+against them lay in the King's power; his protection was no empty word,
+the clergy was lost if it drew on itself Henry's aversion, which was now
+directed against the Papal See.</p>
+
+<p>The heavy weight of the King's hand and the impulse of self-preservation
+were however not the only reasons why they yielded. It is undeniable
+that the conception of the Universal Church, according to which the
+National Church did but form part of a larger whole, was nearly as much
+lost among the clergy as among the laity. In the Parliament of 1532
+Convocation had presented a petition in which they desired to be
+released from the payments which had been hitherto made to the supreme
+spiritual authority, especially the annates and first-fruits. The
+National Church was the existing, immediate authority&mdash;why should they
+allow taxes to be laid on them for a distant Power, a Power moreover of
+which they had no need? As the bishops complained that this injured
+their families and their benefices, Parliament calculated the sums which
+Rome had drawn out of the country on this ground since Henry VII's time,
+and which it would soon draw at the impending vacancies; what losses the
+country had already suffered in this way, and would yet
+suffer.<a name="FNanchor_113_113" id="FNanchor_113_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a></p>
+
+<p>The tendency of men's minds in this direction showed itself also in the
+understanding come to on the chief question of all.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+Parliament renewed its complaints of the abuses in the ecclesiastical
+legislation, and learned men brought out clearly the want of any divine
+authority to justify it; at last the bishops virtually renounced their
+right of special legislation, and pledged themselves for the future not
+to issue any kind of Ordinance or Constitution without the King's
+knowledge and consent. A revision of the existing canons by a mixed
+commission, under the presidentship of their common head, the King, was
+to restore the unity of legislation.</p>
+
+<p>The clause was then necessarily omitted by which the recognition of the
+Crown's supremacy over the clergy had been hitherto limited. The
+defenders of the secular power put forth the largest claims. They said,
+the King has also the charge of his subjects' souls, the Parliament is
+divinely empowered to make ordinances concerning them
+also.<a name="FNanchor_114_114" id="FNanchor_114_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a></p>
+
+<p>So a consolidation of public authority grew up in England, unlike
+anything which had yet been seen in the West. One of the great statutes
+that followed begins with the preamble that England is a realm to which
+the Almighty has given all fulness of power, under one supreme head, the
+King, to whom the body politic has to pay natural obedience, next after
+God; that this body consists of clergy and laity; to the first belongs
+the decision in questions of the divine law and things spiritual, while
+temporal affairs devolve on the laity; that one jurisdiction aids the
+other for the due administration of justice, no foreign intervention is
+needed. This is the Act by which, for these very reasons, legal appeals
+to Rome were abolished. It was now possible to carry out what in
+previous centuries had been attempted in vain. All encroachments on the
+prerogative of the 'Imperial Crown' were to be abolished, the supreme
+jurisdiction of the Roman Curia was to be valid no longer; appeals to
+Rome were not only forbidden but subjected to penalties.</p>
+
+<p>The several powers of the realm united to throw off the foreign
+authority which had hitherto influenced them, and which limited the
+national independence, as being itself a higher
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+power.</p>
+
+<p>As the oaths taken by the bishops were altered to suit these statutes,
+the King set himself to modify his coronation oath also in the same
+sense. He would not swear any longer to uphold the rights of the Church
+in general, but only those guaranteed to the Church of England, and not
+derogatory to his own dignity and jurisdiction; he did not pledge
+himself to maintain the peace of the Church absolutely, but only the
+concord between the clergy and his lay subjects according to his
+conscience; not, unconditionally, to maintain the laws and customs of
+the land, but only those that did not conflict with his crown and
+imperial duties. He promised favour only for the cases in which favour
+ought to find a
+place.<a name="FNanchor_115_115" id="FNanchor_115_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a></p>
+
+<p>How predominant is the strong feeling of aggrandisement, of personal
+right, and of kingly independence!</p>
+
+<p>Henry VIII too regarded himself as a successor of Constantine the Great,
+who had given laws to the Church. True, said he, kings are sons of the
+Church, but not the less are they supreme over Christian men. Of the
+doctrines which came from Germany none found greater acceptance with him
+than this&mdash;that every man must be obedient to the higher powers. We
+possess Tyndale's book in which these principles are set forth; by Anne
+Boleyn's means it came into Henry's hands. That Pope Clement summoned
+him formally before his judgment-seat, he declared to be an offence to
+the Kingly Majesty. Was a Prince, he exclaims, to submit himself to a
+creature whom God had made subject to him; to humble himself before a
+man who, in opposition to God and Right, wished to oppress him? It would
+be a reversal of the ordinance of
+God.<a name="FNanchor_116_116" id="FNanchor_116_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a></p>
+
+<p>Whilst we follow the questions which here come into discussion&mdash;on the
+relations of Church and State, the rights of nations and
+kings&mdash;questions of infinite importance for this as for all other
+states, we almost lose sight of the affair of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+Divorce, which had
+been the original cause of quarrel, and which had meanwhile moved on in
+the direction given it once for all. Pope Clement restrained himself as
+much as possible, he still more than once made advances to the King and
+offered him conciliatory terms; but the King had already gone too far in
+his separation from Rome to be able to accept them. At the beginning of
+1533 he celebrated his marriage with Anne Boleyn privately. He had once,
+when he was still waiting for the Pope's decision, tried to influence it
+by favourable opinions of learned
+theologians.<a name="FNanchor_117_117" id="FNanchor_117_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a>
+With this view he
+had applied to the most distinguished universities in Italy and Germany,
+in France and in England itself; and managed to obtain a large number of
+decisions, by which the Pope's right of dispensation was denied; and
+this in spite of the constant efforts in various ways of the Imperial
+agents; even the two mother-universities, Bologna and Paris, had
+declared in his favour. He protested that he had been thereby enabled in
+his conscience to free himself from the yoke of an unlawful union,
+bordering on incest, and to proceed to another marriage. But all the
+more urgent was it that the legality of this marriage should be
+recognised according to the forms at that time lawfully valid. He no
+longer wished for a recognition from the Pope; he laid the question
+before the two Convocations of the English Church-provinces. For the
+general course of Church history we must admit it to be an event of the
+highest significance, that they dared to pronounce the dispensation of
+Pope Julius II invalid according to God's law. The authority hitherto
+regarded as the expression of God's will on earth was found guilty, by
+the representatives of the Church of one particular country, of
+transgressing that will. It now followed that the King's marriage,
+concluded on the strength of that dispensation, was declared by the
+Archbishop's court at Canterbury null and void, and invalid from the
+beginning. Catharine was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+henceforth to be treated no longer as Queen
+but only as still Princess-dowager.</p>
+
+<p>She was unable to realise the things that were happening around her.
+That she was expected to renounce her rank as Queen awoke in her quite
+as much astonishment as anger. 'For she had not come to England,' she
+said, 'on mercantile business at a venture, but according to the will of
+the two venerated kings now dead: she had married King Henry according
+to the decision of the Holy Father at Rome: she was the anointed and
+crowned Queen of England; were she to give up her title, she would have
+been a concubine these twenty-four years, and her daughter a bastard;
+she would be false to her conscience, to her own soul, her confessor
+would not be able to absolve her.' She became more and more absorbed in
+strict Catholic religious observances. She rose soon after midnight, to
+be present at the mass; under her dress she wore the habit of the third
+order of S. Francis; she confessed twice and fasted twice a week; her
+reading consisted of the legends of the saints. So she lived on for two
+years more, undisturbed by the ecclesiastico-political statutes which
+passed in the English Parliament. Till the very end she regarded herself
+as the true Queen of England.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately after the sentence on Catharine followed Anne's coronation,
+which was performed with all the ancient ceremonial, all the more
+carefully attended to because she was not born a princess. On the
+Thursday before Whitsuntide she was escorted from Greenwich by the Mayor
+and the Trades of London, in splendidly adorned barges, with musical
+instruments playing, till she was greeted by the cannon of the Tower.
+The Saturday after she went in procession through the City to
+Westminster. The King had created eighteen knights of the Order of the
+Bath. These in their new decorations, and a great part of the nobility,
+which felt itself honoured in Anne's elevation, accompanied
+her:<a name="FNanchor_118_118" id="FNanchor_118_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a>
+she sat on a splendid seat, supported by and slung between horses: the
+canopy over her was borne by the barons of the Cinque Ports;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+her hair was uncovered, she was charming as always, and (it appears) not without
+a sense of high good fortune. On Sunday she was escorted to Westminster
+Abbey by the Archbishop of Canterbury and six bishops, the Abbot of
+Westminster and twelve other abbots in full canonicals: she was in
+purple, her ladies in scarlet, for so old custom required; the Duke of
+Suffolk bore the crown before her, which was placed on her head by the
+hands of the archbishop. Nobles and commons greeted her with emulous
+devotion, the ecclesiastics joined in; they expected from her an heir to
+England.&mdash;Not a son, but a daughter, Elizabeth, did she then bear
+beneath her heart.</p>
+
+<p>Anne's coronation was at the same time the complete expression of the
+revolt of the nation collectively from the Roman See: it is noteworthy
+that Pope Clement VII, in his all-calculating and temporising policy,
+even then reserved to himself the last word. As he had once yielded to
+the Emperor, to conclude his peace with him, so now again&mdash;for he did
+not wish to be entirely dependent on him&mdash;he had entered into close
+relations with King Francis, who on his side saw in the continuance of
+his union with England one of the conditions of his position in Europe.
+The political weight of England reacted indirectly on the Pope: he
+indeed annulled Archbishop Cranmer's decision, but he could not yet
+bring himself to take a further step, often as he had promised the
+Emperor and pledged himself in his agreements to do
+so.<a name="FNanchor_119_119" id="FNanchor_119_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a>
+Charles V supplied his ambassador at Rome with yet another means to advance (as he
+expressed himself) the decision of the proceedings with the Pope and
+with the Holy See&mdash;for he made a distinction between them. The Pope
+inquired of him what, after this had ensued, would then be done to carry
+it out. The Emperor answered, his Holiness should do what justice
+pledged him to do, what he could not omit if he would fulfil his duty to
+God and the world, and maintain his own importance; this must come
+first, the Church must use all its own means before it called in the
+temporal arm: but if the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+matter came to that point, he would not fail
+to do his part; to declare himself explicitly beforehand might excite
+religious scruples.<a name="FNanchor_120_120" id="FNanchor_120_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a>
+And however much the policy of the Pope might
+waver, there could be no doubt about the decision of the Rota. On the 23
+March 1534 one of the auditors, Simonetta, bishop of Pesaro, made a
+statement on the subject in the consistory of the cardinals: there were
+only three among them who demanded a further delay: all the rest joined
+without any more consideration in the decision that Henry's marriage
+with Catharine was perfectly lawful, and their children legitimate and
+possessed of full rights. The Imperialists held this to be a great
+victory, they made the city ring with their cries of 'the Empire and
+Spain':<a name="FNanchor_121_121" id="FNanchor_121_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a>
+yet even then the French did not give up the hope of
+bringing the Pope to another mind. But meanwhile in England the last
+steps were already taken.</p>
+
+<p>King Henry reckons it as honourable to himself that he had not yielded
+to the offer of the Roman Court, made to him indirectly, to decide in
+his favour, but had set himself against its usurped jurisdiction,
+without being influenced by the
+proposal,<a name="FNanchor_122_122" id="FNanchor_122_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a>
+not for himself alone but
+in the interest of all kings. Yet once more had he laid the question
+before learned ecclesiastics, whether the Pope of Rome had any authority
+in England by divine right; as the University of Oxford declares, their
+theologians had searched for this through the books of Holy Scripture
+and its most approved interpreters; they had compared the places,
+conferred with each other on them and come at last to the conclusion, to
+answer the King's question unreservedly in the negative. The Cambridge
+scholars and both Convocations declared themselves in the same sense. On
+this the Parliament had no scruple in abrogating piece by piece the
+hierarchic-Romish order of things; it was nothing but a revocable right
+which they had hitherto <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>borne with. The Annates were transferred to the
+crown; never more was an English bishop to receive his pallium from
+Rome. It was made penal to apply for dispensing faculties; with their
+abolition the fees usually paid for them also ceased. The oldest token
+of the devotion of the Anglo-Saxon race to the Roman See, the Peter's
+penny, was definitely abolished. Care was taken that for the appeal in
+the last resort, hitherto made to the Roman courts, there should be a
+similar court at home. On the other hand the King granted a greater
+freedom in the election of bishops, at least in its outward forms. The
+existing laws against heretics were confirmed, though those independent
+proceedings of the bishops which had been usual in the times of the
+Lancasters received some limitation. For the episcopal constitution and
+the old doctrine were to be retained: the wish was to establish an
+Anglo-Catholic Church under the supremacy of the crown. The King added
+to his titles the designation of 'Supreme Head on earth of the Church of
+England immediately under God.' The Parliament awarded him the right of
+Visitation over the Church in reference to abuses and even to errors, as
+well as the right of reforming them. For the exercise moreover of the
+Papal authority, which so far passed over to him, he had an example
+before him which he had only to follow. Wolsey for a series of years, as
+Legate of the Pope and then as his Vicar General, had administered the
+English Church by means of English courts: the unity of the English
+common-weal had been represented in his twofold power as legate and
+first minister; practically it was no violent change when the King
+himself now appointed a Vicar General who, empowered by him, exercised
+this authority without any reference to the Pope. It was an assistant of
+Wolsey, Thomas Cromwell, who was at the same time Keeper of the Great
+Seal, who regulated the management of these affairs in a way not
+altogether new to him. From this point of view Wolsey represents exactly
+the man of the transition, who occupied the intermediate position in
+nationalising the English Church.</p>
+
+<p>Though Henry VIII did not always follow in his father's footsteps, he
+was yet his genuine successor in the work he began. What the first Tudor
+achieved in the temporal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span> domain, viz. the exclusion of foreign
+influence, that the second extended to spiritual affairs. The great
+question now was, whether the conflicting elements, in themselves
+independent but ceaselessly agitated by their connexion with the rest of
+Europe, would continue loyal to the idea of the common-weal; then even
+their opposition might become a new impulse and help to perfect the
+power of the State and the Constitution. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_103_103" id="Footnote_103_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> 'Quasi che quello, che minacciano, non fosse prima a
+danno loro.' So it is said in a letter of Sanga, April 1529, Lettere di
+diversi autori p. 69.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_104_104" id="Footnote_104_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> 'Pour ce qu'il n'est encoires temps qu'il meure que
+premierement l'on n'ayt entendu et veriffié plusieurs choses.' Chapuis
+to Charles V, 25 Oct. 1529, in Bradford, Correspondence of the Emperor
+Charles V, p. 291.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_105_105" id="Footnote_105_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> A letter printed in Fiddes (Life of Wolsey, Records II.
+p. 115, no 58), adds to the laconic parliamentary notices the desirable
+explanation: 'the knights being of the King's council, the King's
+servants and gentlemen ... were long time spoken with and made to see (a
+misprint for "say") yea, it may fortune, contrary to their heart.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_106_106" id="Footnote_106_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> Giustiniani: Four Years, I. 162. 'They see that their
+treasure is spent in vain, and consequently loud murmurs and discontent
+prevail through the kingdom.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_107_107" id="Footnote_107_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> 'The only head sovereign lord and protector of both the
+said parties, your subjects spiritual and temporal.' Petition of the
+Commons 1529, in Froude, History of England i. 200.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_108_108" id="Footnote_108_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> Indictment in Fiddes, Life of Wolsey p. 504.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_109_109" id="Footnote_109_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> 'Pro domino rege, de recuperatione.' Ibid. Collections
+no. 103.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_110_110" id="Footnote_110_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> Falier: 'cominciò a machinar contra la corona con S.
+Sta.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_111_111" id="Footnote_111_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> Pallavicino, Concilio di Trento III, XIV, V, from a Roman
+diary.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_112_112" id="Footnote_112_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> Original accounts in Burnet iii. 52, 53.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_113_113" id="Footnote_113_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> Proceedings in Burnet, History of the Reformation i. 117.
+Strype had already remarked its difference from the original demands.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_114_114" id="Footnote_114_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> Matters to be proposed in Convocation (in Strype,
+Ecclesiastical Memorials i. 215.) 'That the King's Majesty hath as well
+the care of the souls of his subjects as their bodies, and may by the
+law of God by his Parliament make laws touching and concerning as well
+the one as the other.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_115_115" id="Footnote_115_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> Facsimile in Ellis's Original Letters, Ser. ii. vol i.
+But this alteration cannot have taken place at the beginning of his
+government. This would presuppose all the results won by so much effort.
+The handwriting too is not that of a boy, but of a grown man.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_116_116" id="Footnote_116_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> Instruction for Rochefort, State Papers vii. 427.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_117_117" id="Footnote_117_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> Jean Joachim au roi (de France) 15 Feb. 1510, afinche
+questa opinion (della Faculta di Parigi) insieme con altre opinion delle
+universita di Angliterra et d'altrove per M<sup>r</sup>. Winschier [father of Anne
+Boleyn] al papa si possino monstrar o presentar.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_118_118" id="Footnote_118_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> 'The moste part of the nobles of the realm.' Cranmer's
+letter to Hawkyns. Archaeologia xviii. 79.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_119_119" id="Footnote_119_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> In the treaty of Bologna (1 Feb. 1533) is an article,
+'pro administranda justitia super divortio Anglicano et&mdash;amputando omnem
+superfluam dilationem'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_120_120" id="Footnote_120_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> Instruccion para el Conde de Cifuentes y Rodrigo Avalos.
+Papiers d'état de Granvelle ii. 45</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_121_121" id="Footnote_121_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> In a later report to the Emperor it is said, that the
+rights of the Queen and Princess were recognised, 'a l'instante
+poursuite de S. Me. Imperiale.' Ibid. ii. 210.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_122_122" id="Footnote_122_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> In Halliwell, Letters of the Kings of England i. 337.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BII_V" id="BII_V"></a>
+THE OPPOSING TENDENCIES WITHIN THE SCHISMATIC STATE.</p>
+
+<p>Among the results of these transactions in England that which most
+directly concerned the higher interests of the nation was the abolition,
+by a formal decision of Parliament, on religious grounds, of the
+hereditary title of the King's daughter by his Spanish Queen, and the
+recognition of the succession of Queen Anne's issue to the throne, even
+in the case of her having only the one daughter who had been meanwhile
+born. This does not depend so much on the actual measures taken as on
+the fact, that now, according to Wolsey's plan, the government had
+broken with the political system which had prevailed hitherto, and
+indeed in a sense that went far beyond his views. Not merely was a
+French alliance avoided; the separation from the Church of Rome was to
+become the basis of the whole dynastic settlement of England.</p>
+
+<p>At home men felt most the harshness and violence of basing a political
+rule on Church ideas. The statute contains threats of the sharpest
+punishments against all who should do or write or even say anything
+against it: a commission was appointed, in which we find the Dukes of
+Norfolk and Suffolk, which could require every one to take an oath of
+conformity to it. It was to be carried out with the full weight of
+English adherence to the law.</p>
+
+<p>It was to this very statute that Bishop Fisher of Rochester and Sir
+Thomas More fell victims. They did not refuse to acknowledge the order
+of succession itself thus enacted, for this was within the competence of
+Parliament, but they would not confirm with their oath the reason laid
+down in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+statute, that Henry's marriage with Catharine was against
+Scripture and invalid from the beginning. More ranks among the original
+minds of this great century: he is the first who learnt how to write
+English prose; but in the great currents of the literary movement he
+shrank back from the foremost place: after he had aided them by writings
+in the style of Erasmus, he set himself as Lord Chancellor of England to
+oppose their onward sweep with much rigour: he would not have the Church
+community itself touched. Of the last statute he said, it killed either
+the body if one opposed it, or the soul if one obeyed: he preferred to
+save his soul. He met his death with so lively a realisation of the
+future life, in which the troubles of this life would cease, that he
+looked on his departure out of it with all the irony which was in
+general characteristic of him. The fact that the Pope at this moment had
+named Bishop Fisher cardinal of the Roman Church seems to have still
+more hastened his execution. They both died as martyrs to the ideas by
+which England had been hitherto linked to the Church community of the
+West and to the authority of the Papacy.</p>
+
+<p>If we turn our eyes abroad, the succession statute above all must have
+made a most disagreeable impression on the Emperor Charles V. He saw in
+it a political loss, an injury to his house, and indeed to all sovereign
+families, and a danger to the Church. With a view to opposing it, he
+formed the plan of drawing the King of France into an enterprise against
+England. He proposed to him the marriage of his third son, the Duke of
+Angoulême, with the Princess Mary, who was recognised as the only lawful
+heiress of England by the Apostolic See, and whose claims would then
+accrue to this
+prince.<a name="FNanchor_123_123" id="FNanchor_123_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a>
+And they would not be difficult, so he said,
+to establish, as a great part of the English abhorred the King's
+proceedings, his second marriage, and his divergence from the Church. At
+the same time the Emperor proposed the closest dynastic union of the two
+houses by a double marriage of his two children with a son and a
+daughter of Francis I. What in the whole world would he not have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+attained, if he had won over France to himself! His combination embraced
+as usual West and East, Church and State, Italian German and Northern
+affairs.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the success of such a scheme was not probable; but independently
+of this, Henry VIII had good cause to prepare himself to meet the
+superior power of the Emperor, with whom he had so decidedly broken. As
+we have already hinted, he could have no want of allies in this
+struggle. It was under these circumstances that he entered into
+relations with the powerful demagogues who were then from their central
+position at Lubeck labouring to transform the North, and to sever it
+from all Netherlandish-Burgundian influence. But it was of still more
+importance to him to form an alliance with the Protestant princes and
+estates of Germany proper, who had gradually become a power in
+opposition to Pope and Emperor. In the autumn of 1535 we find English
+ambassadors in Germany, who attended the meeting of the League at
+Schmalkald, and the most serious negociations were entered on. Both
+sides were agreed not to recognise the Council which was then announced
+by the Pope, for the very reason that the Pope announced it, who had no
+right to do so. The German princes demanded an engagement that if one of
+the two parties was attacked, the other should lend no support to its
+enemy; for the King this was not enough; he wished, in case he was
+attacked, to be able to reckon on support from Germany in cavalry,
+infantry, and ships, in return for which he was ready to give a very
+considerable contribution to the chest of the League. It was even
+proposed that he should undertake the protection of the
+League.<a name="FNanchor_124_124" id="FNanchor_124_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></p>
+
+<p>All this however was based on a presupposition, which could not but lead
+the English to further ecclesiastical changes. It was not a schism
+affecting the constitution and administration of justice, but a complete
+system of dissentient Church doctrines, with which Henry VIII came in
+contact. The German Protestants made it a condition of their alliance
+with England, that there should be full agreement between them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span> as to
+doctrine.</p>
+
+<p>We may ask whether this was altogether possible.</p>
+
+<p>If we compare the Church movements and events that had taken place
+during the last years in Germany and in England, their great difference
+is visible at a glance. In Germany the movement was theological and
+popular, corresponding to the wants and needs of the territorial state;
+in England it was juridico-canonical, not connected with appeals to the
+people or with free preaching, but based on the unity of the nation.
+Though the German Diet had for a moment inclined to the Reform and had
+once even given it a legal sanction, it afterwards by a majority set
+itself against it: to carry it through became now the part of the
+minority, the Protesting party. In England on the contrary all proceeded
+from the plan of the sovereign and the resolutions of Parliament, in
+which the bishops themselves with few exceptions took part. Perhaps a
+more deep-seated ground of difference may be that the German bishops
+were more independent than the English, and that an Emperor was then
+ruling who, being at the same time King of Spain and Naples, troubled
+himself little about the unity of Germany in particular; while in
+England a newly-formed strong political power existed which made the
+national interests its own and upheld them on all sides.</p>
+
+<p>Despite all this the English Schism had nevertheless a deep inner
+analogy with the German Reformation.</p>
+
+<p>From the beginning the dispute as to jurisdiction was based on the
+historical point of view, on which Luther too laid much stress.
+Standish, who has been already mentioned, derived the right to limit the
+ecclesiastical prerogatives, from this among other grounds, that there
+were Christian churches in which they were altogether rejected, for
+instance the rule as to the celibacy of the clergy was not accepted by
+the Greeks. He inferred too, that, as no one disputed the claim of the
+Greek Church to be Christian, the conception of the universal Church
+must be different from that which Romanism asserts. Both countries also
+found the groundwork of the true church-community in Scripture. In the
+chief instance before them, that of the divorce,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+the German theologians
+were not of the same mind as the English; but both sides agreed in this,
+that there was a revealed will of God, which the ecclesiastical power
+might not contravene: the conviction took root that the Papacy did not
+represent the highest communion of men with divine things, but that this
+rested on the divine record alone. The use of Scripture had at last
+influenced various questions in England also. For abolishing the Annates
+it was argued that such an impost contradicts a maxim of the Apostle
+Paul; for doing away the Papal jurisdiction, that no place of Scripture
+justifies it. This is what was meant when the assertion that the Papacy
+is of divine right was denied. This becomes quite clear when Henry VIII
+instead of the previous prohibitions against distributing the Bible in
+the vernacular gave his licence for it. As he once declared with great
+animation, the advancement of God's word and of his own authority were
+one and the same thing.<a name="FNanchor_125_125" id="FNanchor_125_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a>
+The engraved title-page of the translation
+which appeared with his <i>privilegium</i> puts into his mouth the expression
+'Thy word is a light to my feet.' The order soon followed to place a
+copy of the Book of books in every church: there every man might look
+into the disputed places, and convince himself, by this highest of
+codes, as to the rightfulness of the procedure that had been chosen.</p>
+
+<p>But then it was impossible to stop at mere divergences of jurisdiction.
+The German interpretation of Scripture gained ground in every direction:
+a theological school grew up, though only here and there, which adhered
+to it more or less openly.</p>
+
+<p>It must needs have had the greatest effect, that the followers of this
+view obtained a great number of bishoprics. The archbishopric of
+Canterbury had already fallen to the lot of a man who had completed his
+theological training in Germany: this very man, Thomas Cranmer, had
+carried through the divorce; his was one of those natures which must
+have the support of the supreme power to help them to follow out their
+own views; as they then appear enterprising and courageous,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+so do they
+become pliant and yielding when this favour fails them; they do not
+shine through moral greatness, but they are well suited to preserve,
+under difficult circumstances, what they have once embraced, for better
+times. Hugh Latimer was cast in a sterner mould; he actually dared, in
+the midst of the persecutions, to admonish the King, whose chaplain he
+was, of the welfare of his soul and his duty as King. However little
+this act effected for the moment, yet he may have thus contributed to
+enlighten the King (who now and then showed him personal goodwill) as to
+his title of 'Defender of the Faith.' Latimer was a fervent and
+effective preacher: he was made bishop of Worcester. Nicolas Shaxton,
+Bishop of Salisbury, Hilsey of Rochester, Bisham of S. Asaph's and then
+S. David's, Goodrich of Ely, were all disposed to Protestantism. Edward
+Fox who had been named Bishop of Hereford, had at Schmalkald openly
+declared the Pope to be Antichrist, and assured the Protestants in the
+strongest manner of his sovereign's inclination to attach himself to
+their Confession. It was the grand union of these biblical scholars
+among the bishops, which in the Convocation of 1536 undertook to carry
+through the work of drawing their church nearer that of Germany. Latimer
+opened the war by a fervent sermon against image-worship, indulgences,
+purgatory, and other doctrines or rites which were at variance with the
+Bible. Cranmer proved that Holy Scripture contains all that is necessary
+for man to know for the salvation of his soul, and that tradition is not
+needed. The Bishop of Hereford communicated it, as an experience of his
+journey, that the laity everywhere would now be instructed only out of
+the Revelation. Thomas Cromwell, who took part in the sittings as the
+King's representative, lent them much support, and once brought with him
+a Scottish scholar who had just returned from Wittenberg, to combat the
+received doctrine of the
+Sacrament.<a name="FNanchor_126_126" id="FNanchor_126_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a>
+On the other side also stood
+men of weight and consideration, Lee archbishop of York who had
+expressly opposed himself, together with his clergy, to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+adoption of the King's new title, Stokesley of London who broke a lance for the
+seven sacraments, Gardiner of Winchester and Longland of Lincoln who
+after contributing materially to the King's divorce nevertheless
+rejected any alteration in doctrine, Tonstall of Durham, Nix of Norwich.</p>
+
+<p>It seems as though the King, who was still busied in the Parliament
+itself with the confirmation of his church regulations, thought he
+detected in this party too much predilection for the Papacy. He found
+another motive in the necessity of having allies for the coming Council;
+he decisively took the side of Reform. Ten articles were laid before the
+Convocation in his name, the first five of which are taken from the
+Augsburg Confession or from the commentaries on it; as to these the
+Bishop of Hereford agreed with the theologians of Wittenberg. In them
+the faithful were referred exclusively to the contents of the Bible, and
+the three oldest creeds; only three sacraments were still recognised,
+Baptism, Penance, and the Lord's Supper. The real presence was
+maintained in them, in the words of those commentaries, and entirely in
+Luther's original
+sense.<a name="FNanchor_127_127" id="FNanchor_127_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_127_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a>
+But still this tendency was not yet so
+strong as to be able to make itself exclusively felt. In the following
+articles, the veneration, even the invocation, of saints, and no small
+part of the existing ceremonies, were allowed&mdash;though in terms which
+with all their moderation cannot disguise the rejection of them in
+principle. Despite these limitations the document contains a clear
+adoption of the principles of religious reform as they were carried out
+in Germany. It was subscribed by 18 bishops, 40 abbots and priors, 50
+members of the lower house of Convocation: the King, as the Head of the
+Church, promulgated it for general observance. His vicegerent in Church
+affairs commanded all the clergy entrusted with a cure of souls to
+explain the articles, and also at certain times to lay before the people
+the rightfulness of the abrogation of Papal authority. He required them
+to give warnings against image-worship, belief in modern miracles, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+pilgrimages. Children were henceforth to learn the Lord's Prayer, the
+articles of the Creed, and the Ten Commandments in
+English.<a name="FNanchor_128_128" id="FNanchor_128_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a>
+It was the beginning of the Church service in the vernacular, which was rightly
+regarded as the chief means of withdrawing the national Church from
+Romish influence.</p>
+
+<p>But Cromwell was also engaged in another enterprise, not less hostile
+and injurious to the Papacy.</p>
+
+<p>As many of the great men in State and Church thought, so thought also
+the pious members of the monasteries and cloistered convents; they
+opposed the Supremacy, not as they said from inclination to
+disobedience, but because Holy Mother Church ordered otherwise than King
+and Parliament ordained.<a name="FNanchor_129_129" id="FNanchor_129_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a>
+The apology merely served to condemn them.
+In the rules they followed, in the Orders to which they belonged, the
+intercommunion of Latin Christianity had its most living expression; but
+it was exactly this which King and Parliament wished to sever. Wolsey
+had already, as we know, and with the help of Cromwell himself, taken in
+hand to suppress many of them: but in the new order of things there was
+absolutely no more place for the monastic system; it was necessarily
+sacrificed to the unity of the country, and at the same time to the
+greed of the great men.</p>
+
+<p>But it cannot be imagined that innovations which struck so deep could be
+carried through without opposition. After all the efforts of the old
+kings to establish Christianity in agreement with Rome, after the
+victories of the Papacy when the kings quarrelled with it, and the
+violent suppression of all dissent, it was inevitable that the belief of
+the hierarchic ages, which is besides so peculiarly adapted to this end,
+had in England as elsewhere sunk deep into men's minds, and in great
+measure still swayed them. Was what had been always held for heresy no
+longer to merit this name because it was avowed by the ruling powers? In
+the northern counties neither the clergy nor the people would hear of
+the King's supremacy; they continued to pray for the Pope;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+Cromwell's injunctions were disregarded. It may be that horrible abuses and vices
+were prevalent in the cloisters, but all did not labour under such
+reproaches; many were objects of reverence in their own districts, and
+centres of hospitality and charity. It would have been wonderful if
+their violent destruction had not excited popular discontent. And this
+temper was shared by those who enjoyed the chief consideration in the
+provinces. Among the nobles there were still men like Lord Darcy of
+Templehurst, who had borne arms against the Moors in the service of
+Isabella and Ferdinand: how offensive to them must innovations be which
+ran counter to all their reminiscences! The lords in these provinces
+were believed to have pledged their word to each other to suppress the
+heresies, as they called the Protestant opinions, together with their
+authors and abettors. The country people, who apprehended yet further
+encroachments, were easily stirred up to commotion; collections of money
+were made from house to house, and the strongest men of each parish
+provided with the necessary weapons: in the autumn of 1536 open revolt
+broke out. A lawyer, Robert Aske, placed himself at its head; he set
+before the people all the damage that the suppression of the monasteries
+did to the country around, by diverting their revenues and abstracting
+their treasures. In a short time he had gained over the whole of the
+North. The city of York joined him; Darcy admitted him into the strong
+castle of Pomfret: in that broad county only one single castle still
+held out in its obedience to the government: then the neighbouring
+districts also were carried away by the movement: Aske saw an army of
+thirty thousand men around him. He took the road to London to, as he
+said, drive base-born men out of the King's council, and restore the
+Christian church in England: he called his march a 'Pilgrimage of
+Grace.' But when he came into contact with royal troops at Doncaster he
+paused; for it was not a war, which would cost the country too dear, but
+only a great armed remonstrance in favour of the old system that he
+contemplated. He contented himself with presenting his
+demands&mdash;suppression of heresies, restitution of the supreme charge of
+souls to the Pope, restoration of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+the monasteries, and in particular
+the punishment of Cromwell with his abettors, and the calling of a
+Parliament.<a name="FNanchor_130_130" id="FNanchor_130_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a></p>
+
+<p>When we consider that Ireland was in revolt, Cornwall in a state of
+ferment, men's Catholic sympathies stirred up by foreign princes, it is
+easy to understand how some voices in the King's Privy Council were
+raised in favour of concession. Henry VIII, a true Tudor, was not the
+man to give in on such a point. He upbraided the rebels in haughty words
+with their ignorance and presumption, and repeated that all he did and
+ordered was in conformity with God's law and for the interests of the
+country; but it was mainly by promising to call a Parliament at York
+that he really laid the gathering storm. But at the first breach of the
+law that occurred he revoked this
+promise;<a name="FNanchor_131_131" id="FNanchor_131_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a>
+if he had relaxed the
+maintenance of his prerogative for a moment, he exercised it immediately
+after all the more relentlessly. He at last got all the leaders of the
+revolt into his hands, and appeared to the world to be conqueror. But we
+cannot for this reason hold that the movement did not react upon him.
+His plan was not, and in fact could not be, to incur the hostility of
+his people or endanger the crown for the sake of dogmatic opinions.
+True, he held to his order that the Bible should be promulgated in the
+English tongue, for his revolt from the hierarchy, and demand of
+obedience from all estates, rested on God's written word: nor did he
+allow himself to swerve from the legally enacted suppression of the
+monasteries; but he abandoned further innovations, and an altered
+tendency displayed itself in all his proclamations. Even during the
+troubles he called on the bishops to observe the usual church
+ceremonies: he put forth an edict against the marriage of priests
+(although he had been inclined to allow it) from regard to popular
+opinion. The importation of books printed abroad, and any publication of
+a work in England itself without a previous censorship, were again
+prohibited. Processions, genuflexions, and other pious
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+usages, in church and domestic life, were once more recommended. The sharpest
+edicts went forth against any dissent from the strict doctrine of the
+Sacrament and against any extreme variations in doctrine. The King
+actually appeared in person to take part in confuting the misbelievers.
+He would prove to the world that he was no heretic.</p>
+
+<p>It had also already become evident that no invasion by the Emperor was
+at present impending. Soon after his overtures to the King of France,
+Charles V perceived that he could not win him over to his side. In the
+Spanish Council of State they took it into consideration that Henry
+VIII, if anything was undertaken against him, would at all times have
+the King of France on his side, and in his passionate temperament might
+be easily instigated to take steps which they would rather
+avoid.<a name="FNanchor_132_132" id="FNanchor_132_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a>
+After Catharine's death they made mutual advances, which it is true did
+not bring about a good understanding, but yet excluded actual
+hostilities. It would only disturb our view if we were here to follow
+one by one the manifold fluctuations in the course of these political
+relations and negociations. One motive in favour of peace under all
+circumstances was supplied by the ever-growing commerce between England
+and the Netherlands, on which the prosperity of both countries depended,
+and the destruction of which would have been injurious to the sovereigns
+themselves. When, some time after, the prospect of an alliance with
+France against England was presented to him by the interposition of the
+new Pope, Paul III, Charles declined it. He remarked that the German
+Protestants, to whom his attention must be mainly directed, would be
+strengthened by
+it.<a name="FNanchor_133_133" id="FNanchor_133_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a>
+At the most an interruption of this system
+could only be expected in case civil disturbances in England invited the
+Emperor to make a sudden attack. Once it even appeared
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+as if a Yorkist movement might be combined with the religious agitation. A descendant of
+Edward IV, the Marquis of Exeter, formed the plan of marrying the
+Princess Mary, and undertaking the restoration of the old church system.
+He found much sympathy in the country for this plan; the co-operation of
+the Emperor with him might have been very dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>Henry lost no time in fortifying the harbours and coasts against such an
+attack.</p>
+
+<p>But the chief means of preventing all dangers of this kind lay in
+cutting from under them the ground on which they rested. Henry VIII was
+not minded to yield a jot of the full power he had inherited: on the
+contrary his supremacy in church matters was confirmed in 1539 by a new
+act of Parliament: another finally ordained the suppression of the
+greater abbeys also, whose revenues served to endow some new bishoprics,
+but mainly passed into the possession of the Crown and the Lords: the
+unity of the Church and the exclusive independence of the country were
+still more firmly established. But the more Henry was resolved to abide
+by his constitutional innovations, the more necessary it seemed to him,
+in reference to doctrine, to avoid any deviation that could be
+designated as heretical. And though he some years before made advances
+to the Protestants because he needed their support against the Emperor
+and the Pope, things were now on the contrary in such a state that he
+could feel himself all the safer, the less connexion he had with the
+Germans. Under quite different auspices of home and foreign politics was
+the religious debate, that had led in 1536 to the Ten Articles, resumed
+three years later. The bishops who held to the old belief were as steady
+as ever and, so far as we know, bound together still more closely by a
+special agreement. They knew how to get rid of the old suspicion of
+their having thought of restoring the Papal supremacy and jurisdiction,
+by showing complete devotion to the King. On the other hand the
+Protestants had suffered a very sensible loss in Bishop Fox of Hereford,
+who had always possessed much influence over the King, but had died
+lately. An understanding between the two parties on questions which were
+dividing the whole world was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+not to be thought of; they confronted each
+other as irreconcilable antagonists. The debates were transferred on
+Norfolk's proposal to Parliament and Convocation; at last it was thought
+best that each of the two parties should bring in the outline of a bill
+expressing its own views. This was done: but first both bills were
+delivered to the King, on whose word, according to the prevailing point
+of view, the decision mainly depended. We may as it were imagine him
+with the two religious schemes in his hand. On the one side lay
+progressive innovation, increasing ferment in the land, and alliance
+with the Protestants: on the other, change confined to the advantages
+already gained by the crown, the contentment of the great majority of
+the people, who adhered to the old belief, peace and friendship with the
+Emperor. The King himself too had a liking for the doctrines he had
+acknowledged from his youth. The balance inclined in favour of the
+bishops of the old belief: Henry gave their bill the preference. It was
+the bloody bill of the Six Articles, mainly, so far as we know, the work
+of Bishop Gardiner of Winchester.</p>
+
+<p>The doctrine of transubstantiation and all the usages connected with it,
+private masses and auricular confession, and the binding force of vows,
+were sanctioned anew; the marriage of priests and the giving the cup to
+the laity were prohibited; all under the severest penalties. The whole
+of the high nobility to a man agreed to it: the Lower House raised the
+resolutions of the clergy into law.</p>
+
+<p>How completely did the German ambassadors, who had come over with the
+expectation of seeing the victory in England of the theologians who were
+friendly to them, find themselves deceived! They still however cherished
+the hope that these resolutions would never be carried out. Their ground
+for hope lay in the King's marriage with a German Protestant princess,
+which was just then being arranged.</p>
+
+<p>Some years before Anne Boleyn had fallen a victim to a dreadful fate.
+How had the King extolled her shortly before his marriage as a mirror of
+purity, modesty and maidenliness! hardly two years afterwards he accused
+her of adultery under circumstances which, if they were true, would
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+make her one of the most depraved creatures under the sun. If we go
+through the statements that led to her condemnation, it is difficult to
+think them complete fictions: they have been upheld quite recently. If
+on the other hand we read the letter, so full of high feeling and inward
+truthfulness, in which Anne protests her innocence to the King, we
+cannot believe in the possibility of the transgressions for which she
+had to die. I can add nothing further to what has been long known,
+except that the King, soon after her coronation, in November 1533,
+already showed a certain discontent with
+her.<a name="FNanchor_134_134" id="FNanchor_134_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a>
+Was it after all not
+right in the eyes of the jealous autocrat that his former wife's lady in
+waiting now as Queen wore the crown as well as himself? Anne Boleyn too
+might not be without blame in her demeanour which was not troubled by
+any strict rule. Or did it seem to the King a token of the divine
+displeasure against this marriage also, that Anne Boleyn in her second
+confinement brought a stillborn son into the world? It has been always
+said that the lively interest she took in the progress of the outspoken
+Protestantism, whose champions were almost all her personal friends,
+contributed most to her fall. For the house from which she sprung she
+certainly in this respect went too far. In the midst of religious and
+political parties, pursued by suspicion and slander, and in herself too
+tormented by jealousy, endangered rather than guarded by the possession
+of the highest dignity, she fell into a state of excitement bordering on
+madness.</p>
+
+<p>On the day after her execution the King married one of her maids of
+honour, the very same who had awakened her jealousy, Jane Seymour. She
+indeed brought him the son for whom his soul longed, but she died in her
+confinement.</p>
+
+<p>In the rivalry of parties Cromwell after some time formed the plan of
+strengthening his own side by the King's marriage with a German
+princess; he chose for this purpose Anne of Cleves, a lady nearly
+related to the Elector of Saxony, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+whose brother as possessor of
+Guelders was a powerful opponent of the Emperor. This was at the time
+when the Emperor on his way to the Netherlands paid a visit to King
+Francis, and an alliance of these sovereigns was again feared. But by
+the time his new wife arrived all anxiety had already gone by, and with
+it the motive for a Protestant alliance for the King had ceased. Anne
+had not quite such disadvantages of nature as has been asserted: she was
+accounted amiable:<a name="FNanchor_135_135" id="FNanchor_135_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a>
+but she could not enchain a man like Henry; he
+had no scruple in dissolving the marriage already concluded; Anne made
+no opposition: the King preferred to her a Catholic lady of the house of
+Howard. But the consequent alteration was not limited to the change of a
+wife. The hopes the Protestants had cherished now completely dwindled
+away: it was the hardest blow they could receive. Cromwell, the person
+who had been the main instrument in carrying out the schism by law, and
+who had then placed himself at the head of the reformers, was devoted to
+destruction by the now dominant party. He was even more violently
+overthrown than Wolsey had been. In the middle of business one day at a
+meeting of the Privy Council he was informed that he was a prisoner; two
+of his colleagues there tore the orders which he wore from his person,
+since he was no longer worthy of
+them;<a name="FNanchor_136_136" id="FNanchor_136_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a>
+that which had been the ruin
+of so many under his rule, a careless word, was now his own.</p>
+
+<p>Now began the persecution of those who infringed the Six Articles, on
+very slight grounds of fact, and with an absence of legal form in
+proving the cases, that held a drawn sword over innocent and guilty
+alike. Bishops like Latimer and Shaxton had to go to the Tower. But how
+many others atoned for their faith with their life! Robert Barnes, one
+of the founders of the higher studies at Cambridge, well known and
+universally beloved in Germany, who avowed the doctrines imbibed there
+without reserve, lost his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+life at the stake. For what the peasants had
+once demanded now again came to pass;&mdash;the heretics perished by fire
+according to the old statutes.</p>
+
+<p>After some time a check was given to extreme acts of violence. Legal
+forms were supplied for the bloody laws, which softened their severity.
+To Archbishop Cranmer, who was likewise attacked, the King himself
+stretched out a protecting hand. When he once more made common cause
+with the Emperor against France, and undertook a war on the Continent,
+he previously ordered the introduction of an English Litany, which was
+to be sung in processions. The fact that the Bible was read in the
+vernacular, and popular devotional exercises retained in use, saved the
+Protestant ideas and efforts, despite all persecution, from extinction.</p>
+
+<p>It gives a disagreeably grotesque colouring to the government of Henry
+VIII to see how his matrimonial affairs are mixed up with those of
+politics and religion. Queen Catharine Howard, whose marriage with him
+marked also the preponderance of the Catholic principle, was without any
+doubt guilty of offences like those which were imputed to her
+predecessor Anne: at her fall her relations, the leaders of the
+anti-Protestant party, lost their position and influence at court. The
+King then married Catharine Parr, who had good conduct and womanly
+prudence enough to keep him in good temper and contentment. But she
+openly cherished Protestant sympathies; and she was once seriously
+attacked on their account. Henry however let her influence prevail, as
+it did not clash with his own policy.</p>
+
+<p>Now that once the sanctity of marriage had been violated, the place of
+King's wife became as it were revocable; the antagonistic factions
+sought to overthrow the Queen who was inconvenient to them; that which
+has been at various times demanded of other members of the household,
+that they should be in complete agreement with the ruling system, was
+then required with respect to their wives, and indeed to the wife of the
+sovereign himself; the importance of marriage was now shown only by the
+violence with which it was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span> dissolved.</p>
+
+<p>This self-willed energetic sovereign however by no means so completely
+followed merely his own judgment as has been assumed. We saw how after
+Wolsey's fall he at first inclined to the protestant doctrines, and then
+again persecuted them with extreme energy. He sacrificed, as formerly
+Empson and Dudley, so Wolsey and now Cromwell to the public opinion
+roused against them. He recognised with quick penetration successive
+political necessities and followed their guidance. The most
+characteristic thing is that he always seemed to belong body and soul to
+these tendencies, however much they differed from each other: he let
+them be established by laws contradictory to each other, and insisted
+with relentless severity on the execution of those laws.</p>
+
+<p>Under him, if ever, England appears as a commonwealth with a common
+will, from which no deviation is allowed, but which moves forward
+inclining now to the one side now to the other. It was no part of Henry
+VIII's Tudor principles and inclinations to call the Parliament
+together; but for his Church-enterprise it was indispensable. He gave
+its tendencies their way and respected the opinion which it represented:
+but at the same time he knew how to keep it at all times under the sway
+of his influence. Never has any other sovereign seen such devoted
+Parliaments gathered round him; they gave his proclamations the force of
+law, and allowed him to settle the succession according to his own
+views; they then gave effect to what he determined.</p>
+
+<p>In this way it was possible for Henry VIII to carry through a political
+plan that has no parallel. He allowed the spiritual tendencies of the
+century to gain influence, and then contrived to confine them within the
+narrowest limits. He would be neither Protestant nor Catholic, and yet
+again both; an unimaginable thing, if it had only concerned these
+opinions: but he retained his hold on the nation because his plan of
+separating the country from the Papal hierarchic system, without taking
+a step further than was absolutely necessary, suited the people's views.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+In the earlier years it appeared as though he would alienate Ireland by
+his religious innovations, since there Catholicism and national feeling
+were at one. And there really were moments when the insurgent chiefs in
+alliance with Pope and Emperor boasted that with French and Scotch help
+they would attack the English on all sides and drive them into the sea.
+But there too it proved of infinite service to him that he defended
+dogma while he abandoned the old constitution. In Ireland the
+monasteries and great abbeys were likewise suppressed; the O'Briens,
+Desmonds, O'Donnels, and other families were as much gratified as the
+English lords and gentlemen with the property almost gratuitously
+offered them. Under these circumstances they recognised Henry VIII as
+King of Ireland, almost as if they had a feeling of the change of
+position as regards public law into which they thus came: they received
+their baronies from him as fiefs and appeared in Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the end of his life Henry once more drew the sword against
+France in alliance with the Emperor. What urged him to this however was
+not the Emperor's interest in itself, but the support which the party
+hostile to him in Scotland received from the French. Moreover he did not
+trouble himself to bring about a decisive result between the two great
+powers: he was content with the conquest of Boulogne. He had reverted to
+his father's policy and resolved not to let himself be drawn over by any
+of his neighbours to their own interests, but to use their rivalry for
+his own profit and
+security.<a name="FNanchor_137_137" id="FNanchor_137_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a></p>
+
+<p>And he was able to do yet more than his father to increase England's
+power of defence against the one or the other. We hear of fifty places
+on the coast which he fortified, not without the help of foreign
+master-workmen: the two great harbours of Dover and Calais he put into
+good condition and filled them with serviceable ships. For a long time
+past he had been building the first vessels of a large size (such as the
+Harry and Mary Rose) which then did service in the
+wars.<a name="FNanchor_138_138" id="FNanchor_138_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a>
+It may be
+that the property of the monasteries was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+partly squandered and ought to
+have been better husbanded: a great part of their revenues however was
+applied to this purpose, and conferred much benefit on the country so
+far as its own peculiar interests were concerned.</p>
+
+<p>The characteristic of his government consists in the mixture of
+spiritual and temporal interests, the union of violence with fostering
+care. The family enmities, which Henry VII had to contend with, are
+combined with the religious under Henry VIII, for instance in the
+Suffolk family: as William Stanley under the father, so Fisher and More
+under the son, perished because they threw doubt on the grounds for the
+established right, and still more because they challenged that right
+itself. It raised a cry of horror when it was seen how under Henry VIII
+Papists and Protestants were bound together and drawn to the place of
+execution together, since they had both broken the laws. Who would not
+have been sensible of this? Who would not have felt himself distressed
+and threatened? Yet at the opening of the Session of 1542, after the
+Chancellor had stated in detail the King's services (who had taken his
+place on the throne), Lords and Commons rose and bowed to the sovereign
+in token of their acknowledgment and gratitude. In the Session of 1545
+he himself once more took up the word. In fatherly language he exhorted
+both the religious parties to peace; a feeling pervaded the assembly
+that this address was the last they would listen to from him; many were
+seen to burst into tears.</p>
+
+<p>For his was the strong power that kept in check the fermenting elements
+and set them a law that might not be broken. On their antagonism, by
+favouring or restraining them, he established his strong system of
+public order. In Henry VIII we remark no free self-abandonment and no
+inward enthusiasm, no real sympathy with any livi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>ng man: men are to him
+only instruments which he uses and then breaks to pieces; but he has an
+incomparable practical intelligence, a vigorous energy devoted to the
+general interest; he combines versatility of view with a will of
+unvarying firmness. We follow the course of his government with a
+mingled sense of aversion and admiration. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_123_123" id="Footnote_123_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> Papiers d'état du Cl. de Granvelle ii. 147, 210.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_124_124" id="Footnote_124_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> Documents in the Corpus Reformatorum ii. 1032, iii. 42.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_125_125" id="Footnote_125_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> Henry VIII to the judges&mdash;in Halliwell i. 342 (25 June
+1535).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_126_126" id="Footnote_126_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a> Burnet, History of the Reformation i. 213. Soames,
+History of the Reformation ii. 157.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_127_127" id="Footnote_127_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> Seckendorf, Historia Lutheranismi iii. 13, xxxix. p. 112:
+my German History iv. 46.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_128_128" id="Footnote_128_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> Injunctions given by the authority of the King. Burnet's
+Collection p. 160.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_129_129" id="Footnote_129_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> Prior of Charterhouse (Houghton), Speech, in Strype i.
+313.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_130_130" id="Footnote_130_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> Froude, History of England iii. 104.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_131_131" id="Footnote_131_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> 'The people were unsatisfyed that the parliament was not
+held at York; but our King alledged that since they had not restaured
+all the religious houses [as they had promised] he was not bound
+strictly to hold promise with them.' Herbert, Henry VIII, p. 428.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_132_132" id="Footnote_132_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> Los impedimentos en que esta S. M. por la malignidad del
+dicho rey de Francia que haze gran fundamento en la adherencia del dicho
+rey de Inglaterra, y la obstinacion ceguedad y pertinacia en que esta.
+(Report in the State Archives at Paris.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_133_133" id="Footnote_133_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a> As it is said in the Emperor's letter of refusal to his
+ambassador at Rome. 'Los desviados de Germania se juntarian mas
+estrechamente con el rey de Inglaterra.' (Document in the Archives at
+Paris.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_134_134" id="Footnote_134_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> In a letter of the Emperor, 2 November, is mentioned 'le
+descontentement, que le roi d'Ingleterre prenoit de Anna de Bolans.'
+Papiers d'état ii. 224.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_135_135" id="Footnote_135_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> Marillac au roi, 8 Juillet 1540. 'Le peuple l'aymoit et
+estimoit bien fort, comme la plus douce gracieuse humaine Reyne, qu'ils
+eurent onque.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_136_136" id="Footnote_136_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a> A description of the scene, which deserves to be known,
+is contained in the letter of the French ambassador, Marillac, to the
+Constable Montmorency, 23 June 1540.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_137_137" id="Footnote_137_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a> Froude iv. 104.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_138_138" id="Footnote_138_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a> Marillac assures us that there were not more than eight
+vessels in England over 500 tons, that then the King built in 1540
+fourteen larger ones, among them 'le grand Henri,' over 1800 tons; he
+had however 'peu de maistres que entendent a l'ouvrage. Les naufs
+(navires) du roi sont fournies d'artillerie et de munition beaucoup
+mieux que de bons pilots et de mariniers dont la plus part sont
+estrangers.' (Letter of 1 Oct. 1540.)</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BII_VI" id="BII_VI"></a>
+RELIGIOUS REFORM IN THE ENGLISH CHURCH.</p>
+
+<p>The question arises, whether it was possible permanently to hold to
+Henry's stand-point, to his rejection of Papal influence and to his
+maintenance of the Catholic doctrines as they then were. I venture to
+say, it was impossible: the idea involves an historical contradiction.
+For the doctrine too had been moulded into shape under the influence of
+the supreme head of the hierarchy while ascending to his height of
+power: they were both the product of the same times, events, tendencies:
+they could not be severed from each other. Perhaps they might have been
+both modified together, doctrine and constitution, if a form had been
+found under which to do it, but to reject the latter and maintain the
+former in its completed shape&mdash;this was impracticable.</p>
+
+<p>When it was seen that Henry could not live much longer, two parties
+became visible in the country as well as at court, one of which, however
+much it disguised it, was without doubt aiming at the restoration of the
+Pope's supremacy, while the other was aiming at a fuller development of
+the Protestant principle. Henry had settled the succession so that first
+his son Edward, then his elder daughter (by his Spanish wife), then the
+younger (by Anne Boleyn), were to succeed. As the first, the sovereign
+who should succeed next, was a boy of nine, it was of infinite
+importance to settle who during the time of his minority should stand at
+the helm. The nearest claim was possessed by the boy's uncle on the
+mother's side, Edward Seymour, Earl of Hertford, who had begun to play a
+leading part in Henry's court and army, was in close alliance with Queen
+Catharine Parr, and like her cherished Protestant
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+sympathies. But the
+Norfolks with their Catholic sympathies who had previously so long
+exercised a leading influence on the government, would not give way to
+him. Norfolk's son, the Earl of Surrey, adopted the immoral plan of
+ensnaring the King, who though dying was yet supposed to be still
+susceptible to woman's charms, by means of his sister, in order to draw
+him back to the side of his family and the strict Catholics: a plot
+which failed at once when his sister refused to play such a part. The
+ambitious announcements into which he allowed himself to be hurried away
+could only bring about the opposite result: he himself was executed, his
+father thrown into prison, and the man who could have done most in the
+Catholic direction, Bishop Gardiner, was struck out of the list of those
+who, after the King's death, were to form the Privy
+Council.<a name="FNanchor_139_139" id="FNanchor_139_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a>
+Immediately afterwards, January 1547, Henry died. He had composed the
+Privy Council of men of both tendencies in the hope, as it appears, that
+in this way his system would be most surely upheld. But men were too
+much accustomed to see the highest power represented in one leading
+personage, for it to continue long in the hands of a Board of
+Councillors. From the first sittings of the Privy Council Edward VI's
+uncle, the Earl of Hertford, came forth as Duke of Somerset and
+Protector of the realm. In him the reforming tendency won the upper
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>It appeared at once with full force at the Coronation, which was not
+celebrated at all after the form traced out by Henry VIII, since even
+this would have tied them far too much to the existing system; Cranmer,
+in the discourse which he there addressed to the young King, departed in
+the most decided manner from all the ideas hitherto attached to a
+coronation. Whither had the times of the first Lancaster departed, in
+which a special hierarchic sacredness was given to the Anointing through
+its connexion with Thomas Becket? Becket's shrine had been destroyed.
+The present Archbishop of Canterbury went back to the earliest times of
+human history: he brought forward the example of Josias, who
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+likewise came to the government in tender years and extirpated the worship of
+idols: so might Edward VI also completely destroy image-worship, plant
+God's true service, and free the land from the tyranny of the Bishop of
+Rome; it was not the oil that made him God's anointed, but the power
+given him from on high, in virtue of which he was God's representative
+in his realm. His duty to the Church was changed into his duty to
+religion: instead of upholding the existing state of things, it at once
+pledges and empowers him to reform the
+Church.<a name="FNanchor_140_140" id="FNanchor_140_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a></p>
+
+<p>The great question now was, how an alteration could be prepared in a
+legal manner, and how far it would be possible to maintain in this the
+constitution of the realm in its relation to the states of Europe. On
+the ground of the supremacy and of a precedent of Henry VIII, they began
+with a resolution to despatch commissions throughout the realm, to
+revive the suppressed Protestant sympathies; the precedent was found in
+the ordinances that had once proceeded from Thomas Cromwell, just as if
+they had not in the least been annulled by what had happened since, but
+simply set aside by party feeling and neglect. They were to enquire
+whether, as therein ordered, the bishops had preached against the Pope's
+usurpation, the parish priests had taught men to regard not outward
+observances but fulfilment of duty as the real 'good works,' and had
+laboured to diminish feast-days and pilgrimages. Above all, images to
+which superstitious reverence was paid were at last to be actually
+removed: the young were to be really taught the chief points of the
+faith in English, a chapter of the Bible should be read every Sunday,
+and Erasmus' Paraphrase employed to explain it. In place of the sermon
+was to come one of the Homilies which had been published under the
+authority of the Archbishop and King. For this last ordinance also
+authority was found in an injunction of Henry VIII. Archbishop Cranmer,
+whose work they are, establishes in them the two principles, on which he
+had already proceeded in 1536, one that Holy Scripture contains all that
+it is necessary for men to know, the other that forgiveness of sins
+depends<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+only on the merits of the Redeemer and on faith in Him. On this
+depends absolutely the possibility of rooting out of men's minds the
+belief in the binding force of Tradition, and the hierarchic views as to
+the merit of good works. The Archbishop's views were promoted by
+eloquent and zealous preachers such as Matthew Parker, John Knox, Hugh
+Latimer; more than all by the last, who had been released from the
+Tower, weak in body but with unimpaired vigour of spirit. The fact of
+his having maintained these doctrines in the time of persecution, his
+earnest way and manner, and his venerable old age doubled the effect of
+his discourses.</p>
+
+<p>No direct alteration could be thought of so long as the Six Articles
+still existed with their severe threats of punishment. In the Parliament
+elected under the influence of the new government it needed little
+persuasion to procure their repeal. The Protector assured the members
+that he had been urgently entreated to effect this, since every man felt
+himself endangered.<a name="FNanchor_141_141" id="FNanchor_141_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_141_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a></p>
+
+<p>One of those popular beliefs gained ground, which are often more
+effective in great assemblies than elaborate proofs: the conviction that
+doctrine and authority were too closely akin for the separation from
+Rome to be maintained without deviation in doctrine; the breach must be
+made wider if it was to continue, and the hierarchic doctrines give way.</p>
+
+<p>So it came about that by a unanimous resolution of Convocation, which
+Parliament confirmed, the alteration was approved, which almost more
+than any other characterises those Church formularies that deviate from
+the Romish, the administration of the communion in both kinds.</p>
+
+<p>Now it was exactly from this that the transformation of the whole divine
+worship in England proceeded. The very next Easter (1548) a new form for
+the communion office was published in English. This was followed,
+according to a wish expressed by the young King, by a Liturgy for home
+and church use, in which the revised Litany of Henry VIII was also
+included. In this 'Common Prayerbook' they everywhere
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+kept to what was before in use, but everywhere also made changes. The Reforming
+tendencies obtained the upper hand in reference to its doctrinal
+contents; thus even one of the rubrics previously in favour by which
+auricular confession was declared to be indispensable was now omitted;
+it was left to every man's judgment to avail himself of it or not. At
+times they again sought out what had been disused in later ages: they
+recurred to Anglo-Saxon usages. The Common Prayer-book is a genuine
+monument of the religious feeling of this age, of its learning and
+subtlety, its forbearance and decision. In the Parliament of 1549 it was
+received with admiration: men even said it was drawn up under the
+inspiration of the Holy Spirit. The order went forth for its adoption in
+all churches of the land, no other liturgy was to be used; it has
+nourished and edified the national piety of the English
+people.<a name="FNanchor_142_142" id="FNanchor_142_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a></p>
+
+<p>And just as it was now asserted that in all this they were only carrying
+out the views of the deceased King, as he had set them forth many years
+before and had at the last again proclaimed them, so now Somerset
+undertook to carry through another of his intentions as well, which was
+closely connected with his religious plans.</p>
+
+<p>In 1542 Henry VIII had agreed with some of the most powerful nobles of
+Scotland that in that country too the Church should be reformed, all
+relations with France broken off, and the young Queen brought to England
+in order if possible to marry his son Edward at some future day. The
+scheme broke down owing to all kinds of opposition, but the idea of
+uniting England and Scotland in one great Protestant kingdom had thus
+made its appearance in the world and could never again be set aside. The
+ambition to realise
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+it filled the soul of Somerset. When, before the
+end of the summer of 1547, he took up arms, he hoped to bring about an
+acknowledgment of England's old supremacy over Scotland, to prepare the
+way for the future union of both countries by the marriage, and to
+annihilate the party there which opposed the progress of Protestantism.
+A vision floated before him of fusing both nations into one by a union
+of dynasty and of creed. It was mainly from the religious point of view
+that his ward regarded the matter. 'They fight for the Pope,' wrote
+Edward to the Protector when he was already in the field, 'we strike for
+the cause of God, without doubt we shall
+win.'<a name="FNanchor_143_143" id="FNanchor_143_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a></p>
+
+<p>Somerset had already penetrated far into the land when he offered the
+Scots to retreat and make peace on the one condition that Mary should
+marry Edward VI. But the ruling party did not so much as allow his offer
+to be known. A battle took place at Pinkie, in which Somerset won a
+brilliant victory. Not a little did this victory contribute to establish
+his consequence in the world: even in Scotland some districts on the
+borders took the oath of fidelity to King Edward. But in general the
+antipathies of the Scotch to the English were all the more roused by it;
+they would hear nothing of a wooing, carried on with arms in the hand:
+the young Queen was after some time (August 1548) carried off to France,
+to be there married to the Dauphin. The Catholic interests once more
+maintained their ascendancy in Scotland over those of the English and
+the Protestants.</p>
+
+<p>And how could Somerset's plans and enterprises fail to meet with
+resistance in England itself? All the elements were still in existence
+that had once set themselves in opposition to King Henry with such
+energy. When an attempt
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+was made in earnest to carry out the
+innovations at home, in the summer of 1549, the revolt burst into flame
+once more.</p>
+
+<p>In Cornwall a tumult arose at the removal of an image, and the King's
+commissary was stabbed by a priest. The troubles extended to Devonshire,
+where men forced the priests to celebrate the mass after the old ritual,
+and then took the field with crosses and tapers, and carrying the Host
+before them. When their numbers became so large as to embolden them to
+put forth a manifesto, they demanded before all&mdash;incredible as it may
+seem&mdash;the restoration of the Six Articles and the Latin Mass, the
+customary reverence to the Sacrament and to images. They did not go so
+far as to demand the restoration of the authority of the Roman See, like
+the rebels under Henry VIII; but they pressed for a fresh recognition of
+the General Councils, and of the old church laws as a whole. At least
+half of the confiscated church property was to be given back, two abbeys
+at least were to remain in each county. But this movement owed its
+peculiar character to yet another motive. The enclosures of the arable
+land for purposes of pasture, of which the peasantry had been long
+complaining, did not merely continue; the nobility, which took part in
+the secularisation of the church-lands in an increasing degree, extended
+its grasp also to the newly-gained estates. So it came to pass that a
+rising of the peasants against the nobles was now united with tendencies
+towards church restoration, as in previous times with ideas of quite a
+different kind. East and West were in revolt at one and the same time
+and for different reasons. On a hill near Norwich, the chief leader, a
+tanner by trade, called Ket, took his seat under a great oak which he
+called the Oak of Reformation; he had the mass read daily after the old
+use: but he also planned a remodeling of the realm to suit the views of
+the people. The wildest expectations were aroused. A prophecy found
+belief according to which monarchy and nobility were to be destroyed
+simultaneously, and a new government set up under four Governors elected
+by the common people. And woe to him who wished to reason with the
+peasants against their design. They were already bending their bows
+against a preacher who attempted to do so, he was only saved with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+difficulty. But they were still less capable this time of withstanding
+the organised power of the State than they had been under Henry VIII. In
+Devonshire they were beaten by Lord Russel, the ancestor of the Dukes of
+Bedford; in Norfolk, where they had risen in the greatest force, by John
+Dudley Earl of Warwick. Under his banners we find German troops as well,
+who were untouched by the national sympathies, and in the rebels
+combated only the enemies of Protestantism. The government obtained a
+complete victory.</p>
+
+<p>The insurrectionary movement was suppressed, but it once more produced a
+violent reaction in home affairs, by which this time the head of the
+government was himself struck
+down.<a name="FNanchor_144_144" id="FNanchor_144_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a>
+Among English statesmen there
+is none who had a more vivid idea of the monarchical power than the
+Protector Somerset. He started from the view that religious and
+political authority were united in the hand of the anointed King in
+virtue of his divine right. The prayer which he daily addressed to God
+is still extant; it is full of the feeling that to himself, as the
+representative and guardian of the King, not only his guidance but also
+the direction of all affairs is entrusted. Such was also the view of the
+young sovereign himself. In one of his letters he thanks the Protector
+for taking this employment on him, and for trying to bring his State to
+its lawful obedience, the country to acknowledge the true religion, and
+the Scots to submission. Somerset did not think himself bound by the
+opinion of the Privy Council, since with him, and with no other, lay the
+responsibility for the administration of the State. He held it to be
+within his competence to remove at pleasure those of its members who
+showed themselves adverse to him. He too had that jealousy of power,
+which always directs itself against those who stand nearest to it. There
+is no doubt that his brother, Thomas Lord Seymour, impelled by a
+restless ambition, hoped to overthrow the existing government and put
+himself in possession of the highest place, and committed manifold
+illegal acts; he&mdash;the Lord Admiral of the realm&mdash;even entered into
+alliance with the pirates in the
+Channel.<a name="FNanchor_145_145" id="FNanchor_145_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a>
+But despite this
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+it was thought at the time very severe when the Protector gave his word that
+the vengeance of the law should be executed on his brother. His reason
+was that Lord Seymour would not submit to sue in person for mercy to him
+the injured party and possessor of power. Such were these men, these
+brothers. The one died rather than pray for mercy: the other made the
+bestowal of it depend on this prayer, this confession of his supreme
+authority.<a name="FNanchor_146_146" id="FNanchor_146_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a>
+The Protector took all affairs, home and foreign,
+exclusively into his own hand. Without asking any one, he filled up the
+ministerial and civil posts: to the foreign ambassadors he gave audience
+alone. He erected in his house a Court of
+Requests,<a name="FNanchor_147_147" id="FNanchor_147_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a>
+which encroached not a little on the business of Chancery. The palace in the
+Strand, which still bears his name, was to be a memorial of his power;
+not merely houses and gardens, but also churches which occupied the
+ground, or from which he wished to collect his building materials, were
+destroyed with reckless arbitrary power. Great historical associations
+are indissolubly linked with this house. For it was Somerset after all,
+who through personal zeal opened a free path for the Protestant tendency
+which had originated under Henry VIII but had been repressed, and gave
+the English government a Protestant character. He connected with this
+not merely the Union of Scotland and England, but a yet further idea of
+great importance for England itself. He wished to free the change of
+religion from the antipathy of the peasantry which was at that time so
+prominent. In the above-mentioned dissensions he took open part for the
+demands of the commons: he condemned the progress of the enclosures and
+gave his opinion that the people could not be blamed so heavily for
+their rebellion, as their choice lay only between death by hunger and
+insurrection. It seemed as though he wished in the next Parliament by
+means of his influence to carry through a legal measure in favour of
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+commons.</p>
+
+<p>But by this he necessarily awakened the ill will of the aristocracy. He
+was charged with having instigated the troubles themselves by
+proclamations which he issued in opposition to the Privy Council; and
+with not merely having done nothing to suppress them but with having on
+the contrary supported the ringleaders and taken them under his
+protection.<a name="FNanchor_148_148" id="FNanchor_148_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a>
+No doubt this was the reason why the campaign against
+the rebels in Norfolk was not entrusted to him, as he wished, but (after
+some vacillation) to his rival, John Dudley, Earl of Warwick. The
+victory gained by him, with the active sympathy of the nobility, which
+was defending its own interests, was a defeat for Somerset. Even those
+who did not believe that he had any personal share in the movement,
+nevertheless reproached him with having allowed conditions to be
+prescribed to himself and his government by the people; the common man
+would be King. Financial difficulties arising from an alteration in the
+coinage, and ill success in the war against France, contributed to give
+his opponents the ascendancy in the Privy Council. Somerset once
+entertained the idea of setting the masses in movement on his own
+behalf: one day he collected numerous bands of people at Hampton Court,
+under cover of summoning them to defend the King, by whose side his
+enemies wished to set up a regency. But this pretext had little
+foundation, it was only himself whom his rivals would no longer see at
+the head of affairs: after a short fluctuation in the relations between
+the main personages he was forced to submit. He saved his life for that
+time: after an interval he was released from prison and again entered
+the Privy Council: then he once more made an attempt to recover the
+supreme power by help of the people, but thus drew his fate on himself.
+The masses who regarded him as their champion showed him loud and
+heartfelt sympathy at his execution.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+On Somerset's first fall it was said that the Emperor Charles V had a
+share in bringing it about, and this is very conceivable; for what
+result could be more displeasing to this sovereign than that
+Protestantism, which he was putting down in Germany, should have gained
+at the same moment a strong position in England: it is certain that the
+change of administration was greeted with joy by the court at
+Brussels.<a name="FNanchor_149_149" id="FNanchor_149_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a></p>
+
+<p>But it brought the Emperor no advantage. At the moment the new
+government assumed a hostile attitude towards France: but soon
+afterwards the Earl of Warwick, who now took the lead of affairs as Duke
+of Northumberland, found himself driven to the necessity of making a
+peace with that power, by which Boulogne was given up and Scotland
+abandoned to French influence. One article of the treaty contains
+indirectly a renunciation of the proposed marriage between the King of
+England and the Queen of Scotland. And this treaty was greatly to the
+Emperor's disadvantage, since it now set the French free to renew the
+hostility against him which had been broken off some years before by an
+agreement all in his favour. They allied themselves for this purpose
+with the German princes who found the Emperor's yoke intolerable. These
+princes had even applied to the English government: and Edward would
+personally have been much inclined to lend an ear to their proposals. If
+the fear of being involved in war with the Emperor on this account
+withheld him from open sympathy, yet it is certain that his general
+political attitude essentially contributed to enable them to take up
+arms and break the Emperor's ascendancy.</p>
+
+<p>Among the determining causes of a movement which is part of the history
+of the world must be specially reckoned the personal disposition of this
+prince, young as he was even at the close of his reign. Somerset had
+kept him rather close: the Duke of Northumberland gave him greater
+freedom, allowed him to manage his own money, and was pleased
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+when he made presents and showed himself as King; he was careful to see that
+immediate obedience was paid
+him.<a name="FNanchor_150_150" id="FNanchor_150_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_150_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a>
+Whilst Edward had been hitherto
+almost exclusively busied with his studies, he now turned to knightly
+exercises for which he also showed aptitude: he sat well on horseback,
+drew his bow and broke his lance as well as any other young man of his
+age. But with all this his learning was not
+neglected.<a name="FNanchor_151_151" id="FNanchor_151_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a>
+Edward VI not merely possessed for his years extraordinary and manifold
+attainments; the written remains which are extant from his hand display
+a rare mental growth. What he has written for instance on his connexion
+with the two Seymours, his uncles, indicates a clear and almost a
+judicial conception of existing relations, which is very uncommon. On
+his tutor's advice, to prevent his passing thoughts from getting
+confused, he regularly noted them down, and composed a diary which has
+the same characteristics and may be regarded as a valuable historical
+monument. But studies and religion coincide in him: he is Protestant to
+the core; his chief ambition is by means of his rank and power to place
+himself at the head of the Protestant world. The duke could not have
+ventured to oppose the progress of the Reformation.</p>
+
+<p>In the days of distress, after the defeat in the Schmalkaldic war,
+England was regarded as the refuge of the gospel: men welcomed the
+scholars who fled thither, whose co-operation in the conflict with
+Catholicism, still so powerful, was very desirable. In Cranmer's palace
+at Lambeth were assembled Italians, French, Poles, Swiss, South Germans
+and North Germans; the Secretary of State, William Cecil, who had been
+trained in the service of the Protector, but had kept his place after
+his fall, obtained them the King's support. Martin Bucer and Paulus
+Fagius received promotion at Cambridge, Peter Martyr at Oxford: he there
+maintained the Calvinistic
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+views on the communion in a great
+disputation. There were Walloon and French churches in the old centres
+of Catholic worship, Canterbury and Glastonbury; John a Lasco preached
+in the church of the Augustines in London. With no less vigour than
+these foreigners did natives, sometimes returned exiles, maintain the
+views then prevailing on the Continent. Under these influences it was
+impossible, in conformity with the view taken up in 1536, to abide by
+the dogmas, which had been put forth by the school of Wittenberg, now
+completely overthrown. The difference comes out very remarkably when we
+compare the Common Prayer-book of 1549 with the revised edition of 1552.
+Originally men had held fast to the real presence in England also:
+Cranmer in his catechism expressly declared for it: in the formula of
+the first book, which was compiled out of Ambrose and Gregory, this view
+was retained:<a name="FNanchor_152_152" id="FNanchor_152_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a>
+but men in England had since convinced themselves
+that this doctrine had not prevailed so exclusively in Christian
+antiquity as had been hitherto thought: following the example of Ridley,
+the most learned of the Protestant bishops, the majority had given up
+the real presence: in the new Common Prayer-book a controversial passage
+was even inserted against it. First on their own impulse, and then with
+the help of the Privy Council, the zealous Protestant-minded bishops
+removed the high altars from the churches and had wooden tables for the
+communion put in their place: since with the word Altar was associated
+the idea of Sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>It was now inevitable that the question from which all had started in
+England, as to the relation between State and Church, should be decided
+completely in favour of the secular principle. It is very true that
+Cranmer held fast to the objective view of the visible church. If the
+ceremonies were altered with which the Romish church imparts the
+spiritual consecration, yet in this respect only the mystical usages
+introduced in recent centuries were abandoned, and the ritual restored
+to the form used in more primitive times, especially in the African
+church. But it was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+surely a violent change, when those who wished to
+receive consecration were now previously asked, whether their inward
+call agreed both with the will of the Redeemer and the law of the land;
+they were required to assent to the principle that Scripture contains
+all which it is necessary for man to know, and to pledge themselves to
+guard against any doctrine not in conformity with Scripture. It is
+generally believed, and the fact is of lasting importance, that the
+Convocation of the clergy, a commission of the spiritualty, the
+Primate-Archbishop and a number of bishops, took part in the change; but
+yet the decisive decrees went forth from the Parliament, to which the
+spiritual power had been irrevocably attached since Henry VIII, and
+sometimes from the Privy Council alone. To establish a normal form of
+doctrine, men set to work to compose a Confession, which was completed
+at that time in forty-two Articles. There had been a wish that
+Melanchthon should have come over in person to aid in composing it; at
+any rate his labours had much influence in deciding the shape it took.
+The Articles belong to the class of Confessions, as they were then
+framed in Saxony by Melanchthon, in Swabia by Brenz, to be laid before
+the coming Council. And it is just in this that their value lies, that
+by them England attached herself most closely to the Protestant
+community on the Continent. They are the work of Cranmer, who was
+entrusted with their composition by the King and Privy Council, and
+communicated his labours first to the King's tutor, Cheke, and the
+Secretary of State, Cecil: in conjunction with them he next laid them
+before the King; with the assistance of some chaplains their final form
+was given them; then the Privy Council ordered them to be subscribed.
+The influence of the government on the nominations to the office of
+bishop was now still more open: the bishops were to hold office as long
+as they conducted themselves well,&mdash;in other words, as long as the
+ruling powers were content with them: the church jurisdiction was no
+longer administered in the name of the bishopric, but, like the temporal
+jurisdiction, in the King's name and under the King's seal; when they
+proceeded to revise the church laws, the primary maxim was, not to admit
+anything that contravened
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+the temporal laws.<a name="FNanchor_153_153" id="FNanchor_153_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a>
+The use of the power of the keys was also derived by Cranmer from the permission of the
+sovereign. Against this ever-increasing dependence some bishops of the
+old views made a struggle; to avoid coming into direct conflict with the
+supremacy, which they had acknowledged, they put forth the assertion
+that it could not be exercised by a King under age; they connived at the
+mass being read in side-chapels of their cathedrals, or refused to allow
+the change of the altars into communion-tables, or kept alive the
+controversy as to the doctrine of faith. The government on their side
+persisted in enforcing uniformity. They brought all opponents before a
+commission consisting of secular as well as ecclesiastical dignities,
+which had no scruple in pronouncing the deprivation of the bishops: a
+fate which befell Gardiner of Winchester, Bonner of London, Day of
+Chichester, Heath of Worcester. In vain did they plead that the court
+before which they were brought was not a canonical one; the government
+appealed to the general rights of the temporal power as it had once been
+exercised by the Roman Emperors. In the conflict of church opinions the
+Protestant-minded prelates now had the upper hand. Many who did not
+conform bought toleration from the government by sacrifices of money and
+goods. Elsewhere the newly-appointed bishops assented to concessions
+which did not always profit even the crown, but sometimes, as at
+Lichfield, private persons.<a name="FNanchor_154_154" id="FNanchor_154_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a>
+Already the further question was
+discussed whether there is in fact any essential distinction between
+bishops and presbyters: a church of foreigners was set up in London, to
+present a pattern of the pure apostolic constitution as an example to
+the country. The government which had acquired such a thorough mastery
+over the clergy developed an open disinclination to the old forms of
+constitution in the church. Who could have said, so long as things
+remained in the path thus once entered upon, whither this would lead?</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_139_139" id="Footnote_139_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a> Froude iv. 515 (extracts from the documents).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_140_140" id="Footnote_140_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a> Collier ii. 220 (Records lii).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_141_141" id="Footnote_141_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a> Proclamation of 8 July 1549 in Tytler, England under
+Edward VI and Mary I, p. 180.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_142_142" id="Footnote_142_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a> The point of view under which it was drawn up appears in
+a declaration inserted in the edition of 1549: 'the most weighty cause
+of the abolishment of certain ceremonies was, that they were abused
+partly by the superstitious blindness of the unlearned, and partly by
+unsatiable avarice.&mdash;Where the old (ceremonies) may be well used there
+they [their opponents] cannot reprove the old only for their age. They
+ought rather to have reverence unto them for their antiquity, if they
+will declare themselves to be more studious of unity and concord, than
+of innovations and newfangleness which&mdash;is always to be eschewed.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_143_143" id="Footnote_143_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a> 12 Sept. 1547 in Halliwell ii. 31. Cranmer appointed a
+prayer in church for the marriage of Edward and Mary, 'to confound all
+those, which labour to the lett and interruption of so godly a quiet and
+amity.' In Somerset's prayer printed, since the first edition of this
+book, in Froude v. 47, it is said: 'Look upon the small portion of the
+earth, which professeth thy holy name; especially have an eye to thy
+small isle of Britain;&mdash;that the Scotismen and we might thereafter live
+in one love and amity, knit into one nation by the marriage of the
+King's Majesty and the young Scotish Queen.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_144_144" id="Footnote_144_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a> Godwin, Rerum Anglicarum Annales 315.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_145_145" id="Footnote_145_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a> Proofs in Froude v. 136.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_146_146" id="Footnote_146_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a> So Queen Elizabeth tells us. Ellis, Letters ii. ii. 257.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_147_147" id="Footnote_147_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a> Cecil however was not the first Master of Requests:
+Thomas More already appears under this title; Nares, Life of Burghley i.
+179.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_148_148" id="Footnote_148_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a> 'You have suffered the rebels to lie in camp and armour
+against the King his nobles and gentlemen; you did comfort divers of the
+said rebels.' Articles against the Lord Protector, in Strype, Memorials
+of Cranmer ii. 342.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_149_149" id="Footnote_149_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a> Marillac 26 Oct. 1549. 'Ceux-ci (at the Emperor's court)
+font une merveilleuse demonstration de joye de ce que le protecteur est
+abattu.' In Turnbull, Calendar of State Papers 1861 p. 47 an Instruction
+of the Council is mentioned, 'to acquaint the Emperor with the
+proceeding taken against the Duke of Somerset.' We should like to be
+better informed about this Instruction, in which too the Emperor was
+asked for aid.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_150_150" id="Footnote_150_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a> Soranzo, Relatione d'Inghilterra 1554. 'Per posseder la
+sua grazia ben amplamente, non solo faceva qualche spettacolo, per
+dargli piacere, ma gli diede liberta di danari.' Florentine Collection
+viii. 37.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_151_151" id="Footnote_151_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a> As he advises a friend: 'Apply yourself to riding
+shooting or tennis&mdash;not forgetting sometimes when you have leisure, your
+learning, chiefly reading the Scripture.' Halliwell ii. 49.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_152_152" id="Footnote_152_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a> Wheatly in Soames, History of the Reformation iii. 604.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_153_153" id="Footnote_153_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a> In the commission of 32 members (bishops, divines,
+civilians, lawyers) we find the names of Will. Cecil, Will Peters,
+Thomas Smith.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_154_154" id="Footnote_154_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a> Compare Heylin, History of the Reformation 50, 101.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BII_VII" id="BII_VII"></a>
+TRANSFER OF THE GOVERNMENT TO A CATHOLIC QUEEN.</p>
+
+<p>We can easily see how the power of the crown, founded by the first
+Tudor, and developed by the second through the emancipation from the
+Papacy, was further strengthened under the third. From Edward VI we have
+essays, in which he speaks about the spiritual and temporal government
+with the consciousness of a sovereign, whose actions depend only on
+himself. In the Homilies, which obtained legal sanction, there is found
+an express condemnation of resistance to the King, 'for Godes sake, from
+whom Kings are, and for orders sake.'</p>
+
+<p>Whilst men were now expecting that Edward VI would arrive at manhood,
+and take the government completely into his own hands, and conduct it in
+the sense he had hitherto foreshadowed&mdash;not merely carrying out the
+Reformation thoroughly at home, but assuming the leadership of the
+Protestant world, symptoms appeared in him of the malady to which his
+half-brother Richmond had succumbed at an early age. But how then if the
+same fate befell him? According to Henry VIII's arrangement Mary was
+then to ascend the throne who, through her descent from Queen Catharine
+and from an inborn disposition which had become all the more confirmed
+by her opposition to her father and brother, represented the Catholic
+and Spanish interest. Nothing else could be expected but that she would
+employ the whole power of the State in support of her own views, would,
+so far as it could possibly be done, bring back the church to its
+earlier form, would depress the men who had hitherto played a great part
+by the side of the King and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+subject them to the opposite faction. But
+were they quietly to acquiesce in their fate?</p>
+
+<p>The ambition of the Duke of Northumberland associated itself with the
+great interests of religion, to prevent the threatening ruin. He
+persuaded the young King that it lay in his power to alter his father's
+settlement of the succession, as in itself not conformable to law,
+neither Mary nor the younger sister Elizabeth being entitled to the
+throne, as the two marriages from which they sprang had been declared
+illegal, and a bastard could not be made capable of wearing the English
+crown by any act of Parliament. Henry VIII had in his settlement of the
+succession passed over the descendants of his elder sister, married in
+Scotland, as foreigners, but acknowledged those of the younger, Mary of
+Suffolk, as the next heirs after his own children. Mary's elder daughter
+Frances had married Henry Grey of Dorset, who had already obtained the
+title of Suffolk, and had three daughters, the eldest of whom was Jane
+Grey. It was to her, whom the Duke of Northumberland married to one of
+his sons, that he now directed the King's attention, and induced him to
+prefer her to his sisters. Yet it was not so much to herself in person
+as to her male issue that Edward's attention was originally directed.
+Never yet had a Queen ruled in England in her own right, and even now
+there was a wish to avoid it. Edward arranged that, if he himself died
+without male heirs, the male heirs of Lady Frances, and if she too left
+none, then those of Lady Jane, should succeed. He hoped still to live
+till such an heir should be eighteen years old, in which case he could
+enter on the government immediately after himself. If his death occurred
+earlier, Jane was to conduct the administration during the interval, not
+as Queen but as Regent, and conjointly with a Council of government
+still to be named by him.<a name="FNanchor_155_155" id="FNanchor_155_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a>
+This Council of executors was to avoid
+all war, all other change, and especially not to alter the established
+religion in any point: rather it was to devote itself to completing the
+ecclesiastical legislation in conformity
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+with that religion, and to the abolition of the Papal
+claims.<a name="FNanchor_156_156" id="FNanchor_156_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a>
+We see that Edward's view was, like
+that of many other sovereigns, to secure the continuance of his
+political and religious system of government for long years after his
+own death. The members of the Privy Council, before whom these
+arrangements were laid in the King's handwriting, promised on their oath
+and their honour to carry them out in every article, and to defend them
+with all their power.<a name="FNanchor_157_157" id="FNanchor_157_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a></p>
+
+<p>And if the affair had been undertaken in this manner, who could say that
+it might not have succeeded? Northumberland did not neglect to form a
+strong family interest in favour of the new combination that he
+designed. He married his own daughter to Lord Hastings, who was
+descended from the house of York, and one of Jane's sisters with the son
+of the powerful Earl of Pembroke. He could reckon on the support of the
+King of France, to whom the succession of a niece of the Emperor was
+odious, and on the consent of the Privy Council, which was in great part
+dependent on him; how could the Protestant feeling have failed to gain
+him a large party in the country, especially since something might be
+said for the plan itself.</p>
+
+<p>But Edward VI's malady developed quicker than was expected. At the last
+moment he was further induced to award the succession not to the male
+heirs of Lady Jane, but to herself and her male
+heirs.<a name="FNanchor_158_158" id="FNanchor_158_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a>
+He died with the prayer that God would guard England from the Papacy.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Jane Grey had hitherto devoted her days to study. For father and
+mother were severe and found much in her to blame: on the other hand
+quiet hours of inward satisfaction were given her by the instructions of
+a teacher, always alike kindly disposed, who initiated her into learning
+and an acquaintance with literature: bending over her Plato, she did not
+miss the amusement of the chase which others were enjoying
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+in the Park. After her marriage too, which did not make her exactly happy, she still
+lived thus with her thoughts withdrawn from the world, when she was one
+day summoned to Sion-House where she found a great and brilliant
+assembly. She still knew nothing of the King's death. What were her
+feelings, when she was told that Edward VI was dead; that to secure the
+kingdom from the Popish faith and the government of his two sisters who
+were not legitimate, he had declared her, Lady Jane, his heiress, and
+when the great dignitaries of the realm bent their knees and reverenced
+her as their Queen! At times they had already talked to her of her claim
+to the throne, but she had never thought much of it. When it now thus
+became a reality, her whole soul was overcome by it: she fell to the
+ground and burst into a flood of tears. Whether she had a full right to
+the throne, she could not judge: what she felt was her incapacity to
+rule. But whilst she uttered this, a different feeling passed through
+her, as she has told us herself: she prayed in the depths of her soul
+that, if the highest office belonged to her legally, God might give her
+the grace to administer it to his honour. The next day she betook
+herself by water to the Tower, and received the homage offered her. The
+heralds proclaimed her accession in the capital.</p>
+
+<p>But here this proclamation was received in silence and even with
+murmurs. The succession had been settled by Henry VIII on the basis of
+an act of Parliament: nothing else was expected but that this would be
+adhered to, and Mary succeed her brother: that Edward without any legal
+authorisation of a similar kind had now put a distant relative in his
+sister's place, seemed an open robbery of the lawful heir. It made no
+impression, that at the proclamation men were reminded of the Popery of
+the Princess Mary and her intention to restore the Papal power.
+Religious discord had not yet become so strong in England as to make men
+forget the fundamental principles of right on its account. The man who
+brought the princess the first news of Edward's death (which was still
+kept secret) remarks expressly in telling it, that he did not love her
+religion but abhorred the attempt to set aside lawful heirs. Mary
+prudently betook herself to Norfolk,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+where she had the most determined friends, to a castle on the sea; so as to be able, if her opponent
+should maintain the upper hand, to escape to the Emperor. But every one
+declared for her, the Catholics who saw in her the born champion of
+their religion and were strongest in those very districts, and the
+Protestants to whom the princess made some, though not binding,
+promises; she was proclaimed Queen in Norwich. If the Duke of
+Northumberland wished to carry out his projects, it was necessary for
+him to suppress this movement by force. He at once took the field for
+this purpose, with a fine body of artillery and two thousand infantry,
+and occupied a position in the neighbourhood of Cambridge.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed as though the crown would once more be fought for in open
+field just as it had been a century before, and that in fact, just as
+then, the neighbouring powers would interfere. On Northumberland's side
+French help was expected; on the other hand application was already made
+to the Emperor to send armed troops over the sea to his
+cousin.<a name="FNanchor_159_159" id="FNanchor_159_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a>
+It was not however this time to reach such a point: while the combination
+attempted in favour of Jane Grey met with strong popular resistance, it
+was shattered to pieces by internal discord. If the new Queen had such a
+good right as they told her, she would share it with none, not even with
+her husband; she would not appear as a creature of the Dudleys and a
+tool of their ambition: she would only name him a duke and would not
+allow him to be crowned with her as King. We recognise in this her high
+idea of the kingly power and its divine right; but we can also easily
+conceive that the discord which broke out on this point in the family
+could not but act on the members of the Privy Council, of whom only a
+section were in complete understanding with Northumberland, while the
+rest had merely yielded to the ascendancy of his power. While the duke
+was expecting armed reinforcements from London, a complete revolution
+took place there: under
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+the management of the Privy Council Mary was
+proclaimed Queen, and a summons sent to Northumberland to submit to her.
+The fleet which was destined to prevent Mary's flight had already
+declared for her; the troops which were called out in the counties to
+fight against her crossed over to her side; in Northumberland's camp the
+same opinion gained the upper hand: the duke felt himself incapable of
+withstanding it: he allowed himself to be carried along by it like the
+rest. Men saw the extraordinary spectacle of the man who had marched out
+to destroy Mary now ordering her accession to be proclaimed in his
+encampment, he accompanied the herald and himself cried out Mary's
+name.<a name="FNanchor_160_160" id="FNanchor_160_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a>
+These English nobles have boundless ambition, they grasp with
+bold hand at the highest prizes: but they have no inner power of
+resistance, as against the course of events and public opinion they have
+no will of their own. However the duke might behave, he could not save
+either his freedom or his life. Soon afterwards Mary entered London amid
+the joyous shouts of the people. She was still united as closely as
+possible with her sister Elizabeth: they appeared together hand in hand.
+Jane Grey remained as a prisoner in the Tower, which she had entered as
+Queen. Never did the natural right of succession, as it was established
+by the testator of the inheritance and the Parliament, obtain a greater
+triumph.</p>
+
+<p>After the succession was decided, the great questions of government came
+into the foreground, above all the question what position Mary should
+take up with regard to religious matters.</p>
+
+<p>Among the Protestants the opinion prevailed that it could not yet be
+known whether she would not let religion remain in the state in which
+she found it. Towns where the Protestant feeling was strongest joyfully
+attached themselves to her in this expectation.</p>
+
+<p>Her cousin, the Emperor Charles, who justly regarded her accession as a
+victory, and who from the first moment exercised the greatest influence
+on her resolutions, advised her before
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+all things to moderate her
+Catholic zeal. She should reflect that many of the lords by whom she was
+now supported, a part of the Privy Council, and the people of London,
+were Protestants, and guard against estranging them. She should at once
+call a Parliament to show that she meant to rule in the accustomed
+manner, and take care that the Northern counties, as well as Cornwall,
+where men still held the most firmly to Catholicism, were represented in
+it.</p>
+
+<p>This good advice was not without influence on the Queen. In a tumult
+which arose two days after her arrival in the city, she had the Lord
+Mayor summoned in order to tell him that she would force no man's
+conscience, she hoped that the people would through good instruction
+come back to the religion which she herself professed with full
+conviction. When she repeated this soon after in a proclamation, she
+added that these things must shortly be ordered by common consent. But
+of what kind this order would be, there could be already no doubt after
+these words: she desired a change, but intended to bring it about in a
+legal manner.</p>
+
+<p>In all the steps taken by her government her Catholic sympathies
+predominated. She felt no scruple in using the spiritual rights, which
+the constitution gave her, in favour of Catholicism. As 'Head of the
+Church next under God,' Mary forbade all preaching and interpretation of
+Scripture without special permission. But she entrusted the power of
+giving this permission to the same Bishop Gardiner who had offered the
+most persevering resistance to the Protestant tendencies of the previous
+government. The antagonism between the bishops entered again on an
+entirely new phase: the Catholics rose, the Protestants were depressed
+to the uttermost. Tonstal, Heath, and Day were, like Gardiner, restored
+to their sees on the ground of the protests lodged against the
+proceedings taken with reference to them at their deprivation, protests
+which were regarded as valid. Ridley had to give up the see of London
+again to Bonner: the Bishops of Gloucester and Exeter experienced the
+royal displeasure; not merely Latimer but also Cranmer were imprisoned
+in the Tower. Everywhere the images were replaced, in many churches the
+celebration of the mass was revived.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+Those preachers who declared
+themselves against it had to follow their bishops to prison. The
+Calvinistic model-congregation was dissolved. The foreign scholars
+quitted the country; and their most zealous followers also fled to the
+continent before the coming storm of persecution.</p>
+
+<p>At the beginning of October the Queen's coronation took place with the
+old customary ceremonies, for which the Emperor's leading minister,
+Granvella, Bishop of Arras, sent over a vase of consecrated oil, on the
+mystical meaning of which great stress was again laid. The Queen had
+some scruples about the coronation, as she wished previously to get rid
+of her title, 'Head of the Church': but the Emperor saw danger in delay;
+he thought the declaration she had in the deepest secrecy made to the
+Roman See, that she meant to re-establish its authority, removed any
+religious scruple. He fully approved of the coronation preceding the
+Parliament, and recommended the Queen, in virtue of her constitutional
+right, without any delay to name bishops and prelates, who might be
+useful to her at its impending meeting.</p>
+
+<p>But the supreme power once constituted, as formerly in the civil wars,
+so also in the times of the Reformation movement, had always exercised a
+decisive influence on the composition of the Parliamentary assemblies;
+would not this then be the case when it had declared itself again
+Catholic? No doubt the government, at the head of which Gardiner
+appeared as Lord Chancellor, used all the means at its disposal to guide
+the elections according to its views. It appears to have been with the
+same motive that the Queen in a proclamation, which generally breathed
+nothing but benevolence, remitted payment of the subsidies last voted
+under her brother. Yet we can hardly attribute the result wholly to
+this. Parliamentary elections are wont to receive their impulse from the
+mistakes of the last administration and the evils that have come to
+light: and much had undeniably been done under Edward VI which could not
+but call forth discontent. The ferment at home was increased by
+financial disorder: church property had suffered enormous losses. But
+above all the supreme power had taken a sudden start in breaking through
+its ancient bounds. And, last of all, the Protestant
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+tendencies had
+allied themselves with an undertaking which ran directly counter to the
+customary law and to previous Parliamentary enactments. And so it might
+come to pass that the same feelings swayed the elections which had
+mainly brought about Mary's accession.</p>
+
+<p>But, after all, the result of these elections was not such as to make a
+complete return to the Papal authority probable. The Emperor Charles,
+who mainly guided the Queen's steps, warned her from attempting it. She
+had prayed him to communicate to her the Pope's declarations issued in
+favour of her hereditary right: he sent them to her, but with the advice
+to make no use of them, since they might involve her in difficulties
+without end. It seemed to him sufficient if the Parliament simply
+repealed the enactments which had formerly been passed respecting the
+invalidity of her mother's marriage with her father. In the bill which
+was drawn up on this point in the Upper House it was merely stated that
+the marriage, in itself valid and approved by the wisest persons of the
+realm, had been made displeasing to the King through evil influences and
+annulled by a sentence of Archbishop Cranmer, on whom the greatest blame
+fell. To many men this seemed already going too far, since together with
+the dispensation the old church authority was again recognised: but as
+there was not a word about the Pope in it, this was less apparent: the
+bill was passed unanimously. The act might be regarded as a political
+one. On the other hand religion was very directly affected by the
+proposal to repeal the alterations in the church service which had been
+introduced under Edward VI, and to abolish the Common Prayer-book. On
+this ensued the hottest conflict. Once the proposal had to be laid
+aside: when it was resumed, the debate on it lasted six days: a third of
+the members were steadily against it. But in the majority the opinion
+again prevailed that Henry VIII's church constitution&mdash;retention of the
+Catholic doctrines and emancipation from the Papacy&mdash;was the most
+suitable for England: a resolution was carried to the effect that only
+such books as were in use under Henry VIII should be henceforth used in
+the church. The new forms of divine service, which contained a clearly
+marked body of doctrine, were abolished and the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+old ones restored.</p>
+
+<p>The position which the Parliament took up in relation to another
+scarcely less important question coincided with this sense of national
+independence.</p>
+
+<p>It was a very widespread wish in England that the Queen should give her
+hand to young Courtenay, son of that Marquis of Exeter who had himself
+once thought of marrying Mary against her father's wishes. He was a
+young man of suitable age, handsome figure, and mental activity; Mary
+had not merely freed him from the prison in which her brother had kept
+him, but also endowed him with the Earldom of Devon, one of his father's
+possessions; in this act many saw a token of personal inclination.
+Bishop Gardiner was decidedly in his favour, and we can conceive how a
+great ecclesiastic, who had the power of the state in his hands, wished
+to altogether exclude every foreign influence; he of course knew that
+Courtenay would also conform in church matters.</p>
+
+<p>Gardiner spoke once with the Queen about it and was very pressing: she
+was absolutely against it. The old chronicle is entirely in error when
+it repeats the then widespread rumour of Mary's inclination for
+Courtenay. Mary told the Imperial ambassador that she was altogether
+ignorant of what love was; she had never seen Courtenay but once in her
+life, at the moment when she released him. She intended to marry, since
+she was assured that the welfare of the realm required it, but not an
+Englishman, not one who was a subject. As in other things, so in this,
+she requested the Emperor to give her his advice.</p>
+
+<p>Charles V would not have been absolutely against the plan of his cousin
+giving her hand to an English lord, whom England might obey more easily
+than a stranger: but, when she showed such an aversion to it, he did not
+hesitate for a moment as to what advice to give her. One of his
+brother's sons was taken into consideration, but rejected by him on the
+ground that there was already much ill-will against Spain stirring in
+the Netherlands, and a union of the German line with England might some
+day make it difficult for his own son to maintain those provinces: he
+therefore proposed him to the Queen.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+Don Philip, not yet thirty but
+already a widower for the second time, was just then negociating for a
+marriage with a Portuguese princess. These negociations were broken off
+and counter ones opened with England. Mary showed a joyful inclination
+to it at the first word: it was to this that her secret thoughts had
+turned.</p>
+
+<p>It looked as if the dynastic union of the Burgundian-Spanish house with
+the English, which was also a political alliance and had been violently
+broken off at the same time with that alliance, would now be restored
+more closely than before, and this time for ever. Men took up the idea
+that Philip's eldest son was to continue the Spanish line, as Ferdinand
+and his sons the German, but that from the new marriage, if it should be
+blest with offspring, an English line of the house of Burgundy was to
+proceed: a prospect of the extension of the power of England and of her
+influence on the continent, which it was expected would set aside all
+opposition.</p>
+
+<p>In England however every voice was against it, among nobles and commons,
+people and Parliament, high and low. The imperial court fully believed
+that it was Gardiner who brought the matter forward in Parliament. The
+House resolved to send a deputation to the Queen with the request that
+she would marry an Englishman. Mary, who had as high an idea of her
+prerogative as any of her predecessors or successors, felt herself
+almost insulted; she interrupted the speech as soon as she understood
+its purport, and declared that Parliament was taking too much on itself
+in wishing to give her advice in this matter: only with God, from whom
+she derived her crown, would she take counsel
+thereon.<a name="FNanchor_161_161" id="FNanchor_161_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_161_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a>
+When the Parliament, not satisfied with this, prepared a fresh application to
+her, it was dissolved.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+But if this happened among men who adhered to her views in other
+points, what would those say who saw themselves, contrary to their
+expectation, oppressed and endangered by the Queen's measures in
+religious matters?</p>
+
+<p>The agitation was so general that men caught at the hope of putting an
+end to all that was begun by a sudden rising. We find a statement which
+must not be lightly rejected, that the English nobility, which had taken
+great part in the Reformation movement and put itself in possession of
+much church property, came to an understanding at Christmas 1553, and
+decided on a general rising on the next Palm Sunday, 18th
+March:<a name="FNanchor_162_162" id="FNanchor_162_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a>
+thus doing as the French, German, Netherlandish and Scotch nobility had
+done, who took the initiative in this matter. In Cornwall Peter Carew
+was to have the lead, in the Midland Counties the Duke of Suffolk, in
+Kent Thomas Wyatt. As the Queen's Privy Council was even now not
+unanimous, they hoped to bring about an overthrow of the government
+before it was yet firmly established: and either to compel the Queen to
+dismiss her evil counsellors and give up the Spanish marriage, or if she
+remained obstinate to put her sister Elizabeth in her place, who would
+then marry Courtenay. The French, who saw in the Queen's marriage with
+the prince of Spain a danger for themselves, urged on the movement, and
+had a secret understanding with the rebels; their plan was to support it
+by an incursion from Scotland where they were then the masters, and an
+attack on Calais.<a name="FNanchor_163_163" id="FNanchor_163_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a>
+But as often happens with such comprehensive
+plans, the government detected them; the attempt to carry them out had
+to be made before the preparations were complete; in most of the places
+where an effort was made it was suppressed without much trouble. Carew
+fled to France; Suffolk, who in vain tried to draw Coventry over to his
+side, was captured. On the other hand Sir Thomas Wyatt'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>s rising in Kent
+was formidable. He collected a couple of thousand men, defeated the
+royal troops, some of whom joined him, and as he had the sympathies of a
+great part of the inhabitants of London with him, he attempted forthwith
+an attack on the capital. But the new order of things had too firm a
+legal foundation to be so easily overthrown. The Queen betook herself to
+the Guildhall and addressed the assembled people, decided as she was and
+confident in the goodness of her cause; the general feeling was in
+favour of supporting her. All armed for defence. For a couple of days,
+during which Wyatt lay before the city, every one was under arms, mayor,
+aldermen and people; the lawyers went to the courts with armour under
+their robes: priests were seen celebrating mass with mail under their
+church vestments. The Queen had some trustworthy troops, whose leader,
+the Earl of Pembroke, told her he would never show his face to her again
+if he did not free her from these rebels. When Wyatt at last appeared in
+Hyde Park with exhausted and badly fed men, he was met and beaten by an
+overwhelming body of Pembroke's troops; with a part of his followers he
+was driven into the city, and there made prisoner without much
+bloodshed.</p>
+
+<p>It has always been reckoned to the Queen's credit that amid the alarm of
+these days she never quitted the unfortified palace. She had now an
+opportunity to rid herself completely of Northumberland's faction. Jane
+Grey, whose name at least had been mentioned, her father Suffolk, her
+uncle Thomas Grey, were executed; Wyatt also and a great number of the
+prisoners paid for their rebellion with their
+lives.<a name="FNanchor_164_164" id="FNanchor_164_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_155_155" id="Footnote_155_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a> King Edward: My devise for the succession: in 'Chronicle
+of Queen Anna, with illustrative documents and notes' by Nicholls, 89.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_156_156" id="Footnote_156_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a> King Edward's Minutes for his last will. In 'Chronicle of
+Queen Anna, with illustrative documents and notes' by Nicholls, 101.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_157_157" id="Footnote_157_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a> Engagement of the council, the signatures all autograph.
+Ibid. 90.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_158_158" id="Footnote_158_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a> This was done by a correction. The original text was 'to
+the Lady Jane's heires masle;' instead of 'Jane's,' the King now wrote
+'to the Lady Jane and her h. m. (Nares' Burghley i. 452. Nicholls, 87.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_159_159" id="Footnote_159_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a> Lettre écrite à l'empereur par ses ambassadeurs en
+Angleterre 19 Juill. Luy (au roi de France) sera facile, d'envoyer 2 ou
+3 m. Français et quelques gens de chevaux. Plusieurs de ce royaume sont
+d'opinion, si V. M. assistoit ma dite dame (Mary) de gens et de secours
+contre le dit duc, la dite dame ne diminueroit en rien l'affection du
+peuple.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_160_160" id="Footnote_160_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a> Proclama avec le dict herault Mm. Marie à haute voix.
+Lettre des ambassadeurs a l'empereur. Papiers d'état de Granvelle iv.
+58.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_161_161" id="Footnote_161_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a> To the reports of the French and Spanish ambassadors
+(compare Ambassades de M<sup>ss</sup>. de Noailles en Angleterre ii. 269, Turner
+ii. 204, Froude vi. 124) may be added that of the Venetian: 'ch'ella si
+consiglierebbe con dio e non con altri.' I combine this with Noailles'
+account; for these ambassadors were immediately informed by their
+friends of the deputation and have noted down that part of the Queen's
+speech which made most impression on the bystanders.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_162_162" id="Footnote_162_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a> Soranzo Relatione 79, a testimony worth consideration, as
+Soranzo stood in a certain connexion with the rebels.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_163_163" id="Footnote_163_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a> So Simon Renard reports 24th Feb. 1553-4 to the Emperor
+after Wyatt's confession. 'Le roy feroit emprinse de coustel d'Escosse
+et de coustel de Guyenne (it should without doubt be Guisnes) et
+Calais': in Tytler ii. 207. Wyatt's statements in the 'State Trials'
+refer to a confession which is not given there, and from which the
+ambassador may have taken his account.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_164_164" id="Footnote_164_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a> Renard à l'empereur, 8 Feb. The communications in Tytler,
+which come from Brussels, and the Papiers d'état de Granvelle, which
+come from Besançon, supplement each other, yet even when taken both
+together they are still not quite complete.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BII_VIII" id="BII_VIII"></a>
+THE CATHOLIC-SPANISH GOVERNMENT.</p>
+
+<p>The effort to overthrow Mary's throne had strengthened it: for the
+second time she had rallied around it the preponderant majority of the
+nation. And this was all the more surprising, since no one could doubt
+any longer in what direction the Queen's exclusive religious views would
+lead her. In her victory she saw a divine providence, by which it was
+made doubly her duty to persevere, without looking back, in the path she
+had once taken. In full understanding with her Gardiner proceeded
+without further scruple, in the Parliament which met in April 1554, to
+attempt to carry through the two points on which all else depended, the
+abrogation of the Queen's spiritual title, which implied restoration of
+the Pope's authority, and the revival of the old laws against heretics.
+These views and proposals however met with unexpected opposition, both
+in the nation, and no less in the Privy Council and Parliament,
+especially in the Upper House. The lay lords did not wish to make the
+bishops so powerful again as they had once been, and rejected the
+restoration of the Pope's authority unless they previously had security
+for their possession of the confiscated church property. The first
+proposition could not, so far as can be seen, even be properly brought
+forward:<a name="FNanchor_165_165" id="FNanchor_165_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a>
+the second, the revival of the heresy laws, was accepted
+by the Commons over whom Gardiner exercised great influence, but the
+Peers threw it out. It was especially Lords Paget and Arundel who
+opposed Gardiner's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+proposals in the Privy Council and the Lords and
+caused their rejection.</p>
+
+<p>Only in one thing were the two parties united, in recognising the
+marriage contract concluded with Spain: it was passed unanimously by
+Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>In July 1554 Don Philip reached England with a numerous fleet, divided
+into three squadrons, with a brilliant suite on board. At Southampton
+the leader of one of the two parties, the Earl of Arundel, received him;
+Bishop Gardiner, the leader of the other, gave the blessing of the
+church to the marriage in Winchester cathedral. The day before the
+Emperor had resigned the crown of Naples to his son, to make him equal
+with the Queen in rank. How grand it sounded, when the king-at-arms
+proclaimed the united titles: Philip and Mary, King and Queen of
+England, France, Naples, Jerusalem, Ireland! A title with an almost
+Plantagenet sound, but which now however only denoted the closest union
+between the Spanish monarchy and the Catholics of England. Philip was
+solicitous to gain over the different parties and classes of England:
+for he had been told that England was a popular monarchy. He belied his
+Spanish gravity and showed himself, despite the stiffness that was his
+natural characteristic, affable to every man: he tried to make the
+impression, and successfully, that he desired the prosperity of England.
+One of the chief resources of the time, that of securing the most
+considerable persons by means of pensions, he made use of to a great
+extent. Both parties were provided for by annual payments and presents,
+Pembroke and Arundel as well as Derby and Rochester. We are assured that
+this liberality exercised a very advantageous influence on the
+disposition of the country.<a name="FNanchor_166_166" id="FNanchor_166_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a>
+Gardiner looked on it as a slight, that
+he was passed over in the list, for these pensions were considered at
+that time an honour, but this did not prevent him from praising the
+m<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>arriage in his sermons as ordained by heaven for the restoration of
+religion.</p>
+
+<p>All now depended on whether the King's influence would be sufficient to
+carry at the next meeting of Parliament in November, the proposals which
+had been rejected in the last session.</p>
+
+<p>But for this, according to the view not merely of the English lords, but
+of the imperial ambassador and of the Emperor himself, a previous
+condition was indispensable. The English nobles must be relieved from
+all apprehension lest the confiscated ecclesiastical property should
+ever again be wrested from them. Cardinal Pole had been already for some
+time residing in the Netherlands: but he was told that his arrival in
+England would be not merely fruitless but detrimental unless he brought
+with him a sufficient dispensation with regard to this. In Rome the
+concession was opposed on the ground that it would be setting a bad
+precedent. But when it was pointed out that the English confiscations
+did not touch any church lands, but only monastic property, and still
+more that without this concession the restoration of obedience to the
+church could not be attained, Pope Julius III yielded to the request.
+Two less comprehensive forms were rejected by the Emperor: at last one
+was granted which would satisfy the English. The form of the absolution
+which the Pope was to bestow after their submission was previously
+arranged: it was agreed to avoid everything that could remind men of the
+old pretensions and awaken the national antipathies.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the elections to Parliament were completed. The proclamation
+issued gives the ruling points of view without reserve. An invitation to
+elect Catholic members of merit was coupled with the assurance that
+there was no intention of disturbing any kind of property. The means
+lately used for preventing any hostile influence were not yet
+sufficient: the advice was given from Brussels to go back to the older
+and stricter forms.</p>
+
+<p>The leading men of the Upper House were won over: there could be no
+doubt about the tone of the Lower. At their first sitting a resolution
+to release Cardinal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+Pole from the attainder that weighed on him, and
+invite him to return to England, passed without opposition. Now the
+Emperor had no longer any scruple in letting him go. He said as to this
+very matter, that what is undertaken at the wrong time hinders the
+result which might else have been expected; everything has its time: the
+time for this appeared to him now come. From Philip we have a letter to
+his sister Juana in which he extols himself with much satisfaction for
+the share he had taken in recalling the cardinal and restoring the Papal
+authority. 'I and the most illustrious Queen,' he says in it, 'commanded
+the Parliament of the three Estates of the realm to recall him; we
+especially used our efforts with the chief among them to induce them to
+consent to the cardinal's return: at our order prelates and knights
+escorted him to our Court, where he has delivered to us the Breve of his
+Holiness.'&mdash;'We then through the Chancellor of the realm informed the
+Estates of what seemed to us becoming, above all how much it concerned
+themselves to come to a conclusion that would give peace to their
+conscience.'<a name="FNanchor_167_167" id="FNanchor_167_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Parliament declared itself ready to return to the obedience of the
+Roman See, and repeal all the statutes against it, provided that the
+cardinal pronounced a general dispensation, that every man might keep
+without scruple the ecclesiastical property which had fallen to his
+share.<a name="FNanchor_168_168" id="FNanchor_168_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a>
+On this understanding Cardinal Pole was allowed to exercise
+his legatine power, and the King and Queen were entreated to intercede
+that the absolution might be bestowed.</p>
+
+<p>With heartfelt joy Cardinal Pole pronounced it without delay, first at a
+meeting of the Parliament in the palace, then with greater solemnity at
+S. Paul's at a high mass attended by the Court with a brilliant suite;
+among those present were the knights who wore the Burgundian order of
+the Golden Fleece, and those who wore the English Order of the Garter.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+The King stood by the Chancellor when from the outer corridor of the
+church he announced the event and its motives to the great crowds there
+assembled. It made an impression on the imperial ambassadors that no
+outward sign of discontent was heard.</p>
+
+<p>The agreement that now followed bears more of a juridical than of a
+religious character. The jurisdiction was given back to the Pope which
+he possessed before the twentieth year of Henry VIII (1529): the
+statutes by which it was abolished were severally enumerated and
+repealed: on the other hand the Pope's legate in his name consented that
+the owners of church property should not be disturbed in their
+possession, either now or at any future time, either by church councils
+or by Papal decrees. Such property was henceforth to be quite as
+exclusively subject to the jurisdiction of the crown as any other;
+whoever dared to call in question the validity of the title in any
+spiritual court whatever, within or without the realm, was to be
+punished as an enemy of the Queen. The cardinal legate strove long to
+prevent the two enactments, as to the restoration of obedience and the
+title to the ecclesiastical property, from being combined together in
+one Act, since it might look as if the Pope's concession was the price
+of this obedience to him; he once said, he would rather let all remain
+as it was and go back to Rome than yield on this point. But the English
+nobility adhered immoveably to its demand; it wished to prevent all
+danger of the restoration of obedience becoming in any way detrimental
+to its acquisitions, an object which was clearly best secured by
+combining both enactments in a single statute, so that they must stand
+or fall together; even the King's representations effected no alteration
+in this; the cardinal had to comply.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand the King's influence, if we believe himself, had all
+possible success in the other affair, which was at any rate not less
+weighty. 'With the intervention of the Parliament,' he continues in the
+above-mentioned letter, 'we have made a law, I and the most illustrious
+Queen, for the punishment of heretics and all enemies of holy church; we
+have revived the old ordinances of the realm, which will serve this
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+purpose very well.' It was more especially the statute against the
+Lollards, by which Henry V had entered into the closest alliance with
+the hierarchy, that was to be re-enacted by Parliament. Gardiner had not
+been able to carry it through in the previous session, though it was
+known that the Queen wished it. Under the King's influence, who was
+accustomed to the execution of heretics in Spain, the Lords after some
+deliberation let their objections drop and accepted the bill.</p>
+
+<p>If we put together these four great Acts, the abolition of the Common
+Prayer-book, the Spanish marriage, the restoration of obedience to Rome,
+and the revival of the heresy laws, we could hardly doubt the intention
+of the members of the government, and of the Parliament, to return
+completely to the ancient political and religious state of things. With
+some members such an intention may have been the predominant one: to
+assume it in all, or even in the majority, would be an
+error.<a name="FNanchor_169_169" id="FNanchor_169_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a></p>
+
+<p>The agreement then legalised as to ecclesiastical property, and the
+abolition of the monastic system, already formed such an anomaly in the
+Roman Catholic church, that the ecclesiastical condition of England
+would have always retained a very abnormal character. And the obedience
+expressed was by no means complete. For it should have included above
+all a recognition of that right of dispensation, about which the
+original quarrel had broken out, and the revocation of the order of
+succession which was based on its rejection. In fact Gardiner's
+intention was to bring matters to this; being besides a great enemy and
+even persecutor of Elizabeth, he wished to see her illegitimacy
+pronounced in due form;<a name="FNanchor_170_170" id="FNanchor_170_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a>
+the resolutions passed seemed necessarily
+to lead to it. Men however did not proceed this time so logically in
+England. They did not wish to base the future state of the realm on
+Papal decrees, but on the ordinances once
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+enacted by King and Parliament. They could not deceive themselves as to the fact that
+Elizabeth, though she conformed outwardly, yet remained true at heart to
+the Protestant faith; but not on that account would the Parliament deny
+her right to the English throne. It also by no means entertained exactly
+Spanish sentiments. The Emperor expressed the wish that his son might be
+crowned: his ambassador's advice however was against proposing it in
+Parliament; since, with the high ideas entertained in England of the
+rights implied in the coronation, this would never be allowed. In the
+event of the Queen's dying before Philip, and leaving children, the
+guardianship was reserved to him: but even for this object conditions
+had been originally proposed which would have been much more
+advantageous to him: these the Upper House threw out. So little was even
+then the policy of the Queen and King at the same time the policy of the
+nation and Parliament. In the Privy Council the old discords continued.
+The government obtained a greater unity by the fact that Gardiner, who
+now followed the Queen's lead in every respect, carried most of the
+members with him by the authority which her favour gave him. As Paget
+and Arundel, since they could effect nothing, refused to appear any
+more, there always remained a secret support for the discontent that was
+stirring. In the beginning of 1555 traces of a conspiracy in favour of
+Courtenay were again detected: if the inquiry into it led to no
+discovery, it was because&mdash;so it was thought&mdash;the commission entrusted
+with it did not wish to make any.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment the revived heresy-laws began to be put into execution.
+Prosecutions were instituted for statements that under another order of
+things would have been considered as fully authorised. Still more than
+to single offences was attention directed to any variations in doctrine.
+In these proceedings we can remark the points which were then chiefly in
+question.</p>
+
+<p>The first of the accused, one of the earliest and most influential of
+the martyrs, John Rogers, was reminded of the article which speaks of
+the faith in one holy catholic church; he replied that by it was meant
+the universal church of all
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+lands and times, not the Romish, which on
+the contrary had deviated in many points from the main foundation of all
+churches, Holy Scripture. Rowland Taylor, who gloried in a marriage
+blest with children, which Gardiner would not acknowledge to be a
+marriage at all, maintained that Christian antiquity had allowed the
+marriage of priests. Gardiner accused him of ignorance. 'But,' said
+Taylor, 'I have read the Holy Scripture, the Latin and the Greek
+fathers;' a canon of the Nicene council, which was cited on the point,
+he interpreted far more correctly than the bishop. John Hooper was
+called in question because he held divorce to be permissible on the
+ground given in Scripture, and because he found that the view of the
+real presence had no foundation in
+Scripture.<a name="FNanchor_171_171" id="FNanchor_171_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a>
+Their offence was the
+conception of church-communion as resting on the foundation of Scripture
+and extending therefore far beyond Romanism: the most telling defence
+could not save them here, for only the carrying out of old laws was
+concerned, and these unconditionally condemned such opinions. As the
+condemned were being taken back by night to their prison, many
+householders came out of their doors with lights in their hands, to
+greet them with their prayers and thank them for their steadfastness: a
+deep and sorrowful sympathy, but one which scarcely dared to utter
+itself, and thus renounced the attempt to effect anything. Rogers
+suffered death in London, Hooper at his episcopal see of Gloucester,
+Taylor (who on the way showed as much good wit as Sir Thomas More had
+formerly done) in his parish, Saunders at Coventry, Ferrar in the
+market-place at Caermarthen. Their punishment, in every place where they
+had taught, was intended to confirm the doctrines they had rejected.
+There have been more bloody persecutions elsewhere: this was
+distinguished by the fact that many of the more eminent men of the
+nation became its victims. Among them, besides those we have named, were
+Ridley, who was looked on as the most learned scholar in England, the
+eloquent Latimer, Bradford a man of deep piety, Philpot who united
+learning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+and religion. How could Archbishop Cranmer, who had
+contributed almost more than any one to carry through the Reformation,
+who had pronounced the divorce of the Queen's mother, possibly find
+mercy? He persuaded himself of it once; and, yielding as he was, allowed
+himself to be tempted into a recantation, in despite of which he was
+condemned to death. But then there awoke in him also the whole
+consciousness of the truth of his belief. The hand with which he had
+signed the recantation he held firm, and let it burn in unutterable
+agony, as an expiation which he imposed on himself, before the flame of
+the faggots closed over him. The executions extended themselves over the
+whole country and even over the neighbouring islands; the diaries show
+that they continued till 1558. Many could have fled, but wished to
+testify to the firmness of their belief by dying for it, and thus to
+strengthen in their faith the people from whom they were taken away.
+Most of them showed a sublime contempt of death, which inflamed others
+to imitate them. How many would have been prepared to throw themselves
+with their friends into the flames! And no one could say that here there
+was any question of tendencies to revolt. The Protestants had on the
+whole kept themselves far from it: they did not contest the Queen's
+right to the throne; they died as her obedient subjects.</p>
+
+<p>But now what an impression must these executions produce, combined with
+what preceded and followed them.</p>
+
+<p>Gardiner appears in all this imperious, proud, and with that confident
+tone which the possessors of power assume, implying that they regard
+themselves as being also mentally superior; Bonner Bishop of London
+fanatical, without any power of discernment, and almost bloodthirsty.
+His attention was once drawn to the ill effects of his rough acts of
+violence; he replied that he must do God's work without fear of men.
+Under the last government they had both had much to endure: they had
+been deprived by their enemies and thrown into prison: now they employed
+the temporal arm in their own favour; they felt no scruple in sentencing
+their old opponents to death in accordance with the severity of the laws
+which they had again brought into active operation. Such was the issue
+of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+the contest between the bishops under the changing systems of
+government.</p>
+
+<p>As Queen Mary is designated 'The Bloody,' we are astonished when we read
+the authentic descriptions, still extant, of her personal appearance.
+She was a little, slim, delicate, sickly woman, with hair already
+turning grey. She played on the lute, and had even given instruction in
+music; she had a skilful hand; on personal acquaintance she made the
+impression of goodness and mildness. But yet there was something in her
+eyes that could even rouse fear; her voice, which could be heard at a
+great distance, told of something unwomanly in her. She was a good
+speaker in public; never did she show a trace of timidity in danger. The
+troubles she had experienced from her youth, her constant antagonism to
+the authority under which she lived, had especially hardened in her the
+self-will which is recognisable in all the Tudors. A peculiarity found
+elsewhere also in gifted women, that they are weary of all which
+surrounds them at home, and give to what is foreign a sympathy above its
+worth, had become to her a second nature. She rejected with aversion the
+idea of marrying Courtenay, for this reason among others that he was an
+Englishman. She, the Queen of England, had no sympathy for the life, the
+interests, the struggles of her people: she hated them from her
+childhood. All her sympathies were for the nation from which her mother
+came, for its views and manners: her husband was her ideal of a man: we
+are assured that she even overlooked his infidelities to her because he
+did not enter into permanent relations with any other woman. Besides
+this he was the only man who could support her in the great project for
+which she thought herself marked out by God, the restoration of
+Catholicism.<a name="FNanchor_172_172" id="FNanchor_172_172"></a><a href="#Footnote_172_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a>
+This is the meaning of her pledging herself in her
+bedchamber before a crucifix, when she had not yet seen him, to give her
+hand to him and to no other. For with him and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+his fortunes were linked the hopes of a restoration of Catholicism. Mary was absolutely
+determined to do all she could to strengthen it in England. Gardiner
+assures us, and we may believe him in this, that it was not he who
+prompted the revival of the old laws against the Lollards; the chief
+impulse to it came on the contrary from the Queen. And as those laws
+ordered the punishment of heretics by fire, and Parliament had
+consented, and the orthodox bishops offered their aid, it would have
+seemed to her a blameable weakness, if out of feelings of compassion she
+had stood in the way of the execution of those laws, to the suspension
+of which the bishops ascribed the spread of heretical opinions. Many of
+the horrors which accompanied their execution may have remained
+concealed from her; still it cannot be doubted, that the persecutions
+would never have begun without her. No excuse can free her memory from
+the dark shade which rests on it. For that which is done in a
+sovereign's name, with his will and consent, determines his character in
+history.</p>
+
+<p>The conduct of the Queen and her government, without whose help
+ecclesiastical authority would have been null and void, had a result
+that extended far beyond her time: men began to inquire into the claims
+of the temporal power. John Knox, who had now to fly from England before
+a Queen, as he had previously from Scotland before a Queen-regent, and
+whose word was of weight, poured forth his feelings in a piercing call,
+which he himself named 'a blast of the trumpet,' against the right of
+women to the government of a country, which ought to be exercised only
+by men. And while Knox went no further than the immediate case, others
+examined into the powers of all State authority: above all, to prevent
+its taking part in religious persecution, they brought forward the
+principles according to which sovereignty issues originally from the
+people. Mary's government had awakened in Protestantism, and that not
+merely in England, the hostility of political theory.</p>
+
+<p>But besides no man could hide from himself, that discontent, even
+without theory, had grown in England in an alarming manner. The French
+and Imperial ambassadors
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+both gave their courts information of it, the
+former with a kind of satisfaction, the latter with apprehension and
+pain. He laments the bad effect which the religious persecution
+produces, makes pressing objections to it and demands that the bloody
+zeal of the bishops shall be moderated; but the matter was regularly
+proceeding in a kind of legal way; we do not find that he effected
+anything.</p>
+
+<p>The Queen had hitherto flattered herself and her partisans with the hope
+that she would give the country an heir to the throne. When this
+expectation proved fallacious in the summer of 1555 it produced an
+impression which, as the imperial ambassador says, no pen could
+describe. The appearance had been caused by an unhealthy condition of
+body, which was now looked on rather as a prognostic of her fast
+approaching death. It is already clear, remarks the ambassador, that
+least confidence can be placed in those who have been hitherto most
+trusted: many a man still wears a mask: others even show their ill-will
+quite openly. For so badly is the succession at present arranged that my
+lady Elizabeth will without doubt ascend the throne on Mary's death and
+will restore heresy.</p>
+
+<p>While things were in this state, Philip II was led to resolve on going
+to the Netherlands by the vicissitudes of the French war and his
+father's state of health; he wished either to bring about peace, or to
+push the war with energy.</p>
+
+<p>He had hitherto exercised a moderating influence on the government. Not
+to let all fall back into the previous party-strife, he thought it best
+to give the eight leading members of the Privy Council a pre-eminent
+place in the management of business. He could not avoid admitting men of
+both parties even among these; but he had already found a man whom he
+could set over the others and trust with the supreme rule of affairs in
+complete confidence. This was Cardinal Pole, who after Cranmer's death
+received the Archbishopric of Canterbury, long ago bestowed on him at
+Rome, and was released from the duty of again returning to the Roman
+court. He was descended from the house of the Yorkist Suffolks,
+persecuted by the earlier Tudors with great severity; but how
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+completely did this family difference recede before the world-wide
+interests of religion! He served with the most entire devotion a queen
+of the house of Lancaster-Tudor who on her side reposed in him unlimited
+reliance: she wished to have him about her for hours every day. Reginald
+Pole was a man of European and general ecclesiastical culture; he shared
+in a tendency existing within Catholicism itself, which approached very
+nearly to Protestantism on one dogmatic question: we also hear that he
+would gladly have moderated the
+persecution;<a name="FNanchor_173_173" id="FNanchor_173_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a>
+but when it is said,
+that the obstinacy of the Protestants hindered him in this, all that can
+be implied is, that they held fast to a confession which was now
+absolutely condemned by the hierarchic laws, while he was bound and
+resolved to carry these laws into effect. His chief care was above all
+not to be involved in English party-divisions: he therefore usually
+worked with a couple of Italian assistants who shared his sentiments and
+his plans. The union of the ecclesiastical and temporal authority is
+seen once more in Pole, as it had been in Wolsey: he combined the powers
+of a legate with the position of a first minister. His distinguished
+birth, his high ecclesiastical rank, the confidence of the King and
+Queen, enhanced by completely blameless personal
+conduct,<a name="FNanchor_174_174" id="FNanchor_174_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a>
+procured him an authority in the country which seemed almost that of the
+sovereign.</p>
+
+<p>A singular government this, composed of an absent king, who however had
+to be consulted in all weighty matters, a cardinal, and a dying queen
+who lived exclusively in church ideas. Difficulties could not be
+wanting: they arose first in church matters themselves.</p>
+
+<p>We know how much the recognition of the alienation of the church
+property, to which Julius III was brought to consent by the Emperor,
+contributed to the restoration of church obedience; among the English
+nobility it formed the main
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+ground of its submission. But in May 1555
+Pope Paul IV ascended the Papal throne, in whom dislike of the
+Austro-Spanish house was almost a passion, and who wished to base his
+ecclesiastical reputation on the recovery of the alienated church
+property. His third Bull orders its restoration, including the
+possessions of monastic foundations, and the revenues hitherto received
+from them. The English ambassadors who had been sent to Rome under
+wholly different conditions, to announce the restoration of obedience,
+found this Pope there on their arrival. When they mentioned the
+confirmation of the alienation of the monastic property, he answered
+them in plain terms: for himself he would be ready to consent, but it
+lay beyond his power; the property of the church was sacred and
+inviolable, all that belonged to it must be restored to the uttermost
+farthing. And so ecclesiastically minded was Queen Mary that she in her
+heart agreed with the Pope. The monasteries in particular she held to be
+an indispensable part of the church-system, and wished for their
+restoration. Already the fugitive monks were seen returning: a number of
+Benedictines who had remained in the country resumed the dress of their
+Order; the Queen made no secret of her wish to restore the monastery of
+Westminster in particular. Another side of church life was affected by
+the fact that, owing to the suppression of the great abbeys, a number of
+benefices, which were dependent on them, had lost their incomes and had
+fallen into decay. That Henry VIII should have appropriated to the crown
+the tenths and first-fruits, which belonged to the church, seemed to
+Queen Mary unjustifiable; she felt herself straitened in her conscience
+by retaining these revenues, and was prepared to give them back,
+whatever might be the loss to the crown. But she could not by herself
+repeal what had been done under authority of Parliament: in November
+1555 she attempted to gain over that assembly to her view. A number of
+influential members were summoned to the palace, where first Cardinal
+Pole explained to them that the receipt of the first-fruits was
+connected with the State's claim of supremacy over the church, but that,
+after obedience was restored, it had no longer any real justification.
+He put forward some further reasons, and then the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+Queen herself took up
+the word. She laid the greatest stress on her personal wish. She asked
+the Parliament, after having shown obedience to her in so many ways, to
+prove to her that the peace of her soul lay near their hearts, and to
+take this burden from her. But the conception of the crown and its
+property had in England already ceased to be so merely personal. The
+most universally intelligible motive in the whole church-movement was
+the feeling, that the resources of the nation ought to be devoted to
+national purposes, and every one felt that the diminution of the royal
+revenues would have to be made up by Parliamentary grants. In addition
+to this, it appeared to be only the first step to such an universal
+restitution, as Pope Paul IV clearly contemplated and directed. Was
+there not much more to be said for the recovery of the church revenues
+from private hands than for their withdrawal from the crown which used
+them for public purposes?&mdash;A member of the Lower House wished to answer
+the Queen at once after her address: but, as he was not the Speaker, he
+was not allowed to do so.</p>
+
+<p>When the proposal came under discussion in the Lower House, it met with
+lively opposition. A commission was then appointed, to which the Upper
+House sent two earls, two barons, and two bishops, and to which some
+lawyers were added; by these the proposed articles were revised and then
+laid before them again. The decisive sitting was on the 3rd December
+1555. The doors were closed: no stranger was allowed to enter nor any
+member to leave the House. After they had sat in hot debate from early
+morning till three in the afternoon&mdash;just one of those debates, of which
+we have to regret that no detailed account has survived&mdash;the proposal
+was, it is true, accepted, but against such a large minority as was
+hitherto unheard of in the English Parliament, 120 votes to 183. Queen
+and cardinal regarded it as a great victory, for they had carried their
+view: but the tone of the country was still against them. However strong
+the stress which the cardinal laid on the statement that the concession
+of the crown was not to react in any way on private men's ownership of
+church property, the apprehension was nevertheless
+universal,<a name="FNanchor_175_175" id="FNanchor_175_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a>
+that with the Queen's zeal for the monasteries,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+and a consistent carrying
+out of the Pope's principles, things would yet come to this. But the
+interests which would be thus injured were very widespread. It was
+calculated that there were 40,000 families which in one way or another
+owned part of the church property: they would neither relinquish it nor
+allow their title to be called in question. Powerful lords were heard to
+exclaim that they would keep the abbey-lands as long as they had a sword
+by their side. The popular disposition was reflected in the widespread
+rumour, which gained credence, that Edward VI was still alive and would
+soon come back.</p>
+
+<p>From time to time seditious movements showed the insecurity of the
+situation. At the beginning of 1556 traces were detected of a plan for
+plundering the treasury in order to levy troops with the
+money.<a name="FNanchor_176_176" id="FNanchor_176_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a>
+The Western counties were discontented because Courtenay was removed from
+among them: he died subsequently in Italy. Sir Henry Dudley, the Duke of
+Northumberland's cousin, rallied around him some zealous and
+enterprising malcontents, who planned a complete revolution: he found
+secret support in France, whither he
+fled.<a name="FNanchor_177_177" id="FNanchor_177_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a>
+In April 1557 a grandson of the Duke of Buckingham, Thomas Stafford, also coming from France,
+landed and made himself master of Scarborough castle. He had only a
+handful of followers, but he ventured to proclaim himself Protector of
+the realm, which he promised to secure against the tyranny of
+foreigners, and 'the satanic designs of an unlawful Queen.' He was
+crushed without difficulty. But in the general ferment which this
+aroused, it was observed how universal was the wish for a
+change.<a name="FNanchor_178_178" id="FNanchor_178_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span></p><p>Meanwhile foreign affairs took a turn which threatened to involve
+England in a dangerous complication. The peace between the great powers
+had not been concluded: the truce they had made was broken off at the
+instigation of the Pope; hostilities began again, and Philip II returned
+to England for a couple of months to induce her to join in the war
+against France. The diplomatic correspondence shows that the imperial
+court from the beginning valued their near relation to England chiefly
+as the basis of an alliance against France. We can easily understand how
+this early object was now attained. Besides many other previous wrongs,
+Stafford's enterprise, which was ascribed to the intrigues of France,
+was a motive for declaring war against that Power. And a French war
+still retained its old charm for the English: their share in it
+surpassed all expectation. The English land forces co-operated with
+decisive effect in the great victory of S. Quintin, and similarly the
+appearance of the English fleet on the French coasts ensured Philip's
+predominance on the ocean. But it is very doubtful whether this was the
+part the English power should have played at this moment. By his
+father's abdication and retirement into the cloister Philip had become
+lord and master of the Spanish monarchy. Could it be the mission of the
+English to help in consolidating it in his hands? On the foundation then
+laid, and mainly through the peace which France saw herself compelled to
+make, its greatness was built up. For the Spanish monarchy the union
+with England, which rested on the able use to which the existing
+troubles and the personal position of the Queen were turned&mdash;and which,
+strictly speaking, was still a result of the policy of Ferdinand the
+Catholic&mdash;was of indescribable advantage: to the English it brought a
+loss which was severely felt. They had neglected to put Calais in a
+proper state of defence; at the first attack it fell into the hands of
+the French. The greatest value was still laid in England on a possession
+across the sea, which seemed indispensable for the command of the
+Channel; its extension was the main object of Henry VIII's last war:
+that now it was on the contrary utterly lost was felt to be a national
+disaster; the population of the town, which consisted of English, was
+expelled together with the garrison.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+And as Pope Paul IV was now allied with the King of France, the result
+was that he found himself at war with Philip II (whom he tried to chase
+from Naples), and hence with England as well. His hatred to the house of
+Austria, his aversion to the concessions made in England with reference
+to church property, and to the religious position which Cardinal Pole
+had hitherto taken up in the questions at issue within the Catholic
+Church, determined the Pope to interfere in the home affairs of England
+with a strong hand. For these Cardinal Pole was the one indispensable
+man, on whose shoulders the burden of affairs rested. But it was this
+very man whom Paul IV now deprived of his legatine power, on which much
+of his consequence rested, and transferred it to a Franciscan monk.</p>
+
+<p>But what now was the consequent situation of affairs in England! The
+Queen, who recognised no higher authority than that of the Papal See,
+was obliged to have Paul IV's messages intercepted, lest they should
+become known. While the ashes of the reputed heretics were still smoking
+on their Calvaries, the man who represented the Catholic form of
+religion, and was working effectively for its progress, was accused of
+falling away from the orthodox faith, and summoned to Rome to answer for
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile England did not feel herself strong enough, even with the help
+that Philip offered, to attempt the reconquest of Calais. The finances
+were completely disordered by the war; and the Parliament showed little
+zeal in restoring the balance: just before this the Queen had found
+herself obliged even to diminish the amount of a subsidy already as good
+as voted. However unwilling she might be to take the step after her
+previous experiences, she had to decide once more in the autumn of 1558
+on calling a Parliament. Circumstances wore an appearance all the more
+dangerous, as the Scotch were allied with the victorious French: the
+Queen represented to the Commons the need of extraordinary means of
+defence. A number of the leading lords appeared in the Lower House to
+give additional weight to the demand of the Crown by their presence. The
+Commons, though not quite willingly, were proceeding to deliberate on
+the subsidies demanded, when an event happened which relieved them from
+the necessity of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+coming to any resolution.</p>
+
+<p>A tertian or quartan fever was then prevalent in the Netherlands and in
+England, which was very fatal, especially to elderly persons of
+enfeebled health.<a name="FNanchor_179_179" id="FNanchor_179_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a>
+The Queen, who had been for some time visited by
+her usual attacks of illness, could not resist this disease, when
+suffering besides, as she was, from deep affliction at the
+disappointment of all her hopes, and from heart-rending anticipations of
+the future: once more she heard mass in her chamber&mdash;she died before it
+was ended, on the 17 November 1558. Cardinal Pole also was suffering:
+completely crushed by this news he expired the following night. It was
+calculated that thirteen bishops died a little before or after the
+Queen. As if by some predetermined fate the combination of English
+affairs which had been attempted during her government came at once to
+an end.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_165_165" id="Footnote_165_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a> The Queen imputed the chief blame to Paget 'Quand l'on a
+parlé de la peyne des heretiques, il a sollicité les Seigneurs pour non
+y consentir ny donner lieu à peyne de mort' Renard à l'empereur, in
+Tytler ii. 386.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_166_166" id="Footnote_166_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a> Les seigneurs quils ont pension du roy font tels et si
+bons offices es contrées et provinces du roy ou ils ont charge que l'on
+ne oye dire si non que le peuple est content de l'alliance; ce que
+divertit les mauvais.' Renard à l'empereur, 13 Oct. Papiers d'état iv.
+348.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_167_167" id="Footnote_167_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a> Carta del rey Don Felipe a la princesa de Portugal Donna
+Juana su hermana, in Ribadeneyra, Historia del Scisma 381.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_168_168" id="Footnote_168_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a> Renard informs King Ferdinand that this resolution would
+be adopted the 29 Nov (Papiers d'état iv. 344), 'Confiant que la
+dispense soit generale, pour sans scrupule confirmer la possession des
+biens ecclesiastiques es mains de ceux qui les tiennent.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_169_169" id="Footnote_169_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a> 'La chambre haulte y faict difficulté pour ce, que
+l'autorité et jurisdiction des évesques est autorizee et que la peine
+semble trop griefve.' Renard à l'empereur, Papiers d'état iv. 347.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_170_170" id="Footnote_170_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a> Renard, ibid. 341. 'Le chancellier insistoit, que l'on
+declaira Mme. Elizabeth bastarde en ce parlement' They feared
+'l'evidente et congnue contrariété qui seroit en tout le royaume.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_171_171" id="Footnote_171_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a> Condemnatio Johannis Hooper, in Burnet Coll. iii. 246.
+Compare Foxe, Martyrs vol. iii; Soames iv.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_172_172" id="Footnote_172_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a> According to a despatch of Micheli (25 Nov. 1555) she
+says to the Parliament: 'che non ad altro fine dalla Maesta di dio era
+predestinata e riservata alla successione del regno, se non per servirsi
+di lei principalmente nella riduttione alla fede cattolica.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_173_173" id="Footnote_173_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a> Erat tanta in plerisque animorum obstinatio ac
+pertinacia, ut benignitati et clementiae nullum plane locum
+relinquerent.' Vita Poli, in Quirini i. 42.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_174_174" id="Footnote_174_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a> Micheli, Relatione, 'Incontaminatissimo da ogni sorte di
+passione et interessi humani, non prevalendo in lui ni l'autorità de
+principi ni rispetto di sangue ni d'amicizia.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_175_175" id="Footnote_175_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a> 'Assicurando e levando il sospetto, che per quello che
+privatamente ciascuno possedeva, non sarebbe mai molestato ni
+travagliato.' Micheli, despatch 25 Nov., from whose reports I draw my
+notices of these proceedings in general.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_176_176" id="Footnote_176_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a> Micheli, despatch 1556, 7 April, notes 'la maggior parte
+dei gentilhuomini del contado di Dansur (Devonshire) come conscii et
+partecipi della congiura.' 5 Magg. 'Tutta la parte occidentale è in
+sospetto.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_177_177" id="Footnote_177_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a> The Constable to Noailles, Amb. v. 310. 'Le roy a advisé
+d'entretenir doulcement Dudelay et secrettement toute fois, pour s'en
+servir s'il en est de besoing luy donnant moyen d'entretenir aussi par
+de là des intelligences, qu'il faut retenir.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_178_178" id="Footnote_178_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a> Suriano, despatch 29 April 1557. 'Si è scoperto l'animo
+di molti, che non si sono potuti contener di mostrarsi desiderosi di
+veder alteration del stato presente.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_179_179" id="Footnote_179_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a> Godwin 470 'Innumeri perierunt, sed aetate fere
+provectiores et inter eos sacerdotum ingens numerus.'</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="INT_III" id="INT_III"></a>BOOK III.</h2>
+
+<p class='center'><br />QUEEN ELIZABETH. CLOSE CONNEXION OF ENGLISH AND SCOTCH AFFAIRS.</p>
+
+<p>To appreciate the motives which led Henry VIII to attach such importance
+to a male heir, and to exclude his daughter by the Spanish marriage from
+the succession, we need only cast our eyes on what happened under her,
+when in spite of all she had become Queen. The idea with which the
+Tudors had ascended the throne, and administered the realm, that of
+founding a political power strong in itself and alike independent of
+home factions and foreign influence, was sacrificed by Mary to her
+preference for the nation from which her mother came and from which she
+chose her husband. The military power of England served to support the
+Spanish monarchy at a dangerous and doubtful moment in the course of its
+formation. And while Mary's father and brother had made it the object of
+their policy to deprive the hierarchy of all influence over England, she
+on the contrary reinstated it: she put the power and all the resources
+of the State at its disposal. Though historically deeply rooted, the
+Catholic tendency showed itself, through the reactionary rule which it
+brought about and through its alliance with the policy of Spain,
+pernicious to the country. We have seen what losses England suffered by
+it, not merely in its foreign possessions, but&mdash;what was really
+irreparable&mdash;in men of talent and learning, of feeling and greatness of
+soul; and into what a state of weakness abroad and dissolution at home
+it thereby fell. A new order of things must arise, if the national
+element, the creation of which had been the labour of centuries, was not
+to be crushed, and the mighty efforts of later ages were not to succumb
+to religious and political reaction. </p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BIII_I" id="BIII_I"></a>
+ELIZABETH'S ACCESSION. TRIUMPH OF THE REFORMATION.</p>
+
+<p>During Mary's government, which had been endurable only because men
+foresaw its speedy end, all eyes were directed to her younger sister
+Elizabeth. She was the daughter of Anne Boleyn, who bore her under her
+heart when she was crowned as Queen. After many changes, Henry VIII, in
+agreement with Parliament, had recognised her right of inheritance; the
+people had risen against the enterprise of the Duke of Northumberland
+for her as well as for Mary. And it had also been maintained against
+Mary herself. Once, in Wyatt's conspiracy, letters were found, which
+pointed at Elizabeth's having a share in it: she was designated in them
+as the future Queen. The predominant Spanish-Catholic party had her
+examined and would have much wished to find her guilty, in order to rid
+themselves of her for ever. But Elizabeth was not so imprudent as to
+lend her hand to a movement, which if unsuccessful&mdash;a result not hard to
+foresee&mdash;must destroy her own good title. And moreover she, with her
+innate pride, could not possibly have carried out the wishes of the
+French by marrying Courtenay, whom her sister had rejected. The letter,
+which she wrote to Mary at this crisis, is full of unfeignedly loyal
+submission to her Queen, before whom she only wishes to bend her knee,
+to pray her not to let herself be prejudiced by false charges against
+her sister; and yet at the same time it is highminded and great in the
+consciousness of innocence. Mary, who was now no longer her friend, did
+not vouchsafe her a hearing, but sent her to the Tower and subjected her
+to a criminal examination. But however zealously they sought for proofs
+against her, yet they found none: and they dared not touch
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>her life
+unless she were first publicly found guilty. She was clearly the heiress
+to the throne appointed under the authorisation of Parliament: the
+people would not give up the prospects of the future which were linked
+with her. When she appeared in London at this moment of peril,
+surrounded by numerous attendants, in an open litter, with an expression
+in which hopeful buoyant youth mingled with the feeling of innocence and
+distress, pale and proud, she swayed the masses that crowded round her
+with no doubtful sympathy.<a name="FNanchor_180_180" id="FNanchor_180_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a>
+When she passed through the streets
+after her liberation, she was received with an enthusiasm which made the
+Queen jealous on her throne.</p>
+
+<p>Yet Elizabeth was not merely the head of the popular opposition to her
+sister's policy: from the first moment onwards she was in collision with
+another female foe, whose pretensions would determine the relations of
+her life. If Henry VIII formerly in settling the succession passed over
+in silence the rights of his married sister in Scotland, which had now
+come to her granddaughter Mary Stuart, the memory of them was now all
+the more vividly revived by the Catholic party in the country. For with
+the religious reverence which men devoted to the Papacy it was not at
+all possible to reconcile the recognition of Elizabeth, whose very
+existence was as it were at variance with it. Nor was a political motive
+for preferring Mary Stuart wanting. That for which Henry VIII and
+Somerset had striven so zealously, the union of England and Scotland,
+would be thus attained at once. They were not afraid that Scotland might
+thus become predominant; Henry VII at the conclusion of the marriage,
+having his attention drawn to this possible risk, replied with the
+maxim, that the larger and more powerful part always draws the smaller
+after it. The indispensable condition for the development of the English
+power lay in the union of the whole island: this would have ensued in a
+Catholic, not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+in a Protestant, sense. Was not this union of political
+advantage and religious concord likely to influence the Privy Council of
+England, which under Mary was again zealously Catholic, and also to
+influence Queen Mary Tudor herself?</p>
+
+<p>Great political questions however do not usually present themselves to
+men in such perfect clearness, but are seen under the modifying
+circumstances of the moment. It was at that time all important that Mary
+Stuart had married the Dauphin: she would have united England not merely
+with Scotland, but at the same time with France, thus bringing it for
+ever under the influence of that country. How revolting must such a
+prospect have been to all English feeling! England would have become a
+transmarine province of France, it would in time have been absorbed like
+Brittany. Above all, French policy would have completely gained the
+upper hand in Europe. This apprehension induced the Spanish
+statesmen&mdash;Elizabeth's eager enemies as long as they expected their King
+to have issue of Mary Tudor&mdash;when this hope failed, to give the princess
+sympathy and attention. Philip II, when her troubles revived (for both
+Gardiner and Pole were her enemies), informed her through secret
+messengers, that he was her good friend and would not abandon her. Now
+that Mary was failing before all men's eyes, and every one was looking
+forward to her death, it was his evident interest to further Elizabeth's
+accession. In this sense spoke his ambassador Feria, whom he sent at
+this moment to England, before the assembled Privy
+Council;<a name="FNanchor_181_181" id="FNanchor_181_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a>
+even Mary was urged to declare herself to the same effect. From an advice
+written for Elizabeth during the first moments of her reign we see that
+all still looked very dangerous: she was urged in it to possess herself
+of the Tower and there to receive the allegiance of the high officers of
+State, to allow no departure from the English ports, and so on. Men
+expected turbulent movements at home, and were not without apprehension
+of an attempt
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
+at invasion from France. The decision however followed
+without any commotion and on the spot. Though most of its members were
+Catholic, the Privy Council did not hesitate. A few hours after Mary's
+decease the Commons were summoned to the Upper House, to receive a
+communication there: it was, that Mary was dead, and that God had given
+them another Queen, My lady Elizabeth. The Parliament dissolved; the new
+Queen was proclaimed in Westminster and in London. Some days afterwards
+she made her entry into the capital amidst the indescribable rejoicings
+of the people, who greeted her accession as their deliverance and their
+salvation.</p>
+
+<p>But if this, as we see, involved in its very essence a hostile attitude
+towards France and Scotland, on the other hand the question was at once
+laid before the Queen, and in the most personal way imaginable, how far
+she would unite herself with Spain, the great Power which was now on her
+side. Philip resolved, inasmuch as propriety in some measure allowed it,
+to ask for her hand&mdash;not indeed from personal inclination, of which
+there is no trace, but from policy and perhaps from religion: he hoped
+by this means to keep England firm to the Spanish alliance and to
+Catholicism.<a name="FNanchor_182_182" id="FNanchor_182_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a>
+And on the English side also much might be said for
+it. An ally was needed against France, even to obtain a tolerable peace:
+there was some danger that Philip, if rejected by the Queen, might
+perhaps marry a French princess; to be secure against the French claims
+the Queen seemed to need the support of Spain. Her first answer was not
+in the negative. She declared she must consult with Parliament as to the
+King's proposal: but he might be assured that, if she ever married, she
+would not give any one else the preference over him.</p>
+
+<p>Well considered, these words announce at once her resolution not to
+marry. Between Mary Tudor who thought to bring the crown to the heir of
+Spain, and Mary Stuart similarly pledged to the heir of France, nothing
+was left for her&mdash;since she would not wish the husband of her choice to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+be of inferior rank&mdash;but to remain unmarried. From listening to Philip's
+wooing she was kept back by her sister's example, whose marriage had
+destroyed her popularity. And for Elizabeth there would have been yet
+another danger in this alliance. Was not her legitimacy dependent on the
+invalidity of her father's marriage with his brother's widow? It would
+be a very similar case if she were to marry her sister's husband.
+Besides she would have needed the Pope's dispensation for such a
+union&mdash;as Philip had already explained to her&mdash;while her birth and crown
+were the results of a Papal dispensation being declared a nullity. She
+would thus have fallen into a self-contradiction, to which she must have
+succumbed in course of time. When told that Philip II had done her some
+service, she acknowledged it: but when she meditated on it further, she
+found that neither this sovereign nor any other influence whatever would
+have protected her from her enemies, had not the people shown her an
+unlimited devotion.<a name="FNanchor_183_183" id="FNanchor_183_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a>
+This devotion, on which her whole existence
+depended, she would not forfeit. After a little delay she let Philip
+know that she felt some scruples as to the Papal dispensation. She gave
+weight to the point which had been under discussion, but added that she
+was altogether disinclined to marry. We may doubt whether this was her
+immoveably formed resolution, considering how often afterwards she
+negociated about her marriage. It might seem to her allowable, as an
+instrument of policy, to excite hopes which she did not mean to fulfil:
+or her views may in fact have again wavered: but these oscillations in
+her statements can mean nothing when set over against a great necessity:
+her actual conduct shows that she had a vivid insight into it and held
+firm to it with tenacious resolution. She was Henry's daughter, but she
+knew how to keep herself as independent as he had thought that only a
+son could possibly do. There is a deep truth in her phrase, that she is
+wedded to her people: regard to their interests kept her back from any
+other union.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+But if she resolved to give up the relation of close union in which
+England had hitherto stood with Spain, it was indispensable to make
+peace with France. It was impossible to attain this if she insisted on
+the restoration of Calais; she resolved to give it up, at first for a
+term of years. Of almost the same date as her answer of refusal to
+Philip's ambassador is her instruction empowering her ambassador to let
+Calais go, as soon as he saw that the Spaniards would conclude their
+peace with France without stipulating for its restoration. She was able
+to venture this, for however deeply the nation felt the loss of the
+place, the blame for it could not be imputed to her. Without repeating
+what was then asserted, that her distinct aim was to turn the hatred of
+the nation against the late government and its alliance with Spain, we
+may still allow that this must have been the actual result, as it really
+proved to be. It was indeed said that Philip II, who not merely
+concluded peace with France but actually married a daughter of Henry II,
+would make common cause with him against England: but Elizabeth no more
+allowed herself to be misled by this possibility, which also had much
+against it, than Henry VIII had been under similar circumstances. Like
+him and like the founder of her family, she took up an independent
+position between the two powers, equally ready according to
+circumstances for war or peace with one or the other.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile she had already proceeded to measures which could never have
+been reconciled with the Spanish alliance, and to ecclesiastical changes
+which first gave her position its true character.</p>
+
+<p>Her earliest intimation of again deviating from the Church was given by
+restoring, like a devoted daughter, her father's monument, which Mary
+had levelled with the ground. A second soon followed, which at once
+touched on the chief doctrine in dispute. Before attending a solemn high
+mass she required the officiating bishop to omit the elevation of the
+host. As he refused, she left the church at the moment the ceremony was
+being consummated. To check the religious strife which began to fill the
+pulpits she forbade preaching, like her predecessors; but she allowed
+the Sunday Lessons, the Litany, and the Creed to be read in English.
+Elizabeth had hitherto conformed to the restored Catholic
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span> ritual: it
+could not be quite said that she belonged to either of the existing
+confessions. She always declared that she had read no controversial
+writings. But she had occupied herself with the documents of the early
+Church, with the Greek and Latin Fathers, and was thoroughly convinced
+that the Romanism of the later centuries had gone far astray from this
+pattern. She had made up her mind, not as to every point of doctrine,
+but as to its general direction: she believed too that she was upheld
+and guarded by God, to carry out this change. 'How wonderful are God's
+ordinances,' she exclaimed, when she heard that the crown had fallen to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>What course however was now to be taken was a question which, owing to
+the antagonism of the factions and the close connexion of all
+ecclesiastical and political matters, required the most mature
+consideration.</p>
+
+<p>The Queen was advised simply to revert to Edward VI's regulations, and
+to declare all things null and void that had been enacted under Mary,
+mainly on the ground that they had been enacted in violation of legal
+forms. A speech was laid before her, in which the validity of the last
+elections was disputed, since qualified members had been excluded from
+the sittings of both houses, although they were good Englishmen: the
+later proclamations of summons were held to be null, because in them the
+formula 'Supreme Head of the English Church' had been arbitrarily
+omitted, without a previous resolution of Parliament, though on this
+title so much depended for the commonwealth and people: but no one could
+give up a right which concerned a third person or the public interest;
+through these errors, which Mary had committed in her blindness, all
+that had then been determined lost its force and
+authority.<a name="FNanchor_184_184" id="FNanchor_184_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a>
+But the Queen and her counsellors did not wish to go so far. They remarked that
+to declare a Parliament invalid for some errors of form was a step of
+such consequence as to make the whole government of the nation insecure.
+But even without this it was not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+the Queen's purpose merely to revert
+to the forms which had been adopted under her brother. She did not share
+all the opinions and doctrines which had then obtained the upper hand:
+she held far more to ceremonies and outward forms than Edward VI or his
+counsellors: she wished to avoid a rude antagonism which would have
+called forth the resistance of the Catholics.</p>
+
+<p>In the Parliament that met immediately after the coronation (which was
+still celebrated by a Catholic bishop), they began with the question
+which had most occupied the late assembly, namely, should the Church
+revenues that had been attached to the crown be restored to it. The
+Queen's proposal, that they should be left to the crown, was quite the
+view of the assembly and obtained their full consent.</p>
+
+<p>The Parliamentary form of government however had also the greatest
+influence on religious affairs. Having risen originally in opposition to
+Rome, the Parliament, after the vicissitudes of the civil wars, first
+recovered its full importance when it took the side of the crown in its
+struggle with the Papacy. It did not so much concern itself with Dogma
+for its own sake: it had thought it possible to unite the retention of
+Catholicism with national independence. Under Mary every man had become
+conscious that this would be impossible. It was just then that the
+Parliament passed from its previous compliant mood into opposition,
+which was not yet successful because it was only that of the minority,
+but which prepared the way for the coming change of tone. It attached
+itself joyfully to the new Queen, whose birth necessarily made her adopt
+a policy which took away all apprehensions of a union with the Romish
+See injurious to the country.</p>
+
+<p>The complete antagonism between the Papal and the Parliamentary powers,
+of which one had swayed past centuries and the other was to sway the
+future, is shown by the conduct of the Pope, when Elizabeth announced
+her accession to him. In his answer he reproached her with it as
+presumption, reverted to the decision of his predecessors by which she
+was declared illegitimate, required that the whole matter should be
+referred to him, and even mentioned England's feudal relation to the
+Papacy:<a name="FNanchor_185_185" id="FNanchor_185_185"></a><a href="#Footnote_185_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a>
+but Parliament, which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+had rejected this claim centuries
+before, acknowledged Elizabeth as legitimately sprung from the royal
+blood, and as Queen by the law of God and of the land; they pledged
+themselves to defend her title and right with their lives and property.</p>
+
+<p>Owing to this the tendencies towards separation from Rome were already
+sure to gain the superiority: the Catholic members of the Privy Council,
+to whom Elizabeth owed her first recognition, could not contend
+effectively against them. But besides this, Elizabeth had joined with
+them a number of men of her own choice and her own views, who like
+herself had not openly opposed the existing system, but disapproved it;
+they were mainly her personal friends, who now took the direction of
+affairs into their hands; the change which they prepared looked moderate
+but was decided.</p>
+
+<p>Elizabeth rejected the title of 'Supreme Head of the Church,' because it
+not merely aroused the aversion of the Catholics, but also gave offence
+to many zealous Protestants; it made however no essential difference
+when she replaced it by the formula 'in all causes as well
+ecclesiastical as civil, supreme.' Parliament declared that the right of
+visiting and reforming the Church was attached to the crown and could be
+exercised by it through ecclesiastical commissioners. The clergy, high
+and low, were to swear to the ecclesiastical supremacy, and abjure all
+foreign authority and jurisdiction. The punishment for refusing the oath
+was defined: it was not to be punished with death as under Henry VIII,
+but with the loss of office and property. All Mary's acts in favour of
+an independent legislation and jurisdiction of the spiritualty were
+repealed. The crown appropriated to itself, with consent of Parliament,
+complete supremacy over the clergy of the land.</p>
+
+<p>The Parliament allowed indeed that it did not belong to it to determine
+concerning matters really ecclesiastical; but it held itself authorised,
+much like the Great-Councils of Switzerland, to order a conference of
+both parties, before which the most pressing questions of the moment, on
+the power of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+national Churches, and the nature of the Mass, should be laid.</p>
+
+<p>The Catholic bishops disliked the whole proceeding, as may be imagined,
+since these points had been so long settled; and they disliked no less
+the interference of the temporal power, and lastly the presidency of a
+royal minister, Nicolas Bacon. They had no mind to commit themselves to
+an interchange of writings: their declarations by word of mouth were
+more peremptory than convincing. In general they were not well
+represented since the deaths of Pole and Gardiner. On the other hand the
+Protestants, of whom many had become masters of the controverted
+questions during the exile from which they had now returned, put forward
+explicit statements which were completely to the point. They laid stress
+chiefly on the distinction between the universal, truly Catholic, Church
+and the Romish: they sought to reach firm ground in Christian antiquity
+prior to the hierarchic centuries. While they claimed a more
+comprehensive communion than that of Romanism, as that in which true
+Catholicity exists, they sought at the same time to establish a
+narrower, national, body which should have the right of independent
+decision as to ritual. Nearly all depended on the question, how far a
+country, which forms a separate community and thus has a separate
+Church, has the right to alter established ceremonies and usages; they
+deduced such an authority from this fact among others, that the Church
+in the first centuries was ruled by provincial councils. The project of
+calling a national council was proposed in Germany but never carried
+out: in England men considered the idea of a national decree, mainly in
+reference to ritual, as superior to all others. But we know how much the
+conception of ritual covered. The question whether Edward VI's
+Prayer-book should be restored or not, was at the same time decisive as
+to what doctrinal view should be henceforth
+followed.<a name="FNanchor_186_186" id="FNanchor_186_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Catholic bishops set themselves in vain against the progress of
+these discussions. They withdrew from the conference: but the Parliament
+did not let itself be misled by this:
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+it adopted the popular opinion,
+that they did not know what to answer. At the division in the Upper
+House they held obstinately fast to their opinion: they were left
+however, though only by a few votes, in the
+minority.<a name="FNanchor_187_187" id="FNanchor_187_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a>
+The Act of Uniformity passed, by which the Prayer-book, in the form which should be
+given it by a new revision, was to be universally received from the
+following Midsummer. The bishops raised an opposition yet once more, at
+a sitting of the Privy Council, on the ground that the change was
+against the promises made by Mary to the See of Rome in the name of the
+crown. Elizabeth answered, her sister had in this exceeded her powers:
+she herself was free to revert to the example of her earlier
+predecessors by whom the Papal power was looked on as an usurpation. 'My
+crown,' she exclaimed, 'is subject only to the King of Kings, and to no
+one else:' she made use of the words, 'But as for me and my house, we
+will serve the Lord.' The Protestant bishops had perished at the stake,
+but the victory was theirs even in their graves.</p>
+
+<p>The committee of revision consisted of men, who had then saved
+themselves by flight or by the obscurity of a secluded life. As under
+Edward men came back to the original tendencies prevalent under Henry
+VIII, so they now reverted to the settlement under Edward; yet they
+allowed themselves some alterations, chiefly with the view of making the
+book acceptable to the Catholics as well. Prayers in which the hostility
+of decided Protestantism came forward with especial sharpness, for
+instance that 'against the tyranny of the Bishop of Rome,' were left
+out. The chief alteration was in the formula of the Lord's Supper.
+Elizabeth and her divines were not inclined to let this stand as it was
+read in the second edition of Edward's time, since the mystical act
+there appeared almost as a mere commemorative
+repast.<a name="FNanchor_188_188" id="FNanchor_188_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a>
+They reverted to a form composed from the monuments of Latin antiquity, from Ambrose
+and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+Gregory, in which the real presence was maintained; this which
+already existed in the first edition they united with the view of the
+second. As formerly in the Augsburg confession in Germany, so in England
+at the last recension of the Common Prayer-book an attempt was made to
+keep as near as possible to the traditional system. For the Queen this
+had also a political value: when Philip II sent her a warning, she
+explained that she was only kept back from joining in the mass by a few
+points: she too believed in God's presence in the
+Sacrament.<a name="FNanchor_189_189" id="FNanchor_189_189"></a><a href="#Footnote_189_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a></p>
+
+<p>She was of a similar mind in reference to other matters also. If at
+first, under pressure from zealous Protestants who saw in images an
+occasion for superstition, she ordered their removal, we perceive that
+in a short time she regretted it, especially as it made a bad impression
+in Wales and the Northern counties; in her chapel men again saw the
+cross and the lighted tapers, as before. The marriages entered into by
+priests had given much offence, and not unjustly, as they were often
+inferior unions, little honourable to them, and lowering the dignity of
+their order. Elizabeth would have gladly forbidden them altogether: she
+contented herself with setting limits to them by ordering that a
+previous permission should be requisite, but she always disliked them.
+She felt a natural pleasure in the splendour and order of the existing
+church service. For the future also the spiritualty were to be bound to
+appear&mdash;in the customary dress&mdash;in a manner worthy of God's service,
+with bent knees and with ceremonious devotion. When they proceeded to
+revise the confession drawn up by Cranmer, which two years afterwards
+was raised to a law in the shape of the 'Thirty-nine Articles,' they
+struck out the places that leant to Zwingli's special view; on the other
+hand they added some new propositions, which stated the right of the
+higher powers, and the authority of each kingdom to determine religious
+usages for
+itself.<a name="FNanchor_190_190" id="FNanchor_190_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+For in this consisted the essence of the alteration, that the Civil
+Authority, as it was then composed, decided the church-questions that
+arose, and raised its decision into law.</p>
+
+<p>The Statute was, that no person should hold a public office, whether
+spiritual or temporal, who did not conform to this law. Thirteen
+bishops, four-and-twenty deans, eighty rectors of parishes, and most of
+the heads of colleges resigned. It has been said that this number, about
+two hundred, is not very considerable, since the English clergy held
+9000 benefices and offices; but it comprehended all those who held the
+government of the church and represented the prevalent opinion in it.
+The difficulty arose how to replace the bishops in conformity with the
+principles of the English church constitution as then retained: perhaps
+the difficulty was intentional. There were however two conforming
+bishops who had received the laying on of hands according to the Roman
+ritual, and two others according to the Reformed: these consecrated the
+new Archbishop of Canterbury. It was objected to this act that none of
+them was in actual possession of a bishop's see: the Queen declared
+every defect, whether as to the statutes of the realm or church-usages,
+since time and circumstances demanded it, to be nullified or supplied.
+It was enough that, generally speaking, the mystery of the episcopal
+succession went on without interruption. What was less essential she
+supplied by the prerogative of the crown, as her grandfather had done
+once before. The archbishop consecrated was Dr. Parker, formerly
+chaplain to Anne Boleyn: a thoroughly worthy man, the father of learned
+studies on English antiquities, especially on the Anglo-Saxon times. By
+him the laying on of hands and consecration was bestowed on the other
+bishops who were now elected: they were called on to uphold at the same
+time the idea of episcopacy in its primitive import, and the doctrines
+of the Reformation.</p>
+
+<p>In regard to the election of bishops also Elizabeth went back one step
+from her brother's system; she gave up the right of appointment, and
+restored her father's regulations, by which it is true a strong
+influence was still reserved for the Civil Power. Under her supreme
+authority she wished to see the spiritual principle recognised as such,
+and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+to give it a representation corresponding to its high destiny.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it must needs be. The principle which comes forward for the first
+time, however strong it may appear, has yet to secure its future: it
+must struggle with the other elements of the world around it. It will be
+pressed back, perhaps beaten down: but in the vicissitude of the strife
+it will develop its inborn strength and establish itself for ever.</p>
+
+<p>An Anglican church,&mdash;nationally independent, without giving up its
+connexion with the reformed churches of the continent, and reformed,
+without however letting fall the ancient forms of episcopacy,&mdash;in
+accordance with the ideal, as it was originally understood, was at
+length, after a hard schooling of trials, struggles, and disasters,
+really set on foot.</p>
+
+<p>But now it is clear how closely such a thoroughgoing alteration affected
+the political position. Reckoning on the antipathies, which could not
+but hence arise against Elizabeth in the catholic world, and above all
+on the consent of the Roman See, the French did not hesitate to openly
+recognise the claims of the Dauphiness Mary Stuart to the English
+throne. She was hailed as Queen, when she appeared in public: the
+Dauphin's heralds bore the united arms of England, Ireland, and
+Scotland.<a name="FNanchor_191_191" id="FNanchor_191_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a>
+And this claim became still more important after the
+unexpected death of Henry II, when the Dauphin ascended the French
+throne as Francis II. The Guises, uncles of Mary the new Queen, who saw
+their own greatness in her success and were the very closest adherents
+of the church, got into their hands all the powers of government. The
+danger of their hostility lay above all in this, that the French already
+exercised a predominant influence over Scotch affairs, and hoped in a
+short time to become complete masters of that country in the Queen's
+right. She moreover had already by a formal document transferred to the
+French royal house an eventual right of inheritance to her crown. But if
+matters came to this, the old war of England and France would be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+transferred from the fields of Boulogne and Calais to the Scotch border.
+An invasion of the English territory from that side was the more
+dangerous, as the French would have brought thither, according to their
+custom, German and Swiss troops as well. England had neither fortresses,
+nor disciplined troops, nor even generals of name, who could face such
+an invasion. It was truly said, there was not a wall in England strong
+enough to stand a cannon shot.<a name="FNanchor_192_192" id="FNanchor_192_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a>
+How then if a defeat was sustained
+in the open field? The sympathies of the Catholics would have been
+aroused for France, and general ruin would have ensued.</p>
+
+<p>It was a fortunate thing for Elizabeth that the King of Spain, after she
+had taken up a line of conduct so completely counter to his wishes and
+ideas, did not make common cause with the French as they requested him.
+But she could not promise herself any help from him. Granvella told the
+English as emphatically as possible, that they must provide for
+themselves. Another Spanish statesman expressed his doubt to them
+whether they were able to do so: he really thought England would one day
+become an apple of discord between Spain and France, as Milan then was.
+It was almost a scoff, to compare the Island that had the power of the
+sea with an Italian duchy. But from this very moment she was to take a
+new upward flight. England was again to take her place as a third Power
+between the two great Powers; the opportunity presented itself to her to
+begin open war with one of them, without breaking with the other or even
+being exactly allied with it.</p>
+
+<p>At first it was France that threatened and challenged her.</p>
+
+<p>And to oppose the French, at the point where they might be dangerous, a
+ready means presented itself; England had but to form an alliance with
+those who opposed the French interests in Scotland. As these likewise
+were in opposition to their Queen, it was objected that one sovereign
+ought not to combine with the subjects of another. Elizabeth's leading<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+statesman, William Cecil, who stood ever by her side with his counsel in
+the difficulties of her earlier years, and had guided her steps
+hitherto, made answer that 'the duty of self-preservation required it in
+this case, since Scotland would else be serviceable to France for war
+against England.'</p>
+
+<p>Cecil took into his view alike the past and the future. It was France
+alone, he said, that had prevented the English crown from realising its
+suzerainty over Scotland: whereas the true interest of Scotland herself
+lay in her being united with England as one kingdom. This point of view
+was all the more important, since the religious interest coincided with
+the political. The Scots, with whom they wished to unite themselves,
+were Protestants of the most decided kind. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_180_180" id="Footnote_180_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a> 'Ayant visage pale fier haultain et superbe pour
+desguyser le regret qu'elle a.' Renard to the Emperor 24 Feb. 1554, in
+Tytler ii. 311. He adds, 'si pendant l'occasion s'adonne, elle (la
+reine) ne la punyt et Cortenay, elle ne sera jamais assurée.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_181_181" id="Footnote_181_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a> 'Manifestò el contentamiento grande que tendria el rey de
+saber que se declaba la sucesion en favor de ella (Isabel), cosa que S.
+M. habia descado sempre.' In Gonzalez, Apuntamientos para la historia
+del rey Don Felipe II. Memorias de la real academia de historia, Madrid,
+vii. 253.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_182_182" id="Footnote_182_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a> One of the documents which Mackintosh (History of England
+iii. 25) missed, the commission for the proposal to Elizabeth, which
+gives its contents, was soon after printed in Gonzalez, Documentos I.
+405.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_183_183" id="Footnote_183_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a> Feria: 'Dando a entender, que el pueblo la ha puesto en
+el estado que esta, y de esto no reconoce nada ni a V. M., ni a la
+nobleza del reino.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_184_184" id="Footnote_184_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a> An oration of John Hales to the Queen delivered by a
+certain nobleman, in Foxe, Martyrs iii. 978. 'It most manifestly
+appeareth, that all their doings from the beginning to the end were and
+be of none effect force or autority.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_185_185" id="Footnote_185_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a> P Sarpi, Concilio di Trento, lib. v. p. 420, confirmed by
+Pallavicino lib. xiv.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_186_186" id="Footnote_186_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a> Horne's Papers for the reformed, in Collier ii. 416.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_187_187" id="Footnote_187_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a> Ribadeneyra: 'No fueron sino tres votos mas, los que
+determinaron en las cortes, que se mudasse la religion catolica, que los
+que pretendian que se conservasse.' Ribadeneyra says the Queen gained
+Arundel's vote by allowing him to hope for her hand, and then laughed at
+him; but Feria's despatches show that she mocked at his pretensions even
+before her entry on the government.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_188_188" id="Footnote_188_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a> Soames iv. 675. Liturgiae Britannicae 417.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_189_189" id="Footnote_189_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a> From Feria's despatches, Apuntamientos 270.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_190_190" id="Footnote_190_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a> In Heylin there is a comparison of the original forty-two
+with the later thirty-nine Articles; but he did not venture at last to
+do what he proposed at first, give his opinion as to the reason and
+nature of the variations.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_191_191" id="Footnote_191_191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_191_191"><span class="label">[191]</span></a> Leslaeus de rebus gestis Scotorum: Henricus Mariam
+Reginam Angliae Scotiae et Hiberniae declarandam curavit,&mdash;Angliae et
+Scotiae insignia in ipsius vasis aliisque utensilibus simul pingi
+fingique ac adeo tapetibus pulvinis intexi jussit. (In Jebb i. 206.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_192_192" id="Footnote_192_192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_192_192"><span class="label">[192]</span></a> From one of Cecil's first notes, 'if they offered battle
+with Almains, there was great doubt, how England would be able to
+sustain it.' In Nares ii. 27.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BIII_II" id="BIII_II"></a>
+OUTLINES OF THE REFORMATION IN SCOTLAND.</p>
+
+<p>In its earliest period church reform was everywhere introduced or
+promoted by the temporal governments; in Germany by the government of
+the Empire, and by the Princes and towns which did not allow the
+authorisation, once given them through the Empire, to be again
+withdrawn; in the North by the new dynasties which took the place of the
+Union-Princes; in Switzerland itself by the Great-Councils which
+possessed the substance of the republican authority. After manifold
+struggles and vicissitudes this tendency had at last yet once more
+established itself in its full force under Queen Elizabeth in England.</p>
+
+<p>But another tendency was also very powerful in the world. In South
+Europe, France, the Netherlands, and a part of the German territory, the
+state attached itself to the principles of the old Church. At this very
+time in Italy and Spain this led to the complete destruction of what was
+there analogous to the Reformation; it has had more influence on the
+later circumstances of these countries than it had then. But where the
+religious change had already obtained a more durable footing, as in
+France and the Netherlands, politico-religious variances of the most
+thoroughgoing nature arose almost of necessity: the Protestantism of
+Western Europe was pervaded by anti-monarchical ideas. We noticed how
+much everything was preparing for this under Queen Mary in England also:
+that it did not so happen was owing to the arrangements made by
+Elizabeth. But this tendency appeared in full force in Scotland, and in
+fact more strongly there than anywhere else.</p>
+
+<p>In Scotland the efforts made by all the monarchic powers of this period
+in common were not so successful as in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+rest of Europe. The kings of
+the house of Stuart, who had themselves proceeded from the ranks of the
+nobility, never succeeded in reducing the powerful lords to real
+obedience. The clannish national feeling, closely bordering on the old
+Keltic principle, procured the nobles at all times numerous and devoted
+followers: they fought out their feuds among themselves, and then
+combined anew in free confederacies. They held fast to the view that
+their sovereigns were not lords of the land (for they regarded their
+possessions as independent properties), not kings of Scotland but kings
+of the Scots, above all, kings of the great vassals, who had to pay them
+an obedience defined by laws. It gave the kings not a little superiority
+that they had obtained a decisive influence over the appointment to the
+high dignities in the Church, but this proved advantageous neither to
+the Church nor at last to themselves. Sometimes two vassals actually
+fought with each other for a rich benefice. The French abuses came into
+vogue here also: ecclesiastical benefices fell to the dependents of the
+court, to the younger sons of leading houses, often to their bastards:
+they were given or sold <i>in commendam</i>, and then served only for
+pleasure and gain: the Scotch Church fell into an exceedingly scandalous
+and corrupt state.</p>
+
+<p>It was not so much disputed questions of doctrine as in Germany, nor
+again the attempt to keep out Papal influence as in England, but mainly
+aversion to the moral corruption of the spiritualty which gave the first
+impulse to the efforts at reformation in Scotland. We find Lollard
+societies among the Scots much later than in England: their tendencies
+spread through wide circles owing to the anticlerical spirit of the
+century, and received fresh support from the doctrinal writings that
+came over from Germany. But the Scotch clergy was resolved to defend
+itself with all its might. Sometimes it had to sit in judgment on
+invectives against its disorderly and luxurious life, sometimes on
+refusals to pay established dues: or Lutheran doctrines had been
+preached: it persecuted all with equal severity as tending to injure the
+stability of holy Church, and awarded the most extreme penalties. To put
+suspected heretics to death by fire was the order of the day; happy the
+man who escaped the unrelenting persecution
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+by flight, which was only possible amid great peril.</p>
+
+<p>These two causes, an undeniably corrupt condition and relentless
+punishment of those who blamed it as it well deserved, gave the Reform
+movement in Scotland, which was repressed but not stifled, a peculiar
+character of exasperation and thirst for vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>Nor was it without a political bearing in Scotland as elsewhere. In
+particular Henry VIII proposed to his nephew, King James V, to remodel
+the Church after his example: and a part of the nobility, which was
+already favourably disposed towards England, would have gladly seen this
+done. But James preferred the French pattern to the English: he was kept
+firm in his Catholic and French sympathies by his wife, Mary of Guise,
+and by the energetic Archbishop Beaton. Hence he became involved in the
+war with England in which he fell, and after this it occasionally
+seemed, especially at the time of the invasions by the Duke of Somerset,
+as if the English, and in connexion with them the Protestant, sympathies
+would gain the ascendancy. But national feelings were still stronger
+than the religious. Exactly because England defended and recommended the
+religious change it failed to make way in Scotland. Under the regency of
+the Queen dowager, with some passing fluctuations, the clerical
+interests on the whole kept the upper hand. In spite of a general
+sympathy the prospects of Reform were slender. It could not reckon on
+any quarrel between the government and the higher clergy: foreign
+affairs rather exercised a hostile influence. It is remarkable how under
+these unfavourable circumstances the foundation of the Scotch Church was
+laid.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the Scots who had fled from the country were content to provide
+for their subsistence in a foreign land and improve their own culture.
+But there was one among them who did not reconcile himself for one
+moment to this fate. John Knox was the first who formed a Protestant
+congregation in the besieged fortress of S. Andrew's; when the French
+took the place in 1547 he was made prisoner and condemned to serve in
+the galleys. But while his feet were in fetters, he uttered his
+conviction in the fiery preface to a work on Justification, that this
+doctrine would yet again be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+preached in his
+fatherland.<a name="FNanchor_193_193" id="FNanchor_193_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a>
+After he was released, he took a zealous share in the labours of the English
+Reformers under Edward VI, but was not altogether content with the
+result; after the King's death he had to fly to the continent. He went
+to Geneva, where he became a student once more and tried to fill up the
+gaps in his studies, but above all he imbibed, or confirmed his
+knowledge of, the views which prevailed in that Church. 'Like the first
+Reformers of French Switzerland, Knox also lived in the opinion that the
+Romish service was an idolatry which should be destroyed from off the
+earth. And he was fully convinced of the doctrine of the independence of
+the spiritual principle side by side with the State, and believed that
+the new spiritualty also was authorised to exclude men from the Church,
+views for which Calvin was at that very time contending. Thus he was
+equally armed for the struggle against the Papacy and against the
+temporal power allied with it, when a transient relaxation of
+ecclesiastical control in Scotland made it possible for him to return
+thither. In the war between France and Spain the Regent took the side of
+France: she lighted bonfires to announce the capture of Calais; out of
+antipathy to Mary Tudor and her Spanish government she allowed the
+English fugitives to be received in Scotland. Knox himself ventured to
+return towards the end of 1555: without delay he set his hand to form a
+church-union, according to his ideas of religious independence, which
+was not to be again destroyed by any State power.</p>
+
+<p>Among the devout Protestants who gathered together in secret the leading
+question was, whether it was consistent with conscience to go to mass,
+as most then did. Knox was not merely against any one doing wrong that
+good might come of it, but he went on further to restore the interrupted
+Protestant service of God. Sometimes in one and sometimes in another of
+the places of refuge which he found he administered the Communion to
+little congregations according to the Reformed rite; this was done with
+greater solemnity at Easter 1556 in the house of Lord Erskine of Dun,
+one of those Scottish
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+noblemen who had ever promoted literary studies
+and the religious movement as far as lay in his power. A number of
+people of consequence from the Mearns (Mearnshire) were present. But
+they were not content with partaking the Communion; following the mind
+of their preacher they pledged themselves to avoid every other religious
+community, and to uphold with all their power the preaching of the
+Gospel.<a name="FNanchor_194_194" id="FNanchor_194_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a>
+In this union we may see the origin of the Scotch Church
+properly so called. Knox had no doubt that it was perfectly lawful. From
+the power which the lords possessed in Scotland he concluded that this
+duty was incumbent on them. For they were not lords for themselves, but
+in order to protect their subjects and dependents against every
+violence. From a distance he called on his friends&mdash;for he had once more
+to leave Scotland, since the government recurred to its earlier
+severity&mdash;not again to prefer their own ease to the glory of God, but
+for very conscience' sake to venture their lives for their oppressed
+brethren. At Erskine's house met together also Lord Lorn, afterwards
+Earl of Argyle, and the Prior of S. Andrews, subsequently Earl of
+Murray; in December 1557 Erskine, Lorn, Murray, Glencairn (also a friend
+of Knox), and Morton, united in a solemn engagement, to support God's
+word and defend his congregation against every evil and tyrannical power
+even unto death.<a name="FNanchor_195_195" id="FNanchor_195_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a>
+When in spite of this another execution took place
+which excited universal aversion, they proceeded to an express
+declaration, that they would not suffer any man to be punished for
+transgressing a clerical law based on human ordinances.</p>
+
+<p>What the influence of England had not been able to effect, was now
+produced by antipathy to France. The opinion
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+prevailed that the King of
+France wished to add Scotland to his territories, and that the Regent
+gave him aid thereto. When she gathered the feudal array on the borders
+in 1557 (for the Scots had refused to contribute towards enlisting
+mercenaries) to invade England according to an understanding with the
+French, the barons held a consultation on the Tweed, in consequence of
+which they refused their co-operation for this purpose. The matrimonial
+crown was indeed even afterwards granted to the Dauphin, when he married
+Mary Stuart;<a name="FNanchor_196_196" id="FNanchor_196_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a>
+but thereupon misunderstandings arose with all the
+more bitterness. Meetings were everywhere held in a spirit hostile to
+the government.</p>
+
+<p>It was this quarrel of the Regent with the great men of the country that
+gave an opportunity to the lords who were combined for the support of
+religion to advance with increasing resolution. Among their proposals
+there is none weightier than that which they laid before her in March
+1559, just when the Regent had gathered around her a numerous
+ecclesiastical assembly. They demanded that the bishops should be
+elected for the future by the nobility and gentry of each diocese, the
+parish clergy by the parishioners, and only those were to be elected who
+were of esteemed life and possessed the requisite capacity: divine
+service was to be henceforth held in the language of the country. The
+assembled clergy rejected both demands. They remarked that to set aside
+the influence of the crown on the elections involved a diminution of its
+authority which could not be defended, especially during the minority of
+the sovereign. Only in the customary forms would they allow of any
+amendments.</p>
+
+<p>But this assembly was not content with rejecting the proposals: they
+confirmed the usages and services stigmatised by their opponents as
+superstitious, and forbade the celebration of the sacraments in any
+other form than that sanctioned by the Church. The royal court at
+Stirling called a number of preachers to its bar for unauthorised
+assumption of priestly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+functions.</p>
+
+<p>The preachers were ready to come: the lords in whose houses they
+sojourned were security for them. And already they had the popular
+sympathy as well as aristocratic protection. It was an old custom of the
+country that, in especially important judicial proceedings, the accused
+appeared accompanied by his friends. Now therefore the friends of the
+Reformation assembled in great numbers at Perth from the Mearns, Dundee,
+and Angus, that, by jointly avowing the doctrines on account of which
+their spiritual leaders were called to account, their condemnation might
+be rendered impossible.</p>
+
+<p>As to the Regent we are assured that she was not in general firmer in
+her leaning towards the hierarchy than other Princes of the time, and
+had once even entertained the thought that the supreme ecclesiastical
+power belonged to
+her;<a name="FNanchor_197_197" id="FNanchor_197_197"></a><a href="#Footnote_197_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a>
+but, perhaps alarmed by the vehemence of the
+preachers, she had done nothing to obtain such a power. It now appeared
+to her that it would be a good plan to check the flow of the masses to
+the place of trial by some friendly words which she addressed to Erskine
+of Dun.<a name="FNanchor_198_198" id="FNanchor_198_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a>
+The Protestants saw in them the assurance of an
+interposition in the direction of lenity, and stayed away; but without
+regard to this and without delay the Justiciary at Stirling, Henry
+Levingstoune, proceeded to business on the day appointed, 20 May 1559.
+As the preachers did not appear, those who had become security for them
+were condemned to a money-fine, while they themselves were denounced as
+rebels,<a name="FNanchor_199_199" id="FNanchor_199_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a>
+as having withdrawn themselves from the royal jurisdiction;
+an edict followed which pronounced them exiled, and in the severest
+terms forbade any to give them protection or favour.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+The news fell like a spark of fire among the inflammable masses of
+Protestants assembled at Perth. The sentence promulgated was an open act
+of hostility against the lords, who felt themselves bound by their word
+which they had given to the preachers and by their vow to each other.
+They considered that the Regent's promise had given them a right against
+her; Lord Erskine, whom the others had warned, declared that he had been
+deceived by her. While the Regent had prevented a collision between the
+two parties at Stirling, she had occasioned in one of them, at Perth,
+the outbreak of a popular storm against the hierarchy of the land, their
+representatives, and the monuments of their religion. John Knox, who had
+come, as he said, to be where men were striving against Satan, called on
+them in a fiery sermon to destroy the images which were the instruments
+of idolatry. The attempt of a priest, after the sermon, to proceed to
+high mass and open the tabernacle of the altar, was all that was needed
+to cause a tumult even in the church itself, in which the images of the
+saints were destroyed; and the outbreak spreading through the city
+directed itself against the monasteries and laid them too in ruins. How
+entirely different is Knox from Luther! The German reformer made all
+outward change depend on the gradual influence of doctrine, and did not
+wish to set himself in rebellious opposition to the public order under
+which he lived. The Scot called on men to destroy whatever contravened
+his religious ideas. The Lords of the Congregation, who became ever more
+numerous, declared themselves resolved to do all that God commands in
+Scripture, and destroy all that tended to dishonour his name. With these
+objects, and with their co-operation and connivance, the stormy movement
+once raised surged everywhere further over the country. The monasteries
+were also destroyed in Stirling, Glasgow, and S. Andrews; the abbeys of
+Melrose, Dunfermline, and Cambuskenneth fell: and the proud abbey of
+Scone, an incomparable monument of the hierarchic feeling of earlier
+ages, was, together with the bishop's palace, levelled to the ground. It
+may be that the popular fury went far beyond the original intentions of
+the leaders, but without doubt it was also part of their purpose, to
+make an end above all of the monasteries and abbeys,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+from which nothing but resistance could be
+expected.<a name="FNanchor_200_200" id="FNanchor_200_200"></a><a href="#Footnote_200_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a>
+It has been regarded even in our
+days as a measure of prudence, dictated by the circumstances, that they
+destroyed these monuments, which by their imposing size and the
+splendour of the service performed in them would have always produced an
+impression adverse to the Reformation. On the other hand the cathedrals
+and parish churches were to be preserved, and after being cleansed from
+images were to be devoted to Protestant worship. Everywhere the
+church-unions, which were at once formed and organised on Protestant
+principles, gained the upper hand. The Mass ceased: the Prayer-book of
+King Edward VI took its place.</p>
+
+<p>So the reformed Scotch Church put itself in possession, in a moment, of
+the greatest part of the country. It was from the beginning a
+self-governed establishment: it found support in the union of some
+lords, whose power likewise rested on independent rights: but it first
+gained free play when the French policy of the Regent alienated the
+nobility and the nation from her. On the one side now stood the princess
+and the clergy, on the other the lords and the preachers. As their
+proposals were rejected and preparations made to defend the hierarchic
+system with the power of the State, the opposition also similarly arose,
+claiming to have an original right: revolt broke out; the church system
+of the Romish hierarchy was overthrown and a Protestant one put in its
+place. In the history of Protestantism at large the year 1559 is among
+the most important. During the very days in which the revised Common
+Prayer-book was restored in England (so definitely putting an end to the
+Catholic religion of the realm), the monuments of Roman Catholicism in
+Scotland were broken in pieces, and the unrevised Common Prayer-book
+introduced into the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+churches. But yet how great was the difference! In
+the one country all was done under the guidance of a Queen to whom the
+nation adhered, in consequence of Parliamentary enactments, the ancient
+forms being preserved as far as possible: here the whole transaction was
+completed in opposition to the Regent, under the guidance of an
+aristocracy engaged in conflict with her, amidst very great tumult,
+while all that was ancient was set aside.</p>
+
+<p>At the beginning of July the Scotch lords had become masters of the
+capital as well, and had reformed it according to their own views, with
+the most lively sympathy of the citizens. They were resolved to uphold
+the change of religion now effected, cost what it would, and hoped to do
+so in a peaceful manner. When Perth again opened her gates to the Regent
+after the first tumult, under the condition that she should punish no
+one, she promised at the same time to put off the adjustment of all
+questions in dispute to the next Parliament. There they intended to
+carry at once the recognition of the Reformation in its whole breadth,
+and the removal of the French. We perceive that it was their plan in
+that case to obey the Regent as before, and to unite the abbey-lands to
+the possessions of the crown. 'But if your Grace does not agree to
+this,' so runs the letter of a confederate, 'they are resolved to reject
+all union with you.'</p>
+
+<p>It was soon shown that the last was the only alternative. The regent
+collected so many French and Scotch troops that the lords did not
+venture to stop her return to Edinburgh. They came to an agreement
+instead, in which she promised to prosecute no member of the
+Congregation, and especially no preacher, and not to allow the clergy on
+the ground of their jurisdiction to undertake any annoying proceedings:
+in return for which the lords on their side pledged themselves not to
+disturb any of the clergy or destroy any more of the church buildings.
+It was a truce in which each party, sword in hand, reserved to itself
+the power of defending its partisans against the other. The two parties
+encountered in Edinburgh. The inhabitants had called Knox to be their
+preacher, and when he thought it unsafe to stay in the city after the
+Congregation withdrew, another
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
+champion of the Reformation, Willok,
+filled his place with hardly less zeal and success. But on the other
+side the bishop of Amiens appeared with some doctors of the Sorbonne at
+the Regent's court. Here and there the Protestant service was again
+discarded; the Paris theologians defended the old dogma among the Scotch
+scholars, and made even now some impression; the mass and the preaching
+contended with each other. As to the Regent's views there can be no
+doubt. She drew the attention of the French court to the frequent
+intercourse between the nobles of Protestant views in France and
+Scotland, and to the encouragement the Scots had from the French; but
+she gave the assurance that she would soon finish with the Scots if she
+received support. Some French companies had just landed at Leith, they
+had brought with them munitions of war and money: the Regent demanded
+four companies more, to make up twenty, and perhaps 100 hommes d'armes;
+if only four French ships were stationed at Leith to keep off foreign
+assistance, she pledged herself to put down the movement
+everywhere.<a name="FNanchor_201_201" id="FNanchor_201_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a></p>
+
+<p>Then the Scots also decided that they must employ their utmost means of
+resistance. They had framed politico-religious theories, in virtue of
+which they believed in their right to do so. The substance of the whole
+is that they acknowledged indeed an obligation on the conscience which
+required obedience to the sovereign, but at the same time they held that
+the obligation came to an end as soon as the sovereign contravened the
+known will of God: an idolatrous sovereign, so said the preachers, could
+be deposed and punished:&mdash;should the supreme Head put off the reform
+which was required by God's law, the right and the duty of executing it
+falls on the subordinate authorities.</p>
+
+<p>But the lords claimed also an authority based on the laws of the land.
+When the French troops began to fortify Leith, they held themselves
+justified in raising remonstrances against it: they demanded that the
+Regent should desist from
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+the design. As she replied with a
+proclamation which sounded very offensive to themselves, they had no
+scruple in taking up arms. Each noble collected his men round him and
+appeared at their head in the field. Relying on the fine army which was
+thus brought together, they repeated their demand, with the remark, that
+in receiving foreign troops into the harbour-town there was involved a
+manifest attempt to enslave the land by force: if the Regent would not
+lend an ear to their remonstrances, they being the hereditary
+councillors of the crown, they would remember their oath which bound
+them to provide for the general welfare. The Regent expressed her
+astonishment to the lords through a herald that there should be any
+other authority in the realm than that of her daughter, the Queen. She
+already felt herself strong enough to order them and their troops to
+disperse, on pain of the punishment appointed for high treason. On this
+the great men met in the old council-house at Edinburgh, to consider the
+question whether it was obligatory to pay obedience to a princess, who
+was but regent, and who disregarded the opinion of the hereditary
+councillors of the crown. The consultation, at which some preachers
+supported the views of the lords with similar arguments, ended in the
+declaration that the Regent no longer possessed an authority which she
+was using to the damage of the realm. In the name of the King and Queen
+they announced to her that the commission she had received from them was
+at an end. 'And as your Grace,' so they continued, 'will not acknowledge
+us as your councillors, we also will no longer acknowledge you as our
+regent.'<a name="FNanchor_202_202" id="FNanchor_202_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a></p>
+
+<p>To this pass matters had now come. The combined interests, on the one
+side of the crown and the clergy, on the other of the lords and the
+Protestants, came into open and avowed conflict. The Act of Suspension
+is but the proclamation of war in a form which would enable them to
+avoid directly breaking with their duties towards
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>their born prince.</p>
+
+<p>The lords' first enterprise was directed against the French troops which
+held Leith in their possession, and which were now first of all to be
+driven out of the country: but the hastily-constructed fortifications
+there proved stronger than was expected. And not merely were their
+assaults on Leith repelled, but the Lords soon saw themselves driven
+from their strongest positions, for instance from Stirling; their
+possessions were wasted far and wide; the war, which was transferred to
+Fife, took an unfortunate turn for them; to all appearance they were
+lost if they did not obtain help from abroad.</p>
+
+<p>But to whom could they apply for it if not to their neighbour, just now
+rising in power, Elizabeth Queen of England?</p>
+
+<p>They might have hesitated, as they had indeed repelled the influence of
+Henry VIII and of Somerset, even when it was united with reforming
+tendencies. But how entirely different were matters now from what they
+had been then! With their own hands they had already given themselves a
+Protestant church-system, which was national in a high degree, and
+somewhat opposite to the English one. So long as it existed, the
+influence England would gain by giving them help could never become the
+supremacy, at which it is certain attempts had previously been made.</p>
+
+<p>We know too the objections which were made in England against a union
+with the Scots. To these were added the Queen's decided antipathies to
+the new form of church government and to its leaders: she could not bear
+the mention of Knox's name. But all these considerations disappeared
+before the pressing danger and the political necessity. In opposition to
+France, Protestant England and Protestant Scotland, however different
+the religious and even the political tendencies prevailing in each of
+them, held out their hands to each other.</p>
+
+<p>Elizabeth had already at an earlier time privately given the Scots some
+support: the moment at which she gave them decisive assistance is worth
+noticing.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+The Regent's French and Scotch troops were planning an attack on S.
+Andrews, and had made themselves masters of Dysarts; the lords, again
+retreating, marched along the coast, and the French were in pursuit when
+a fleet hove in sight in the distance. The French welcomed it with
+salvos of cannon, for they had no doubt that it was their own fleet,
+bringing them help from France, long expected, and now in fact known to
+be ready. But it soon appeared that they were English vessels, in
+advance of the larger fleet which had put to sea under Vice-admiral
+Winter. Nothing remained for the French, when thus undeceived, but to
+give up their project and withdraw. But the whole state of things was
+thus altered. Soon after this the Scots, to whose assistance English
+troops had also come by land, were able to advance against Leith and
+resume the suspended siege.</p>
+
+<p>Everything that is to come to pass in the world has its right time and
+hour. Incredible as it may seem, the champion of the strictest
+Catholicism, the King of Spain, was at this moment not merely for help
+being given to the Scots, but pressing for it; his ministers complained
+not that the Queen interfered, but that she did not do so more quickly.
+For in the union of Scotland and France, which was already complete in a
+military sense, they saw a danger for themselves. The enthusiastic Knox,
+who only lived and moved in religious ideas, was, more than he foresaw,
+a link in the chain of European affairs. Without the impulse which he
+gave to the minds of men, that resistance to the Regent, by which a
+complete union with France was hindered, would have been impossible.</p>
+
+<p>A treaty was made in Berwick between Queen Elizabeth and the Scotch
+lords, by which they bound themselves to drive the French out of
+Scotland with their united strength. The lords promised to remain
+obedient to their Queen, but Elizabeth assented to the additional words,
+that this was not to be in such cases as might lead to the overthrow of
+the old Scottish rights and liberties. This was a very comprehensive
+clause, which placed the further attempts of the Scotch lords against
+the monarchical power under English protection.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+While the siege of Leith was being carried on by land and sea,
+commissioners from France appeared on the part of Queen Mary Stuart and
+her husband, as they had now assumed the place of the Regent (who had
+died in the midst of these troubles), to attempt to bring about an
+agreement. The chief among them was Monluc, bishop of Valence, a
+well-meaning and moderate man even in religious matters, who, convinced
+of the impossibility of carrying on the war any further with success,
+gave way step by step before the inflexible purpose of the English
+plenipotentiary, William Cecil. He put his hand to the treaty of
+Edinburgh, in which the withdrawal of the French troops from Scotland
+and the destruction of the fortifications of Leith were stipulated for.
+This satisfied the chief demand of the lords, and at the same time
+agreed with the wish of the neighbouring Power. The King and Queen of
+France and Scotland were no longer to bear the title and arms of England
+and Ireland. For Scotland a provisional government was arranged on the
+basis of election by the Estates; it was settled that for the future
+also the Queen and King should decide on war and peace only by their
+advice. It is easy to see how much a limitation of the Scotch crown was
+connected with the interests of the Power that was injured by its union
+with the crown of France.</p>
+
+<p>Religion was not expressly mentioned; Queen Elizabeth had purposely
+avoided it. But when the Scotch Parliament, to which the adjustment of
+the matters in dispute was once more referred in the treaty of
+Edinburgh, now met, nothing else could be expected than what in fact
+happened. The Protestant Confession was accepted almost without
+opposition, the bishops' jurisdiction declared to be abolished according
+to the view of the confederate lords, the celebration of the Mass not
+only forbidden, but, after the example of Geneva, prohibited under the
+severest penalties.</p>
+
+<p>How mightily had the self-governing church-society, founded three years
+and a half before in the castle at Dun, secured its foothold! By its
+union with the claims of the aristocracy it had broken up the existing
+government not merely of the Church but also of the State. It was of
+unspeakable importance for the subsequent fortunes of England that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span> this
+vigorous living element had been taken under the protection of the Queen
+of that country and supported by her.</p>
+
+<p>But at the same time, if we may so say, it complicated her personal
+relations inextricably. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_193_193" id="Footnote_193_193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_193_193"><span class="label">[193]</span></a> Extract in M'Crie, Life of John Knox 36.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_194_194" id="Footnote_194_194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_194_194"><span class="label">[194]</span></a> Knox, History of the Reformation,&mdash;a work which some
+later insertions have not deprived of its credit for trustworthiness,
+which it otherwise deserves,&mdash;p. 92. 'That they refussit all society
+with idolatri and band them selfes to the uttermost of their powery to
+manetein the trew preiching of the evangille, as God should offer unto
+thame preichers and opportunity.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_195_195" id="Footnote_195_195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_195_195"><span class="label">[195]</span></a> 'That we sall&mdash;apply our haill power substance and our
+verie lyves, to mantein set forward and establish the most blissit word
+of God, and his congregatioun sall labour&mdash;to have faithful ministeris,
+puirlie and trewlie to minister Christis evangell and sacramentis to his
+pepyll.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_196_196" id="Footnote_196_196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_196_196"><span class="label">[196]</span></a> According to Leslaeus 205, in this the promise was
+specially emphatic, that everything should be done, 'Ne regina nostra
+Angliae sceptro excluderetur.' This was during Mary Tudor's lifetime.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_197_197" id="Footnote_197_197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_197_197"><span class="label">[197]</span></a> So King James said at the Conference of Hampton Court,
+State Trials ii. 85; negociations must have taken place of which we know
+nothing.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_198_198" id="Footnote_198_198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_198_198"><span class="label">[198]</span></a> Knox: 'That she wald tak sume better order:' and so in
+Calderwood. Buchanan xvi. 590: 'Se interea nihil adversus quemquam
+illius sectae molituram.' Spottiswood i. 271: That the diet should
+desert and nothing be done to the prejudice of the ministres.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_199_199" id="Footnote_199_199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_199_199"><span class="label">[199]</span></a> Praefati Paulus Methven, Joannes Cristesoun, Willielmus
+Harlaw et Joannes Willok denunciati sunt rebelles S. D. N. regis et
+reginae. From the Justiciary records in M'Crie, Note GG. 360.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_200_200" id="Footnote_200_200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_200_200"><span class="label">[200]</span></a> Kirkaldy of Grange, one of the leaders of the
+Protestants, to Sir Henry Percy, Edinburgh, 1 July, in Tytler vi. 107.
+'The manner of their proceeding in reformation is this. They pull down
+all manner of friaries and some abbeys, which willingly receive not the
+reformation: as to parish churches they cleanse them of images and other
+monuments of idolatry and command that no masses be said in them.' Even
+now M'Crie says: 'I look upon the destruction of those monuments as a
+piece of good policy.' Life of Knox 130.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_201_201" id="Footnote_201_201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_201_201"><span class="label">[201]</span></a> I find this only in Lesley 215, who is in general the
+best informed as to the relations of the Regent with the French court.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_202_202" id="Footnote_202_202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_202_202"><span class="label">[202]</span></a> 'As your grace will not acknowledge us, our soverane
+lords and ladyis liegis for your subjectis and counssail, na mair will
+we acknowledge you for our regent.' Declaration of 23 Oct. 1559.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BIII_III" id="BIII_III"></a>
+MARY STUART IN SCOTLAND. RELATION OF THE TWO QUEENS TO EACH OTHER.</p>
+
+<p>People were now fully satisfied that they had obtained something great,
+and had laid a firm foundation for secure relations throughout all
+future time: but it became clear at once that this was not the case.
+Francis II and his wife seemed to have forgotten that they had promised
+on their royal word, in the instructions to their ambassadors, to accept
+whatever they should arrange: they refused to ratify the treaty of
+Edinburgh. For it was really concluded by the Queen of England with men
+in rebellion against them, by whom it was chiefly subscribed. They
+regarded it as an insult that the Scots deputed an embassy of great
+lords to England, whilst the request to confirm all that was arranged in
+Scotland was laid before them, their Queen and their King, by a
+gentleman of less distinguished birth. They felt themselves highly
+injured by a Parliament being called even before they had ratified the
+treaty, without any authorisation on their side. How were they to accept
+its resolutions? Francis II on the contrary said, he would prove to the
+Scots that they had no power to meet together in their own name, just as
+if they were a republic.<a name="FNanchor_203_203" id="FNanchor_203_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a>
+And as little was he inclined to give up
+the title and arms of England according to the treaty: he said he had
+hitherto borne them with good right, and saw no reason to give
+satisfaction to others, before he had received any himself.</p>
+
+<p>Those were the days in which the French government, guided by the
+Queen's uncles, including the Cardinal of Lorraine, had considerably
+repressed the Protestant movements<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span> which were stirring in France, had
+brought the insurgent princes into its power, and was occupied in
+establishing a strict system of obedience in ecclesiastical and
+political matters; with kindred aims it sought in Scotland also to
+revert to its earlier policy; all concessions made to the contrary it
+ignored. I see here, says the English ambassador Throckmorton, more
+intention of vengeance than inclination to peace.</p>
+
+<p>At this juncture occurred the unexpected event which gave French affairs
+another shape. King Francis II died at the beginning of December 1559
+without issue; and the Guises could not maintain the authority they had
+hitherto possessed. The kingdom which, by the extent and unity of its
+power, was wont to exercise a dominant influence over all others, fell
+into religious and political troubles which engrossed and broke up its
+force.</p>
+
+<p>Elizabeth took some part also in these movements within France itself:
+it was her natural policy to support the opponents of the Guises, who
+likewise stood so near her in their religious confession. With their
+consent she once occupied Havre, but allowed it without much hesitation
+to fall again into the hands of the French government which was then
+guided by Catharine Medici, who for some time even made common cause
+with the leaders of the Huguenots. We cannot here follow out these
+relations any further, for to understand them fully would require us to
+go into the details of the changeful dissensions in France: for English
+history these are only so far important as they made it impossible for
+the French to act upon England.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand the entire sequel of English history turns on the
+relation to Scotland: Scotch affairs already form a constituent part of
+the English, and demand our whole attention.</p>
+
+<p>At first sight it would not have seemed so impossible to bring about
+peace and even friendship between the Queen of Scotland and the Queen of
+England: for the former was of course no longer bound to the interests
+of the French crown. But this expectation also proved deceitful. A
+primary condition would have been the acceptance of the treaty of
+Edinburgh;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+Elizabeth demanded this expressly and as if it were
+obligatory on Mary, who would as little consent to it after, as before,
+the death of her husband. She ceased to bear the arms of England: all
+else she deferred till her arrival in Scotland. Immediately on this, at
+the first step, the mutual antipathy broke
+out.<a name="FNanchor_204_204" id="FNanchor_204_204"></a><a href="#Footnote_204_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a>
+In consequence of
+the refusal to ratify the treaty, Elizabeth declined Mary's request to
+be allowed to return home through England. Mary regarded this as an
+insult: it is worth while to hear her words. 'I was once,' so she said,
+'brought to France in spite of all the opposition of her brother: I will
+return to Scotland without her leave. She has combined with my
+rebellious subjects: but there are also malcontents in England who would
+listen to a proposal from my side with delight: I am a Queen as well as
+she, and not altogether friendless, and perhaps I have as great a soul
+too.'</p>
+
+<p>Few words, but they contain motives of jealousy rising out of the depths
+of her inmost heart and announce a stormy future. But at first Mary
+could not give effect to them.</p>
+
+<p>Some Catholic lords did indeed request her to come to them in the
+northern counties, whence they would escort her to her capital with an
+armed force. But who could advise her to begin her government with a
+civil war? She would then have herself driven the Protestant lords over
+to the side of her foe. But she had connexions with them as well. Their
+leader, her half-brother James, Prior of S. Andrews, whom she now
+created Earl of Murray, a man of spirit, energy, and comprehensive
+views, appeared before her in France; his experience and caution and
+even the inner tie of blood-relationship always gave him a great
+influence over her resolutions. He showed her how it was possible to
+rule Scotland even under existing circumstances, so as to have a
+tolerable understanding with Elizabeth, but reserving all else for the
+future. These counsels she followed. Not with Elizabeth's help, but yet
+without hindrance from her, she arrived at Holyrood in August 1561.
+Murray succeeded
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+in obtaining, though not without great opposition, and
+almost by personally keeping off opponents, that she should be allowed
+to have mass celebrated before her. He took affairs into his own hands;
+the Protestants had the ascendancy in the country and in the royal
+council.</p>
+
+<p>Not that Queen Mary by this fully acquiesced in what had happened, or
+recognised the state of affairs in Scotland. She even now confirmed
+neither the treaty of Edinburgh, nor the resolutions of Parliament based
+on it: but in the first place took possession of her throne, reserving
+her dynastic rights.</p>
+
+<p>A sight without a parallel, these two Queens in Albion, haughty and
+wondrous creatures of nature and circumstances!</p>
+
+<p>They were both of high mental culture. From Mary we have French poems,
+of a truth of feeling and a simplicity of language, which were then rare
+in literature. Her letters are fresh and eloquent effusions of momentary
+moods and wishes: they impress us even if we know that they are not
+exactly true. She has pleasure in lively discussion, in which she
+willingly takes a playful, sometimes a familiar, tone; but always shows
+herself equal to the subject. From Elizabeth also we have some lines in
+verse, not exactly of a poetic strain, not very harmonious in
+expression, but full of high thoughts and resolves. Her letters are
+skilful but, owing to their allusions and antitheses, far from
+perspicuous products of reflection, although succinct and rich in
+matter. She was acquainted with the learned languages, had studied the
+ancient classics and translated one or two, had read much of the
+church-fathers: in her expressions there sometimes appears an insight
+into the inner connexion between history and ideas, which fills us with
+astonishment. In conversation she tried above all things to produce a
+sense of her gifts and accomplishments. She shone through a combination
+of grandeur and condescension which appeared like grace and sweetness,
+and sometimes awakened a personal homage, for which in the depths of her
+soul she cherished a longing. She did but toy with such feelings, to
+Mary they were a reality. Mary possessed that natural power of womanly
+charm which awakens
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+strong, even if not lasting, passion. Her personal
+life fluctuates between the wish to find a husband who could advance her
+interests and those passionate ebullitions by which she is also herself
+overpowered. This however does not hinder her from devoting all her
+attention to the business of government. Both Queens work with like zeal
+in their Privy Council: and they only deliberate with men of intimate
+trust; the resolutions which are adopted are always their own. Elizabeth
+yields more to the wisdom of tried councillors, though even these are
+not sure of her favour for a moment, and have a hard place of it with
+her. Mary fluctuates between full devotion and passionate hate: she is
+almost always swayed by an unlimited confidence in the man who meets her
+wishes. Elizabeth lets things come to her: Mary is ever restless and
+enterprising.<a name="FNanchor_205_205" id="FNanchor_205_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a>
+Elizabeth appeared once in the field, to animate the
+courage of her troops in a great peril. Mary took a personal share in
+the local Scottish feuds: she was seen riding at the head of a small
+feudal army against the enemy, with pistols at her saddle-bow.</p>
+
+<p>But we here discontinue this representation of the antitheses of
+character between them, which first acquired historical import through
+the differences of position in which the two sovereigns found
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Elizabeth was mistress of her State, as well in its religious as its
+political constitution. She had revived the obedience once paid to her
+father; and remodelled the Church in the decidedly Protestant spirit
+which corresponded to her personal position; at first every man
+submitted to the new order of things, though many looked on its growth
+only with aversion. Mary on the contrary had to accommodate herself to a
+form of Church, and even of State, government, which was founded in
+opposition to the right of her predecessors, and above all to her own
+views. If she ever thought of making her own religion predominant, or of
+oppressing that which was newly established, open resistance was
+announced to her in threatening
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+terms by its leader John Knox. However
+much this reaction against her religious belief straitened her on the
+one side, yet on another side it opened out to her a wider prospect. She
+already had numerous personally devoted partisans in Great Britain, both
+in Scotland where she could yet once more call them together, and in
+England where she was secretly regarded by not a few as the lawful
+Queen; but, besides this, she had many in Catholic Europe, which had
+become reunited during these years (the times when the Council of Trent
+was drawing to a close) around the Papal authority, and was preparing to
+bring back those who had fallen away. This great confederacy gave Mary a
+position which made her capable of confronting a neighbour in herself so
+much more powerful.</p>
+
+<p>Elizabeth once touched on the old claims of England to supremacy over
+Scotland: the ambition of all the Scotch kings, to prove to the English
+that they were independent of them, still lived in Mary: when queen was
+set over against queen, it took a more sharply-expressed shape; any
+whisper of subjection seemed to her an outrage.</p>
+
+<p>For the moment Mary had, as before mentioned, given up the title of
+'Queen of England': but all her thoughts were directed towards the point
+of getting her presumptive hereditary right to that kingdom recognised,
+and of preparing for its realisation at a later time.</p>
+
+<p>But now there were two ways by which she might gain her end. She might
+either get her claim to the English throne recognised by an agreement
+with its present possessor, which did not appear so unattainable, as
+Elizabeth was unmarried, and such a settlement would have been legally
+valid in England; or she might enter into a dynastic alliance with a
+neighbouring great power, so as to be enabled to carry her claims into
+effect one day through its military
+strength.<a name="FNanchor_206_206" id="FNanchor_206_206"></a><a href="#Footnote_206_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a></p>
+
+<p>With this last view negociations were during several years carried on
+for a marriage with Don Carlos the son of the Spanish
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+King. For in the same proportion that the union of Scotch and French interests dissolved,
+did the opposite alliance between Spain and England become looser. The
+most varied reasons made Philip II wish to enter into direct and close
+relations with Scotland. Immediately after the death of Francis II, a
+negociation was set on foot with a view to this alliance, on Mary's
+giving an audience to the Spanish ambassador, to the vexation of Queen
+Catharine of France, who wished to see this richest of princes, and the
+one who seemed destined to the greatest power, reserved for her own
+youngest daughter. After Mary returned to Scotland similar rumours were
+renewed, and from time to time we meet with a negociation for this
+object. When her minister Lethington was in London in the spring of
+1563, he agreed with the Spanish ambassador that this marriage was the
+only desirable one: it was longed for by all Scotch and English
+Catholics. Soon afterwards the ambassador sent a young member of the
+embassy to Scotland, in the deepest secrecy, by a long circuit through
+Ireland; not without difficulty he obtained an interview with Mary
+Stuart, in which he assured himself of her inclination for the marriage.
+In the autumn of 1563 Catharine Medici showed herself well informed
+about this negociation and much disquieted by
+it.<a name="FNanchor_207_207" id="FNanchor_207_207"></a><a href="#Footnote_207_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a>
+It appeared to depend only on Philip's decision whether the marriage was concluded or
+not.<a name="FNanchor_208_208" id="FNanchor_208_208"></a><a href="#Footnote_208_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a>
+After some time the Scotch Privy Council sent the bishop of
+Ross to Spain, to bring the matter about. The Queen herself corresponded
+on it with Cardinal Granvella and the Duchess of Arschot.</p>
+
+<p>Don Carlos was too weak, too morbidly excited, to be married when young.
+King Philip, who did not wish to feed his ambition, at last gave the
+plan up, and recommended, instead of his son, his nephew the Archduke
+Charles of Austria.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+But the one was as disagreeable to the English court as the other.
+Elizabeth had announced eternal enmity to Queen Mary if she married a
+prince of the house of Austria. Besides, the Spanish influence in
+England troubled her: she now saw herself already under the necessity of
+demanding and enforcing the recall of the Spanish ambassador, because he
+drew the Catholic party round him and incited them to oppose the laws of
+England. What might have come of it, if a prince of this house should
+now obtain rule over a part of the island itself?</p>
+
+<p>But while Mary through these secret negociations tried to obtain the
+support of a great Catholic house for her claims, she neglected nothing
+that could contribute at the same time to make a good and friendly
+understanding with Queen Elizabeth possible, and to bring it about. In
+the company of her half-brother Murray, who held the reins of government
+with a firm hand, supported by his religious and political friends, she
+undertook a campaign into the Northern counties (which inclined to
+Catholicism), to make them submit to the universal law of the land. Only
+one priest was allowed at court, from whom she heard mass; some of those
+who read the mass elsewhere were occasionally punished for it; clergymen
+who complained of the hardship they experienced were referred to Murray.
+This proceeding too was only temporary, it was intended to incline the
+Queen of England to her wishes. All quarrel was carefully avoided: on
+solemn festivals she drank to the English ambassador, to the health of
+his mistress. Besides, there were negociations for a meeting of the two
+Queens in person at York, where Mary hoped to be solemnly recognised as
+presumptive heiress of
+England.<a name="FNanchor_209_209" id="FNanchor_209_209"></a><a href="#Footnote_209_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a>
+However much it otherwise lies
+beyond the mental horizon of this epoch of firm and mutually opposed
+convictions, Mary was then thought capable of willingly adopting the
+forms of the English Church; to this even the Cardinal of Lorraine had
+assented. She herself unceasingly declared that she wished to honour
+Elizabeth as a mother, as an elder sister. But the Queen of England,
+after all sorts of promises, preparations, and delays, declined the
+interview. She would
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+hear absolutely nothing of any recognition of the
+claim of inheritance. With naive plainness she inferred that such a
+declaration would not lead 'to concord with her sister, the Queen of
+Scotland,' since naturally a sovereign does not love his heir;&mdash;how
+indeed could that be possible, since every one is wont to make the heir
+the object of his aim and hopes;&mdash;she might increase Mary's importance
+by the recognition, but at the same time she would undermine her
+own;&mdash;whether Mary had a right to the English throne, she did not know
+and did not even wish to know: for she was (and as she said this, she
+pointed to the ring on her finger in proof) married to the people of
+England; if the Queen of Scotland had a right to the English throne,
+that should be left to her unimpaired.</p>
+
+<p>And none could deny that such a declaration as Mary required had its
+hazardous side for Elizabeth. Henry VIII's settlement of the succession,
+on which Elizabeth's own accession rested, excluded the Scotch line: in
+virtue of it the descendants of the younger sister, who were natives of
+England, possessed a greater right. And how if the Queen of Scots, when
+recognised as heir to England, afterwards gave her hand to a Catholic
+prince hostile to Elizabeth? The dangers indicated above would then be
+doubled, the followers of the ancient Church would have attached
+themselves to the royal couple, and formed a compact party in opposition
+to Elizabeth's arrangements, which would never have attained stability.</p>
+
+<p>To meet this very objection, it was suggested that Mary might marry a
+Protestant, in fact Robert Dudley Earl of Leicester, who was looked upon
+as the favourite of the Queen of England herself. Elizabeth could have
+been quite secure of him: she herself recommended him. Mary was at the
+first moment unpleasantly affected by the idea that she was expected to
+take as a husband one who was a born subject of England; but she was by
+no means decidedly against it, always supposing that in that case
+Elizabeth would recognise her right of inheritance in a valid form for
+herself and her issue by this marriage. Above all men Murray was in
+favour of this. He said, although his power
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
+must be diminished by the
+Queen's union with Leicester, yet he wished for it, in so far as it was
+bound up with the confirmation of the heirship; for that was the hope by
+which he had kept Mary firm to the existing system, and separated her
+from her old friends all these years past. Such was without doubt the
+case: it is this point of view that renders Mary's policy and conduct
+during the last years intelligible. If he, so Murray continued, could
+not make his promise good, Mary would think he had deceived her: should
+she afterwards marry a Catholic prince, what would be their
+position?<a name="FNanchor_210_210" id="FNanchor_210_210"></a><a href="#Footnote_210_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a>
+Once more was the request brought before Queen Elizabeth.
+But even under these circumstances she could not be induced to grant it.
+She said, if Mary trusted her and married Leicester, she should never
+repent it: but these words, which contained no definite engagement, had
+rather an opposite effect on Mary. In the hope of the recognition of her
+heirship she had hitherto endured the absolute constraint of her
+position: she would even have agreed to the choice of a husband by which
+she feared to be disparaged and controlled: for how could she have
+concealed from herself, that by it she would have fallen into a
+permanent dependence on the policy of England? With all her compliances
+and advances she had nevertheless gained nothing. Her vexation relieved
+itself by a violent outburst of tears: but during this inward storm she
+decided at the same time to drop her union with Elizabeth, and thus
+leave herself free for an opposite policy.</p>
+
+<p>She had refused the Archduke because his possessions were too small to
+secure her ends, too distant for him to be able to help her. Then
+another suitor presented himself for her hand, who would not indeed
+bring her any increase of power, but would strengthen her claims, which
+seemed to her very desirable. This was the young Henry Lord Darnley,
+through his mother likewise a descendant of Henry VII's daughter
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+who had married in Scotland, and through his father Matthew Earl of Lennox
+related to that family of the Stuarts which was descended from
+Alexander, a younger son of James Stuart the ancestor of the Scotch
+kings. In his descent there lay a double recommendation for him. It was
+remarked also that he had in his favour in Scotland itself the numerous
+and important Stuarts (Lord Athol too belonged to them); but mainly that
+a scion of this marriage would not find in England any rival of similar
+claims, which might be easily the case if young Darnley should marry
+into a family of the English nobility and bring it his
+rights.<a name="FNanchor_211_211" id="FNanchor_211_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a>
+Darnley was a youth remarkable for his fine figure, tall and well built;
+he made a great impression on the Queen at his very first appearance. In
+July 1565 the marriage was celebrated and Henry Darnley proclaimed King:
+the heralds named his name first, when they delivered the royal
+proclamations.</p>
+
+<p>He had hitherto, at least publicly, held to the Protestant faith: even
+now he occasionally attended the preaching: but after a little wavering
+he avowed himself a Catholic and drew over a number of lords with him by
+his example. The Catholic interest thus obtained a complete ascendancy
+at court.</p>
+
+<p>And now Mary did not delay a moment longer in making decisive advances
+to the Catholic powers. She had in fact no need to fear that the King of
+Spain would be offended at her refusing his nephew, if she attached
+herself to him in other matters. When she announced her marriage to him,
+she not merely requested him to interest himself for her and her
+husband's claims in England; she designated him as the man whom God had
+raised up above all others to defend the holy Catholic religion, and
+asked for his help to enable her to withstand the apostates in her
+kingdom: as long as she lived, she would join him against all and every
+enemy.<a name="FNanchor_212_212" id="FNanchor_212_212"></a><a href="#Footnote_212_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a>
+This quite fell in with the ideas which Philip himself
+cherished. From the park of Segovia in October 1565 he commissioned
+Cardinal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+Pacheco to reassure the Pope with the declaration that he
+meant to support the Queen of Scots not less than the Pope himself. In
+this they must, he remarked, keep three points in view: first the
+subjugation of her rebellious subjects, which he thought not difficult,
+as Elizabeth would not support them; then the restoration of the
+Catholic Church in Scotland, than which nothing would give him greater
+satisfaction; lastly, the most difficult of all, the obtaining the
+recognition of her right to the English throne: in all this he would
+support the Queen with his counsel and with money: he could not however
+come forward himself, it could only be done in the Pope's
+name.<a name="FNanchor_213_213" id="FNanchor_213_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a></p>
+
+<p>The ordinary accounts of the conferences at Bayonne have proved
+erroneous, as the proposals which were certainly made there by the
+Spaniards were not accepted. But Philip II's resolutions seem not less
+comprehensive in this case; these were his hostility to Queen Elizabeth,
+still concealed from the world but fully clear to his own consciousness,
+and his resolve to do everything in his power to place Mary, if not now,
+yet at a future time on the English throne. The great movement he was
+designing was to begin from Scotland. Like the Guises at a later time,
+so now Mary and her partisans in England and Scotland, if he supported
+her, were to be instruments in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Mary had the good fortune to break up the seditious combination of some
+lords who opposed her marriage. Strengthened by this she prepared for
+quite a different state of things. She received money from Spain: Pope
+Pius V had promised to support her as long as he had a single chalice to
+dispose of. She expected disciplined Italian troops from him: artillery
+and other munitions of war were brought together for her in the
+Netherlands. Leaning on Rome and Spain the spirited Queen hoped to
+become capable of any great
+enterprise.<a name="FNanchor_214_214" id="FNanchor_214_214"></a><a href="#Footnote_214_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a></p>
+
+<p>It was clearly to be expected that she would unite a political tendency
+with the religious one. In the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
+letter quoted above Philip reminds her
+how dangerous to monarchy were the doctrines of the pretended
+Gospellers:<a name="FNanchor_215_215" id="FNanchor_215_215"></a><a href="#Footnote_215_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a>
+opinions like those which Knox, regardless of all else,
+put before her personally, as to the limitations of royal power
+justified by religion, she as a matter of course would not endure. It is
+more surprising to find that she also called in question the rights
+which the nobility claimed as against the royal government, assigning a
+sort of theoretic ground for her view. The nobles base them, so she
+said, on the services of their ancestors; but if the children have
+renounced their virtue, neglect honour, care only for their families,
+despise the King and his laws and commit treason, must the sovereign
+even then still let his power be limited by theirs? How vast were the
+plans which this Queen entertained&mdash;to restore Catholicism in Scotland,
+to resume the war against the nobility in which her ancestors had
+failed, to overthrow the Protestant opinions, and therewith to become
+one day Queen of England!</p>
+
+<p>Among those around her was an Italian, David Riccio of Poncalieri in
+Piedmont, who had previously been secretary to the Archbishop of Turin,
+and then in the same capacity accompanied his brother-in-law, the Conte
+di Moretta, who went to Scotland as ambassador of the Duke of Savoy. He
+knew how to express himself well in Italian and French, and was besides
+skilful in music.<a name="FNanchor_216_216" id="FNanchor_216_216"></a><a href="#Footnote_216_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a>
+As he exactly supplied a voice which was wanting
+in the Queen's chapel, she asked the ambassador to let him enter her
+service. Riccio was not a blooming handsome man; though still young, he
+gave the impression of advanced years: he had something morose and
+repellent about him; but he showed himself endlessly useful and zealous,
+and won greater influence from day to day. He not merely conducted the
+foreign correspondence, on which all now depended and for which he was
+indispensable,&mdash;it became his office to lay everything before the Queen
+that needed her signature, and through this he attained the incalculable
+actual power of a confidential cabinet-secretary;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+he saw the Queen, who
+took pleasure in his company, as often as he wished, and ate at her
+table. James Melvil, whom she had commissioned to warn her, if he saw
+her committing faults, did not neglect doing it in this case; he
+represented to her the ill effects which favouring a foreigner drew
+after it: but she thought she could not let her royal prerogative be so
+narrowly limited.<a name="FNanchor_217_217" id="FNanchor_217_217"></a><a href="#Footnote_217_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a>
+Riccio had promoted the marriage with Darnley:
+the latter seemed to depend on
+him;<a name="FNanchor_218_218" id="FNanchor_218_218"></a><a href="#Footnote_218_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a>
+it was even said that the
+secretary used at pleasure a signet bearing the King's initials. It was
+no wonder indeed if this influence created him enemies, especially as he
+took presents which streamed in on him abundantly: yet the real
+hostility came from quite another quarter.</p>
+
+<p>The English Council of State did not fail to notice the danger which lay
+in a policy of estrangement on the part of Scotland. It was proposed to
+put an end to its progress once for all by an invasion of Scotland: or
+at least the wish was expressed to arm for defence, e.g. to fortify
+Berwick, and above all to renew the understanding with the Scotch lords;
+Murray, whom Mary had in vain tried to gain over by reminding him of the
+interest of their family and the views of their father, would most
+gladly have delivered Darnley at once into the hands of the English. By
+thus openly choosing his side he had been forced, together with his
+chief friends, Chatellerault, Glencairn, Rothes, and some others, to
+leave Scotland: the Queen, refused with violent words the demand of the
+English court that she should receive them again; she called a
+Parliament instead for the beginning of March, in which their banishment
+was to be confirmed and an attempt made to restore Catholicism. This was
+not so difficult, as the resolutions of 1560 had never yet been
+ratified. There appeared at court the Catholic lords, Huntley, Athol,
+and Bothwell who was ever ready for fighting (he had returned from
+banishment); they came to an understanding with Riccio. But now it
+happened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+that the personal union (on which all rested) between the
+King, the Queen, and the powerful secretary changed to discord. Darnley,
+who wished not merely to be called King but to be King, demanded that
+the matrimonial crown should be conferred on him by the Parliament; this
+would have given him independent rights. The Queen on her side wished to
+keep the supreme power undiminished in her hands: and Riccio may well
+have confirmed her in this, as his own importance depended thereon:
+Darnley ascribed the opposition he met with from his wife not so much to
+her own decision as to the low-born foreigner against whom he now
+conceived a violent hatred. His father, Lennox, who cared little for the
+restoration of Catholicism in itself, entirely agreed with him as to
+this. They held it allowable to put out of the way the intruder who
+dared to hinder their house from mounting to the highest honours, and
+who by the confidential intimacy in which he stood with the Queen gave
+rise to all kinds of offensive rumours. With this object they&mdash;for the
+instigation came from them&mdash;joined in a union with the Protestant
+nobles. These regarded Riccio as their most thoroughgoing opponent: they
+too wished him to be got rid of; but his death alone could not content
+them. A Parliament was to meet at once, from which they expected nothing
+but a complete condemnation of their former friends, and absolutely
+ruinous resolutions against themselves. They made the overthrow of this
+system a condition of their taking a share in getting rid of Riccio. The
+King consented that Murray should be again placed at the head of the
+government, in return for which the matrimonial crown was promised him.</p>
+
+<p>On the 7th March the Queen went to the old council-house of Edinburgh to
+make the necessary arrangements for the Parliament. The insignia of the
+realm, sword crown and sceptre, were borne before her by the Catholic
+lords, Huntley, Athol, and Crawford, the heads of those houses which had
+once already, in France, offered her their alliance. The King had
+refused to take part in the ceremony. She named the Lords of Articles,
+who from of old exercised a decisive influence in the Scotch
+Parliaments, and restored the bishops
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+to their place among them. As the
+Queen declares, her object was to promote the restoration of the old
+religion and to have the rebels sentenced by the assembled Estates. In
+Holyrood, besides Huntley and Athol, Bothwell, Fleming, Levingstoun, and
+James Balfour had also found favour, all men who had taken an active
+part for the restoration of Catholicism or for the re-establishment of
+the power of the crown: how much it must have surprised men to find that
+the Queen granted Huntley and Bothwell, who had been declared traitors,
+admittance into the Privy Council. If the Parliament adopted resolutions
+in accordance with these preliminaries, it was to be expected that the
+work of political and religious reaction would begin at once, with the
+active participation not only of the Pope from whom some money had
+already come, but also of other Catholic powers with whom Riccio kept
+the Queen in communication.</p>
+
+<p>A serious danger assuredly for the lords and for Protestantism; there
+was not a moment to lose if they wished to avert it; but the attempt to
+do so assumed, through the wild habits of the time and the country, that
+character of violence which has made it the romance of centuries. The
+event had such far-reaching results that we too must devote a discussion
+to it.</p>
+
+<p>In the low, narrow, and gloomy rooms of Holyrood House there is a little
+chamber to which the Queen retired when she would be alone: it was
+connected by an inner staircase with the King's lodgings. Here Mary was
+sitting at supper on Saturday the 9th March 1566, with her natural
+sister the Countess of Argyle, her natural brother the Laird of Creich,
+who commanded the guard at the palace, and some other members of her
+household, among whom was also Riccio; when the King, who had been
+expected somewhat earlier, appeared and seated himself familiarly by his
+wife. But at the same moment other unexpected guests also entered. These
+were Lord Ruthven, who had undertaken to execute the vengeance of King
+and country on Riccio, and his companions; under his fur-fringed mantle
+were seen weapons and armour: the Queen asked in affright what brought
+him there at that unwonted hour. He did not leave her long in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+doubt. 'I see a man here,' said Ruthven, 'who takes a place that does not become
+him; by a servant like this we in Scotland will not let ourselves be
+ruled,'<a name="FNanchor_219_219" id="FNanchor_219_219"></a><a href="#Footnote_219_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a>
+and so prepared to lay hands on him.</p>
+
+<p>Riccio took refuge near her; the Queen declared that she would punish an
+attack on him as high treason, but swords were bared before her eyes,
+Riccio was wounded by a thrust over her shoulder, and dragged away: on
+the floor and on the steps he received more than fifty wounds: the
+King's own dagger was said to have been seen in the body of the murdered
+man. This may be doubted, as his jealousy was by no means so real; yet
+he said soon after that he was responsible for the honour of his wife.
+In the turmoil he had only just stretched out his hand, to guard her
+person from any accident. For the nobles, who though acting with the
+utmost violence yet did not wish to risk their whole future, it was
+enough that he was there: his presence would authorise their act and
+give it impunity. When the murder was done Ruthven returned to the Queen
+and declared to her that the influence she had given Riccio had been
+unendurable to them, as had been also his counsels for the restoration
+of the old religion, his enmities against the great men of the land, his
+connexions with foreign princes; he announced to her plainly the return
+of the banished lords, with whom the others would unite in an opposite
+policy. For they had not merely aimed at Riccio: at the same time the
+Lords Morton and Lindsay, who had collected a number of trustworthy men,
+had advanced with them and beset the approaches to the palace-yard.
+Their plan was to get into their hands all their enemies who had
+gathered round the Queen. But while their attention was fastened on
+Riccio's murder, most of the threatened persons succeeded in escaping.
+All the rest who did not belong to the household, and were taken in the
+palace, were removed without distinction: the Queen was treated like a
+prisoner.<a name="FNanchor_220_220" id="FNanchor_220_220"></a><a href="#Footnote_220_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a>
+She still possessed a certain popularity, as being
+hereditary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+sovereign: a movement arose in the city in her favour, but
+this was counterbalanced by the antipathies of the Protestants, and a
+declaration of the King sufficed to still it. The next day a
+proclamation appeared in his name which directed the members of the
+Parliament, who had already arrived, to depart again.</p>
+
+<p>It was at any rate secured that a restoration of Catholicism or a legal
+prosecution of the banished lords was not to be thought of; the original
+plan however was not completely carried out. As it appears, the temper
+of the country had not been so far prepared beforehand as to make it
+possible to deprive the Queen of her power. And the spirited princess
+did not let herself be so easily subdued. Above all she succeeded in
+gaining over her husband again, to whom the predominance of the lords
+was itself derogatory; he helped her to escape and accompanied her in
+her flight. When they were once safe in a strong place, her partisans
+gathered round her; she placed herself at the head of a force, small
+though it was, and occupied the capital; the chief accomplices in the
+attack of Holyrood, Morton and Ruthven, fled from the country. She did
+not however revert to her old plans: she resumed her earlier connexions
+instead, her half-brother Murray again obtained influence, the old
+members of the Privy Council stood by his side, after some time Morton
+was able to return. Foreigners found that Scotland was as quiet as
+before.</p>
+
+<p>But this apparent quiet concealed a discord destined to produce still
+greater complications. The Queen had only learnt afterwards the share
+which Darnley had taken in Riccio's murder: it was her husband who had
+instigated this insult to her royal honour: how could she ever again
+repose confidence in him? And he no longer found support in the lords
+whom he had deserted at the moment of the crisis. He was very far now
+from obtaining the matrimonial crown or even any real influence: he saw
+himself excluded from affairs more than ever, and despised. When his son
+was baptised at Stirling, the father could not appear, though he was in
+the palace: he was afraid of being insulted in public. His condition
+filled him with shame: he often thought of leaving the kingdom,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+and made preparations for doing so. But he was not able to state and prove
+his grievances: he had to acknowledge before the assembled Privy Council
+that he had no complaints worth mentioning.</p>
+
+<p>The Queen on her side had sometimes let drop her wish to be rid of such
+a husband. She could not however think seriously of having her marriage
+with him dissolved, as this could only be done by declaring it null and
+void, and by that step her son, of whom she had just been delivered, and
+who was to inherit all her rights, would have been at the same time
+declared illegitimate. She was told that means would be found to carry
+the matter through without prejudice to her son. She warned her friends
+not to undertake anything which, though meant to help her, might prepare
+yet more trouble.</p>
+
+<p>How men stood to each other is clear from the fact that on the one side
+Darnley and his father linked themselves with the Catholic party&mdash;they
+were said to have adopted a plan of seizing the government, in the
+Queen's despite, in the name of her new-born son<a name="FNanchor_221_221" id="FNanchor_221_221"></a><a href="#Footnote_221_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a>&mdash;while on the
+other side the rest of the barons pledged themselves not to recognise
+him but only the Queen. A league was already concluded between some of
+them, originating with Sir James Balfour (who had been marked out for
+death by the halter in Holyrood), to rid the world by force of a tyrant
+and enemy of the nobility, against whom men must secure their lives.</p>
+
+<p>Thus all was in preparation for a fresh catastrophe; a new personal
+relation of the Queen brought it to pass.</p>
+
+<p>Among the nobles of Scotland James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell, was
+especially distinguished for a fine figure, for youthful strength,
+intrepid manly courage, proved in a thousand adventures, and decided
+character. Though professedly a Protestant, he had attached himself to
+the Regent without wavering, and assured the Queen of his assistance
+while she was still in France. Can we wonder if Mary, under the pressure
+of the party combinations around, needing before
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+all things a friend personally devoted to her, sought for support in this tried and
+energetic man? As she in general prized nothing more highly than bold
+and valiant deeds, she had often told him how much she admired him; but
+yet more than this,&mdash;we cannot doubt that she let herself be drawn into
+a passionate connexion with him. Who does not know the sonnets and the
+love-intoxicated letters she is believed to have addressed to him? I
+would not say that every word of the latter is genuine; through the
+several translations&mdash;from the French original (which is lost) into the
+Scotch idiom, from this into Latin, and then back into French as we now
+have them&mdash;they may have suffered much alteration: we have no right to
+lay stress on every expression, and interpret it by the light of later
+events: but in the main they are without doubt genuine: they contain
+circumstances which no one else could then know and which have since
+been proved to be true; no human being could have invented
+them.<a name="FNanchor_222_222" id="FNanchor_222_222"></a><a href="#Footnote_222_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a>
+It does not seem as if Mary's fondness for Bothwell was returned by him in
+the same degree: in her letters and poems she is constantly combating a
+rival, to whom his heart seems to give the preference. This was
+Bothwell's own wife whom he had only shortly before married: she stayed
+with him for a time in the neighbourhood of the court, but he took care
+that the Queen knew nothing of her being there. As he was before all
+things ambitious and desirous of power, he only cared for the Queen's
+love and the possession of her person so far as it would enable him to
+share her authority and to obtain the supreme power in Scotland. But for
+this another thing was necessary; the King must be removed out of the
+way. As Darnley had once joined Riccio's political enemies in the
+Holyrood assassination, so Bothwell now united himself with Darnley's
+enemies with a view to his murder, for which they were already quite
+prepared. Morton was asked to join the enterprise this time also: but he
+demanded a declaration from the Queen that she was not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+against it: and this Bothwell could not obtain.</p>
+
+<p>But, it may be said, was not the Queen in collusion with him? Did she
+not purposely bring back her husband, who had fallen sick at Glasgow, to
+Edinburgh, and did she not lodge him in a lonely house there not far
+from the palace under the pretence that the purer air would contribute
+to his recovery, but in fact to deliver him over all the more surely to
+destruction? Such has been always the general belief: even her
+partisans, the zealous Catholics, at that time inclined to believe that
+the Queen at least connived in the
+plot.<a name="FNanchor_223_223" id="FNanchor_223_223"></a><a href="#Footnote_223_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a>
+But there was yet another view taken at the time, according to which the better relations that had
+begun between husband and wife were not due to hypocrisy but were
+genuine, and a complete reconciliation and reunion was to have been
+expected: the returning inclination towards her husband was contending
+in the Queen with her passion for Bothwell; and he was driven on, by the
+apprehension that his prey and the prize of his ambition would escape
+him, to hasten the execution of his
+scheme.<a name="FNanchor_224_224" id="FNanchor_224_224"></a><a href="#Footnote_224_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a>
+And psychologically the
+event might be best explained in this way. But the statement has not
+sufficiently good evidence for it to be maintained historically. A poet
+might, I think, so apprehend it: for it is one of the advantages of
+poetic representation, that it can take up even a slightly supported
+tradition, and following it can infer the depths of the heart, those
+abysmal depths in which the storms of passion rage, and those actions
+are begotten which laugh laws and morality to scorn, and yet are deeply
+rooted in the souls of men. The informations on which our historical
+representation must be based do not reach so far: on a scrupulous
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
+examination they do not allow us to attain a definite conviction as to
+the degree of complicity. Only there can be no doubt as to the fact that
+this time too ambition and the lust of power played a great part. If
+Bothwell once said he would prevent Darnley from setting his foot on the
+necks of the Scotch, he thereby only expressed the feeling of the other
+nobles. Yet he executed his murderous plot without their joining in it
+and by means of his own
+servants.<a name="FNanchor_225_225" id="FNanchor_225_225"></a><a href="#Footnote_225_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a>
+In the house before mentioned he
+caused a quantity of gunpowder to be laid under the chamber in which
+Darnley slept, in order to blow him into the air: alarmed at the noise
+made by opening the door, the young sovereign sprang from his bed; while
+trying to save himself, he was strangled together with the page who was
+with him: the powder was then fired and the house laid in
+ruins.<a name="FNanchor_226_226" id="FNanchor_226_226"></a><a href="#Footnote_226_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a></p>
+
+<p>So the dreadful deed was done: the news of it filled men at first with
+that curiosity which always attaches to dark events that touch the
+highest circles; they then busied themselves with the question as to who
+would ascend the Scottish throne and give the Queen his hand,&mdash;among the
+other suitors Leicester now thought the time come for him, and for
+renewing good relations between England and Scotland:&mdash;but meanwhile to
+every man's astonishment and horror a rumour spread that the Queen would
+unite herself with the man to whom the murder of her husband was
+ascribed. Men fell on their knees before her, to represent the dishonour
+she would thus draw on herself, and even the danger into which she would
+bring her child. Letters from England were shown her in which the ruin
+of all her prospects as to the English throne was intimated, if she took
+this step: for it would strengthen the suspicion, which had arisen on
+the spot, that she had been an accomplice in her husband's murder. But
+she was already no longer her own mistress. Bothwell now did altogether
+what he would. He obtained from the lords, who feared him, a declaration
+that he was guiltless of any share in the King's murder, and even their
+consent to his marriage with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+the Queen. He said publicly he would marry
+the Queen, whoever might be against it, whether she would or not. And if
+Mary wished ever again to govern the country, and make the lords feel
+her vengeance, Bothwell might appear to her the only man who could
+assist her in this. Half of her free will, half by force, she fell into
+his power and thus into the necessity of giving him her hand. An
+archiepiscopal matrimonial court found in a near relationship between
+Bothwell and his wife a pretext for dissolving his previous
+marriage.<a name="FNanchor_227_227" id="FNanchor_227_227"></a><a href="#Footnote_227_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a>
+Bothwell was created Duke of Orkney: he began to exercise
+the royal power for his own objects; his friends, even the accomplices
+in the murder, were
+promoted.<a name="FNanchor_228_228" id="FNanchor_228_228"></a><a href="#Footnote_228_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a></p>
+
+<p>But how could it be expected that the Lords would tolerate in the much
+more dangerous hands of Bothwell a power they would not have endured in
+Darnley's? Against him they had the full support of the people; filled
+with moral aversion to the Queen for the guilt she had incurred, or
+which was attributed to her, they expressed their loyalty only in
+hostility to her; a general uneasiness showed itself as to the safety of
+her son who was likewise threatened by his father's murderers.</p>
+
+<p>Under a banner on which were depicted the murdered King and his child
+the latter praying for help, a great army marched against the castle
+where the newly-married pair dwelt. Bothwell merely regarded the hostile
+lords as his rivals, who envied him the great position to which he had
+raised himself, and thought to rout them all with the feudal array which
+gathered round him at the Queen's summons. But at the decisive moment
+the feeling of the country infected his own people as well; instead of
+being able to fight he had to fly. He was forced to live as a pirate in
+the Northern Seas; for he could no longer remain in the country. The
+Queen fell into the power of the Lords, who placed her in the strong
+castle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
+which the Douglas had built in the middle of Loch Leven, and
+detained her as a prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>In France it was not wholly forgotten that she had once been the Queen
+of that realm; a fiery champion of the Catholics boasted that, if they
+would give him a couple of thousand arquebusiers, he would free her from
+custody in despite of the Scots; but Catharine Medici, who besides was
+no friend of hers, rejected this absolutely, as they had already so many
+irons in the fire.<a name="FNanchor_229_229" id="FNanchor_229_229"></a><a href="#Footnote_229_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a>
+On the other hand Elizabeth concerned herself
+for the interests of her endangered neighbour with a certain emphasis.
+But the Scots were already discontented with the conduct of England, and
+complained loudly that since the treaty of Leith nothing good had come
+to them from thence;<a name="FNanchor_230_230" id="FNanchor_230_230"></a><a href="#Footnote_230_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a>
+they were resolved to pay their neighbour no
+more attention, but to manage their own affairs for themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Their path was clearly marked out for them. They had murdered Riccio,
+conspired against Darnley, driven Bothwell away, and all for the special
+reason that they had tried to create a strong supreme power over them:
+they could not possibly allow the Queen, irritated and insulted as she
+was, to again obtain the exercise of her power. Mary therefore was
+forced to resign the Scotch crown in favour of her son, and to name her
+brother Murray regent during his minority. Immediately on this the
+ceremony of anointing and crowning the child was performed in an almost
+grotesque manner.<a name="FNanchor_231_231" id="FNanchor_231_231"></a><a href="#Footnote_231_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a>
+Two superintendents and a bishop set the crown on
+his head, which the Lords there present touched in token of their
+consent; two of them, Morton and Hume, then swore in the name of the new
+King, James VI, that he would uphold the religion now prevailing in
+Scotland, and combat all its enemies.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span></p><p>When after this Murray, who had exiled himself to France, and had taken
+no share in the last catastrophe (which he foresaw), returned, he was in
+a position once more to conduct the government according to his old
+policy, only with greater independence. A Parliament was called which
+now for the first time confirmed the statutes made in 1560 in favour of
+the Kirk, and also came to such an arrangement about the confiscated
+church-property as made it possible for it to exist.</p>
+
+<p>So ruinous for Mary were the results of her attempt to break through the
+combination which formed the condition of her government in Scotland,
+and to effect a restoration of the old ecclesiastical and political
+forms. Before the power which she wished to overthrow her own had gone
+down.</p>
+
+<p>But she was not yet minded to submit to it. And mainly through a
+personal relation which she had entered into with the young George
+Douglas, who conceived hopes of her hand, she succeeded in escaping out
+of her prison and over the lake, bold and venturous as she always was.
+In the country there were many who thought themselves to stand so high
+above the bastard Earl of Murray, that they held it a disgrace to obey
+him: all these gathered round her; and as she then, the very day after
+her escape, revoked her abdication, they bound themselves together to
+replace her on the throne. In the league, at the head of which stood the
+Hamiltons, we find eight bishops and twelve abbots,&mdash;for the
+re-establishment of the Catholic Church was part of the plan: a
+considerable army was brought into the field with this object. Murray
+and his party were however the stronger of the two, they represented the
+organised power of the State, and their soldiers were the best
+disciplined. The Queen, who, at Langsyde, from a neighbouring eminence,
+looked on at the battle between the two armies, had to witness her own
+men being scattered without having done the enemy any damage,&mdash;Murray is
+said to have lost only one man. He himself put a stop to the slaughter
+of the fugitives. Still even now her affairs did not seem to those
+around her utterly lost, for all her friends had not yet appeared in the
+field, and there were still strong places to which she could retreat.
+But she aimed not merely at defence, but at overpowering her enemies. As
+what she had just seen left her no hope of this in Sco<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>tland, she
+adopted the idea of demanding help from the Queen of England. For the
+latter had in the strongest terms made known to the Scotch barons her
+displeasure at the treatment of their Queen, which was not in harmony
+with the laws of God or man, and had threatened to punish them for the
+wound thus inflicted on the royal dignity. She had once sent Mary
+herself a jewel as a pledge of her friendship. Mary was warned by those
+around her not to put full trust in these assurances. But she was quite
+accustomed to take her resolutions under passionate emotion, and could
+not then be dissuaded from her views. Through forests and woods, over
+stock and stone, without a single woman attendant, without any other
+food than the Scotch oatcake, day and night she kept on her way to the
+coast, from which she betook herself in a small boat to Carlisle. Her
+soul was thirsting to subdue the rebels: her firm trust was to draw
+Queen Elizabeth into the war against them: she came, not to seek a
+refuge, but to gain troops and assistance. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_203_203" id="Footnote_203_203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_203_203"><span class="label">[203]</span></a> Throckmorton to Chamberlain, 21 Nov. 1560, in Wright,
+Elizabeth i. 52.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_204_204" id="Footnote_204_204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_204_204"><span class="label">[204]</span></a> Throckmorton, in Tytler, History of Scotland vi. 194. In
+a memoir of Cecil, 'a note of indignities and wrongs done by the Queen
+of Scots to the Queen's Majesty,' in Murdin 582, the greatest stress is
+justly laid on this refusal.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_205_205" id="Footnote_205_205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_205_205"><span class="label">[205]</span></a> Castelnau, Mémoires iii. 13. 'Cette jeune princesse avoit
+un esprit grand et inquiète, comme celui du feu Cardinal de Lorraine son
+oncle, auxquels ont succedé la pluspart des choses contraires à leurs
+délibérations.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_206_206" id="Footnote_206_206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_206_206"><span class="label">[206]</span></a> As it is once expressed in one of her letters: 'pour
+l'advanchement de mes affaires tant en ce pays (Scotland) qu'en celuy
+là, ou je pretends quelque droit (England).' In Labanoff, Lettres et
+Mémoires de Marie Stuart i. 247.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_207_207" id="Footnote_207_207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_207_207"><span class="label">[207]</span></a> 'Que la conveniencia publica, en especial la de la
+religion aconsejaba que la reina su ama, se casase con el principe Don
+Carlos.' From the ambassador's reports in Gonzalez 299.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_208_208" id="Footnote_208_208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_208_208"><span class="label">[208]</span></a> 'Qu'il ne tiendra, qu'au dit Espagne qu'il (ce mariage)
+se ne fasse.' Additions à Castelnau.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_209_209" id="Footnote_209_209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_209_209"><span class="label">[209]</span></a> Compare Conaeus, Vita Mariae, in Jebb i. 24.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_210_210" id="Footnote_210_210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_210_210"><span class="label">[210]</span></a> Conversation with Randolph, in Tytler vi. 316. Murray
+says to him: 'the Queen would dislike and suspect him, because he had
+deceived her with promises which he could not realise: he was the
+counsellor and devizer of that line of policy, which for the last five
+years had been pursued towards England; he it was that had induced her
+to defer to Elizabeth.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_211_211" id="Footnote_211_211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_211_211"><span class="label">[211]</span></a> Spottiswood, History of the Church of Scotland ii. 25.
+'If it should fall him to marry with one of the great families of
+England, it was to be feared that some impediment might be made to her
+in the right of succession.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_212_212" id="Footnote_212_212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_212_212"><span class="label">[212]</span></a> Lislebourc (Edinburgh), 24 July 1565, in Labanoff vii.
+430.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_213_213" id="Footnote_213_213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_213_213"><span class="label">[213]</span></a> Compare Apuntamientos 312. The letter itself in Mignet
+ii. App. E.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_214_214" id="Footnote_214_214"></a><a href="#FNanchor_214_214"><span class="label">[214]</span></a> Sacchinus, Historia societatis Jesu, pp. iii, xiii, no.
+166.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_215_215" id="Footnote_215_215"></a><a href="#FNanchor_215_215"><span class="label">[215]</span></a> Fragment d'un Mémoire de Marie Stuart sur la noblesse.
+Labanoff vii. 297.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_216_216" id="Footnote_216_216"></a><a href="#FNanchor_216_216"><span class="label">[216]</span></a> Mémoire adressé à Cosme I, from the Archivio Mediceo at
+Florence, in Labanoff vii. 65.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_217_217" id="Footnote_217_217"></a><a href="#FNanchor_217_217"><span class="label">[217]</span></a> James Melvil, Memoirs 59.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_218_218" id="Footnote_218_218"></a><a href="#FNanchor_218_218"><span class="label">[218]</span></a> From a despatch of Randolph's in Mackintosh, History of
+England iii. 73. 'David is he that worketh all, chief secretary of the
+Queen of Scotland, only governor to her good man.' Can the date be
+right?</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_219_219" id="Footnote_219_219"></a><a href="#FNanchor_219_219"><span class="label">[219]</span></a> 'Volemo quel galante la e non volemo esser governati per
+un servitor.' Letter to Cosimo I, in Tuscany, in Labanoff vii. 92.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_220_220" id="Footnote_220_220"></a><a href="#FNanchor_220_220"><span class="label">[220]</span></a> Queen Mary to the Archbishop of Glasgow, 2 April 1566, in
+Keith and Labanoff. Of all the reports on this event the most important
+and trustworthy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_221_221" id="Footnote_221_221"></a><a href="#FNanchor_221_221"><span class="label">[221]</span></a> 'That the king ... suld take the prince our son and crown
+him and being crownit as his father suld tak upon him the government.'
+Mary to the Archbishop of Glasgow, in Labanoff i. 396.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_222_222" id="Footnote_222_222"></a><a href="#FNanchor_222_222"><span class="label">[222]</span></a> Compare Robertson, Dissertation on King Henry's murder,
+Works i., History of Scotland 243. From a letter of Thuanus to Camden
+(1606) it is clear how much trouble it already cost him to arrive at a
+decided opinion.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_223_223" id="Footnote_223_223"></a><a href="#FNanchor_223_223"><span class="label">[223]</span></a> 'Monsenor de Moreta ... anadio (to his narrative of the
+event) algunas particularidades, que en juicio del embajador probaban o
+inducian mucha sospecha que la reina avia sabido y aun permetido el
+suceso.' Apuntamientos 320. The affair has been very wrongly drawn into
+the sphere of religious controversy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_224_224" id="Footnote_224_224"></a><a href="#FNanchor_224_224"><span class="label">[224]</span></a> Account in the collection for the history of the times of
+the Emperor Maximilian II, which Simon Schardius embodied in the tomus
+rerum Germanicarum iv, not authentic, yet based on what was then held in
+Scotland to be true. It runs: 'Rex cum illa se accedente ita suaviter
+sermones commutat, ut reconciliatae annulum daret, hoc pacto, ut illa se
+in lectum conjugalem intra duos dies admitteret. Erant in aula, qui hanc
+offensionem placari minime vellent, unde, priusquam rex voti compos
+fieret, eum e medio tollere constituerunt.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_225_225" id="Footnote_225_225"></a><a href="#FNanchor_225_225"><span class="label">[225]</span></a> Trial of James Earl Bothwell. State trials.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_226_226" id="Footnote_226_226"></a><a href="#FNanchor_226_226"><span class="label">[226]</span></a> Report of the Nuncio, which agrees fairly with the
+statements in Schardius.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_227_227" id="Footnote_227_227"></a><a href="#FNanchor_227_227"><span class="label">[227]</span></a> Mary's confessor told the Spanish ambassador in answer to
+his questions: 'Que el caso se habia consultado con los obispos
+catolicos y que unanimemente havian dicho que lo podia hacer (casarse)
+por que la muger de Bodwell era pariente sua en quarto grado.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_228_228" id="Footnote_228_228"></a><a href="#FNanchor_228_228"><span class="label">[228]</span></a> Memorandum of Cecil. 'She committed all autority to him
+and his compagnons, who exercised such cruelty as none of the nobility
+that were counsel of the realm durst abide about the Queen.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_229_229" id="Footnote_229_229"></a><a href="#FNanchor_229_229"><span class="label">[229]</span></a> Norris to Elizabeth 23 July 1567, in Wright i. 260.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_230_230" id="Footnote_230_230"></a><a href="#FNanchor_230_230"><span class="label">[230]</span></a> Throckmorton to Cecil: 'upon other accidents [since
+Leith] they have observed such things in H. My's doings, as have tended
+to the danger of such as she had dealt withall.' Wright 251.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_231_231" id="Footnote_231_231"></a><a href="#FNanchor_231_231"><span class="label">[231]</span></a> Calderwood ii. 384: 'Modo cha ha usato la regina di
+Scotia per liberarsi,' from the Florentine archives, in Labanoff vii.
+135.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BIII_IV" id="BIII_IV"></a>
+INTERDEPENDENCE OF THE EUROPEAN DISSENSIONS IN POLITICS AND RELIGION.</p>
+
+<p>If we inquire into the reason why Philip II gave up his previous
+relations with England and sided with the Queen of Scots, we shall find
+it mainly in the fact that the victory of Protestant ideas in England
+exercised a counter-action which was insupportable for the government he
+had established in the Netherlands. But that he gave Mary no help in her
+troubles, though information was once collected as to how it might be
+done, may also be traceable to the disturbances that had broken out in
+the Netherlands, the suppression of which occupied all his attention and
+resources.</p>
+
+<p>In 1568 the Duke of Alva was master of the Netherlands: he was already
+able to send a considerable force to help the French government, which
+had once more broken an agreement forced upon it by the Huguenots; the
+stress of the religious war was transferred to France, and there too the
+Catholic military force by degrees gained the upper hand.</p>
+
+<p>It was under these circumstances that Mary Stuart appeared in England
+with a demand for help. If in the Netherlands the attempts of the nobles
+and the Protestant tendencies had been alike defeated, they had on the
+other hand, by a similar union, achieved a decisive victory in Scotland.
+Was Elizabeth to join Mary in combating them?</p>
+
+<p>Elizabeth disliked the proceedings of the Scotch nobles towards their
+lawful Queen; the adherents of the Scotch church-system were already
+troublesome to her in England: but, however much she found to blame in
+them, in the great contest of the world they were her allies. Mary on
+the other hand held to that great system of life and thought with which
+the English Queen and her ministers had broken. Whatever
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+Elizabeth might have previously promised, she did not mean to be bound by it under
+circumstances so completely
+altered.<a name="FNanchor_232_232" id="FNanchor_232_232"></a><a href="#Footnote_232_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a>
+Had she chosen to restore
+Mary, she would have opened the island to all the influences which she
+desired to exclude. Nor did she wish to let her retire to France, for
+while Mary had resided there previously, England had not had a single
+quiet day: without doubt the Catholic zeal prevailing there would have
+been at once excited in support of her claims to the English throne. An
+attempt was again made to reconcile the Scotch nobles with their Queen:
+but as this led to an enquiry respecting her share in the guilt of the
+King's murder&mdash;those letters of Mary to Bothwell now first came to the
+knowledge of the public&mdash;the dissension became rather greater and quite
+irreconcilable.</p>
+
+<p>One now begins to feel sympathy with the Queen of Scots, especially as
+her share in the crime imputed to her is not quite clear. Of her own
+free will she had come to England to seek for assistance on which she
+thought she could reckon: but high considerations of policy not merely
+prevented its being given but also made it seem prudent to detain her in
+England.<a name="FNanchor_233_233" id="FNanchor_233_233"></a><a href="#Footnote_233_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a>
+Elizabeth and her ministers brought themselves to prefer
+the interests of the crown to what was in itself right and fit. Mary did
+not however on this account vanish from the stage of the world: rather
+she obtained an exceedingly important position by her presence in
+England, where one party acknowledged her immediate claim to the throne,
+the other at least her claim to the succession; and hence arose not
+merely inconveniences but very serious dangers for the English
+government. Even in 1569, at a moment when the Catholic military power
+had the superiority in France and the Netherlands, Mary's uncle, the
+Cardinal of Lorraine, proposed to the King of Spain an offensive
+alliance against Queen Elizabeth.<a name="FNanchor_234_234" id="FNanchor_234_234"></a><a href="#Footnote_234_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a>
+In the civil wars of France they had just
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+won the victory in two great battles. Who could say what the
+result would have been if in the still very unprepared condition of
+England an invasion had been undertaken by the combined Catholic powers?</p>
+
+<p>But the life and the destiny of Europe depend on the fact that the great
+general antagonisms are perpetually crossed by the special ones of the
+several states. Philip did not wish for an alliance with the French; it
+seemed to him untrustworthy, too extensive and, even if it led to
+victory, dangerous. He declared with the greatest distinctness, that he
+thought of nothing but of putting down his rebels (including at the time
+the Moriscoes), and the complete pacification of the Netherlands; he
+would not hear of a declaration of war against England. The difficulty
+of this sovereign's position on all sides and his natural temperament
+were the determining element in the history of the second half of the
+sixteenth century. His great object, the re-establishment and extension
+of the Catholic religion, he never leaves out of sight for a moment; but
+yet he pursues it only in combination with his own special interests. He
+is accustomed to weigh all the chances, to proceed slowly, to pause when
+the situation becomes critical, to avoid dangerous enterprises. Open war
+is not to his taste, he loves secret influences.</p>
+
+<p>In November 1569 a rebellion broke out in England, not without the
+connivance of the Spanish ambassador, but mainly under the impression
+made by the Catholic victories in France, as to which Mary Stuart also
+had let it be known that they rejoiced her inmost soul. It was mainly
+the Northern counties that rose, as had before been the case in 1536 and
+1549. Where the revolt gained the upper hand, the Common Prayer-book and
+sometimes the English translation of the Bible as well were burnt, and
+the mass re-established. Many nobles, above all in the North itself,
+still held Catholic opinions. At the head of the present insurrection
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
+stood the Percies of Northumberland, the Nevilles of Westmoreland, the
+Cliffords of Cumberland; Richard Norton, who rose for the Nevilles,
+venerable for his grey hair, and surrounded by a troop of sons in their
+prime, carried the Cross as a banner in front of his men. The nobility
+did not exactly want to overthrow the Queen, but it wished to force her
+to alter her government, to dismiss her present ministers, and above all
+to recognise Mary Stuart's claim to the succession&mdash;which would have
+given her an exceedingly numerous body of supporters in England and thus
+have seriously hampered the Queen. But now the government possessed a
+still more decided ascendancy than even in 1549. It had come upon the
+traces of the enterprise in time to quell it at its first outbreak, and
+had at once removed the Queen of Scots out of reach of the movement. The
+commander in the North, Thomas Ratcliffe, Earl of Sussex, one of the
+Queen's heroes, who bore himself bravely and blamelessly in other
+spheres of action as well as in this, and has left behind him one of the
+purest of names, encountered the rebels with a considerable force,
+composed entirely of his own men; these the rebels were the less able to
+withstand, as they knew that still more troops were on the march. As the
+ballad of a northern minstrel says, the gold-horned bull of the
+Nevilles, the silver crescent of the Percies, vanished from the field:
+the chiefs themselves fled over the Scotch border, their troops
+dispersed, their declared partisans underwent the severest punishments.
+Many who knew themselves guilty passed over to the Queen's party in
+order to escape.</p>
+
+<p>But at the very time of this victory the war against the Queen at home
+and abroad first received its most vivid impulse through the supreme
+head of the Catholic faith. Pope Pius V, who saw in Elizabeth the
+protectress of all the enemies of Catholicism, had issued the long
+prepared and hitherto withheld excommunication against her. In the name
+of Him who had raised him to the supreme throne of Right, he declared
+Elizabeth to have forfeited the realm of which she claimed to be Queen:
+he not merely released her subjects from the oath they had taken to her:
+'we likewise forbid,' he added, 'her barons and peoples henceforth to
+obey this woman's
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+commands and laws, under pain of
+excommunication.'<a name="FNanchor_235_235" id="FNanchor_235_235"></a><a href="#Footnote_235_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a>
+It was a proclamation of war in the style of
+Innocent III: rebellion was therein almost treated as a proof of faith.</p>
+
+<p>The way in which the Queen opened her Parliament in 1571 forms as it
+were a conscious contrast to the Papal bull, and its declaration that
+she was deposed. She appeared in the robes of state, the golden coronal
+on her head. At her right sat the dignitaries of the English Church, at
+her left the lay lords, on the woolsack in the centre the members of the
+Privy Council, by the sides stood the knights and burgesses of the lower
+house. The keeper of the great seal reminded the Houses of the late
+years of peace, in which&mdash;a thing without example in England&mdash;no blood
+had been shed; but now peace seemed likely to perish through the
+machinations of Rome. All were of one accord that they must confront
+this attempt with the full force of the law. It was declared high
+treason to designate the Queen as heretical or schismatic, to deny her
+right to the throne, or to ascribe such a right to any one else. To
+proselytise to Catholicism, or to bring into England sacred objects
+consecrated by the Pope, or absolutions from him, was forbidden and
+treated as an offence against the State. What a decidedly antipapal
+character did the Church, which retained most of the hierarchic usages,
+nevertheless assume! The oath of supremacy became indispensable even for
+places at court and in the country districts, in which it had not
+hitherto been required. Men deemed the Queen's ecclesiastical power the
+palladium of the realm.</p>
+
+<p>In this form the war of religion appeared in England. The Protestant
+exiles from the Netherlands and France sought and found a refuge here in
+large bodies; it has been calculated that they then composed
+one-twentieth of the inhabitants of London, and they were settled in
+many other places. But the fiery passions, which on the Continent led to
+the re-establishment of Catholicism, reacted on the old
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+English families of the Catholic faith as well, and produced, under the
+influence of Spanish or Italian agitators, ever new attempts at
+overthrowing the government.</p>
+
+<p>It was just then, there cannot be any doubt of it, that Thomas duke of
+Norfolk, who might be regarded as almost the chief noble of the realm,
+became concerned in such an attempt. Somewhat earlier the idea had been
+entertained that his marriage with Mary Stuart might contribute to
+restore general quiet in both kingdoms: but Queen Elizabeth had
+abandoned this plan, and he had pledged himself to her under his hand
+and seal not to enter into any negociation about it without her previous
+knowledge. Nevertheless he had allowed himself to be drawn by an Italian
+money-changer, Roberto Ridolfi, who had lived long in England, not
+merely into a new agreement with this object in view but into
+treasonable designs. Norfolk possessed an immense following among the
+nobility of both religious parties: and, as he would not declare himself
+a Catholic at once, he thought to have the Protestant lords also on his
+side, if he married Mary Stuart, whom many of them regarded as the
+lawful heiress of the realm. He applied for the Pope's approval of his
+proceedings, and promised to come forward without reserve if a Spanish
+force landed in England: he affirmed that his views were not directed to
+his own advancement, but only to the purpose of uniting the island under
+one sovereign, and re-establishing the old laws and the Catholic
+religion. These thoughts hardly originated with the duke, they were
+suggested to him by Ridolfi, who himself drew up the instructions with
+which Norfolk and Mary despatched him to the Pope and the King of
+Spain.<a name="FNanchor_236_236" id="FNanchor_236_236"></a><a href="#Footnote_236_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a>
+Ridolfi had been sent to Mary with full powers from the
+Pope, and also well provided with money. When he now appeared again in
+Rome with his instructions, which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+really contained simply the
+acceptance of his proposals, he was, as may be imagined, received with
+joy: the Pope, who expected the salvation of the world from these
+enterprises, recommended them to King Philip. In Spain also they met
+with a good reception. We are astonished at the naiveté with which the
+Council of State proceeded to deliberate on the proposal of a sudden
+stroke by which an Italian partisan undertook to seize the Queen and her
+councillors at one of her country-houses. The King at last left the
+decision to the Duke of Alva. Alva would have been in favour of the plan
+itself, but he took into consideration that an unsuccessful attempt
+would provoke a general attack from all sides on the Netherlands, which
+were only just subdued and still full of ferment. He thought the King
+should not declare himself until the conspirators had succeeded in
+getting the Queen into their hands, alive or dead. If Norfolk made his
+rising contingent on the landing of a Spanish force in England, Alva on
+the other hand required that he should already have got the Queen into
+his power before his own master made his participation in the scheme
+known.<a name="FNanchor_237_237" id="FNanchor_237_237"></a><a href="#Footnote_237_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a></p>
+
+<p>But while letters and messages were being exchanged in this way (for
+Ridolfi held it necessary to be in communication with his friends in
+England and Scotland), Elizabeth's watchful ministers had already
+discovered all. Even before Ridolfi reached Spain, Elizabeth gave the
+French ambassador an intimation of the commission with which the Queen
+of Scots had entrusted
+him.<a name="FNanchor_238_238" id="FNanchor_238_238"></a><a href="#Footnote_238_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a>
+The latter had not yet received any
+kind of answer from Spain when the Earl of Shrewsbury, in whose custody
+she then was at Sheffield, reproached her with the schemes in which she
+was implicated, and announced to her a closer restriction of her liberty
+as a punishment for them: further Elizabeth would not at that time as
+yet proceed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
+against her. In Spain and Italy they were still expecting
+the Duke of Norfolk to take up arms, when he was already a prisoner.
+Elizabeth struggled long against giving him over to the arm of the law,
+but her friends held an execution absolutely necessary for her personal
+security. On the scaffold in the Tower Norfolk said he was the first to
+die on that spot under Queen Elizabeth and trusted he would be the last.
+All people said Amen.</p>
+
+<p>The scheme of this revolt proceeded more from Italy and Rome than from
+Spain: King Philip had taken no active part in it, the Duke of Alva had
+rather set himself against it: but we need only glance at their
+correspondence to perceive how completely nevertheless they were
+implicated in the matter. To carry on the war against Elizabeth not in
+his own name but in the name, and for the restoration of the rights, of
+the Queen of Scotland, would have exactly suited the policy of Philip
+II: he thought such an opportunity would never present itself again;
+they must avail themselves of it and finish the affair as quickly as
+possible, that France might not take part in it. If Alva counts up the
+difficulties which manifestly stood in the way of the scheme, yet he
+promises to execute the King's wishes with all the means in his power,
+with person and property: 'God will still send the King other favourable
+opportunities as a reward for his religious
+zeal.'<a name="FNanchor_239_239" id="FNanchor_239_239"></a><a href="#Footnote_239_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a></p>
+
+<p>Queen Elizabeth expelled the Spanish ambassador, Gueran de Espes, who
+had undeniably taken part in Ridolfi's schemes as well as in the last
+rising, from England; as soon as he reached Brussels, the English and
+Scotch fugitives gathered round him, and communicated to him many new
+schemes of invasion, to which his ear was more open than that of the
+Duke of Alva. An attack was to be tried, now on Scotland, now on
+Ireland, now on England itself.</p>
+
+<p>We cannot suppose that in England they knew every word that was uttered
+about these plans, or that everything
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+they did believe there was well
+grounded. But from year to year men's minds were more and more filled
+with the idea that Philip II was the great enemy of their religion and
+of their country. In the sphere of classical literature the translation
+of Demosthenes in 1570 is noteworthy in this respect. What Demosthenes
+says against Philip of Macedon, in regard to the Athenians, the
+translator finds applicable to Philip II; he calls the English to open
+war in the words of the ancient orator, 'for as it was then, so is it
+now, and ever will be.'</p>
+
+<p>But for this Elizabeth on her side did not feel inclined or prepared.
+Many acts of hostility took place at sea in a piratical war, in politics
+they stood sharply opposed to each other: but they were not inclined on
+either side for an open contest, front to front.</p>
+
+<p>Above all the English held it necessary now to come to a good
+understanding with the other of the two great neighbouring powers. It
+stood them in good stead that a tendency to moderate measures gained
+sway in France; the English ambassadors took a very vivid interest in
+the project of a marriage between Henry of Navarre and Margaret of
+Valois. While the victory of Lepanto filled the hearts of the partisans
+of Spain with fresh hopes, the jealousy it awakened in the French
+contributed largely to their withdrawal from Spain and the Pope, and
+their readiness for an alliance with England. The two powers promised
+each other mutual support against any attack, on whatever ground it
+might at any time be undertaken. A later explanation of the treaty
+expressly confirmed its including the case of
+religion.<a name="FNanchor_240_240" id="FNanchor_240_240"></a><a href="#Footnote_240_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a></p>
+
+<p>Thus secured on this side the Queen proceeded to carry out an idea which
+had immense consequences. It is not a mere suspicion, partially derived
+from the result, to suppose that she thought King Philip's combining
+with her rebels gave her a right to combine with the King's revolted
+subjects: she herself said so once to the French ambassador: while
+talking with him, she one day dropped her voice, and said that as Philip
+kept her state disturbed, she did not hold herself any longer
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+bound to treat him with the regard she had hitherto shewn him in the quarrels of
+the Netherlands.</p>
+
+<p>It is not quite true that she supported with her own power the Gueux
+('Beggars'), who had fled to the sea from Alva's persecutions, in the
+decisive attacks they now made on Brielle and Vliessingen (Brill and
+Flushing): but this was hardly needed, it was quite enough that her
+feeling was known, she merely let things take their way, she did not
+prevent the attack of the rebels against Philip II (powerful at sea as
+they were) being supported by the fugitive Walloons residing in England,
+and by Englishmen also. It was estimated that there were then in
+Vliessingen 400 Walloons and 400 English: 1500 English lay before the
+town, to keep off the attacks of the Spaniards. French troops gave aid
+in corresponding numbers. They were all recalled at a later time; but
+meanwhile the insurrection had gained a consistency which made it
+impossible for the Spaniards to subdue the Netherlands.</p>
+
+<p>As formerly Elizabeth had joined the Scotch lords against the Regent and
+the Queen of Scotland, so now she helped the insurgents of the
+Netherlands against the King of Spain. In the first case she had Philip
+II himself on her side, in the second case France.</p>
+
+<p>By this policy she found the means of securing herself at home, from the
+Spanish attacks. It was more than ever necessary for Philip to
+concentrate on the war in the Netherlands all the forces of which he
+could dispose. The Queen did not yet take direct part in it, and Philip
+had to avoid everything that could induce her to do so. It was not her
+object to bring about the independence of the Provinces: but she
+insisted on the departure of the Spanish troops, the observance of the
+provincial constitutions, and above all assured liberty for the
+Protestant faith. In 1575 she offered the King her mediation, not
+however without including one special English matter, namely the
+mitigation of the severe religious laws in reference to English
+merchants in the Spanish countries: the King took the opinion of the
+Grand Inquisitor on it. As if he could ever have been in its favour
+himself! The Pacification of Ghent in 1576 was quite in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
+accordance with the Queen's views, since it established the supremacy of the Estates,
+and freedom of religion for the chief Northern provinces. To maintain
+this, she had no hesitation in concluding an alliance with the States,
+and in consequence despatching a body of English troops to the
+Netherlands. She informed the King himself of this, and requested him to
+recall the Stadtholder Don John, his half-brother (who was trying to
+break the peace), and to receive the Estates into his favour: she did
+not by this think to come to a breach with him.</p>
+
+<p>The idea of entrusting Don John of Austria, the victor of Lepanto, with
+the restoration of Catholicism in West Europe had been at that time
+adopted in Rome. His was a fiery nature pervaded by Catholic principles,
+and seized with the most vivid ambition to be something in the world and
+to effect something. The Irish wished him to be their king; he was to
+free Mary Stuart from prison, vindicate her rights alike in Scotland and
+in England, and at her side ascend the throne of the British kingdoms
+now united in Catholicism. Mary gladly acceded to this, as she had
+already long wished for a marriage with the Spanish house. It was
+probably to give this combination a firmer basis that she proposed, in
+case her son did not prove to be a Catholic, to transfer her claims on
+the throne of England to the King of Spain, or to any of his relatives
+whom he should name in conjunction with the
+Pope.<a name="FNanchor_241_241" id="FNanchor_241_241"></a><a href="#Footnote_241_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a>
+But whom could she mean by these last words but Don John himself, who then stood in
+close connexion with the Guises, whom she also recommended most
+pressingly to the King. But she had at the same time directed her aim
+towards Scotland. There her enemies Murray and Lennox had perished by
+assassination; under the following regents, Mar and Morton, Mary had
+still nevertheless so many partisans, that they never could have
+ventured, as they were requested to do from England, to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>
+allow Mary to come to Scotland and be put on her trial: their own power would have
+been endangered by it. Mary too believed herself to have prepared
+everything there so well for an enterprise by Don John that, as she
+says, an overthrow of the Scotch government would infallibly have ensued
+if Philip II had only put his hand to the work. And how closely were his
+interests bound up with it! Without a conquest of the island-kingdom, as
+his brother represented to him, the Netherlands could never be subdued.
+But even now he shunned an open rupture. Besides this his brother's
+restlessness and thirst for action, and his political intrigues which
+were already reacting on Spain, were disagreeable to him; he could not
+make up his mind to take a decisive step.</p>
+
+<p>He had again and again been vainly entreated to interest himself in the
+population of Ireland, in which national and religious antagonism
+contended against the supremacy of England. One of the confidential
+agents secretly sent thither assured him that he was implored by
+nine-tenths of the inhabitants to take them under his protection and
+save their souls, that is restore them the mass, which they could no
+longer celebrate publicly: they appealed to their primeval relationship
+with the Iberian people, to ancient prophecies which looked forward to
+this, and to the great political interests at stake. Philip was not
+disinclined to attempt the enterprise; but he required the co-operation
+of France, without doubt to break the opposition of this power in the
+affairs of the Netherlands; a condition which could not be made
+acceptable to the French by any interposition of Rome.</p>
+
+<p>And so, if Pope Gregory XIII wished to undertake anything against
+Ireland, he had to do it himself. Men witnessed the singular spectacle
+of an expedition against Ireland being fitted out on the coasts of the
+States of the Church. A papal general from Bologna came to the
+assistance of the powerful Irish chief, Fitzmaurice. They commanded the
+Irish districts far and wide, and made inroads into the English: for a
+long time they were very troublesome, although not really dangerous.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
+King Philip was then busied in an undertaking which interested him still
+more closely than even that of the Netherlands: he made good his
+hereditary claim to Portugal, without being obstructed in it either by
+the opposition of a native claimant or by the counter-working of the
+European powers.</p>
+
+<p>In the face of this success, by which the Spanish monarchy became master
+of the whole Pyrenean peninsula and its many colonies in East and West,
+it was all the more necessary for the other two powers to hold together.
+Many causes of quarrel indeed arose between them. How could the shocking
+event of the night of St. Bartholomew fail to awaken all the antipathies
+of the English, and indeed of Protestantism in general! Elizabeth did
+not let herself be prevented by her treaty from supporting the French
+Protestants in the manner she liked, that is without its being possible
+to prove it against her. Under Charles IX she contributed to prevent
+them from succumbing, under Henry III she helped them in recovering a
+certain political position: for this very object the Palsgrave Casimir
+led into France German troops paid with English money. Catharine Medici
+often reproached her with observing a policy like that of Louis XI. But
+the common interest of the two kingdoms was always more powerful than
+these differences; frequent and long negociations were carried on for
+even a closer union. The marriage of Queen Elizabeth with Catharine's
+youngest son was once held to be as good as certain: he actually
+appeared personally in England. We refrain from following the course of
+these negociations. The interest they awaken constantly ends in
+disappointment, for they are always moving towards their object without
+attaining it. But perhaps it will repay our trouble to consider the
+reasons which came into consideration for and against the proposed
+connexion.</p>
+
+<p>The main reason for it was that England must hinder an alliance between
+Spain and France, especially one in favour of the Queen of Scots. And
+certainly nothing had stood the English policy in Scotland in such stead
+as the good understanding with France. But much more seemed attainable
+if France and England were united for ever. They would then be able to
+compel the King of Spain to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
+conclude a peace with the Netherlands which
+would secure them their liberties; and, if he did not observe it, they
+would have grounds for a common occupation of a part of the Provinces.
+If there should be any issue of the marriage, this would put an end to
+all attacks on Elizabeth's life, and greatly strengthen the attachment
+of her subjects.</p>
+
+<p>But against it was the fact that this marriage would bring the Queen
+into disagreeable personal relations; and the country would be as
+unwilling to see a French king as it had once a Spanish one. And how
+would it be, if a son sprung from the marriage, to inherit both the
+French and the English throne? was England to be ruled by a viceroy?
+What an opposition the world would raise to the union of these mighty
+kingdoms, into what complications might it not lead! Scotland would
+again attach itself to the French: the Netherlands and the German
+princes would be alienated.</p>
+
+<p>The members of the Privy Council, after they had weighed all these
+considerations, at last pronounced themselves on the whole against it.
+They recommended the continuance of the present system,&mdash;the support of
+the Protestants, especially in France, a good understanding with the
+King of Scotland, and the maintenance of religion and justice in
+England: thus they would be a match for every threat of the King of
+Spain.<a name="FNanchor_242_242" id="FNanchor_242_242"></a><a href="#Footnote_242_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a></p>
+
+<p>But that sovereign had one ally against whom these precautions could not
+suffice, the Order of Jesuits and the seminaries of English priests
+under its guidance.</p>
+
+<p>Young exiles from England, who were studying in the Universities of the
+Netherlands, to prevent the Catholic priesthood from perishing among the
+English at home, had been already in Alva's time brought together in a
+college at Douay, which was then removed to Rheims as the revolt spread
+in the Netherlands. Pope Gregory XIII was not content with supporting
+this institution by a monthly subsidy; he was ambitious of imitating
+Gregory the Great and exercising
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+a direct influence on England: he
+founded in Rome itself a seminary for the reconversion of that country.
+He made over for this purpose the old English hospital which was also
+connected with the memory of Thomas Becket. The first students however
+fell out with each other, and there was seen in Rome the old antagonism
+of the 'Welsh' and the 'Saxons'; in the end the latter gained the upper
+hand, it was mainly their doing that the institution was given over to
+the Jesuits. Not long after its activity began. Each student on his
+reception was bound to devote his powers to spreading the Catholic
+doctrines in England; by April 1580 a company of thirteen priests was
+ready, after receiving the Pope's blessing, to set out with this object.
+The chief among them were Robert Parsons, who passed into England
+disguised as a soldier, and Edmund Campion as a merchant. The first went
+to Gloucester and Hereford, the other to Oxford and Northampton: they
+and the friends who followed them found everywhere a rich
+harvest.<a name="FNanchor_243_243" id="FNanchor_243_243"></a><a href="#Footnote_243_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a>
+It was arranged so that they arrived in the evening at the appointed
+houses of their friends: there they heard confessions and gave advice to
+the faithful. Early in the morning they preached, and then broke up
+again; it was customary to provide them an armed escort to guard them
+from any mischance.</p>
+
+<p>Withal the forms of the church-service in England had been so arranged
+that it might remain practicable for the Catholics also to take part in
+it. How many had done so hitherto, perhaps with a rosary or a Catholic
+book of prayers in their hands! The chief effort of the seminarist
+priests, on their return to the country, was to put an end to this: they
+dissuaded intercourse with the Protestants even on indifferent matters.
+The Queen's statesmen were astonished to find how much the number of
+recusants increased all at once; from secret presses proceeded writings
+of an aggressive, and exceedingly malignant, character; in many places
+Elizabeth was again designated as illegitimate, a usurper, no longer as
+Queen. On this the repressive system, which had been already set in
+motion in consequence of Pope Pius V's bull, was made
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
+more stringent; this is what has brought on the Queen's government the charge of
+cruelty. The Catholics too began to compose their martyrologies. One of
+the first priests whose execution they describe, Cuthbert Mayne, was
+condemned by the jury for bringing the Bull with him into other people's
+houses together with some <i>Agnus Dei.</i><a name="FNanchor_244_244" id="FNanchor_244_244"></a><a href="#Footnote_244_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a>
+Young people were condemned
+for trying to make their way to the foreign seminaries. On the wish of
+the missionaries Pope Gregory XIII explained the bull so far, that the
+excommunication pronounced in it against all who should obey the Queen's
+commands was meant to be in suspense till it was possible to execute it
+against the Queen herself on whom it continued to weigh<a name="FNanchor_245_245" id="FNanchor_245_245"></a><a href="#Footnote_245_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a>. This
+limitation however rather increased the danger. The Catholics could
+remain quiet till rebellion was possible, then it became a duty. The
+law-courts now sought above all to make the accused priests declare
+themselves as to the validity of the bull and its obligation. Men held
+themselves justified in extreme severity against those who 'slip into
+the country at the instigation of the great enemy, the Pope, and poison
+the hearts of the subjects with pernicious
+doctrines.'<a name="FNanchor_246_246" id="FNanchor_246_246"></a><a href="#Footnote_246_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a>
+On this ground Campion met his death; Parsons escaped. Assuredly there were not
+so many executed as the Catholic world wished to reckon, but yet
+probably more than the statesmen of England admitted. They persisted
+that it was not a persecution for religion: and in fact the controverted
+questions lay mainly in the region of the conflict between Papacy and
+Monarchy: those executed were not so much martyrs of Catholicism as of
+the idea of the Papal supremacy over monarchs. But how closely connected
+are these ideas with each other! The priests for their part believed
+that they were dying for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+God and the Church. But the effect which the
+English government had in view was, with all its severity, not produced.
+We are assured on Catholic authority that in 1585 there were yet several
+hundred priests actively engaged. From their reports it is clear that
+they were still always counting on a complete victory. They vigorously
+pressed for the attempt at an invasion, which they represented as almost
+sure of success; 'for two-thirds of the English are still Catholic; the
+Queen has neither strong places nor disciplined troops: with 16,000 men
+she might be overthrown.' This time also the house of the Spanish
+ambassador, Bernardino Mendoza, formed the meeting-point for these
+tendencies; he kept up a constant communication with the emigrants who
+had been declared rebels, and with the discontented at home, with Mary
+Stuart and her friends in Scotland, with the zealous Catholics
+throughout the world, especially with the Guises, with whom Philip II
+himself now had an understanding. The increasing power of his sovereign
+gained him also an ever-increasing consideration.</p>
+
+<p>It was in these days that the Western and Southern Netherlands were
+again subdued by King Philip. After the death of his brother, his nephew
+Alexander Farnese of Parma had formed an army of unmixed Catholic
+composition, which had naturally from its inner unity gained the upper
+hand over the government of the States, which had called now a German
+and now a French prince to its head, and was composed of different
+religions and nationalities. First the seaports, then the towns of
+Flanders, and at last the wealthy Antwerp also, which by its mental
+activity and commercial resources had materially nourished the revolt,
+fell into the hands of the Spaniards. The Prince of Orange was
+assassinated by a fanatic. Alexander of Parma, who ascribed his
+victories to the Virgin Mary, pushed on his conquests gradually till
+they reached the Northern and Eastern Provinces.</p>
+
+<p>The reaction of these events, even while they were still in progress,
+was first felt in Scotland. There the young King James VI after many
+vicissitudes had, while still under age, taken the reins of government
+into his own hands: and a son of his great uncle, Esmé Stuart (who
+exchanged the title Aubigny which he brought from France for the more
+famous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
+name of Lennox, and was a great friend of the Guises and the
+Jesuits) obtained the chief credit with him. Lennox promoted
+Catholicism, which was not so difficult, as part of the nobility still
+adhered to it, at least in secret; he too lived and moved in
+comprehensive plans for the re-establishment of the Church. Through the
+Guises he hoped to be placed in a position to invade England with a
+Catholic army of 15,000 men; if the English Catholics then did their
+duty, everything they wanted could be attained: for himself he was
+resolved to liberate Mary or die in the attempt. Mary was also to
+reascend the Scotch throne: her son was to be co-regent with her,
+provided that he himself returned to the bosom of the Catholic Church.
+Mary Stuart with her indestructible energy was involved in these designs
+also. She commended them warmly to the Pope and the King of Spain: for
+it was precisely in Scotland that the universal re-establishment could
+best be begun.<a name="FNanchor_247_247" id="FNanchor_247_247"></a><a href="#Footnote_247_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a>
+She wished only to know on what resources in men and
+money her friends there might reckon. We must remember the situation and
+the peril of these schemes and preparations, if we would understand to
+some degree the violent measures on which the Protestant lords in
+Scotland resolved. As in a similar case of an earlier time in Germany,
+they closed the castle, in which King James was received, against his
+attendants: Lennox had to leave Scotland. But the young King was shrewd
+enough, and sufficiently well advised, to rid himself of the lords
+almost in the same way that they had taken him. He succeeded, chiefly
+through the help of the French ambassador, a friend of the Guises.
+Hereupon too he seemed much inclined to favour the undertaking with
+which Henry Guise occupied himself in 1583, a scheme for a revolution in
+the affairs of both countries. Guise hoped, with the support of the King
+of Spain, the Pope, and the Duke of Bavaria, to be able to effect
+something decisive. James VI let his uncle know his full agreement with
+the proposed schemes. But, in fact, it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+did not seem to matter much
+whether he agreed or not. It was reported to Queen Mary, that the
+Catholic party in Scotland reckoned on having the most powerful king of
+Christendom on their side, with or against James' will; that Philip II
+was building so many vessels that in a short time he would become
+completely master of the Western ocean, and be able to invade whatever
+countries he pleased.</p>
+
+<p>It is evident how dangerous for England these Scotch movements were in
+themselves: Queen Elizabeth thought herself most vulnerable on the side
+of Scotland: moreover she already saw herself directly threatened. A
+plan fell into her hands, in which the number of ships and men necessary
+for an invasion of England, the harbours where they were to land, the
+places they were to seize, even the men on whose help they could reckon,
+were enumerated.<a name="FNanchor_248_248" id="FNanchor_248_248"></a><a href="#Footnote_248_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a>
+She convinced herself that the plan came from
+Mendoza, who held out the prospect of his King's assistance for the
+purpose, as the attack was to be made simultaneously from the
+Netherlands and from Spain. This time too Elizabeth dismissed the
+hostile ambassador; but how could she flatter herself with having thus
+exorcised the threatening elements? Now that the foe, with whom she had
+been for fifteen years at war&mdash;though not an open war yet one of which
+both sides were conscious&mdash;had become very much stronger, she was forced
+to take up a decisive position against him, to save herself from being
+overpowered.</p>
+
+<p>In 1584 her chief minister, William Cecil, now Lord Burleigh, High
+Treasurer of the kingdom, drew her attention to this necessity. He
+represented to her that she had nothing to fear from any one in the
+world except from Spain&mdash;but from Spain everything. King Philip had
+gained more victories from his cabinet, than his father in all his
+campaigns: he ruled a nation which was thoroughly of one mind in
+religion, ambitious, brave, and resolute; he had a most devoted party
+among the discontented in England. The question
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+for the Queen was,
+whether she hoped to tame the lion or whether she wished to bind him.
+She could not build on treaties, for the enemy would not keep them. And,
+if he was allowed to subdue the Netherlands completely, no one in the
+world could avoid seeing to what object his power would be directed. He
+advises the Queen not to let things go so far&mdash;for those countries were
+the counterscarp of England's fortress&mdash;but to proceed to open war, to
+withstand the Spaniards in the Netherlands and attack them in the
+Indies. 'Better now,' he exclaims, 'while the enemy has only one hand
+free, than later when he can strike with
+both.'<a name="FNanchor_249_249" id="FNanchor_249_249"></a><a href="#Footnote_249_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a></p>
+
+<p>In August 1585 Antwerp fell into the hands of the Spaniards; in the
+capitulation the case is already taken into consideration, that Holland
+and Zealand also might submit. The Northern Netherlands were threatened
+from yet another side, as Zutphen and Nimuegen had just been taken by
+the Spaniards. In this extreme distress of her natural ally she delayed
+no longer. The sovereignty they offered her she refused anew, but she
+engaged to give considerable assistance, in return for which, as a
+security for her advances, the fortresses Vliessingen and Briel were
+given up into her possession. To prove how much she was in earnest in
+this, she entrusted the conduct of the war in the Netherlands to Dudley,
+Earl of Leicester, who was still accounted her favourite and was one of
+the chief confidants of her policy. In December 1585 Leicester reached
+Vliessingen; on the 1st of January 1586, Francis Drake appeared before
+St. Domingo and occupied it. The war had broken out by land and by sea.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_232_232" id="Footnote_232_232"></a><a href="#FNanchor_232_232"><span class="label">[232]</span></a> Randolph states that the promise was given before
+Darnley's death. Strype, Annals iii. i. 234.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_233_233" id="Footnote_233_233"></a><a href="#FNanchor_233_233"><span class="label">[233]</span></a> That this was thought of from the first is not to be
+supposed; the Queen had once previously declared herself against it. 'We
+fynde her removing either into this our realm or into France not without
+great discommodities to us.' Letter to Throckmorton, in Wright i. 253.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_234_234" id="Footnote_234_234"></a><a href="#FNanchor_234_234"><span class="label">[234]</span></a> Gonzalez, Apuntamientos 338. From the 'short memoryall'
+of 1569 in Hayne's State Papers 585 (though much in it is incorrect), we
+see that men believed in the union of both crowns against England, with
+'the ernest desyre to have the Quene of Scotts possess this crown of
+England.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_235_235" id="Footnote_235_235"></a><a href="#FNanchor_235_235"><span class="label">[235]</span></a> 'Sentenza declaratoria contra Elizabetta, che si pretende
+reina d'Inghilterra.' In Catena, Vita di Pio V, 309. The agreement of
+the bull (e.g. as to the 'huomini heretici et ignobili,' who had
+penetrated into the royal privy council) with the manifesto of the last
+rebellion, is worth observing.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_236_236" id="Footnote_236_236"></a><a href="#FNanchor_236_236"><span class="label">[236]</span></a> The instructions which Mary and Norfolk gave their
+Italian agent for the Roman See are preserved in the Vatican archives
+and printed in Labanoff iii. 221. From Leslie's expression
+(Negociations, in Anderson iii. 152) that the duke negociated with
+Ridolfi through a Mr. Backer, 'because he had the Italian tongue,' and
+that then all the plans were communicated to <i>him</i> ('the whole
+devises'), we might conclude that Norfolk was in general very much in
+foreign hands.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_237_237" id="Footnote_237_237"></a><a href="#FNanchor_237_237"><span class="label">[237]</span></a> Lo que se platico en consejo 7 Julio 1571. Some other
+weighty documents are in Appendix V to Mignet's Histoire de Marie
+Stuart, vol. ii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_238_238" id="Footnote_238_238"></a><a href="#FNanchor_238_238"><span class="label">[238]</span></a> Already on the 16th April the French ambassador, while
+speaking with Elizabeth on the conclusion of the treaty agreed on,
+remarks, 'qu'elle a quelque nouvelle offence contre la dite reyne
+d'Ecosse,' which could have been nothing else but the first news of the
+seizure of one of Ridolfi's servants at Dover on the 10th April, who
+then under torture had confessed all.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_239_239" id="Footnote_239_239"></a><a href="#FNanchor_239_239"><span class="label">[239]</span></a> 'Vendran otras ocasiones en tiempo di V. M. per pagarle
+dios el celo, con que tam caldamente abraza este su negocio.'
+Contestation del duque di Alba, in Gonzalez 450.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_240_240" id="Footnote_240_240"></a><a href="#FNanchor_240_240"><span class="label">[240]</span></a> De la Mothe Fénélon au roi de France 22 Dec. 1571.
+Correspondence diplomatique de Bertrand de Salignac de la Mothe Fénélon
+iv. 317.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_241_241" id="Footnote_241_241"></a><a href="#FNanchor_241_241"><span class="label">[241]</span></a> Sketch of a will, in Labanoff iv. 354. 'Je cedde mes
+droits, que je pretends et puis pretendre à la couronne d'Angleterre et
+autres seignuries et royaulmes en dependant au roy catholique ou autres
+des siens qu'il lui plaira, avesque l'advis et consentement de S. S.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_242_242" id="Footnote_242_242"></a><a href="#FNanchor_242_242"><span class="label">[242]</span></a> Conference at Westminster touching the Queen's marriage
+with the Duke of Anjou 1579. Egerton Papers 78. Sussex, who had
+previously given a somewhat different opinion, was one of those who
+signed.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_243_243" id="Footnote_243_243"></a><a href="#FNanchor_243_243"><span class="label">[243]</span></a> Sacchinus, Historia societatis Jesu iii. 1; vii. 1; viii.
+96.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_244_244" id="Footnote_244_244"></a><a href="#FNanchor_244_244"><span class="label">[244]</span></a> 'Perche contro alle leggi d'Inghilterra egli havesse
+portato seco una bollo papale, alcuni grani benedetti et agnus dei.'
+Martyrio di Cutberto Maino, in Pollini, Istoria eccl. delle rivolutioni
+d'Inghilterra p. 499. It is a pity that the eminent Hallam had not the
+first reports at hand.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_245_245" id="Footnote_245_245"></a><a href="#FNanchor_245_245"><span class="label">[245]</span></a> Facultates concessae Rob. Personio et Edm. Campiano 14
+April 1580. 'Catholicos tum demum obliget, quando publica ejusdem bullae
+executio fieri poterit.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_246_246" id="Footnote_246_246"></a><a href="#FNanchor_246_246"><span class="label">[246]</span></a> Execution of Justice in England. Somers Tracts i.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_247_247" id="Footnote_247_247"></a><a href="#FNanchor_247_247"><span class="label">[247]</span></a> Lettre a Don Bernardino de Mendoza 6-8 April 1582. 'La
+grande aparence, qu'il ha de pourvenir (parvenir) maintenant au dict
+restablissement de la religion en ceste isle, començant pour la Scotia
+(par l'Ecosse).' In Mignet App. 522.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_248_248" id="Footnote_248_248"></a><a href="#FNanchor_248_248"><span class="label">[248]</span></a> According to the Venetian accounts (Dispaccio di Spagna,
+Marzo 1584) the King had sent an experienced soldier as a spy to England
+to investigate the possibility of a landing, 'havendo pensato di
+concertarsi bene con il re di Scotia, perche ancora egli a un tempo
+medesimo si movesse da quella parte.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_249_249" id="Footnote_249_249"></a><a href="#FNanchor_249_249"><span class="label">[249]</span></a> The Lord Treasurers advise in matters of Religion and
+State. Somers Tracts i. 164.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BIII_V" id="BIII_V"></a>
+THE FATE OF MARY STUART.</p>
+
+<p>How completely the circumstances of these times are misunderstood, when
+they are measured by the rules of an age of peace! Rather they were
+filled with hostilities in which politics and religion were mingled;
+foreign war was at the same time a domestic one. The religious
+confessions were at the same time political programmes.</p>
+
+<p>The Queen took up arms not to make conquests, but to secure her very
+existence against a daily growing power that openly threatened her,
+before it had become completely an overmatch for her: she provoked an
+open war: but she had not done enough when she now, as is necessary in
+such cases, took into consideration the training of soldiers, securing
+the harbours, fortifying strong places, improving the navy: the most
+pressing anxiety arose from the general Catholic agitation in the
+country.</p>
+
+<p>Elizabeth's statesmen were well aware that the sharp prosecution of the
+seminarist priests was not enough to put an end to it. With reference to
+the laity, the Lord Treasurer, however strict in other respects,
+recommends to his sovereign quite a different mode of proceeding. We
+should never proceed to capital punishment of such men: we should rather
+mitigate the oath imposed on them: in particular we should never force
+the nobles to a final decision between their religious inclinations and
+their political duties, never drive them to despair. But at the same
+time he gives a warning against awakening any hope in them that their
+demands could ever be satisfied, for this would only make them more
+obstinate. And on no consideration should arms be put into their hands.
+'We do not wish to kill them, we cannot coerce them, but we dare
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span> not
+trust them.' Nothing would be more dangerous than to assume a confidence
+which was not really felt.</p>
+
+<p>Even before this the Privy Council had recommended the Queen to employ
+Protestants only in the government of her State, and to exclude all
+Catholics from a share in
+it.<a name="FNanchor_250_250" id="FNanchor_250_250"></a><a href="#Footnote_250_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a>
+The before-mentioned 'Advice' of Lord
+Burleigh is remarkable for extending the Protestant interest and adding
+a popular one to it. He thinks it intolerable that the copyholders and
+tenants of the Catholic lords, even when they fulfil their obligations
+in all other respects, experience bad treatment from them on account of
+religion: it is impossible to let many thousand true subjects be
+dependent on such as have hostile intentions. The plan Henry VIII had
+once entertained, of diminishing the authority of the Lords, is now
+brought by the High Treasurer at this crisis once more into vivid
+recollection. The Queen is to bind the Commons to herself, to win over
+their hearts. And Burleigh advises allowing the followers of dissenting
+Protestant Churches, especially the Puritans, to worship as they please:
+in preaching and catechising they are more zealous than the
+Episcopalians, very far more successful in converting the people, and
+indispensable for weakening the popish party. We see how the necessity
+of the war acts on home affairs. The chief minister favoured the
+elements which were forcing their way out through the existing forms of
+the state.</p>
+
+<p>In this general strain on men's minds their eyes once more turned to the
+Queen of Scots in her captivity. What would there have been at all to
+fear at other times from a princess under strong custody and cut off
+from all the world? But in the excitement of that age she could even so
+be still an object of apprehension. Her personal friends had from the
+first not seen a great mischance in her enforced residence in England.
+For by blameless conduct she refuted the evil report which had followed
+her thither from Scotland; and her right as heiress of the crown came to
+the knowledge of the whole
+nation.<a name="FNanchor_251_251" id="FNanchor_251_251"></a><a href="#Footnote_251_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a>.
+In the days at which we have arrived we
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
+know with certainty that her presence in the country formed
+a great lever for Catholic agitation. A report found in the papal
+archives has been published, by which it is clear how much support men
+promised themselves from her for every resolute
+undertaking.<a name="FNanchor_252_252" id="FNanchor_252_252"></a><a href="#Footnote_252_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a>
+This document says that since she has numberless partisans, and although in
+prison has uninterrupted communication with them, she will always find
+means, when the time comes, of giving them notice of the approaching
+opportunity: she is resolved to encounter every hardship, nay even death
+itself, for the great
+cause.<a name="FNanchor_253_253" id="FNanchor_253_253"></a><a href="#Footnote_253_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a></p>
+
+<p>Occupied with measures of defence on all sides, the English government
+had already long been considering how to meet this danger. This was the
+very reason why Elizabeth's marriage was so often spoken of with popular
+approbation: if she had children, Mary's claims would lose their
+importance. Gradually however every man had to confess to himself that
+this was not to be expected, and on other grounds hardly to be wished.
+Then men thought how to solve the difficulty in another way.</p>
+
+<p>The chief danger was this: if an attempt on Elizabeth's life succeeded,
+the supreme authority would devolve on Mary, who was on the spot, who
+cherished entirely opposite views, and would have at once realised
+them:&mdash;the thought occurred as early as 1579 of declaring by formal act
+of parliament that all persons by whom the reigning Queen should be in
+any way endangered or injured should forfeit any claim they might have
+to the crown;<a name="FNanchor_254_254" id="FNanchor_254_254"></a><a href="#Footnote_254_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a>
+terms which though general were in reality directed
+only against the Queen of Scots; at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
+that time the proposal was not carried into effect.</p>
+
+<p>The negociations are not yet completely cleared up which were carried on
+with Mary in 1582-3 for her restoration in Scotland. The English once
+more repeated their old demand, that Mary should even now ratify the
+treaty of Edinburgh, and annul all that had been done in violation of it
+by her first husband or by herself. She was further not merely to
+renounce every design against the security and peace of England, but to
+pledge herself to oppose it: and in general, as long as Elizabeth was
+alive, to put forward no claim to the English throne: whether she had
+such a right after Elizabeth's death the parliament of England was to
+decide.<a name="FNanchor_255_255" id="FNanchor_255_255"></a><a href="#Footnote_255_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a>
+Here too the old view came into the foreground: Parliament
+was to be made the judge of hereditary right. The negociation failed
+owing to the Scotch intrigues of these years, in which the intention
+rather was to assert the claim of inheritance with the strong hand.</p>
+
+<p>And from day to day new attempts on Elizabeth's life came to light. In
+1584 Francis Throckmorton, who took part in these very schemes, was
+executed: in 1585 Parry also, who confessed having been in connexion
+with Mary's plenipotentiary in France, and who had come over to
+assassinate Queen Elizabeth. Writings were spread abroad in which those
+about her were called on to imitate, against this female Holofernes, the
+example set in the book of Judith.</p>
+
+<p>Protestant England in the danger of its sovereign saw its own. In all
+churches prayers were offered for her safety. The most remarkable proof
+of this temper is contained in an association of individuals for
+defending the Queen, which was at that time subscribed to far and wide
+through the country. It begins with a statement that, to promote certain
+claims on the crown, the Queen's life was threatened in a highly
+treasonable manner, and enters into a union in God's name, in which each
+man pledges himself to the others, to combat with word and deed, and
+even to pursue with arms, all who should make any attempt on the Queen's
+person; and not to rest till
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+these wretches were completely destroyed.
+If the attempt was so far successful as to raise a claim to the crown,
+they pledged themselves never to recognise such a claim: whoever broke
+this oath and separated himself from the association should be treated
+by the other members as a
+perjurer.<a name="FNanchor_256_256" id="FNanchor_256_256"></a><a href="#Footnote_256_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a></p>
+
+<p>The main object of this association was to cut off all prospect of the
+succession from any attempt in favour of the Queen of Scots: a great
+part of the nation pledged itself to reject a claim made good in this
+manner as exceptionable in every respect. The Parliament of 1585, many
+of whose members belonged to the association, not merely confirmed it
+formally: it now also expressly enacted, that persons in whose favour a
+rebellion should be attempted, and an attack on the Queen undertaken,
+should lose their right to the crown: if they themselves took part in
+any such plots, they were to forfeit their life. The Queen was empowered
+to appoint a commission of at least twenty-four members to judge of this
+offence.</p>
+
+<p>These resolutions and unions were of a compass extending far beyond the
+present occasion, however weighty. How important the ecclesiastical
+contest had become in all questions concerning the supreme temporal
+power! That the deposition of Queen Elizabeth, pronounced by the Pope,
+had no effect was due to the Protestant tendencies of the country, and
+to the fact that her hereditary claim had been hitherto unassailed. But
+now it was a similar hereditary claim, made by Queen Mary, not, it is
+true, formally recognised, but also not rejected, on which the partisans
+of this princess based their chief hope. Mary herself, who always
+combined the most vivid dynastic feelings with her religious
+inclinations, in her letters and statements does not lay such stress on
+anything as on the unconditional validity of her claim to inherit the
+throne. When for instance her son rejected the joint government which
+she proposed to him, she remarked with striking acuteness that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>
+this involved an infringement of the maxims of hereditary right; since he
+rejected her authorisation to share in the government, and recognised as
+legitimate the refusal of obedience she had experienced from her
+rebellious subjects. Once she read in a pamphlet that people denied
+Queen Elizabeth the power to name a successor who was not of the
+Protestant faith: she wrote to her that the supreme power was of divine
+right, and raised high above all these considerations, and warned her
+against opinions of that kind which were avowed by some near her, and
+which might lead to the elective principle and become dangerous to
+herself. This could not fail to have an exactly opposite effect on
+Elizabeth. She was again threatened through the strict dynastic right
+that she also enjoyed: she needed some other additional support. Despite
+all inclination to the contrary, she decided to look for it in the
+Parliament. She likewise aimed at making Mary submit the validity of her
+claim to its previous decision. She could not but be thankful that her
+subjects pledged themselves not to recognise any right to the succession
+which was to be asserted by an attack on her life; she ratified the act
+by which Parliament gave these feelings a legal form. It is obvious how
+powerfully the rights of Parliament were thus advanced as against the
+absolute claim of the hereditary monarchy. In the course of the
+development of events this was to be the case in a still higher degree.</p>
+
+<p>Mary rejected with horror the suspicion that she could take part in an
+attempt on Elizabeth's life: she wished to enrol herself in the
+Association for her
+security.<a name="FNanchor_257_257" id="FNanchor_257_257"></a><a href="#Footnote_257_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a>
+And who could have failed to believe
+at least that the threats against her own right and life, in case of a
+second attempt at assassination, would deter her partisans as well as
+herself from any thought of it! For they well understood the energy with
+which the Parliament knew how to vindicate its laws.</p>
+
+<p>But it is vain to try to bridle men's passions by showing them their
+results. If the attempt on the Queen's life succeeded,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span>cceeded
+this Parliament of course would be annihilated as well as the Queen herself, and another
+order of things begin.</p>
+
+<p>In the seminary at Rheims the priests persuaded an English emigrant,
+called Savage, who had served in the army of the Prince of Parma, that
+he could not better secure himself eternal happiness than by ridding the
+world of the enemy of religion who was excommunicated by the holy
+father. Another English emigrant, Thomas Babington, a young man of
+education and ambition, in whom throbbed the pulse of chivalrous
+devotion to Mary, was informed of this design by a priest of the
+seminary, and was fired with a kind of emulation which has something
+highly fantastic about it. Thinking that so great an enterprise ought
+not to be confided to one man, he sought and found new confederates for
+it; when the murder was effected, and the Spanish troops landed, he was
+to be the man who with a hundred sturdy comrades would free his Catholic
+Queen from prison and lead her to her throne. Mendoza at that time (and
+indeed by Mary's recommendation, as she tells us) was Spanish ambassador
+in France: he was in communication with Babington and strengthened him
+in his purpose. Of all the distinguished men of the age Mendoza is
+perhaps the one who took up most heartily the idea of uniting the French
+and Spanish interests, and advocated it most fervently. King Philip II
+was also informed of the design. He now, as he had done fifteen years
+before, declared his intention, if it succeeded, of making the invasion
+simultaneously from Spain and Flanders. The Queen's murder, the rising
+of the Catholics, and at the same moment a twofold invasion with trained
+troops would have certainly been enough to produce a complete
+revolution. The League was still victorious in France: Henry III would
+have been forced to join it: the tendencies of the strictest Catholicism
+would have gained a complete triumph.</p>
+
+<p>If we enquire whether Mary Stuart knew of these schemes, and had a full
+understanding with the conspirators, there can be no doubt at all of it.
+She was in correspondence with Babington, whom she designates as her
+greatest friend. The letter is still extant in which she strengthens him
+in his purpose of calling forth a rising of the Catholics in the different
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
+counties, and that an armed one, with reasons for it true and
+false, and tells him how he may liberate herself. She reckons on a fine
+army of horse and foot being able to assemble, and making itself master
+of some harbours in which to receive the help expected not merely from
+Flanders and Spain, but also from France. In the letter we even come
+upon one passage which betrays a knowledge of the plot against
+Elizabeth's life; there is not a word against it, rather an approbation
+of it, though an indirect
+one.<a name="FNanchor_258_258" id="FNanchor_258_258"></a><a href="#Footnote_258_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a></p>
+
+<p>And we have yet another proof of her temper and views at this time lying
+before us. As the zeal of the Catholics for her claim to the succession
+might be weakened by the fact that her son in Scotland, on whom it
+naturally devolved, after all the hopes cherished on his behalf, still
+remained Protestant, she reverted to an idea that had once before passed
+through her mind: she pledged herself to bring matters in Scotland to
+such a point that her son should be seized and delivered into the hands
+of the King of Spain: he was then to be instructed in the Catholic faith
+and embrace it; if James had not done so at the time of her death, her
+claim on England was to pass to Philip II. Day and night, so she said,
+she bewailed her son's being so stiffnecked in his false faith: she saw
+that his succession in England would be the ruin of the country.</p>
+
+<p>So it stands written in her letters: it is undeniable: but was that
+really her last and well-considered word? Was it her real wish that
+Elizabeth should be killed, her son disinherited notwithstanding her
+dynastic feelings, and that Philip II should become King of England?
+Were the Catholic-Spanish tendencies of Elizabeth's predecessor, Queen
+Mary Tudor, so completely reproduced in her?</p>
+
+<p>I think we can hardly maintain this with full historic certainty. Mary
+Stuart was not altogether animated by hot religious zeal: if she had
+been, how could she formerly have left the Protestant lords in
+possession of power so long as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span>
+she did, and even have once thought of
+marrying Leicester with his Protestant views? Her son affirmed that he
+possessed letters from her, in which she approved of his religious views
+and confirmed him in them. It was not religious conviction and the
+abhorrence of any other faith, as in Mary Tudor, but her dynastic right
+and her self-confidence as sovereign that were the active and
+predominant motives in all the actions of Mary Stuart. And if there are
+contradictions in her utterances, we cannot hold her capable, like
+Catharine Medici, of taking up and secretly furthering two opposite
+plans at the same time; her different tendencies appear consecutively,
+not simultaneously, in exact accordance with her impulses. For Mary
+Stuart was never quiet an instant: even in her prison she shared in the
+movement of the world; her brain never ceased working; she was brooding
+over her circumstances, her distress and her hope, how to escape the one
+and realise the other: sometimes indeed there came a moment of
+resignation, but only soon to pass away again. She throws all her
+thoughts into her letters which, even if they are aiming at some object
+close at hand, are at the same time ebullitions of the moment,
+passionate effusions, productions of the imagination rather than of the
+understanding. Who could think such a letter possible as that in which
+she once sought to inform Elizabeth of the evil reports about her which
+the Countess of Shrewsbury made, and recounted a mass of scandalous
+anecdotes she had heard from her. The communication was meant to ruin
+the countess: Mary did not remark that it must also draw down the
+Queen's hatred on herself. No one would have dared even to lay the
+letter before the Queen. Mary's was a passionate nature, endowed with
+literary gifts: she let her pen run on without saying anything she did
+not really think at the instant, but without remembering in the least
+what lay beyond her momentary mood. Who will hold women of this
+character strictly to what stands in their letters? These are often as
+inconsiderate and contradictory as their words.</p>
+
+<p>While Mary was writing the above-mentioned letters, she was completely
+taken up with the proposals made to her. She guarded herself from
+inserting anything that could
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
+hinder their being carried into effect:
+by the eventual transfer of her son's claims to the foreign King, all
+opposition on the part of zealous Catholics would be done away. Her
+hopes and wishes hurried her away with them, so that she lost sight of
+the danger in which she thus placed herself. And was she not a Queen,
+raised above the law? Who would take it on himself to attack her?</p>
+
+<p>Mary Stuart was then under the charge of a strict Puritan, Sir Amyas
+Paulet, of whom she complained that he treated her as a criminal
+prisoner and not as a queen. The government now allowed a certain
+relaxation in the external circumstances of her custody, but not in the
+strictness of the superintendence. There hardly exists another instance
+of such a striking contrast between projects and facts. Mary composes
+these letters full of far-ranging and dangerous schemes in the deepest
+secrecy, as she thinks, and has them carefully re-written in cipher: she
+has no doubt that they reach her friends safely by a secret way: but
+arrangements are made so that every word she writes is laid before the
+man whose business it is to trace out conspiracies, Walsingham, the
+Secretary of State. He knows her ciphers, he even sees the letters that
+come for her before she does: while she reads them with haste and in
+hope of better fortune at hand, he is only waiting for her answer to use
+it against her as a decisive proof of her guilt.</p>
+
+<p>Walsingham now found himself in possession of all the threads of the
+conspiracy; as soon as that letter to Babington was in his hands, he
+delayed no longer to arrest the guilty persons: they confessed, were
+condemned and executed. By further odious means&mdash;the prisoner being
+removed from her apartments on some pretence and the rooms then
+searched&mdash;possession was obtained of other papers which witnessed
+against her. Then the question could be laid before the Privy Council
+whether she should now be brought to trial and sentenced in due form.</p>
+
+<p>Who had given the English Parliament any right to make laws which should
+be binding on a foreign queen, and in virtue of which, if she
+transgressed them, she could be punished with death? In fact these
+doubts were raised at the
+time.<a name="FNanchor_259_259" id="FNanchor_259_259"></a><a href="#Footnote_259_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a>
+Against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
+them it was alleged that
+Mary, who had been forced to abdicate by her subjects and deprived of
+her dignity, could not be regarded any longer as a queen: while a
+deposed sovereign is bound by the laws of the land in which he resides.
+If she was still a queen, yet she was subject to the feudal supremacy of
+England, and because of her claim to its crown also subject to its
+sovereignty&mdash;two arguments that contradict each other, one of a feudal,
+the other of a popular character and closely connected with the idea of
+popular sovereignty. Whether the one or the other convinced any person,
+we do not hear; it was moreover not a matter for argument any longer.</p>
+
+<p>For how could anything else be expected but that the judicial
+proceedings prepared several years before would now be put in force? A
+law had been passed calculated for this case, if it should occur. The
+case had occurred, and was proved by legal evidence. It was necessary
+for the satisfaction of the country and Parliament&mdash;and Walsingham laid
+particular stress on this&mdash;that the matter should be examined with full
+publicity.</p>
+
+<p>The commission provided for in the Act of Parliament was named: it
+consisted of the chief statesmen and lawyers of the country. In
+Fotheringhay, whither the prisoner had now been brought, the splendid
+ancestral seat of the princes of the house of York, at which many of
+them were buried, they met together in the Hall on the 14th October.
+Mary let herself be induced to plead by the consideration that she would
+be held guilty, if she did not make any defence: it being understood
+that it was with the reserve that she did not by this give up any of the
+rights of a free sovereign. Most of the charges against her she
+gradually admitted to be true, but she denied having consented to a
+personal attempt on Elizabeth's life. The court decided that this made
+no essential difference. For the rebellion which Mary confessed to
+having favoured could not be conceived of apart from danger to the Queen
+of England's life as well as her
+government.<a name="FNanchor_260_260" id="FNanchor_260_260"></a><a href="#Footnote_260_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a>
+The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>
+court pronounced that Mary was guilty of the acts for which the punishment of death had
+been enacted in the Parliamentary statute.</p>
+
+<p>We cannot regard this as a regular criminal procedure, for judicial
+forms were but little observed; it was the decision of a commission that
+the case had occurred in which the statute passed by Parliament found
+its application. Parliament itself, then just summoned, had the
+proceedings of the Commission laid before it and approved their
+sentence.</p>
+
+<p>But this did not bring the affair to an end. Queen Elizabeth deferred
+the execution of the judgment. For in relation to such a matter she
+occupied quite a different position from that of Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>From more than one quarter she was reminded that, by carrying out the
+sentence, she would violate the divine right of kings; since this
+implied that subjects could not judge, or lay their hands on,
+sovereigns. How unnatural if a queen like herself should set her hand to
+degrade the diadem.<a name="FNanchor_261_261" id="FNanchor_261_261"></a><a href="#Footnote_261_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the Privy Council some were of opinion that, as Mary could not be
+regarded as the author of the last plot, but only as privy to it, closer
+imprisonment would be a sufficient punishment for her. Elizabeth caught
+at this idea. The Parliament, she thought, might now formally annul
+Mary's claim to the English throne, declare it to be high treason to
+maintain it any longer, and high treason also to attempt to liberate her
+from prison: this would deter her partisans from an attempt then become
+hopeless, and also satisfy foreign
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+nations. But it was urged in reply,
+that now to repudiate Mary Stuart's claim for the first time would be
+equivalent to recognising its original validity; and an English law
+would make no impression either on Mary or on her partisans. The
+remembrance of what had happened in Scotland revived again; of Darnley's
+murder, which men imputed to her without hesitation: she was compared to
+Johanna I of Naples who had taken part in her husband's murder: it was
+said, Mary has doubled her old guilt by attempts against the sacred
+person of the Queen; after she had been forgiven, she has relapsed into
+the same crime, she deserves death on many
+grounds.<a name="FNanchor_262_262" id="FNanchor_262_262"></a><a href="#Footnote_262_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a></p>
+
+<p>Spenser, in the great poem which has made him immortal, has depicted the
+conflict of accusations and excuses which this cause called forth. One
+of his allegorical figures, Zeal, accuses the fair and splendid lady,
+then on her trial, of the design of hurling the Queen from her throne,
+and of inciting noble knights to join in this purpose. The Kingdom's
+Care, Authority, Religion, Justice, take part with him. On the other
+side Pity, Regard for her high descent and her family, even <i>Grief</i>
+herself, raise their voices, and produce a contrary impression. But Zeal
+once more renews his accusation: he brings forward Adultery and Murder,
+Impiety and Sedition, against her. The Queen sitting upon the throne in
+judgment recognises the guilt of the accused, but shrinks from
+pronouncing the word: men see tears in her eyes; she covers her face
+with her purple robe.</p>
+
+<p>Spenser appears here, as he usually does, an enthusiastic admirer of his
+Queen. But neither should we see hypocrisy in Elizabeth's scruples,
+which sprang much more from motives which touched her very nearly. She
+kept away from all company: she was heard to break her solitary
+meditation by uttering old proverbs that applied to the present case.
+More than once she spoke with the deputation of Parliament which pressed
+for a decision. What she mainly represented to them was, how hard it was
+for her, after she had pardoned so many rebellions, and passed over
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>
+so much treason in silence, to let a princess be punished, who was her
+nearest blood-relation: men would accuse her, the Virgin Queen, of
+cruelty: she prayed them to supply her with another means, another
+expedient: nothing under the sun would be more welcome to her. The
+Parliament firmly insisted that there was no other expedient; it argued
+in detailed representations that the deliverance of the country depended
+on the execution of the sentence. The Queen's own security, the
+preservation of religion and of the state, made it absolutely necessary.
+Mary's life was the hope of all the discontented, whose plots were
+directed only to the object of enabling her to ascend the throne of
+England, to destroy the followers of the true religion, and expel the
+nobility of the land&mdash;that is the Protestant nobility. And must not
+satisfaction be given to the Association which was pledged to pursue a
+new attempt against the Queen's life even to death? 'Not to punish the
+enemy would be cruel to your faithful subjects: to spare her means ruin
+to us.'</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile they came upon the traces of a new attempt. In presence of the
+elder French ambassador, Aubespine, a partisan of the Guises, mention
+was made of the necessity of killing Elizabeth in order to save Mary at
+the last moment. One of his officers spoke with a person who was known
+in the palace, and who undertook to pile up a mass of gunpowder under
+Elizabeth's chamber sufficient to blow it into the air; he was led to
+hope for rewards from Guise and his brother Mayenne, whose interests
+would have been greatly promoted by such a
+deed.<a name="FNanchor_263_263" id="FNanchor_263_263"></a><a href="#Footnote_263_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a>
+But this time too
+Elizabeth was made acquainted with the design before it came to
+maturity. She ascribed her new danger to the silence, if not to the
+instigation, of the ambassador, the friend of the Guises: in its
+discovery she saw the hand of God. 'I nourish,' she exclaims, 'the viper
+that poisons me;&mdash;to save her they would have taken my life: am I to
+offer myself as a prey to every
+villain?'<a name="FNanchor_264_264" id="FNanchor_264_264"></a><a href="#Footnote_264_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+At a moment when she was especially struck with the danger which threatened her from the very
+existence of her rival, after a conversation with the Lord Admiral, she
+had the long-prepared order for the execution brought to her, and signed
+it with quick and resolute strokes of the pen.</p>
+
+<p>The observation of Parliament, that her safety and the peace of the
+country required her enemy's death, at last gained the upper hand with
+her as well. But this did not imply that her conflicting feelings were
+completely silenced. She was haunted in her dreams by the idea of the
+execution. She had once more recourse to the thought that some
+serviceable hand might spare her the last authorisation, by secretly
+executing the sentence of the judges&mdash;an act which seemed to be
+justified even by the words of the Association; the demand was made in
+due form to the Keeper of the prisoner, Sir Amyas Paulet; he rejected
+it&mdash;and how could anything else have been expected from the
+conscientious Puritan&mdash;with an expression of his astonishment and
+indignation. Elizabeth had commissioned Secretary Davison, when she
+signed the order, to have it sealed with the Great Seal. Her idea seems
+to have been that, when all the forms had been duly complied with, she
+might the more easily get a secret execution, or that at some critical
+moment it might be at once performed; but she still meant to keep the
+matter in her own hand: for the custom was, before the last step, to
+once more ask her approval. But Davison, who marked her hesitation, did
+not think it advisable at this moment. Through Hatton he acquainted Lord
+Burleigh with the matter, and Burleigh put the question to the other
+members of the Privy Council: they took it on themselves to despatch the
+order, signed and sealed as it now was, without further delay to
+Fotheringhay.<a name="FNanchor_265_265" id="FNanchor_265_265"></a><a href="#Footnote_265_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the 8th of February 1587 it was executed on Mary in the very hall
+where the sittings of the court had
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
+been held. As compared with
+Elizabeth's painful disquiet, who shrank from doing what she held to be
+necessary, and when she at last did it wished it again undone and
+thought she could still recall it, the composure and quiet of soul, with
+which Mary submitted to the fate now finally decided, impresses us very
+deeply The misfortune of her life was her claim to the English crown.
+This led her into a political labyrinth, and into those entanglements
+which were connected with her disastrous marriage, and then, through its
+combination with the religious idea, into all the guilt which is imputed
+to her more or less justly. It cost Mary her country and her life. Even
+on the scaffold she reminded men of her high rank which was not subject
+to the laws: she thought the sentence of heretics on her, a free queen,
+would be of service to the kingdom of God. She died in the royal and
+religious ideas in which she had lived.</p>
+
+<p>It is undeniable that Elizabeth was taken by surprise at this news: she
+was heard sobbing as though a heavy misfortune had befallen herself. It
+may be that her grief was lightened by a secret satisfaction: who would
+absolutely deny it? But Davison had to atone for taking the power into
+his own hands by a long imprisonment: the indispensable Burleigh hardly
+obtained pardon. In the city on the other hand bells were rung and
+bonfires kindled. For the universal popular conviction agreed with the
+judgment of the court, that Mary had tried to deliver the kingdom into
+the hands of Spaniards. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_250_250" id="Footnote_250_250"></a><a href="#FNanchor_250_250"><span class="label">[250]</span></a> Consultation at Greenwich 1579, In Murdin 340. 'Pluck
+down presently the strengthe and government of all your papists and
+deliver all the strengthe and government of your realm into the hands of
+wise assured and trusty protestants.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_251_251" id="Footnote_251_251"></a><a href="#FNanchor_251_251"><span class="label">[251]</span></a> Bishop Leslie's negociations, in Anderson iii. 235.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_252_252" id="Footnote_252_252"></a><a href="#FNanchor_252_252"><span class="label">[252]</span></a> 'De praesenti rerum statu in Anglia brevis annotatio,' in
+Theiner, Annales ecclesiastici iii. 480 (at the year 1583). As mention
+is made in this writing of the restoration of order in the States of the
+Church, 'per felicissima novi pontificis auspicia,' we must certainly
+attribute it to the first years of Sixtus V.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_253_253" id="Footnote_253_253"></a><a href="#FNanchor_253_253"><span class="label">[253]</span></a> 'Tam ad hos (haereticos) quam ad catholicos omnes ad
+nostras partes trahendos supra modum valebit, licet in carcere, reginae
+Scotiae opera. Nam illa novit omnes secretos fautores suos et hactenus
+habuit viam praemonendi illos atque semper ut speramus habitura est, ut
+cum venerit tempus expeditionis, praesto sint. Sperat etiam&mdash;per
+amicos&mdash;et per corruptionem custodum personam suam ex custodia
+liberare.' In Theiner, Annales ecclesiastici iii. 482.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_254_254" id="Footnote_254_254"></a><a href="#FNanchor_254_254"><span class="label">[254]</span></a> The means to assure Her Majesty of peace. Egerton Papers
+79.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_255_255" id="Footnote_255_255"></a><a href="#FNanchor_255_255"><span class="label">[255]</span></a> 'Jus successionis judicio ordinum Angliae subjecturam.'
+Camden, i. 360. Compare Strype, Annals iii. i. 131.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_256_256" id="Footnote_256_256"></a><a href="#FNanchor_256_256"><span class="label">[256]</span></a> Association for the assecuration of the Queen, subscribed
+by the members of Lincoln's Inn (Egerton Papers 208). We may assume that
+this was the general idea.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_257_257" id="Footnote_257_257"></a><a href="#FNanchor_257_257"><span class="label">[257]</span></a> In a pamphlet of the time it is stated that she had
+subscribed and sworn to the Association.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_258_258" id="Footnote_258_258"></a><a href="#FNanchor_258_258"><span class="label">[258]</span></a> Tytler (History of Scotland viii. App) maintains that the
+passage was inserted by Mary's enemies, and brings forward some reasons
+for this view which are worth considering. But Mignet (ii. 348) has
+already remarked how many other improbable suppositions this
+necessitates. And what would have been the use of it, as the letter even
+without this addition would have sufficed to condemn her.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_259_259" id="Footnote_259_259"></a><a href="#FNanchor_259_259"><span class="label">[259]</span></a> 'Objections against bringing Maria Queen of Scots to
+trial, with answers thereunto.' In Strype, Annals iii. 2. 397.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_260_260" id="Footnote_260_260"></a><a href="#FNanchor_260_260"><span class="label">[260]</span></a> Evidence against the Queen of Scots. Hardwicke Papers i.
+245. 'Invasion and destruction of Her Majesty are so linked together,
+that they cannot be single. For if the invader should prevail, no doubt
+they would not suffer Her Majesty to continue neither government nor her
+life: and in case of rebellion the same reason holdeth.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_261_261" id="Footnote_261_261"></a><a href="#FNanchor_261_261"><span class="label">[261]</span></a> The French ambassador began, according to Camden 480,
+with the maxim 'regum interesse ne princeps libera atque absoluta morte
+afficiatur.' What Camden quotes from a letter of James makes a certain
+impression; the words are still more characteristic in the original:
+'quho beingh supreme et immediate lieutenants of godd in heaven, cannot
+thairefoire be judget by thaire aequallis in earth, quat monstruous
+thing is it that souveraigne princes thaimeselfis shoulde be the exemple
+giveris of thaire own sacred diademes prophaining.' 27 Jan. 1586-7. In
+Nicolas, Life of Davison 70.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_262_262" id="Footnote_262_262"></a><a href="#FNanchor_262_262"><span class="label">[262]</span></a> Reasons gathered by certain appointed in Parliament. In
+Strype iii. 1, 534.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_263_263" id="Footnote_263_263"></a><a href="#FNanchor_263_263"><span class="label">[263]</span></a> According to the protocol of an interview with the
+ambassador (in Murdin, 579) there can be no doubt of the reality of the
+plot. The ambassador does not deny that he had been spoken to about it,
+he only excuses himself for not having had the Queen informed of it, but
+asserts that he had rejected it with abhorrence.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_264_264" id="Footnote_264_264"></a><a href="#FNanchor_264_264"><span class="label">[264]</span></a> To James I, Letters of Elizabeth and James 42.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_265_265" id="Footnote_265_265"></a><a href="#FNanchor_265_265"><span class="label">[265]</span></a> Arraignment of Mr. Davison in the Star Chamber, State
+Trials 1230. In Nicolas, Life of William Davison, are printed the
+statements and memoranda of Davison as to his share in this matter. They
+are not without reserve; but, in what they contain, they bear the stamp
+of truth.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BIII_VI" id="BIII_VI"></a>
+THE INVINCIBLE ARMADA.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment the war with the Spaniards&mdash;the resistance which the
+English auxiliaries offered to them in the Netherlands, as well as the
+attack now being made on their coasts&mdash;occupied men's minds all the
+more, as the success of both the one and the other was very doubtful,
+and a most dangerous counter-stroke was to be expected. The lion they
+wished to bind had only become exasperated. The naval war in particular
+provoked the extreme of peril.</p>
+
+<p>Hostilities had been going on a long while, arising at first from the
+privateering which filled the whole of the Western Ocean. The English
+traders held it to be their right to avenge every injustice done them on
+their neighbours' coasts&mdash;for man has, they said, a natural desire of
+procuring himself satisfaction&mdash;and so turned themselves into
+freebooters. Through the counter operations of the Spaniards this
+private naval war became more and more extensive, and then also
+gradually developed more glorious impulses, as we see in Francis Drake,
+who at first only took part in the mere privateering of injured traders,
+and afterwards rose to the idea of a maritime rivalry between the
+nations. It was an important moment in the history of the world when
+Drake on the isthmus of Panama first caught sight of the Pacific, and
+prayed God for His grace that he might sail over this sea some day in an
+English ship&mdash;a grace since granted not merely to himself but also in
+the richest measure to his nation. Many companies were formed to resume
+the voyages of discovery already once begun and then again discontinued.
+And as the Spaniards based their exclusive right to the possession of
+the other hemisphere on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span> Pope's decision, Protestant ideas, which
+mocked at this supremacy of the Romish See over the world, now
+contributed also to impel men to occupy lands in these regions. This was
+always effected in the main by voluntary efforts of wealthy mercantile
+houses, or enterprising members of the court and state, to whom the
+Queen gave patents of authorisation. In this way Walter Ralegh, in his
+political and religious opposition to the Spaniards, founded an English
+colony on the transatlantic continent, in Wingandacoa: the Queen was so
+much pleased at it that she gave the district a name which was to
+preserve the remembrance of the quality she was perhaps proudest of: she
+called it Virginia.<a name="FNanchor_266_266" id="FNanchor_266_266"></a><a href="#Footnote_266_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a></p>
+
+<p>But at last she formally undertook the naval war; it was at the same
+time a motive for the league with the Hollanders, who could do excellent
+service in it: by attacking the West Indies she hoped to destroy the
+basis of the Spanish greatness.</p>
+
+<p>Francis Drake was commissioned to open the war. When, in October 1585,
+he reached the Islas de Bayona on the Gallician coast, he informed the
+governor, Don Pedro Bermudez, that he came in his Queen's name to put an
+end to the grievances which the English had had to suffer from the
+Spaniards. Don Pedro answered, he knew nothing of any such grievances:
+but, if Drake wished to begin war, he was ready to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>Francis Drake then directed his course at once to the West Indies. He
+surprised St. Domingo and Carthagena, occupied both one and the other
+for a short time, and levied heavy contributions on them. Then he
+brought back to England the colonists from Virginia, who were not yet
+able to hold their own against the natives. The next year he inflicted
+still more damage on the Spaniards. He made his way into the harbour of
+Cadiz, which was full of vessels that had either come from both the
+Indies or were proceeding thither: he sank or burnt them all. His
+privateers covered the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Often already had the Spaniards planned an invasion of England. The most
+pressing motive of all lay in these
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
+maritime enterprises. The Spaniards
+remarked that the stability and power of their monarchy did not rest so
+much on the strong places they possessed in all parts of the world as on
+the moveable instruments of dominion by which the connexion with them
+was kept up; the interruption of the communication, caused by Francis
+Drake and his privateers, between just the most important points on the
+Spanish and the Netherlandish coasts, seemed to them unendurable: they
+desired to rid themselves of it at any price. And to this was now added
+the general cry of vengeance for the execution of the Queen of Scots,
+which was heard from the pulpit in the presence of the King himself. But
+this was not the only result of that event. The life of Queen Mary and
+her claim to the succession had always stood in the way of Spanish
+ambition: now Philip II could think of taking possession of the English
+throne himself. He concluded a treaty with Pope Sixtus V, under which he
+was to hold the crown of England as a fief of the Holy See, which would
+thus, and by the re-establishment of the Church's authority, have also
+attained to the revival of its old feudal supremacy over
+England.<a name="FNanchor_267_267" id="FNanchor_267_267"></a><a href="#Footnote_267_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a></p>
+
+<p>Once more the Spanish monarchy and the Papacy were closely united in
+their spiritual and political claims. Sixtus V excommunicated the Queen
+afresh, declared her deposed, and not merely released her subjects from
+their oath of allegiance, but called on every man to aid the King of
+Spain and his general the Duke of Parma against her.</p>
+
+<p>Negociations for peace however were still being carried on in 1587
+between Spanish and English plenipotentiaries. It was mainly the
+merchants of London and Antwerp that urged it; and as the Spaniards at
+that time had manifestly the best of the struggle, were masters of the
+lower Rhine and the Meuse, had invaded Friesland, had besieged and at
+last taken Sluys in despite of all resistance, we can understand how the
+English plenipotentiaries were moved to unexpected concessions. They
+would have consented to the restoration of the Spanish supremacy over
+the northern Netherlands,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>
+if Philip would have granted the inhabitants
+freedom of conscience. Alexander of Parma brought forward a proposal, to
+make, it is true, their return to Catholicism obligatory, but with the
+assurance that no Inquisition should be set over them, nor any one
+punished for his deviation from the faith. Even if the negociation was
+not meant to be completely in earnest, it is worth remarking on what
+rock it was wrecked. Philip II would neither grant such an assurance,
+which in its essence involved freedom of conscience, nor grant this
+itself completely in a better form. His strength lay precisely in his
+maintaining the Catholic system with unrelenting energy: by this he
+secured the attachment of the priests and the zealous laity. And how
+could he, at a moment when he was so closely united with the Pope, and
+could reckon on the millions heaped up in the castle of St. Angelo for
+his enterprise, so completely deviate from the strictness of exclusive
+belief. He thought he was within his right when he refused any religious
+concession, seeing that every other sovereign issued laws prescribing
+the religion of his own
+territories.<a name="FNanchor_268_268" id="FNanchor_268_268"></a><a href="#Footnote_268_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a></p>
+
+<p>If the war was to be continued, Alexander of Parma would have wished
+that all his efforts should be first directed against Vliessingen, where
+there was an English garrison; from the harbour there England itself
+could be attacked far more easily and safely. But it was replied in
+Spain that this enterprise was likewise very extensive and costly, while
+it would bring about no decisive result. And yet Alexander himself too
+held an invasion of England to be absolutely necessary; his reports
+largely contributed to strengthen the King in this idea; Philip decided
+to proceed without further delay to the enterprise that was needful at
+the moment and opened world-wide prospects for the future.</p>
+
+<p>He took into consideration that the monarchy at this moment had nothing
+to fear from the Ottomans who were fully occupied with a Persian war,
+and above all that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>
+France was prevented from interfering by the civil
+strife that had broken out. This has been designated as the chief aim of
+Philip's alliance with the Guises, and it certainly may have formed one
+reason for it. Left alone, with only herself to rely on (so the
+Spaniards further judged), the Queen of England would no longer be an
+object of fear: she had no more than forty ships; once in an engagement
+off the Azores, in the Portuguese war, the English had been seen to give
+way for the first time: if it came to a sea-fight, the vastly superior
+Spanish Armada would without doubt prove victorious. But for a war on
+land also she was not prepared, she had no more than six thousand real
+soldiers in the country, with whom she could neither meet nor resist the
+veteran troops of Spain in the open field. They had only to march
+straight on London; seldom was a great city, which had remained long
+free from attack, able to hold out against a sudden assault: the Queen
+would either be forced to make a peace honourable to Spain, or would by
+a long resistance give the King an opportunity of forming out of the
+Spanish nobility, which would otherwise degenerate in indolence at home,
+a young troop of brave warriors. He would have the Catholics for him and
+with their help gain the upper hand, he would make himself master of the
+strong places, above all of the harbours; all the nations of the world
+could not take them from him again; he would become lord of the ocean,
+and thus lord and master of the
+continent.<a name="FNanchor_269_269" id="FNanchor_269_269"></a><a href="#Footnote_269_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a></p>
+
+<p>Philip II would have preferred to begin the work as early as the autumn
+of 1587. He hoped at that time that Scotland, where the Catholic lords
+and the people showed a lively sympathy with Queen Mary's fate, would be
+thrown open to him by her son, who was supposed to wish to avenge her
+death. But to others this seemed not so certain; in especial the
+experienced Admiral Santa Cruz called the King's attention to the perils
+the fleet might incur in those
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
+seas: they would have to contend with
+contrary winds, and the disadvantage of short days and thick mists.
+Santa Cruz did not wish to endanger his fame, the only thing he had
+earned during a long life, by an ill-timed or very venturous
+undertaking. He held an invasion of England to be more difficult than
+most other enterprises, and demanded such preparations as would make the
+victory certain. While they were being made he died, after having lost
+his sovereign's favour. His successor, the duke of Medina Sidonia, whom
+the King chose because he had distinguished himself at the last defence
+of Cadiz, did not make such very extensive demands; but the fleet, which
+was fitted out under him and by him, was nevertheless, though not in
+number of ships (about 130), yet in tonnage, size, and number of men on
+board (about 22,000) the most important that had ever been sent to sea
+by any European power. All the provinces of the Pyrenean peninsula had
+emulously contributed to it: the fleet was divided into a corresponding
+number of squadrons; the first was the Portuguese, then followed the
+squadrons of Castille, Andalusia, Biscay, Guipuzcoa, and then the
+Italian&mdash;for ships and men had come also in good number from Italy. The
+troops were divided like the squadrons; there was a 'Mass in time of
+war' for each province.</p>
+
+<p>With not less zeal did men arm in the Netherlands; the drum beat
+everywhere in the Flemish and Walloon provinces, all roads were covered
+with military trains. In the Netherlands too there were a great number
+of Italians, Corsicans and inhabitants of the States of the Church and
+Neapolitans, in splendid accoutrements; there were the brothers of the
+grand duke of Tuscany and of the duke of Savoy: King Philip had even
+allowed the son of a Moorish prince to take part in the Catholic
+expedition. Infantry and cavalry also had come from Catholic Germany.</p>
+
+<p>It was a joint enterprise of the Spanish monarchy and a great part of
+the Catholic world, headed by the Pope and the King, to overthrow the
+Queen who was regarded as the Head, and the State which was regarded as
+the main support, of Protestantism and the anti-Spanish policy.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span>
+We do not find any detailed and at the same time authentic information
+as to the plan of the invasion; a Spanish soldier and diplomatist
+however, much employed in the military and political affairs of the
+time, and favoured with the confidence of the highest persons, J.
+Baptista de Tassis, gives us an outline, which we may accept as quite
+trustworthy. We know that in Antwerp, Nieuport, and Dunkirk, with the
+advice of Hanseatic and Genoese master-builders, transports had been got
+ready for the whole force: from Nieuport (to which place also were
+brought the vessels built at Antwerp) 14,000 men were to be conveyed
+across to England, and from Dunkirk 12,000. But where were they to
+effect a junction with each other and with the Spaniards? Tassis assures
+us that they had selected for this purpose the roadstead of Margate on
+the coast of Kent, a safe and convenient
+harbour;<a name="FNanchor_270_270" id="FNanchor_270_270"></a><a href="#Footnote_270_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a>
+there immediately after the Spanish armada had arrived, or as nearly as possible at the
+same time with it, the fleet of transports from the Netherlands also was
+to make the shore, and Alexander of Parma was then to assume the command
+in chief of the whole force and march straight on London.</p>
+
+<p>All that Philip II had ever thought or planned was thus concentrated as
+it were into one focus. The moment was come when he could subdue
+England, become master of the European world, and re-establish the
+Catholic faith in the form in which he professed it. When the fleet (on
+the 22nd July 1588) sailed out of Corunna, and the long-meditated,
+long-prepared, enterprise was now set in action, the King and the nation
+displayed deep religious emotion: in all the churches of the land
+prayers were offered up for forty days; in Madrid solemn processions
+were arranged to our Lady of Atocha, the patroness of Spain: Philip II
+spent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span>
+two hours each day in prayer. He was in the state of silent
+excitement which an immense design and the expectation of a great turn
+in a man's fortune call forth. Scarcely any one dared to address a word
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>It was in these very days that people in England first really became
+conscious of the danger that threatened them. A division of the fleet
+under Henry Seymour was watching, with Dutch assistance, the two
+harbours held by the prince of Parma: the other and larger division,
+just returned from Spain and on the point of being broken up, made ready
+at Plymouth, under the admiral, Howard of Effingham, to receive the
+enemy. Meanwhile the land forces assembled, on Leicester's
+advice,<a name="FNanchor_271_271" id="FNanchor_271_271"></a><a href="#Footnote_271_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a>
+in the neighbourhood of London. The old feudal organisation of the
+national force was once more called into full activity to face this
+danger. Men saw the gentry take the field at the head of their tenants
+and copyholders, and rejoiced at their holding together so well. It was
+without doubt an advantage, that the threatened attack could no longer
+be connected with a right of succession recognised in the country; it
+appeared in its true character, as a great invasion by a foreign power
+for the subjugation of England. Even the Catholic lords came forward,
+among them Viscount Montague (who had once, alone in the Upper House,
+opposed the Supremacy, and had also since not reconciled himself to the
+religious position of the Queen), with his sons and grandsons, and even
+his heir-presumptive who, though still a child, bestrode a war-horse;
+Lord Montague said, he would defend his Queen with his life, whoever
+might attack her, king or pope. No doubt that these armings left much to
+be desired, but they were animated by national and religious enthusiasm.
+Some days later the Queen visited the camp at Tilbury: with slight
+escort she rode from battalion to battalion. A tyrant, she said, might
+be afraid of his subjects: she had always sought her chief strength in
+their good will: with them she would live and die. She was everywhere
+received with shouts of joy: psalms
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>
+were sung, and prayers offered up in which the Queen joined.</p>
+
+<p>For, whatever may be men's belief, in great wars and dangers they
+naturally turn their eyes to the Eternal Power which guides our destiny,
+and on which all equally feel themselves dependent. The two nations and
+their two chiefs alike called on God to decide in their religious and
+political conflict. The fortune of mankind hung in the balance.</p>
+
+<p>On the 31st July, a Sunday, the Armada, covering a wide extent of sea,
+came in sight of the English coast off the heights of Plymouth. On board
+the fleet itself it was thought most expedient to attempt a landing on
+the spot, since there were no preparations made there for defence and
+the English squadron was not fully manned. But this was not in the plan,
+and would, especially if it failed, have incurred a heavy
+responsibility. Medina Sidonia was only empowered and prepared to accept
+battle by sea if the English should offer it. His galleys, improved
+after the Venetian pattern, and especially his galleons (immense sailing
+ships which carried cannon on their different decks on all sides), were
+without doubt superior to the vessels of the English. When the latter,
+some sixty sail strong, came out of the harbour, he hung out the great
+standard from the fore-mast of his ship as a signal for all to prepare
+for battle. But the English admiral did not intend to let matters come
+to a regular naval fight. He was perfectly aware of the superiority of
+the Spanish equipment and had even forbidden boarding the enemies'
+vessels. His plan was to gain the weather-gauge of the Armada, and
+inflict damage on them in their course, and throw them into disorder.
+The English followed the track of the Armada in four squadrons, and left
+no advantage unimproved that might offer. They were thoroughly
+acquainted with this sea, and steered their handy vessels with perfect
+certainty and mastery: the Spaniards remarked with dissatisfaction that
+they could at pleasure advance, attack, and again break off the
+engagement. Medina Sidonia was anxious above all things to keep his
+Armada together: after a council of war he let a great ship which lagged
+behind fall into the hands of the enemy, as her loss would be less
+damaging than the breaking up of the line which would result from the
+attempt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span>
+to save her: he sent round his sargentes mayores to the
+captains to tell them not to quit the line on pain of
+death.<a name="FNanchor_272_272" id="FNanchor_272_272"></a><a href="#Footnote_272_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the whole the Spaniards were not discontented with their voyage, when
+after a week of continuous skirmishing they, without having sustained
+any very considerable losses, had traversed the English channel, and on
+Saturday the 6th August passed Boulogne and arrived off Calais: it was
+the first point at which they had wished to touch. But now to cross to
+the neighbouring coast of England, as seems to have been the original
+plan, became exceedingly difficult, because the English fleet guarded
+it, and the Spanish galleons were less able in the straits than
+elsewhere to compete with those swift vessels, It was also being
+strengthened every moment; the young nobility emulously hastened on
+board. But neither could the admiral proceed to Dunkirk, as the harbour
+was then far too narrow to receive his large ships, and his pilots were
+afraid of being carried to the northward by the currents. He anchored in
+the roadstead east of Calais in the direction of Dunkirk.</p>
+
+<p>He had already previously informed the Duke of Parma that he was on the
+way, and had then, immediately before his arrival at Calais, despatched
+a pilot to Dunkirk, to request that he would join him with a number of
+small vessels, that they might better encounter the English, and bring
+with him cannon balls of a certain calibre, of which he began to fall
+short.<a name="FNanchor_273_273" id="FNanchor_273_273"></a><a href="#Footnote_273_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a>
+It is clear that he still wished to undertake from thence,
+if supported according to his views, the great attempt at a
+disembarkation which he was commissioned to effect. But Alexander of
+Parma, whom the first message had found some days before at Bruges, had
+not yet arrived at Dunkirk when the second came: the preparations for
+embarking were only then just begun for the first time; and they could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>
+scarcely venture actually to embark, as English and Dutch ships of war
+were still ever cruising before the harbour.</p>
+
+<p>Alexander Farnese's failure to effect a junction with Medina Sidonia has
+been always traced to personal motives; it was even said in England, at
+a later time, that Queen Elizabeth had offered him the hand of Lady
+Arabella Stuart, which might open the way to the English throne for
+himself. It is true that his enterprises in the Netherlands appeared to
+lie closest to his heart; even Tassis, who was about his person, remarks
+that he carried on his preparations more out of obedience than with any
+zeal of his own. But the chief cause why the two operations were not
+better combined lay in their very nature. The geographical relation of
+the Spanish monarchy to England would have required two separate
+invasions, the one from the Pyrenean peninsula, the other from the
+Netherlands. The wish to combine the forces of such distant countries in
+a single invasion made the enterprise, especially when the means of
+communication of the period were so inadequate, overpoweringly helpless.
+Wind and weather had been little considered in the scheme. In both those
+countries immense materials of war had been collected with extreme
+effort; they had been brought within a few miles of sea of each other,
+but combine they could not. Now for the first time came to light the
+full superiority which the English gained from their corsair-like and
+bold method of war, and their alliance with the Dutch. It was seen that
+a sudden attack would suffice to break the whole combination in pieces:
+Queen Elizabeth was said to have herself devised the plan and its
+arrangement.</p>
+
+<p>The Armada was still lying at anchor in line of battle, waiting for news
+from Alexander Farnese, when in the night between Sunday and Monday (7th
+to 8th August) the English sent some fire-ships, about eight in number,
+against it. They were his worst vessels which Lord Howard gave up for
+this purpose, but their mere appearance produced a decisive result.
+Medina Sidonia could not refuse his ships permission to slip their
+anchors, that each might avoid the threatening danger: only he commanded
+them to afterwards resume their previous order. But things wore a
+completely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
+different appearance the following morning. The tide had
+carried the vessels towards the land, a direction they did not want to
+take; now for the first time the attacks of the English proved
+destructive to them: part of the ships had become disabled: it was
+completely impossible to obey the admiral's orders that they should
+return to their old position. Instead of this, unfavourable winds drove
+the Armada against its will along the coast; in a short time the English
+too gave up the pursuit of the enemy, who without being quite beaten was
+yet in flight, and abandoned him to his fate. The wind drove the
+Spaniards on the shoals of Zealand: once they were in such shallow water
+that they were afraid of running aground: some of their galleons in fact
+fell into the hands of the Dutch. Fortunately for them the wind veered
+round first to the W.S.W., then to the S.S.W., but they could not even
+then regain the Channel, nor would they have wished it; only by the
+longest circuit, round the Orkney Islands, could they return to Spain.</p>
+
+<p>A storm fraught with ruin had lowered over England: it was scattered
+before it discharged its thunder. So completely true is the expression
+on a Dutch commemorative medal, 'the breath of God has scattered them'
+(<i>flavit et dissipati sunt</i>).</p>
+
+<p>Philip II saw the Armada, which he had hoped would give the dominion of
+the world into his hand, return home again in fragments without having,
+we do not say accomplished but even, attempted anything worth the
+trouble. He did not therefore renounce his design. He spoke of his wish
+to fit out lighter vessels, and entrust the whole conduct of the
+expedition to the Prince of Parma. The Cortes of Castille requested him
+not to put up with the disgrace incurred, but to chastise this woman:
+they offered him their whole property and all the children of the land
+for this purpose. But the very possibility of great enterprises belongs
+only to one moment: in the next it is already gone by.</p>
+
+<p>First the Spanish forces were drawn into the complications existing in
+France. The great Catholic agitation, which had been long fermenting
+there, at last gained the upper hand, and was quite ready to prepare the
+way for Philip II's
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>
+supremacy. But Queen Elizabeth thought that the day
+on which France fell into his hands would be the eve of her own ruin.
+She too therefore devoted her best resources to France, to uphold Philip
+II's opponent. When Henry IV, driven back to the verge of the coast of
+Normandy, was all but lost, he was by her help put in a position to
+maintain his cause. At the sieges of the great towns, in which he was
+still often threatened with failure, the English troops in several
+instances did excellent service. The Queen did not swerve from her
+policy even when Henry IV saw himself compelled, and found it compatible
+with his conscience, to go over to Catholicism. For he was clearly thus
+all the better enabled to re-establish a France that should be
+politically independent, in opposition to Spain and at war with it; and
+it was exactly on this opposition that the political freedom and
+independence of England herself rested. Yet as his change of religion
+had been disagreeable to the Queen, so was also the peace which he
+proceeded to make; she exerted her influence against its conclusion. But
+as by it the Spaniards gave up the places they occupied on the French
+coasts, which in their possession had menaced England as well, she could
+not in reality be fundamentally opposed to it.</p>
+
+<p>These great conflicts on land were seconded by repeated attacks of the
+English and Dutch naval power, by which it sometimes seemed as if the
+Spanish monarchy would be shaken to its foundations. Elizabeth made an
+attempt to restore Don Antonio to the throne from which Philip II had
+driven him. But the minds of the Portuguese themselves were very far
+from being as yet sufficiently prepared for a revolt: the enterprise
+failed, in an attack on the suburbs of Lisbon. The war interested the
+English most deeply. Parliament agreed to larger and larger grants: from
+two-fifteenths and a single subsidy (about £30,000), which was its usual
+vote, it rose in 1593 to three subsidies and six-fifteenths; the towns
+gladly armed ships at their own expense, and sailors enough were found
+to man them: the national energy turned towards the sea. And they
+obtained some successes. In the harbour of Corunna they destroyed the
+collected stores, which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>
+were probably to have served for renewing the
+expedition. Once they took the harbour of Cadiz and occupied the city
+itself: more than once they alarmed and endangered the West Indies. But
+with all this nothing decisive was effected; the Spanish monarchy
+maintained an undoubted ascendancy in Europe, and the exclusive
+possession of the other hemisphere: it was the Great Power of the age.
+But over against it England also now took up a strong and formidable
+position.</p>
+
+<p>Events in France exercised a strong counter-action on the Netherlands;
+under their influence the reconquest of the United Provinces became
+impossible for Spain. Elizabeth also contributed largely to the
+victories by which Prince Maurice of Orange secured a strong frontier.
+But these could not prevent a powerful Catholic government arising on
+the other side in the Belgian provinces: and though they were at first
+kept apart from Spain, yet it did not escape the Queen that this would
+not last for ever: she seems to have had a foreboding that these
+countries would become the battleground of a later age. However this
+might be, the antagonism of principle between the Catholic Netherlands
+(which were still ruled by the Austro-Spanish House) and the Protestant
+Netherlands (in which the Republic maintained itself), and the continued
+war between them, ensured the security of England, for the sake of which
+the Queen had broken with Spain. Burleigh's objects were in the main
+attained. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_266_266" id="Footnote_266_266"></a><a href="#FNanchor_266_266"><span class="label">[266]</span></a> Oldys, Life of Sir W. Raleigh 38.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_267_267" id="Footnote_267_267"></a><a href="#FNanchor_267_267"><span class="label">[267]</span></a> Spondanus, Continuatio Baronii ii. 847. The word
+'dicitur,' which Spondan uses, is omitted in Timpesti, Vita di Sisto V,
+ii. 51.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_268_268" id="Footnote_268_268"></a><a href="#FNanchor_268_268"><span class="label">[268]</span></a> A letter of Philip's to the King of Denmark, in the
+Venetian Dispacci of this year, which in general would be of great value
+for a detailed account of the event.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_269_269" id="Footnote_269_269"></a><a href="#FNanchor_269_269"><span class="label">[269]</span></a> The reports are in Herrera, Historia del mundo iii. 60
+seq. In 1860 Mr. Motley (History of the United Netherlands ii. ch.
+xviii.) communicated extracts from the letters exchanged at that time
+between Alex. Farnese and Philip II, which reveal the wishes of each
+successive moment.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_270_270" id="Footnote_270_270"></a><a href="#FNanchor_270_270"><span class="label">[270]</span></a> J. B. de Tassis Commentarii: 'eo consilio, ut cum
+adventasset classis et constitisset in Morgat, qui est prope Dormiram [I
+read Douvram, as the copy from which the printed text is taken is very
+defective] districtus maris quietus portumque efficit satis securum,
+trajiceret Parmensis cum navigiis.' Papendrecht, Analecta Belgica II.
+ii. 491. In Motley i. ch. viii we now see that Al. Farnese in his very
+first plan pointed out the coast between Dover and Margate as the most
+proper place for the landing. A junction of the whole transport fleet
+with the Armada before Calais has something too adventurous in it to
+have been contemplated from the beginning.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_271_271" id="Footnote_271_271"></a><a href="#FNanchor_271_271"><span class="label">[271]</span></a> The Earl of Leicester to the Queen. Hardwicke State
+Papers i. 580. The dates given above are New Style.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_272_272" id="Footnote_272_272"></a><a href="#FNanchor_272_272"><span class="label">[272]</span></a> Diario de los sucesos de armada Ilamada la invencible, in
+Salva, Collection de documentos ineditos xvi. 449: essentially the same
+report as that used by Barrow, Life of Sir Francis Drake.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_273_273" id="Footnote_273_273"></a><a href="#FNanchor_273_273"><span class="label">[273]</span></a> Diario 458: 'mandase salir 40 filipotes luego para
+juntarse con esta armada para poder con ellos trabarse con los enemigos,
+que a causa de ser nuestros baseles muy pesados en comparacion de la
+ligereza de los enemigos no era posible en ninguna maniera venir a las
+manos con ellos.'</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BIII_VII" id="BIII_VII"></a>
+THE LATER YEARS OF QUEEN ELIZABETH.</p>
+
+<p>Every great historic existence has a definite purport; the life of Queen
+Elizabeth lies in the transactions already recorded, and their results
+in the change of policy which she brought about.</p>
+
+<p>The issue of the war between the hierarchy, which had once swayed every
+act and thought of the West, and those who had fallen off from it was
+not yet decided as long as England with its power vacillated between the
+two systems. Then this Queen came forward, attaching herself to the new
+view as by a predetermined destiny; she carried it out in a form
+answering to the historical institutions of her kingdom, and with an
+energy by which she at the same time upheld that kingdom's power. It was
+against her therefore that the hierarchy, when it could renew the
+contest, mainly directed its most energetic efforts: an author of the
+period makes those leagued with the Pope against the Queen say to each
+other, 'come let us kill her, and the inheritance shall be ours.' The
+chief among these was the mighty King who had himself once ruled
+England. She maintained a war with this league, in which it was at each
+moment a question of existence for her. She was assailed with all the
+weapons of war and of treason; but she adopted corresponding means of
+defence against every assault: she not only maintained herself, but
+created in the neighbouring countries a powerful representation of the
+principle which she had taken up, without pressing the adoption of a
+form for it exactly like her own. Without her help the
+church-reformation in Scotland, and at that time in France, would have
+been probably suppressed, and in the Netherlands it would have never
+taken actual shape. The Queen is the champion of West-European
+Protestantism and of all the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span>
+political growth that was attached to the
+new faith. She herself expresses her astonishment at her success in
+this: 'more at the fact,' she says once, 'that I am still alive, than
+that my enemies would not have me to live.' That Philip effected so
+little against her, she believes to be due above all to God's justice;
+for the King attacked her in an unkingly manner while negociations were
+still going on: she sees in this a proof that an ill beginning leads to
+a disgraceful end, despite all power and endeavour. 'What was to ruin
+me, has turned to my
+glory.'<a name="FNanchor_274_274" id="FNanchor_274_274"></a><a href="#Footnote_274_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a></p>
+
+<p>It is surely the greatest happiness that can be granted to any human
+being, while defending his own interest, to be maintaining the interests
+of all. Then his personal existence expands into a central part of the
+world's history.</p>
+
+<p>That personal and universal interest was likewise a thoroughly English
+one. Commerce grew amidst arms: the maintenance of internal peace filled
+the country with wellbeing and riches; palaces were seen rising where
+before only huts had stood: as the philosophic Bacon remarks, England
+now won her natural position in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Elizabeth was one of those sovereigns who have beforehand formed an idea
+for themselves as to the duties of government. Four qualities, she says
+once, seemed to her necessary for it: justice and self-control,
+highmindedness and judgment; she might pride herself on the two first:
+never in a case of equal rights had she favoured one person more than
+another: never had she believed a first report, but waited for fuller
+knowledge: the two others she would not claim for herself, for they were
+men's virtues. But the world ascribed a high degree of these very
+virtues to her. Men descried her subtle judgment in the choice of her
+servants, and the directing them to the services for which they were
+best fitted. Her high heart was seen in her despising small advantages,
+and in her unshaken tranquillity in danger. While the storm was coming
+on from Spain, no cloud was seen on her brow: by her conduct she
+animated nobles and people, and inspirited her councillors. Men praised
+her for two things, for zealous participation in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span>
+deliberation and for care in seeing that what was decided on was carried into
+effect.<a name="FNanchor_275_275" id="FNanchor_275_275"></a><a href="#Footnote_275_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a></p>
+
+<p>But we may not look for an ideal female ruler in Queen Elizabeth. No one
+can deny the severities which were practised under her government even
+with her knowledge. The systematic hypocrisy imputed to her may seem an
+invention of her enemies or of historians not thoroughly informed; she
+herself declares truthfulness a quality indispensable for a prince; but
+in her administration, as well as in that of most other rulers,
+reasonings appear which rather conceal the truth than express it; in
+each of her words, and in every step she took, we perceive a calculation
+of what is for her advantage; she displays striking foresight and even a
+natural subtlety. Elizabeth was very accessible to flattery, and as
+easily attracted by an agreeable exterior as repelled by slight
+accidental defects; she could break out at a word that reminded her of
+the transitory nature of human affairs or of her own frailty: vanity
+accompanied her from youth to those advancing years, which she did not
+wish to remark or to think were remarked. She liked to ascribe successes
+to herself, disasters to her ministers: they had to take on themselves
+the hatred felt against disagreeable or doubtful regulations, and if
+they did not do this quite in unison with her mood, they had to fear her
+blame and displeasure. She was not free from the fickleness of her
+family: but on the other hand she displayed also the amiable attention
+of a female ruler: as when once during a speech she was making in a
+learned language to the learned men of Oxford, on seeing the Lord
+Treasurer standing there with his lame foot, she suddenly broke off,
+ordered a chair to be brought him, and then continued; indeed it was
+said she at the same time wished to let it be remarked that no accident
+could discompose her. As Harrington, who knew her from personal
+acquaintance, expresses himself: her mind might be sometimes compared to
+a summer morning sky, beneficent and refreshing: then
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span>
+she won the
+hearts of all by her sweet and modest speech. But she was repellent in
+the same degree in her excited state, when she paced to and fro in her
+chamber, anger in every look, rejection in every word: men hastened out
+of her way. Among other correspondence we learn to know her from that
+with King James of Scotland,&mdash;one side of her political relations, to
+which we shall return:&mdash;how does every sentence express a mental and
+moral superiority as well as a political one! not a superfluous word is
+there: all is pith and substance. From care for him and intelligent
+advice she passes to harsh blame and most earnest warning: she is kind
+and sharp, friendly and rough, but almost ever more repellent and
+unsparing than mild. Never had any sovereign a higher idea of his
+dignity, of the independence belonging to him by the laws of God and
+man, of the duty of obedience binding on all subjects. She prides
+herself on no external consideration influencing her resolutions,
+threats or fear least of all; when once she longs for peace, she insists
+on its not being from apprehension of the enemy, but only from
+abhorrence of bloodshed. The action of life does not develop merely the
+intellectual powers: between success and failure, in conflict and effort
+and victory, the character moulds itself and acquires its ruling tone.
+Her immense good fortune fills her with unceasing self-confidence, which
+is at the same time sustained by trust in the unfailing protection of
+Providence.<a name="FNanchor_276_276" id="FNanchor_276_276"></a><a href="#Footnote_276_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a>
+That she, excommunicated by the Pope, maintains herself
+against the attacks of half the world, gives her whole action and nature
+a redoubled impress of personal energy. She does not like to mention her
+father or her mother: of a successor she will not hear a word. The
+feeling of absolute possession is predominant in her appearance. It is
+noticeable how on festivals she moves in procession through her palace:
+in front are nobles and knights in the costume of their order, with
+bared heads; next the bearers of the insignia of royalty, the sceptre,
+the sword, and the great seal: then the Queen herself in a dress covered
+with pearls and precious stones; behind her ladies,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span>
+brilliant in their
+beauty and rich attire: to one or two, who are presented to her, she
+reaches out her hand to kiss as she goes by in token of favour, till she
+arrives at her chapel, where the assembled crowd hails her with a 'God
+save the Queen,' she returning them thanks with gracious words.
+Elizabeth received the whole reverence, once more unbounded, which men
+paid to the supreme power. The meats of which she was to eat were set on
+the table with bended knee, even when she was not present. It was on
+their knees that men were presented to
+her.<a name="FNanchor_277_277" id="FNanchor_277_277"></a><a href="#Footnote_277_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a></p>
+
+<p>Between a sovereign like this and her Parliament points of contention
+could not be wanting. The Commons claimed the privilege of absolute
+freedom of speech, and repeatedly attacked the abuses which still
+remained in the episcopal Church, and the injurious monopolies which
+profited certain favoured persons. The Queen had members of the Lower
+House imprisoned for speeches disagreeable to her: she warned them not
+to interfere in the affairs of the Church, and even not in those of the
+State, and declared it to be her prerogative to summon and dissolve
+Parliament at her pleasure, to accept or reject its measures. But with
+all this she still did not on the other hand conceal that, in reference
+to the most important affairs of State, she had to pay regard to the
+tone of the two Houses: however much she might be loved, yet men's minds
+are easily moved and not thoroughly trustworthy. In its forms Parliament
+studied to express the devotion which the Queen claimed as Queen and
+Lady, while she tried to make amends for acts by which the assembly had
+been previously offended: for statements of grievances, as in the
+instance of the monopolies, she even thanked them, as for a salutary
+reminder. A French ambassador remarks in 1596 that the Parliament in
+ages gone by had great authority, but now it did all the Queen wished.
+Another who arrived in 1597 is not merely astonished at its imposing
+exterior, but also at the extent of its rights. Here, says he, the great
+affairs are treated of, war and peace, laws, the needs of the community
+and the mode of satisfying
+them.<a name="FNanchor_278_278" id="FNanchor_278_278"></a><a href="#Footnote_278_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a>
+The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span>
+one statement is perhaps as
+true as the other. The solution of the contradiction depends on this,
+that Queen and Parliament were united as to the general relations of the
+country and the world. The Queen, as is self-evident, could not have
+ruled without the Parliament: from the beginning of her government she
+supported herself by it in the weightiest affairs; but a simple
+consideration teaches us how much on the other hand Parliament owed
+precisely to that introduction into these great questions, which the
+Queen thought advisable. They avoided, and were still able to avoid, any
+enquiry into their respective rights and the boundaries of those rights.
+And besides Elizabeth guarded herself from troubling her Parliament too
+much by demands for money. She has been often blamed for her economy
+which sometimes became inconvenient in public affairs: as in most cases,
+nature and policy here also coincided. That she was sparing of money,
+and once was actually in a condition to decline a grant offered her,
+gave the administration an independence of any momentary moods of
+Parliament, which suited her whole nature, and without this might have
+been easily lost.</p>
+
+<p>William Cecil, Lord Burleigh, her treasurer, as economical as herself,
+was likewise her first minister. He had assisted her with striking
+counsel even before her accession, and since lived and moved in her
+administration of the state. He was one of those ministers who find
+their calling in a boundless industry,&mdash;he needed little sleep, long
+banquets were not to his
+taste:<a name="FNanchor_279_279" id="FNanchor_279_279"></a><a href="#Footnote_279_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a>
+never was he seen inactive even for
+half an hour; he kept notes of everything great and small; business
+accompanied him even to his chamber, and to his retirement at S.
+Theobald's. His anxious thoughts were visible in his face, as he rode on
+his mule along the roads of the park; he only lost sight of them for a
+moment when he was sitting at table among his growing children: then his
+heavy eyebrows cleared up, light merriment even came from his lips.
+Every other charm of life lay far from him: for poetry and poets he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>
+had no taste, as Spenser was once made to feel: in literature he patronised
+only what was directly useful; he recommended no one except for his
+being serviceable. Magnanimous he was not; he was content with being
+able to say to himself, that he drew no advantage from any one's ill
+fortune. He was designated even then as the man who set the English
+state in motion: this he always denied, and sought his praise in the
+fact that he carried out the views of the Queen, as she adopted them
+after hearing the plans proposed or even after respectful remonstrances.
+He had to bear many a slander: most of the reproaches made against him
+he brought himself to endure quietly: but if, he said, it could be
+proved against him that he neglected the Queen's interest, the war
+against Spain, and the support of the Netherlands, then he was willing
+to become liable to eternal blame. He was especially effective also
+through a moral quality&mdash;he never lost heart. It was remarked that he
+worked with the greatest alacrity when others were most doubtful. For he
+too had an absolute confidence in the cause which he defended. When the
+enemies' fortune stood highest, he was heard to say with great
+tranquillity, 'they can do no more than God will
+allow.'<a name="FNanchor_280_280" id="FNanchor_280_280"></a><a href="#Footnote_280_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a></p>
+
+<p>By the side of this pilot of the state, Robert Dudley, who was promoted
+to be Earl of Leicester, drew all eyes on himself as the leading man at
+court. Burleigh was looked on as Somerset's creation, Dudley was the
+youngest son of the Earl of Northumberland: for it was of advantage to
+Elizabeth, especially at first, to unite around her important
+representatives of the two parties which had composed her brother's
+government. One motive for her attachment to Leicester is said to have
+been the fact that he was born on the same day, and at the very same
+hour with herself: who at that time would not have believed in the
+ruling influence of the stars? But, besides this, the Earl dazzled by a
+fine person, attractive manners, and an almost irresistible charm
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>
+of disposition. The confidential intimacy which Elizabeth allowed him
+caused scandalous rumours, probably without ground; for if they had been
+true, Leicester, who had his father's ambition, would have played a very
+different part. Elizabeth heard of them; she once actually brought a
+foreign ambassador into her apartments, to convince him how utterly
+impossible it would be for her to see any one whatever without
+witnesses; she censured a foreign writer for letting himself be deceived
+by a groundless rumour, but she would not on this account dismiss the
+favourite from court. She liked to have him about her, and to receive
+his homage which had a tinge of chivalry in it: his devotion satisfied a
+need of her heart. He could not however take any power to himself which
+would infringe on her own supreme authority; once, when such a case
+occurred, she reminded him that he was not in exclusive possession of
+her favour: she could bestow it on whom she would, and again recall it;
+at court, she exclaimed, there should be no Master, but only a
+Mistress.<a name="FNanchor_281_281" id="FNanchor_281_281"></a><a href="#Footnote_281_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a>
+Neither did Leicester display great mental gifts: in the
+campaigns of the Netherlands he did not at all answer even the moderate
+expectations that had been formed of him. If the Queen nevertheless put
+him at the head of her troops when the Spanish danger threatened, this
+was because he possessed her absolute personal confidence.</p>
+
+<p>With Leicester the Sidneys were most closely allied. Henry Sidney, his
+sister's husband, introduced civilisation and monarchic institutions
+into Wales, and was selected to extend them in Ireland. In his son
+Philip the English ideal of noble culture seemed to have realised
+itself; he combined a very remarkable literary power peculiar to
+himself, and talents suited for the society of men of the world (which
+well fitted him for the duties of an ambassador), with disinterested
+kindness to others, and a chivalrous courage in war, which gained him
+universal admiration both at home and in presence of the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>Leicester's good word is also said to have opened an entrance to court
+for young Walter Ralegh and to have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span>
+promoted his first successes.
+Ralegh combined in his own person the aspirations of the age in a most
+vivid manner. He was ambitious, fond of show, with high aims, deeply
+engaged in the factions of the court; but at the same time he had a
+spirit of noble enterprise, was ingenious and thoughtful. In everything
+new that was produced in the region of discoveries and inventions, of
+literature and art, he played the part of a fellow worker: he lived in
+the circle of universal knowledge, its problems and its progress. In his
+appearance he had something that announced a man of superior mind and
+nature.</p>
+
+<p>Around Cecil were grouped the statesmen who had been promoted by him,
+and worked in sympathy with him: for instance Bacon the Keeper of the
+Seals, whom the Queen regarded as the oracle of the laws, and who also
+amused her by many a witty word; Mildmay, the Chancellor of the
+Exchequer, who though adhering to the principles now adopted yet gladly
+favoured the claims of Parliament, and even the tendencies of the
+Puritans; Francis Walsingham, Secretary of State, who had once suffered
+exile for his Protestantism and now supported it after his return with
+all the resources of the administration; it is said of him that he heard
+in London what was whispered in the ear at Rome; he met the crafty
+Jesuits with a network of secret counter-action which extended over the
+world; there has never been a man who more vigilantly and unrelentingly
+hunted down religious and political conspiracies; to pay his agents, in
+choosing whom he was not too particular, he expended his own property.
+Cecil and Bacon had married two daughters of that Antony Cooke, who had
+once taken part in Edward VI's education: the other sisters, wedded to
+Hobby and Killigrew, men who were engaged in the most important
+embassies, extended the connexion of these statesmen. Walsingham was
+allied by marriage with Mildmay, and with Randolph the active ambassador
+in Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>Once the Queen brought a man among them, who owed his rise only to her
+being pleased with his person and conversation, which likewise brought
+her much ill repute:<a name="FNanchor_282_282" id="FNanchor_282_282"></a><a href="#Footnote_282_282" class="fnanchor">[282]</a>
+she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span>
+promoted her vice-chamberlain Christopher
+Hatton to be Lord Chancellor of England. The lawyers made loud and
+bitter complaints of this disregard of their claims and their order.
+Hatton had however been long on good terms with the leading statesmen:
+in all the late questions of difficulty as to Mary Stuart's trial he had
+held firm to them. His nephew and heir soon after married a
+granddaughter of Burleigh.</p>
+
+<p>The Queen's own relations on the mother's side had always some influence
+with her. Francis Knolles who had married into this family, and was
+appointed by the Queen treasurer of her household, won himself a good
+name with his contemporaries and with posterity by his religious zeal
+and openness of heart. A still more important figure in this circle is
+Thomas Sackville, who is also named with honour among the founders of
+English literature; the part of the 'Mirror for Magistrates' which was
+due to him witnesses to an original conception of the dark sides of
+man's existence, and to a creative imagination. But the poet likewise
+did excellent service to his sovereign: he makes his appearance when an
+important treaty is to be concluded, or the people are to be called on
+to defend the country, or even when any agitation is feared in the
+troubles at home. He was selected to inform the Queen of Scots that the
+sentence of death had been pronounced on her. He is the Lord Buckhurst
+from whom the dukes of Dorset are descended.</p>
+
+<p>The distinguished family to which Anne Boleyn belonged, and which had
+such an important influence on her rise, that of the Howards, proved in
+its elder branch as little loyal to the daughter as it had once been to
+the mother. On the other hand Elizabeth had experienced the attachment
+of the younger line, that of Effingham, and had since repaid it with
+manifold favours. From this branch came the Admiral, who commanded the
+sea-force in the decisive attacks on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span>
+the Spanish Armada. We know that
+he was not himself a great seaman; but he understood enough of the
+matter to enable him to avail himself of those who understood more than
+he did. The Queen looked on him as the man marked out by Providence for
+the defence of herself and of the country.</p>
+
+<p>General Norris, who gained reputation for the English arms on the
+continent by the side of Henry IV, was also related to her though more
+distantly: besides this, she wished to repay him for the good treatment
+she had formerly received in her distress from his grandfather.</p>
+
+<p>How predominantly the personal element once more manifests itself in
+this administration! As the Queen's own interest is also that of all,
+those who belong to her family or have won her favour and done her
+essential service, are the chiefs of the State and the leaders in war.
+The royal patronage extended this influence over the Church and the
+universities. But we find it no less in all other branches. Sir Thomas
+Gresham, the Queen's agent in money-matters, was the founder of the
+Exchange of London, to which she at his request gave the name of the
+Royal Exchange.</p>
+
+<p>In literature also we see the traces of her taste and her influence.
+Owing to the tone of good society the classics were studied by every
+one. The higher education was directed to them, as indeed the Queen
+herself found in them refreshment and food for the mind: many classical
+authors were translated, and the forms of the old poets revived or
+imitated. The Italians and Spaniards, who had led the way in similar
+attempts, further awoke the emulation of the English. In Edmund Spenser,
+in whom the spirit of the age shows itself most vividly, we constantly
+meet with imitations of the Latin or Italian poets, which here and there
+aspire to be paraphrastic translations, and may be inferior to his
+originals, even to the modern ones, in delicacy of drawing, since he
+purposely selected their most successful passages: yet how thoroughly
+different a spirit do his works breathe in their total effect! What in
+the Italians is a play of fancy is in him a deep moral earnestness. The
+English nation has an inestimable possession in these works of a moral
+and religious
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span>
+grandeur, and a simple view of nature, which happily
+expressed in single stanzas stamp themselves on every man's memory.
+Spenser has assigned to allegory, as a style, a larger sphere than
+perhaps belongs to it, and one allegory is always interweaving itself
+with another; the heroes whom he takes from the old romances become to
+him representatives of the different virtues, but he possesses such an
+original power of vivid representation that even in this form he gains
+the reader's interest. But, if we ask what is the main thing which he
+celebrates, we find that it is precisely the course of the great war in
+which his nation is engaged against the Papacy and the Spaniards. The
+Faery Queen is his sovereign, whose figure under the manifold symbols of
+the qualities which she possessed, or which were ascribed to her, is
+always coming forward afresh in his verse. With wonderful power
+Elizabeth united around her all the aspiring minds and energies of the
+nation.</p>
+
+<p>Not a few of the productions of the time have so strong an infusion of
+reverence for the Queen that we cannot help smiling: but it is true
+nevertheless that at her court the language formed itself, and all great
+aspirations found their central point. Elizabeth's statesmen, who had to
+deal with a Parliament that could not be led by mere authority, studied
+the rules of eloquence in the models of antiquity, and made their
+doctrines their own. On their table Quintilian lay by the side of the
+Statutes.</p>
+
+<p>The Queen, who loved the theatre and declared it a national institution
+by a proclamation, made it possible for Shakespeare to develop himself;
+his roots lie deep in this epoch, he represents its manners and mode of
+life: but he spreads far out beyond it. We shall return to him in a more
+suitable place than this, in which we are treating of the Queen's
+influence.</p>
+
+<p>It would contradict the nature of human affairs were we to expect that
+the general point of view, which swayed the State as a whole, could have
+induced every one who took part in its administration to move on to
+their common aim in one way. Of the great nobles of the court many
+rather supported the Puritans, as indeed the father of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
+the Puritan Cartwright owed his position at Warwick to Leicester's protection;
+others inclined to favour the Catholics. The severity which the bishops
+thought themselves bound to exercise met with opposition among the
+leading statesmen: and to these again the soldiers were opposed. It was
+a society full of life, and highly gifted, but for that very reason in
+continual ferment and internal conflict.</p>
+
+<p>We have still to grasp clearly the event in which these antagonisms and
+the Queen's temperament yet once more led to a great catastrophe.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>The aged Burleigh, who had provoked the war with Spain, wished also to
+end it. From his past experience he concluded that he could not inflict
+any decisive blow on the Spanish monarchy, which still displayed a vast
+power of resistance; in 1597 it could again offer a high price for
+peace. The Spaniards, who had taken Calais from the French by a sudden
+attack, offered the Queen the restoration of this old English possession
+in exchange for the strong places in the Netherlands, entrusted to her
+in pledge.<a name="FNanchor_283_283" id="FNanchor_283_283"></a><a href="#Footnote_283_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a>
+For the Netherlands no other provision would have been
+thus made than was proposed in 1587: but England would have again won as
+strong a position on the Continent as it had before, and would have
+established its rule over the neighbouring seas: an open commerce would
+have been re-established, and Ireland freed from the hostile influence
+of the Spaniards: the Queen would have enjoyed peace in her advancing
+years. Burleigh saw as it were the conclusion of his life in this: he
+said that, if God granted him a good agreement with Spain, his soul
+would depart with joy.</p>
+
+<p>But for this policy he could not possibly get the approval of the young,
+whose ambitious hopes were connected with the continuance of the war.
+They measured the power of the country by their own thirst for action.
+If the Queen, so they said, would only not do everything by halves and
+not follow her secretaries so much, she could, especially now she had
+the Dutch as allies, tear the Spanish monarchy in pieces.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span>
+How could they fail, with some effort, in occupying the Isthmus of Panama? And
+then they would at one blow deprive the monarchy of all its resources.
+And above all, the man who then played the most brilliant part at court,
+Robert Devereux Earl of Essex, was of this opinion. He was Leicester's
+stepson, introduced by him at court, and after his death his successor
+as it were in the Queen's favour. An attractive manly appearance,
+blooming youth, chivalrous manners, won him all hearts from the very
+first. With the Queen he entered into that rare relation, in which
+favour on the one side and homage on the other took the hues of mutual
+inclination, and even passion.</p>
+
+<p>What Essex's idea of it was he once revealed at a dramatic festivity
+which he arranged for the Queen in honour of her accession. There he
+made a hermit, an officer of state, and a soldier come forward and
+address their exhortations to an esquire who was intended to represent
+himself. By the first the knight was desired to give up all feelings of
+love, by the second to devote his powers to State affairs, by the third
+to apply himself to war. The answer is: the knight cannot give up his
+passion for his lady, since she animates all his thoughts with divine
+fire, teaches him true policy, and at the same time qualifies him to
+lead an army. Essex had taken part in some campaigns of Henry IV, and
+afterwards commanded the squadron which was in possession of the harbour
+of Cadiz for a moment, but without being able to hold it: he also failed
+in another enterprise which was planned to seize the plate-fleet; but
+this did not prevent him from evermore designing fresh and comprehensive
+plans. His view in this matter he also once represented
+dramatically.<a name="FNanchor_284_284" id="FNanchor_284_284"></a><a href="#Footnote_284_284" class="fnanchor">[284]</a>
+He brought forward a native American prince who
+utters the wish to be freed from the Castilians and their oppressive
+rule: an oracle refers him to the Queen whose kingdom lies between the
+old and the new world, and who is naturally inclined to come to the aid
+of all the oppressed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>
+The negociations for peace were wrecked mainly through their inherent
+difficulties: the Spaniards however had no hesitation in ascribing the
+ill result to the influence of the Queen's favourite, who had been won
+over by the King of
+France.<a name="FNanchor_285_285" id="FNanchor_285_285"></a><a href="#Footnote_285_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a>
+But the war could not after this be
+waged on the grand scale contemplated, because Henry IV himself now
+concluded peace, which freed the hands of the Spaniards to act against
+England, and even awoke once more their ideas of an invasion.</p>
+
+<p>Under the double influence of English oppression and the instigation of
+both Spain and Rome a revolt broke out in Ireland, in which the English
+suffered a defeat on the Blackwater, which is designated as the greatest
+mishap they had ever suffered in that island. Ulster, Connaught, and
+Leinster were in arms: their chief, Tyrone, who had learnt war in the
+English service, came forward as The O'Neil, and was already recognised
+by the Pope as sovereign of Ulster; the Irish reckoned on Spanish
+assistance, either in Ireland itself, or through an attack on England.
+Priests and Jesuits fed the Irish with hopes that this time they would
+free themselves, and destroy the very memory of the English rule.</p>
+
+<p>The Queen decided, in order to keep her hold on the island, to send over
+an unusually strong armament of horse and foot: and Essex, who had
+always been the loudest in blaming the errors of previous commanders,
+could not avoid at last himself undertaking its direction, though he did
+not do it with complete alacrity.</p>
+
+<p>Though Burleigh was dead, his son Robert Cecil nevertheless maintained
+himself in possession of the secretaryship of state and was at the head
+of his father's old friends, joined as they were by others who were not
+indeed his friends but were enemies of Essex. It was unwillingly that
+Essex quitted the court and thus left the field open to them: especially
+as his personal relation to the Queen was no longer what it had been of
+old. Aspiring by nature, supported by the good opinion of the people (on
+which his grand appearance and his bold spirit of enterprise had made
+much impression), and by the devotion
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span>
+of brave officers who were ready
+to follow him in any undertaking by land or sea, he presumed to desire
+to be something for himself. He wished to be no longer absolutely
+dependent on the nod of his mistress. The story goes that she once, in a
+violent passion at his disrespectful conduct, gave him a box on the ear,
+and that he laid his hand on his sword. Even in his letters expressions
+indicating resistance break through his declarations of submission. His
+friends indeed advised him to return to absolute obedience: then the
+Queen would raise the man whom she honoured above all others. He
+rejected this advice because he held that the Queen was a woman, from
+whom one gets nothing but by superior authority. It almost appears as
+though he thought he might obtain such an authority by the Irish war.</p>
+
+<p>But he found this expedition far harder than he had expected. Previously
+he had always said that the great rebel, Tyrone, must be tracked to
+Ulster, where were the roots of his power, and conquered there: then the
+rest of the country would return to obedience of itself. How great was
+the astonishment when he now nevertheless began with a march into
+Munster and Leinster, in which he wasted his resources without obtaining
+any great success! He maintained that the Privy Council of Ireland had
+urged him on to this: its members denied it. At last the campaign to the
+North was undertaken: but in this region the Irish were found to have
+the complete superiority: the Queen's newly-levied troops on the other
+hand were neither adapted, nor quite willing, to venture on a decisive
+action: the officers signed a protest against it: and Essex saw himself
+obliged to enter into negociations with Tyrone.</p>
+
+<p>The conditions which that chief demanded in return for his submission
+are exceedingly comprehensive: complete freedom of the Catholic church
+under the Pope, and a transfer of the dignities of state to the natives,
+so that only a viceroy, who should always belong to the high nobility,
+was to come from England: the chief Irish families were to be restored
+to their old possessions, and freed from the most oppressive laws, for
+instance that of wardship; and the Irish were to be allowed free trade
+with England.<a name="FNanchor_286_286" id="FNanchor_286_286"></a><a href="#Footnote_286_286" class="fnanchor">[286]</a>
+These stipulations would have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span>
+promised a free development to the Irish nation, and made the yoke of England
+exceedingly light. Essex accepted them, because the Spaniards were just
+now threatening an attack on England, and Tyrone could only be separated
+from them on these conditions; even then Tyrone begged that for the
+present they might be kept a profound secret, that he might not quarrel
+with the Spaniards too soon.</p>
+
+<p>But how could such comprehensive concessions be expected from the proud
+Queen? How could her counsellors, who always preferred direct
+negociation with Spain, have accepted them?</p>
+
+<p>The idea occurred to the Earl of Essex to return to England with a part
+of his troops, and at their head enforce the acceptance of his treaty,
+after which he would throw himself with all his might into the Spanish
+war. And without doubt this would have been the only way to carry out
+his plan, and become altogether master of the government.</p>
+
+<p>But it was represented to him that this looked exactly like an attempt
+at rebellion. Essex was induced to give it up, and make everything yet
+once more depend on the influence which he was confident he could
+exercise on the Queen by appearing in person. Even this however was a
+great risk: he not merely had no leave to do so, but it had been
+expressly forbidden him just previously: he thought it however the only
+way of obtaining his end. Without even having announced his departure to
+the Queen, he suddenly appeared with slight attendance at Nonsuch, her
+country house.<a name="FNanchor_287_287" id="FNanchor_287_287"></a><a href="#Footnote_287_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a>
+He dismounted before the door, and did not even take
+time to change his dress: as he was, with the dust of the journey on his
+face and clothes, he hastened to the Queen: that he did not find her in
+the reception-room did not check him; he rushed on into her chamber,
+where he entered without being announced, and kissed her hand: her hair
+was still flying about her face. At the first moment she received him
+graciously&mdash;in a couple of hours he might see her again:
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span>
+when he returned to her at table, she began to reproach him. From minute to
+minute the Queen predominated in her over the friend: by evening his
+arrest was announced to him.</p>
+
+<p>Already by his conduct in Ireland Essex had supplied food for the
+slander of his enemies: how much more must this have been the case
+through his self-willed return! As he was fond of tracing his descent
+from royal blood, he was accused of even aspiring to the throne, after
+the example of Bolingbroke: for this purpose he had leagued himself with
+Tyrone and the Irish grandees, whose loyalty he praised notwithstanding
+their revolt. We can say with certainty that the views of the Earl of
+Essex never went so far. In the question as to the Queen's successor,
+which occupied every one, he had taken his side for the rights of the
+King of Scotland: he imputed to his enemies the design of favouring on
+the other hand the claim of the Infant of Spain (which was at that time
+put forward in all seriousness in a book much read) with the view of
+purchasing peace by his recognition. He assigned, as the motive for his
+conduct, his inability to endure the atheists, papists, and Spanish
+partisans in the Queen's council: as a Christian he could not possibly
+look on while religion perished, and as an Englishman he would not stand
+aloof while his fatherland was being
+ruined.<a name="FNanchor_288_288" id="FNanchor_288_288"></a><a href="#Footnote_288_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a>
+He had never wished to
+be anything else than a subject&mdash;but 'only of his Queen, not the
+underling of an unworthy and low vassal.' So far as men saw, he stood in
+connexion with both the parties opposed to the prevailing system. He was
+prayed for in the churches of the Puritans: Cartwright was one of his
+friends; the Scotch doctrine, that the Supreme Power, if it showed
+itself negligent in matters of religion, could be compelled by those
+immediately under it to take them in hand, is said to have been preached
+with reference to him. As Earl Marshal of England, Essex indeed thought
+he possessed an independent right of interference. But the mitigation of
+the ecclesiastical laws would also have benefited the Catholics;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span>
+and it was among them that he had perhaps the most decided allies. If we might
+combine his views into a whole, they were directed towards raising the
+natives of America against Spain, at the same time that by toleration
+both in England and Ireland he united all patriots in the war against
+that power, in which he discerned that the chief interest of the nation
+lay.</p>
+
+<p>Essex remained a long while in the custody of the Keeper of the Seal,
+who was favourably disposed towards him; then he was sentenced by the
+Star Chamber not to exercise any longer his high offices as member of
+the Privy Council, as Earl Marshal, and Master of the Ordnance, and to
+live as a prisoner in his own house during the Queen's pleasure. He
+seemed to reconcile himself to this fate, and behaved modestly for a
+considerable time: he was still flattering himself with the hope of
+regaining his sovereign's favour, when a monopoly was withdrawn from him
+which formed the chief part of his income. This new victory of his
+enemies was intolerable to him: he would not let himself be brought so
+low by them as to be forced to live like a poor knight, without
+influence and independence. The thought occurred to him that, if he
+could but see the Queen once more, he might effect a change in his own
+destiny and in that of England. The popularity he enjoyed in the
+capital, the continued attachment of his old companions in arms, the
+friendship of some considerable nobles, allowed him to entertain the
+hope that he could attain this in despite of those around her, could
+make himself master of the palace, and force her to summon a
+Parliament&mdash;in which the change of government and the succession of the
+King of Scotland should be alike confirmed. Essex was no longer the
+blooming man of times past, he was seen moving along with his neck bowed
+down, but he still had his mind fixed on wide-ranging and ambitious
+thoughts: from his youth up elevated by good fortune and favour, he held
+everything possible which he set his hand to do. On the 8th February
+1601 an armed band assembled at his house under certain lords; the
+Keeper of the Seal and his attendant, whom the Queen despatched in order
+to inform herself of the cause of the agitation, were detained. Essex
+dared to march<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span>
+through the capital with his armed men, in order to
+raise it on his behalf. He reckoned on the desertion of the city militia
+to him, and the connivance of the city magistrates; but instead of
+finding support he only excited astonishment. No one stirred in his
+favour. He was scarcely able&mdash;for royal troops were soon in arms against
+him&mdash;to make his way back to his house: there was nothing left for him
+but to surrender at discretion.</p>
+
+<p>At his trial the principle, which had already had so much weight in the
+proceedings against Mary Stuart, was expressly stated, that every
+attempt at rebellion must be looked on as directed against the life of
+the reigning
+sovereign.<a name="FNanchor_289_289" id="FNanchor_289_289"></a><a href="#Footnote_289_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a>
+A crisis had occurred which obliged
+Elizabeth to execute the man for whom among all men living she cherished
+the deepest and warmest feeling, just as formerly she had been forced to
+condemn one of the grandees connected with her by blood, and then her
+sister Queen of equal rights with herself&mdash;all of them for traitorous
+attempts against her government and person. She said she would gladly
+have saved Essex, but she was forced to let the laws of England take
+their course.</p>
+
+<p>Essex is to be compared with his contemporary Biron in so far as they
+both rebelled against sovereigns with whom they had stood in the closest
+relations. In both it was mainly injured self-esteem which goaded them
+on. As Biron had a portion of the lower French nobility for him, so
+Essex had the soldiers by profession and the officers of the army to a
+great extent on his side: they both appealed once more to religious
+antipathies. But above all they thought of again making room for the old
+independence of the warlike nobles: they both succumbed to the authority
+of the firmly-rooted power of the state.</p>
+
+<p>At that time there were fresh negociations going on for a peace between
+Spain and England; but they could as little now as before agree on the
+great subjects in dispute, the question of the Netherlands, and the
+interests of commerce, which at the same time involved points of
+religion. And the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</a></span>
+Spaniards broke off negotiations all the more
+readily, as exaggerated rumours of Essex's conspiracy resounded
+everywhere, making a revolt in England appear possible. They then
+instantly thought of a landing in an English harbour, and this the
+Catholics promised to support with considerable bodies of horse and
+foot. In Ireland, where the refusal of the concessions held out to them
+by Essex revived the national enmities, the Spaniards really effected a
+landing: under Don Juan d'Aguilar they occupied Kinsale: and hoped not
+merely to become masters of Ireland but to cross from thence to their
+friends' assistance in England.</p>
+
+<p>Hence Queen Elizabeth, who perceived the connexion of these hostilities,
+now reverted to the necessity of carrying on the war again on a larger
+scale. Her view was chiefly directed to a new enterprise against
+Portugal: its separation from Castile she held to be the greatest
+European success that was possible: but she hoped to bring about a
+change in Italy as well: there Venice was to attack the nearest Spanish
+territories. When she called the Venetians to aid&mdash;among other things
+she wished also to obtain a loan from the government&mdash;she put them in
+mind how much her resistance to the Spanish monarchy had benefited the
+European commonwealth: hence it was that Spain had been prevented from
+carrying out her tyrannical views throughout the world, in the
+Netherlands and in Germany, in France and Italy; the Republic, which
+loved freedom, would recognise this. Elizabeth thought to resume the
+war, if possible, at the head of all that part of Europe which was
+opposed to Spain, and in league with Henry IV, with whom she negociated
+on this subject. In the beginning of 1603 a squadron was fitted out
+under Sir Richard Lawson to attack the coasts of the Pyrenean peninsula.
+Men discussed the comparative forces which the two kingdoms could bring
+into the field.</p>
+
+<p>But the Queen's days were already drawing to a close.</p>
+
+<p>In February 1603 the Venetian secretary Scaramelli had an audience of
+her, and gives a report of it from which we see that she still
+completely preserved her wonted demeanour. He found the whole court, the
+leading ecclesiastics and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</a></span>
+temporal dignitaries, assembled around
+her: they had been entertained with music. When he entered, the Queen
+rose in her usual rich attire, with a diadem of precious stones, almost
+encircled with pearls: rubies hung from her neck; and in her mien no one
+could detect any decay of her powers. 'It is time at last,' she said to
+the secretary, who wished to throw himself on his knees before her,
+while she raised him with both hands, 'it is time at last for the
+Republic to send its representative to a Queen by whom it has been
+always honoured.' The letter of the Republic was handed to her, and she
+gave it to the Secretary of State; after he had opened it and given it
+back to her again, she sat down to read it: it contained a complaint
+that Venetian ships had been seized by the English privateers, who then
+made all seas unsafe. The English nation, she then said, is not so small
+but that evil and thievish men may be found in it: while she promised
+enquiry and justice, she nevertheless reverted to her main point that
+she had received nothing from the republic during the forty-four years
+of her government but grievances and demands,&mdash;even the loan had been
+refused;&mdash;Venice had hitherto, contrary to her custom, not sent any
+embassy to her; not, she thought, because she was a woman, but through
+fear of other powers. Scaramelli answered that no temporal or even
+spiritual sovereign had any influence on the Republic in such matters;
+he ascribed the neglect to circumstances which no one could control. The
+Queen broke off: I do not know, she added, whether I have expressed
+myself in good Italian: I learned the language as a child, and think I
+have not forgotten it. After that serious address she again seemed
+gracious, and gave the secretary her hand to kiss, when she dismissed
+him. The next day commissioners were appointed to enquire into his
+grievances.<a name="FNanchor_290_290" id="FNanchor_290_290"></a><a href="#Footnote_290_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a></p>
+
+<p>At that time the affairs of Ireland were once more occupying the Queen.
+The Spaniards had been compelled by Lord Mountjoy to leave the island;
+he had beaten them together with the Irish in a decisive action: but,
+despite his victory, many further conflicts took place, and the
+rebellion was not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</a></span>
+suppressed; Tyrone still maintained himself in the
+hills and woods of Ulster; and, as a return of the Spaniards was feared,
+Mountjoy too was at last disposed to come to an agreement with him. The
+Queen was in her inmost soul against this, for only fresh rebellions
+would be occasioned by it; she required an absolute surrender at
+discretion: if she once allowed the rebels to have their lives secured
+to them, she soon after retracted the concession. She even spoke of
+wishing to go to Ireland, in person; the impression produced by her
+presence would put an end to all revolt.</p>
+
+<p>But at this moment a sudden alteration was remarked in her: she no
+longer appeared at the festivities before Lent, which went off in an
+insignificant style. At first her seclusion was explained by the death
+of one of her ladies whom she loved, the Countess of Nottingham: but
+soon it could not be concealed that the Queen herself was seized with a
+dangerous illness: sleep and appetite began to fail her: she showed a
+deep melancholy. 'No,' she replied to one of the kinsmen of her mother's
+house, Robert Cary, who at that moment had come back to court and
+addressed friendly words to her about her health, 'No Robin, well I am
+not, my heart has been for some time oppressed and heavy;' she broke off
+with painful groans and sighing, hitherto unwonted in her, now no longer
+suppressed. It was manifest that mental distress accompanied the bodily
+decay.<a name="FNanchor_291_291" id="FNanchor_291_291"></a><a href="#Footnote_291_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a></p>
+
+<p>Who has not heard of the ring which Elizabeth is said to have once given
+to the Earl of Essex with the promise that, if it were presented to her,
+she would show him mercy, whatever might have occurred: he had, so the
+tale runs, in his last distresses wished to send it her through the
+Countess of Nottingham: but she was prevented from giving it by her
+husband who was an enemy of Essex, and so he had to die without mercy:
+the Queen, to whom the Countess revealed this on her death bed, fell
+into despair over it. The ring is still shown, and indeed several rings
+are shown as the true one: as also the tradition itself is extant in two
+somewhat varying forms; attempts have been made to get rid of the
+improbabilities
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</a></span>
+of the first by fresh fictions in the
+second.<a name="FNanchor_292_292" id="FNanchor_292_292"></a><a href="#Footnote_292_292" class="fnanchor">[292]</a>
+They are both so late, and rest so completely on hearsay, that they can no
+longer stand before historical criticism.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless we cannot deny, as the reports in fact testify in several
+places, that the remembrance of Essex weighed on the Queen's soul. It
+must certainly have reminded her of him, that she was now brought back
+exactly to the course he had insisted on, namely a friendly agreement
+with the invincible Irish chief. She had allowed less imperious, more
+compliant, declarations to reach Ireland. But was the man a traitor, who
+had recommended a policy to which they had been forced to have recourse
+after such repeated efforts? Had he deserved his fate at her
+hands?<a name="FNanchor_293_293" id="FNanchor_293_293"></a><a href="#Footnote_293_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a>
+It was remarked that the anniversary of the day on which Essex two years
+before had suffered on the scaffold, Ash Wednesday, thrilled through her
+with heart-rending pain; the world seemed to her desolate, since he was
+no longer there; she imputed his guilt to the ambition, against which
+she had warned him, and which had misled him into steps, from the
+consequences of which she could not protect him. But had she not herself
+uttered the decisive word? She burst into self-accusing tears. Her
+distress may have been increased by finding that her statesmen no longer
+showed her the old devotion, the earlier absolute obedience. When they,
+as we know, had framed a formal theory for themselves, that they might
+act against an express command of the Queen, on the assumption of her
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</a></span>
+general intention being directed to the public good, could the
+sharp-sighted, suspicious, sovereign fail to perceive it? Could she fail
+to remark the agitation as to her successor, which occupied all men's
+minds, while the reins were slipping from her hands? The people, on
+whose devotion she had from the first moment laid so much stress, and
+partly based her government, seemed after Essex' death to have become
+cold towards her.</p>
+
+<p>In every great life there comes a moment when the soul feels that it no
+longer lives in the present world, and draws back from it.</p>
+
+<p>Once more Elizabeth had the English Liturgy read in her room: there she
+sat afterwards day and night on the cushions with which it was covered,
+in deep silence, her finger on her mouth: she rejected physic with
+disdain.<a name="FNanchor_294_294" id="FNanchor_294_294"></a><a href="#Footnote_294_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a>
+Most said and believed she did not care to recover or to
+live any longer, that she wished to die. When she was at last got to
+bed, and had a moment left of consciousness and interest in the world,
+she had the members of her Privy Council summoned: she then either said
+to them directly that she held the King of Scotland to be her lawful and
+deserving successor, or she designated him in a way that left no
+doubt.<a name="FNanchor_295_295" id="FNanchor_295_295"></a><a href="#Footnote_295_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a></p>
+
+<p>Amidst the prayers of the Archbishop of Canterbury, who was kneeling by
+her bed, she breathed her last.</p>
+
+<p>It is not merely the business of History to point out how far great
+personages have attained the ideals which float<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</a></span> before the mind of man,
+or how far they have remained below them. It is almost more important
+for it to ascertain how far the universal interests, in the midst of
+which eminent characters appear, have been advanced by them, whether
+their inborn force was a match for the opposing elements, whether it
+allowed itself to be conquered by them or not. There never was a
+sovereign who maintained a conflict of world-wide importance amidst
+greater dangers and with greater success than Queen Elizabeth. Her
+grandfather had begun a political emancipation from the ruling
+influences of the continent, her father an ecclesiastical one: Elizabeth
+took up their task and accomplished it victoriously against Rome and
+against Spain, while her people had an ever-increasing part in public
+affairs, and thus entered into a new stage of development. Her memory is
+inseparably connected with the independence and power of England. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_274_274" id="Footnote_274_274"></a><a href="#FNanchor_274_274"><span class="label">[274]</span></a> Elizabeth to James VI, August 1588, in Rymer and Bruce
+53.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_275_275" id="Footnote_275_275"></a><a href="#FNanchor_275_275"><span class="label">[275]</span></a> Molino: 'Fu prudentissima nel governare diligente nel
+consultare, perche voleva assistere a tutti li negotii, perspicasissima
+nel provedere le cose ed accuratissima perche le deliberationi fatte
+fossero eseguite.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_276_276" id="Footnote_276_276"></a><a href="#FNanchor_276_276"><span class="label">[276]</span></a> One of her expressions was: 'He that placed her in that
+seat would preserve her in it.' Contemporary notice in Ellis, Letters
+ii. iii. 194.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_277_277" id="Footnote_277_277"></a><a href="#FNanchor_277_277"><span class="label">[277]</span></a> Hentzner, Itinerarium 137.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_278_278" id="Footnote_278_278"></a><a href="#FNanchor_278_278"><span class="label">[278]</span></a> De Maisse, in Prevost-Paradol, Mémoire sur Elizabeth et
+Henri IV. Séances et travaux de l'académie des sciences morales, tom.
+34.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_279_279" id="Footnote_279_279"></a><a href="#FNanchor_279_279"><span class="label">[279]</span></a> Ockland, in Strype iii. 2, 237: 'Somni perparcus, parce
+vinique cibique in mensa sumens, semper gravis atque modestus.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_280_280" id="Footnote_280_280"></a><a href="#FNanchor_280_280"><span class="label">[280]</span></a> Letter to a friend, in Strype iii. 2, 379. Certain true
+general notes upon the actions of Lord Burleigh, in Strype iii. 2, 505.
+A letter from Leicester is in existence, in which he tries to prove that
+William Cecil had obligations to his father and not merely to the
+Protector.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_281_281" id="Footnote_281_281"></a><a href="#FNanchor_281_281"><span class="label">[281]</span></a> Naunton, Fragmenta regalia.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_282_282" id="Footnote_282_282"></a><a href="#FNanchor_282_282"><span class="label">[282]</span></a> Sir H. Nicolas, Life and Times of Christopher Hatton,
+communicates (p. 30) fragments of the Queen's letters, which lead him to
+remark that the supposition of an immoral relation (which he elsewhere
+adopts) is refuted by them. The Queen inquires for instance, What is
+friendship? 'The union of two minds bound to each other by virtue. He is
+no more a friend who desires more than the other can reasonably grant.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_283_283" id="Footnote_283_283"></a><a href="#FNanchor_283_283"><span class="label">[283]</span></a> Herrera, Historia del mundo iii. 754.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_284_284" id="Footnote_284_284"></a><a href="#FNanchor_284_284"><span class="label">[284]</span></a> Device made by the Earl of Essex: Devereux, Lives and
+Letters of the Devereux, Earls of Essex, ii. App. F.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_285_285" id="Footnote_285_285"></a><a href="#FNanchor_285_285"><span class="label">[285]</span></a> Herrera complains at first of the 'ministros infideles'
+of the Queen: among them he names Essex.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_286_286" id="Footnote_286_286"></a><a href="#FNanchor_286_286"><span class="label">[286]</span></a> In Winwood, Memorials i.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_287_287" id="Footnote_287_287"></a><a href="#FNanchor_287_287"><span class="label">[287]</span></a> Rowland Whyte to Sir Robert Sidney, Michaelmass Day 1599
+(the day after the Earl's arrival). Sidney Papers ii. 127.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_288_288" id="Footnote_288_288"></a><a href="#FNanchor_288_288"><span class="label">[288]</span></a> 'I could not but see and feel what misery was near unto
+my country by the great power of such as are known indeed to be atheists
+papists and pensioners of the mortal enemies of this kingdom.'
+Confession to Ashton, in Devereux ii. 165.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_289_289" id="Footnote_289_289"></a><a href="#FNanchor_289_289"><span class="label">[289]</span></a> 'As foreseeing that the rebel will never suffer the King
+to live or reign, who might permit or take revenge of the treason and
+rebellion.' In Campbell, Lives of the Lord Chancellors ii. 199.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_290_290" id="Footnote_290_290"></a><a href="#FNanchor_290_290"><span class="label">[290]</span></a> Dispaccio di Carlo Scaramelli 19 Feb. 1603 (Venetian
+Archives).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_291_291" id="Footnote_291_291"></a><a href="#FNanchor_291_291"><span class="label">[291]</span></a> Memoirs of Robert Cary 116.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_292_292" id="Footnote_292_292"></a><a href="#FNanchor_292_292"><span class="label">[292]</span></a> The first appears in Aubery's Mémoires pour servir à
+l'histoire de Hollande 1687, 214; with another apocryphal tale about
+finding the bones of Edward IV's children as early as Elizabeth's time.
+Aubery asserts that he heard the history of the ring from his father's
+mouth, who had heard it from Prince Maurice of Orange, to whom it had
+been communicated by the English ambassador Carleton. According to him
+the Queen then took to her bed, dressed as she was, sprang from it a
+hundred times during the night, and starved herself to death. Who does
+not, in reading this, feel himself in a sphere of wild romance? Lady
+Spelman has tried to clear away the improbability involved in it, that
+Essex should have applied to the wife of one of his enemies, by making
+Essex give the ring to a boy passing by, who was to give it, not to the
+Countess of Nottingham, but to her sister, and then mistook the two
+ladies.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_293_293" id="Footnote_293_293"></a><a href="#FNanchor_293_293"><span class="label">[293]</span></a> Scaramelli, 27 March: 'per occasione del perdono
+finalmente fatto al conte di Tirone cadde in una consideratione, che il
+conte di Esses gia tanto suo intimo di cuore fosse morto innocente.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_294_294" id="Footnote_294_294"></a><a href="#FNanchor_294_294"><span class="label">[294]</span></a> Letter of the French ambassador from London, 3rd April
+1603. 'C'est la verité que delors, qu'elle se sentit atteinte du mal,
+elle dit de vouloir mourir.' Villeroy, Mémoires d'estat iii. 212. Cary:
+'The Queen grew worse and worse, because she would be so.' Compare
+Sloane MS. in Ellis iii. 194.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_295_295" id="Footnote_295_295"></a><a href="#FNanchor_295_295"><span class="label">[295]</span></a> Scaramelli writes to his Signoria 7th April (New Style)
+what was said during those days: 'La regina nel fine della infirmita et
+della vita dopo haver dormito alcune poche hore ritornata di sana mente
+conoscendosi moribonda il primo di Aprile corr. fece chiamare i signori
+del regio consiglio&mdash;e commandava loro,&mdash;che la corona pervenisse al Più
+meritevole ch'ella ha trovato sempre nel suo secreto esser il Re di
+Scotia cosi per il dritto della successione, che per esserne Più degno
+che non è stata lei, poiche egli è nato re et ella privata&mdash;egli le
+portera un regno et ella non porta altro che se stessa donna.' Without
+quite accepting this, we must not pass it over. Winwood too writes to
+Tremouille: 'le jour avant son trespas elle declara pour son successeur
+le roy d'Escosse.' Mémoires i. 461.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="INT_IV" id="INT_IV"></a>BOOK IV.</h2>
+
+<p class='center'><br />FOUNDATION OF THE KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN. FIRST DISTURBANCES UNDER THE
+STUARTS. </p>
+
+<p>Under no dynasty in the world have great national changes been so
+dependent on the personal aims of princes as in England under the
+Tudors. Just as all Henry VIII's subsequent proceedings were determined
+by the affair of the divorce, so also the policy of his three children
+was due to the relations into which they were thrown by their birth.</p>
+
+<p>No one however could derive the course of English history at this epoch
+from this cause alone. How could Henry VIII have even thought of
+detaching his kingdom from the Roman See, but for the ancient and
+deep-seated national opposition to its encroachments? But the nation had
+also for ages had manifold and deep sympathies with Rome; and Mary Tudor
+allied herself with these. Together with subjective personal agencies,
+national influences of universal prevalence were at work. The different
+leanings of the sovereigns appear as exponents of opposite tendencies
+already existing in the nation. The struggle between these was decided
+when, as in the reign of Elizabeth, the most vigorous nature combined
+with the most powerful interests and the most influential motives to
+gain the mastery, although others of a different character were still by
+no means suppressed.</p>
+
+<p>Now however the energetic race of the Tudors had disappeared from the
+throne. By the right of natural inheritance another family ascended it,
+which had its roots and associations in Scotland, the crown of which
+country it united with that of England. If a long time elapsed before
+the English commonwealth was as closely attached to the new dynasty as
+it had been to the old, under which it had developed; so it is also
+clear that the point of view from which this dynasty started could not
+be exactly the same as that which had hitherto prevailed. This could not
+be expected under a prince who had already reigned for a quarter of a
+century and had long ago taken up, in his native country, a firm
+position with regard to the great conflicts of the age. This position we
+must first of all endeavour to represent. </p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<p class='center'><a name="BIV_I_I" id="BIV_I_I"></a>
+<small>JAMES VI OF SCOTLAND: HIS ACCESSION TO THE THRONE OF ENGLAND.</small></p>
+
+<p class='sect'><a name="BIV_I_II" id="BIV_I_II"></a>Origin of fresh dissension in the Church.</p>
+
+<p>Our eyes again turn to the man to whom the last great religious and
+political change in Scotland is mainly due&mdash;John Knox.</p>
+
+<p>We find him, propped on his staff and supported on the other side by a
+helping arm, stepping homewards from the church where he had once more
+performed a religious service: the multitude of the faithful lined the
+road, and greeted him with reverence. He could no longer walk alone, or
+raise his voice as before; it was only in a more confined space that he
+used still to gather a little congregation round him, to whom on
+appointed days and at fixed hours he proclaimed the teaching of the
+Gospel with unabated fire. He lived to hear of the wildest outbursts of
+the struggle on the continent, and to pronounce his curse on the King of
+France, who had taken part in the massacre of St. Bartholomew; but, in
+one respect, he was more fortunate than Luther, who in his last days was
+threatened with mischief from hostile elements about him which he could
+not control; for around John Knox all was peace. He thanked God for
+having granted him grace, that by his means the Gospel was preached
+throughout Scotland in its simplicity and truth: he now desired nothing
+more than to depart out of this miserable life; and thus, without pain,
+in November 1572, after bearing the burden and heat of the day, he fell
+asleep.</p>
+
+<p>With him and his contemporaries the second generation of the reformers
+came to an end. They had fought out the battle against the papacy, and
+had established the foundations
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</a></span>
+of a divergent system: now however a
+third generation arose, which had to encounter violent storms within the
+pale of the new confession itself.</p>
+
+<p>In Scotland the Regents Mar and Morton now thought it necessary, even
+for the sake of the constitution, in which the higher clergy formed an
+important element, to restore episcopacy, which had been laid low in the
+tumult of the times; and to fill the vacant offices with Protestant
+clergy, appointed however in the old way, by the election of the
+chapters on the recommendation of the Government: it was desired at the
+same time to invest them with the power of ordination and a certain
+jurisdiction. Knox was at least not hostile to this measure. The
+resolution to convene an assembly of the Church at Leith was formed
+while he was still alive, and was ratified by Parliament in January
+1573.</p>
+
+<p>But in the Church, which had formed itself in perfect independence by
+means of free association, this project, which besides was spoiled by
+many blunders in the execution, necessarily provoked strong opposition.
+Andrew Melville may be regarded as Knox's successor in the exercise of
+the authority of leader; a man of wide learning, who had in his
+composition still more of the professor than of the preacher, and united
+convictions not less firm than those of Knox with an equal gift of
+eloquence. He however on principle excluded episcopacy in any form from
+the constitution, as, in his opinion, the Scriptures recognised only
+individual bishops: he especially disapproved of the connexion between
+the bishops and the crown. The spiritual and the temporal powers he
+considered to be distinct kinds of authority, of which the one was as
+much of divine right as the other. But he did not regard the clergy or
+ministry of preaching as alone charged with spiritual authority: he
+thought that the lay elders formed the basis of this authority: that,
+once elected, they were permanent, had themselves a spiritual rank,
+watched over the purity of doctrine, took the lead in the call of the
+preachers, and, together with these, formed assemblies by whose
+conclusions every member of the congregation was bound. A General
+Assembly erected on this basis had the legislative authority in the
+Church, with the right of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</a></span>
+visitation and of spiritual correction. It
+was incumbent on the King to protect them; but he was amenable to their
+sentence. Such is the discipline laid down in the Second Book, which was
+approved in the year 1578, in a General Assembly, of which Melville was
+Moderator.<a name="FNanchor_296_296" id="FNanchor_296_296"></a><a href="#Footnote_296_296" class="fnanchor">[296]</a></p>
+
+<p>With these opposite principles before his eyes, the young King grew up.
+He showed himself to be imbued with the reformed doctrine, but he was
+decidedly averse to this form of church government, which created a
+power in the nation intended to counterbalance and withstand that of the
+monarch. The political views of his teachers, highly popular as they
+were, awoke in him, as was natural, the inborn feelings of a king. He
+longed with all his soul for the restoration of episcopacy, which,
+according to his view, was of almost chief importance for both Crown and
+Church.</p>
+
+<p>This was indeed a different strife from the battle between Catholicism
+and Protestantism, which filled the rest of the world: but they had
+points of contact with one another, inasmuch as the reform of doctrine
+had almost everywhere put an end to episcopal government. And the larger
+conflict was constantly exercising fresh influence on the state of the
+question in Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>When the Catholic party was on the point of becoming master of the young
+King, the Protestant lords, as has been mentioned above, gained
+possession of his person by the Raid of Ruthven. They were the champions
+of Presbyterianism in the Church; but as they had been overthrown, and
+overthrown moreover in consequence of the support which the King
+received from an ambassador friendly to the Guises, that form of
+government could not survive their fall. In the Parliament of 1584,
+which obeyed the wishes of the ruling powers, enactments distinctly
+opposed to it were passed. By these the constitution of the Three
+Estates united in Parliament was ratified. They forbade any one to
+attack the Estates either collectively or singly, and therefore to
+attack the bishops. No meeting in which resolutions should be taken
+about temporal or even about spiritual affairs was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</a></span>
+to be held without
+the King's approval: no jurisdiction was to be exercised which was not
+acknowledged by the King and the Estates. The judicial power of the King
+over all subjects and in all causes, and therefore even in spiritual
+causes, was therein expressly confirmed.</p>
+
+<p>At that time however Jesuits and Seminarists effected an entrance into
+Scotland as well as into other countries, and produced a great effect:
+Father Gordon especially, who belonged to one of the most distinguished
+families in the country, that of the Earls of Huntly, was exceedingly
+active; and for two months the King allowed his presence at court. Who
+could guarantee that the young prince would not be entirely carried away
+by this current when his chief counsellor, with whom the final decision
+mainly rested, belonged to the party of the
+Guises?<a name="FNanchor_297_297" id="FNanchor_297_297"></a><a href="#Footnote_297_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a>
+A great reward was offered to him: he was to be married to an archduchess; and at some
+future day, after the victory had been won, he was to be raised to the
+throne of England and Scotland. When we take into consideration that
+Melville, who set himself to oppose this influence, had spent ten years
+at Geneva and among the Huguenots, we see plainly how the struggles
+which distracted the continent threatened to invade Scotland as well.</p>
+
+<p class='sect'><a name="BIV_I_III" id="BIV_I_III"></a>Alliance with England.</p>
+
+<p>In this danger Queen Elizabeth, who for her own sake did not venture to
+allow matters to go so far, resolved to interfere more actively in the
+affairs of Scotland than she had hitherto done. It is not perfectly
+clear what share her government had in the return of the exiled
+Protestant lords, whose attack had compelled King James to allow the
+conviction for high treason of his former minister and favourite, who
+fled to France in consequence. But their return was certainly welcome to
+her; and she advised the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</a></span>
+King not to alienate the great men of his
+kingdom, that is to say the returned lords, from his own side. In the
+instructions to her ambassador it is expressly said that he should aim
+at withholding the King from any alliance with the League in France,
+which was then growing powerful. She had just determined to make open
+war upon the King of Spain, who guided all the proceedings of the
+League; what could be more important for her than to retain the King of
+one division of the island on her own side? For that object she need not
+require him to support the Presbyterians; his point of view was the same
+which she contended for in the Netherlands and in France, and very
+closely akin to her own.</p>
+
+<p>She had besides a great reward to offer him. Distasteful as it was to
+her to speak of her successor, she then determined to give the King the
+assurance that nothing should be done which was prejudicial to his
+claim, and she agreed to a secret acknowledgment of
+it.<a name="FNanchor_298_298" id="FNanchor_298_298"></a><a href="#Footnote_298_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a>
+Her ambassador gave expression to these views in Scotland, and she herself
+spoke in similar terms to the Scottish ambassador in England.</p>
+
+<p>The acceptance of these overtures by King James was the decisive event
+of his life. He was not so blind as not to see that any promise on the
+part of England, although not binding in regular form, afforded a kind
+of certainty entirely different from all the assurances of the League,
+however comprehensive. The Queen moreover pledged herself to a subsidy
+that was very acceptable to the poverty of the Scots, while her
+protection served the King himself as a stay against his nobles, whom he
+dared not alienate, but on whom he could not allow himself to be
+dependent.</p>
+
+<p>Thus in July 1586 an offensive and defensive alliance was concluded at
+Berwick between the King and Queen in order to protect the religion
+adopted in their dominions, which, in the language of the Prayer-book,
+they termed the 'Catholic,' and to repel, not only every invasion, but
+every attempt on the person
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</a></span>
+of their majesties or their subjects,
+without regard to any ties of blood or relationship. The King promised
+the Queen to come to her assistance with all his forces in the event of
+any attack on the Northern counties, and not to allow his subjects to
+support any hostile movements which might take place in Ireland. Every
+word shows how absolutely and entirely in the events that were at hand
+he identifies the interests of England with his
+own.<a name="FNanchor_299_299" id="FNanchor_299_299"></a><a href="#Footnote_299_299" class="fnanchor">[299]</a></p>
+
+<p>It was of more especial advantage to the Queen that James entirely
+renounced the cause of his mother. He had exerted himself in her behalf,
+but his intercession never went beyond the limits of friendly
+representation. Mary's secret resignation of her claims in favour of
+Philip II had certainly not been unknown to him; he complained on one
+occasion that she threatened him on his throne and was as little
+attached to him as to the Queen of England. He loudly condemned her
+conspiracies against Elizabeth and gave utterance to the unfeeling
+remark that she might drain the cup which she had mixed for herself. At
+the trial of his mother he was content with obtaining an assurance from
+the English Parliament, which was of great importance to him, that his
+rights should not be impaired by her condemnation. The claims to the
+English throne which brought Mary to destruction rather served to
+strengthen her son, as it threw him altogether on the side of the
+English system.<a name="FNanchor_300_300" id="FNanchor_300_300"></a><a href="#Footnote_300_300" class="fnanchor">[300]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the approach of the Spanish armada James at once placed his power and
+his person at the disposal of the Queen. He assured her that he would
+behave not as a foreign prince, but as if he were her son and a citizen
+of her realm. With unusual decision he put himself at the head of the
+Protestant nobles, and pursued the Catholic lords who gave ear to those
+Spanish overtures which he had resisted.</p>
+
+<p>He now sought for a wife in a Protestant family. With the concurrence,
+if not at the instigation, of the English ministers, he solicited the
+hand of a daughter of Frederick II,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</a></span>
+King of Denmark, whom Elizabeth had
+praised for adhering to the general interests of the Protestant world.
+In this enterprise James was influenced by the consideration that if any
+other state opposed his claims on England, Denmark with its naval power
+could afford him substantial assistance. A touch of romance is imparted
+to his youth by the circumstance that he set out in person to fetch home
+his bride, who was detained in Norway by contrary winds, and who had
+been promised to him by her mother after her father's death. Their
+marriage was celebrated at Opslo (Nov. 23, 1589), but their homeward
+voyage was now attended with difficulty; James therefore took his wife
+over the snow-clad mountains and the Sound, back to her mother to
+Kronborg and Copenhagen, and spent a couple of months there. He had many
+conversations with the divines of the country, during which the idea of
+an union of both Protestant confessions was mooted. He also paid a visit
+to Tycho Brahe on the island of Hveen, which gave him indescribable
+pleasure: he believed that in his company he fathomed the marvels of the
+universe, and lauded the astronomer in spirited Latin verse as the
+friend of Urania, and as the master of the starry
+world.<a name="FNanchor_301_301" id="FNanchor_301_301"></a><a href="#Footnote_301_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a>
+And a general influence was exercised in Europe both by his alliance with the
+house of Oldenburg, and the connexion which he formed through it with
+many of the most distinguished families in Germany. His consort was
+niece of the Elector of Saxony, sister-in-law of the Elector of
+Brandenburg, and granddaughter of the German Nestor, Ulric of
+Mecklenburg. Her sister had just married Henry Julius Duke of Brunswick;
+at whose marriage, which was celebrated at Cronberg, a company of North
+German princes met together, which seemed like one single family. But
+the days of this assemblage were not occupied with banquets and
+festivities alone. To the impression which was then made on James may be
+traced the despatch of an embassy to the Temporal Electors of the
+Empire, which he deputed soon after his return to invite them to mediate
+between England and Spain. If the King of Spain were disinclined
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</a></span>
+for peace, he thought that a powerful alliance should be formed against him
+for the maintenance of religion.</p>
+
+<p>For such an alliance as this, England and Scotland seemed to offer a
+centre. In an assemblage of the clergy, the King had once congratulated
+himself on living at a time when the light of the Gospel was shining;
+and in the same spirit his Chancellor gave Lord Burleigh to understand,
+that this British microcosm, severed from the rest of the world, but
+united internally by language, religion, and the friendship of its
+princes, could best oppose the bloodthirstiness of an anti-Christian
+League.<a name="FNanchor_302_302" id="FNanchor_302_302"></a><a href="#Footnote_302_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a></p>
+
+<p class='sect'><a name="BIV_I_IV" id="BIV_I_IV"></a>Renewal of the Episcopal Constitution in Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>In Scotland, as well as elsewhere, the waves of the all-prevailing
+struggle kept raging.</p>
+
+<p>Embassies went backwards and forwards between Spain and the powerful
+lords, Huntly, Errol and Angus, who kept alive Catholicism in the
+Highlands; and a plan was formed to assemble a force of Scots and
+Spaniards in Scotland, which should first overthrow the forces of that
+country, and thence advance into
+England.<a name="FNanchor_303_303" id="FNanchor_303_303"></a><a href="#Footnote_303_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a>
+King James at least
+believed that he had gathered a definite statement to this effect from
+an examination of those who had been arrested. Philip the Second's
+design of getting the crown of France into his own family would have
+been powerfully seconded by this undertaking, by which it was designed
+to treat Great Britain in the same way. In the beginning of 1593 we find
+James at Aberdeen engaged on a campaign against the Highlands: the
+lesser nobles and the Protestants were on his side: the great earls were
+driven back into the most remote districts as far as Caithness, and the
+larger part of their domains fell into the hands of the King. But they
+were not yet entirely conquered, and the next Parliament showed that
+they had the greater part of the nobility on their side. No one wished
+to be too severe on
+them;<a name="FNanchor_304_304" id="FNanchor_304_304"></a><a href="#Footnote_304_304" class="fnanchor">[304]</a>
+even the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</a></span>
+legal advisers of the crown
+recommended the King not to commence a suit against them, in which they
+might probably be acquitted. It is impossible to describe the
+displeasure which affected Elizabeth on this turn of affairs, which she
+ascribed to the pusillanimous and negligent government of James. Did he
+not know, she asked, that the religion of the rebels was only a cloak
+for treason? Would he trust men who had so often betrayed him? He could
+never expect them to keep their plighted faith in the future, if their
+great offences in the past were not even acknowledged: a lax government
+set all turbulent spirits in motion, and led to shipwreck. With this
+advice, and similar suggestions from the clergy, came the news of fresh
+commotion. Francis Stuart, who had been made Earl of Bothwell by James,
+but who after this had given great trouble by frequently changing sides,
+had now joined the Catholic lords; and a plan had been concerted between
+them to deal with James as they had formerly dealt with his mother, to
+make him prisoner, and to put the prince just born to him in his place.
+At last in September 1594 we find the King again in the field. The young
+Argyle, whom he sent before him as his lieutenant, was met by the earls
+in open fight, but they did not venture to encounter the King himself.
+He took Strathbogie, the splendid seat of the Earls of Huntly; Slaines,
+the principal castle of the Earls of Errol; some strongholds in Angus;
+Newton, a castle of the Gordons; and had most of them razed. Even in
+these districts he proceeded at last to erect a regular government in
+the name of the King. His superiority was so decided that the earls left
+Scotland in the spring of 1595; Father Gordon also followed them
+reluctantly, after he had once more said mass at Elgin. But even this
+was not such a defeat of the Catholic party as might have been followed
+by their annihilation. The earls felt the hardships of exile with double
+force from the loss of the consideration which they had enjoyed at home;
+and when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</a></span>
+they offered their submission to the King, and satisfaction to
+the Scottish Church, James and his Privy Council were quite ready to
+accede to their offer: for they thought that disunion with his most
+powerful lieges lessened the reputation of the crown, and might be very
+dangerous at some future time if the throne of England became vacant; as
+these important personages might then, like Coriolanus, side with the
+enemy.</p>
+
+<p>The only question now was, how the Presbyterian Church would regard
+this. James had come to a general understanding with the Church, when
+they made common cause against the League. In the year 1592 an agreement
+was arrived at, by which the King gave a general recognition to
+Presbyterianism, although he still left some grave questions undecided;
+for instance, that of the rights of the Crown, and the General
+Assemblies. But in proportion as he now gave intimation of a retrograde
+tendency in favour of the Catholic lords, he roused the prejudices of
+the Protestants against himself. They told him that the lords had been
+condemned to death according to the laws of God, and by the sentence of
+Parliament, the Great Assize of the kingdom: that the King had no right
+to show mercy in opposition to these. He had allowed their return into
+the country; the Church demanded the renewal of their exile: not till
+then would it be possible to deliberate upon the satisfaction offered by
+them. All the pulpits suddenly resounded with invectives against the
+King. The proud feeling of independent existence was roused in all its
+force in the breasts of the churchmen. Andrew Melville explicitly
+declared, that there were two kingdoms in Scotland, of which the Church
+formed one: in that kingdom the sovereign was in his turn a subject;
+those who had to govern this spiritual realm possessed a sufficient
+authorisation from God for the discharge of their functions. The Privy
+Council might be of opinion that the King must be served alike by Jews
+and heathens, Protestants and Catholics, and become powerful by their
+aid; but in wishing to retain both parties he would lose both. The King
+forced himself to ask support for his projects from Robert Bruce, at
+that time the most prominent of the preachers, who answered him, that he
+might make his choice, but that he could not have both the Earl of
+Huntly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</a></span>
+and Robert Bruce for his friends at the same
+time.<a name="FNanchor_305_305" id="FNanchor_305_305"></a><a href="#Footnote_305_305" class="fnanchor">[305]</a></p>
+
+<p>By dealing gently with the Catholic lords the King had intended not only
+to win them over to his side, but also in prospect of the English
+succession, which was constantly before his eyes, to give the English
+Catholics a proof of the moderation of his intentions. Even in Scotland
+he wished not to appear the sovereign of the Presbyterian party alone.
+It was absolutely repugnant to him to adopt the ideas of the Church
+entirely as his own. But the leaders of the Church were bent on shutting
+him within a narrow circle in accordance with their own ideas, from
+which there should be no escape. In his clemency to Catholic rebels they
+saw a leaning to that Catholicism which fought against God and
+threatened themselves with destruction. The efforts which had been
+necessary to overpower these adversaries, and the obligations under
+which they had laid the King himself during the struggle, inspired them
+with resolution to bind him to their system by every means in their
+power.</p>
+
+<p>But as the King also adhered to his own views, a conflict now broke out
+between them which holds a very important place in the history of the
+State as well as of the Church of Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>The King ordered the Commissioners of the Church, who made demands so
+distasteful to him, to leave the capital. The preachers then turned to
+the people. From the pulpit Robert Bruce set before an already excited
+congregation the danger into which the ecclesiastical commonwealth had
+fallen owing to the return of the Catholic lords and the indulgence
+vouchsafed to them; and invited those present to pledge themselves by
+holding up their hands to the defence of their religion on its present
+footing. They not only gave him their assent, but went so far as to make
+a tumultuous rush for the council-house in which the King was sitting
+with some members of the Privy Council and the Lords of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</a></span>
+Session. With difficulty was the tumult so far quieted as to allow James to retire to
+Holyrood.<a name="FNanchor_306_306" id="FNanchor_306_306"></a><a href="#Footnote_306_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a>
+Here a demand was laid before him to remove his
+councillors, to allow the commissioners to resume their functions, and
+to banish the lords again from the country. It was intended that
+religious profession should supply a rule for the guidance of the State.</p>
+
+<p>But in political conflicts nothing is more dangerous than to overstep
+the law by any act of violence. It was the violence attempted by the
+leaders of the Presbyterians against the King, their attack on the
+rights of his crown, that procured him the means of resistance. He
+betook himself with his court to Linlithgow and there collected the
+nobles, who for the most part stood by him, the borderers, whose leaders
+the Humes and Kerrs took up arms for him, and bodies of Highlanders, a
+force to which the magistrates succumbed, not wishing their city to be
+destroyed; so that even the ministers thought it advisable to leave. On
+New-Year's Day 1597 James made his entry with a warlike retinue into
+Edinburgh, where a convention of the Estates met and passed decisive
+resolutions in his favour. Both the provost and baillies of the town
+were obliged to take a new oath of fealty by which they bound themselves
+to suffer no insults to the King and his councillors from the pulpit:
+and it was resolved that the citizens should henceforth submit the
+magistrates of their choice to the King for his approval. The right of
+deposing the ministers was assigned to the King, who was acknowledged
+sole judge of all offences, even of those committed in sermons and
+public worship.<a name="FNanchor_307_307" id="FNanchor_307_307"></a><a href="#Footnote_307_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a></p>
+
+<p>The King had now the Temporal Estates on his side; for however popular
+the footing on which the Presbyterian Church might be constituted, no
+one wished to give it uncontrolled sway. King James was able to form
+plans<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</a></span>
+for transforming its constitution in such a manner as to make it
+consistent with the authority of the crown.</p>
+
+<p>A series of questions which he dedicated to the consideration of the
+public was well calculated to further his end. He asked whether the
+external regimen of the Church might not be controlled both by King and
+clergy, and the legislative power be vested in them in common. Might not
+the King, as a religious and pious magistrate, have the power of
+summoning General Assemblies? Might he not annul unjust sentences of
+excommunication? Might he not interfere if the clergy neglected their
+duties, or if the bounds of the two jurisdictions became doubtful.</p>
+
+<p>At the next assembly of the Church at Perth (Feb. 1597) the current set
+in the opposite direction. 'Mine eyes,' so says one of the most zealous
+adherents of the Church, 'witnessed a new sight, preachers going into
+the King's palace sometimes by night, sometimes in the morning,&mdash;mine
+ears heard new sounds.' The greatest pains had been taken to secure the
+presence of a number of ministers from the northern provinces, who were
+still more anxious about the spread of their doctrines than about
+controversies touching the constitution of the Church; and who rather
+reproached the clergy of the southern counties with having taken on
+themselves the government of the Church. But even among the latter the
+King, who spared neither threats nor flatteries, won adherents. Moreover
+an opinion gained ground that concessions must be made to him, as far as
+conscience allowed, in order not to alienate him entirely from the
+Church or drive him to take the opposite side. The answers to his
+questions contained admissions. The right of taking the initiative in
+everything relating to the external government of the Church was
+conceded to him, together with a share in the nomination of ministers in
+the principal towns; properly speaking the patronage of the Church in
+these towns was made over to him. The Church itself made a most
+important concession in renouncing its right of using the pulpit to
+attack the crown. Henceforward no one was to venture to impugn the
+measures of the King, until an officer of the Church had made a
+remonstrance to him on the subject.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</a></span>
+And the same ideas prevailed also
+in the subsequent assemblies at Dundee and Perth. The former of these
+conceded to the King a share in all the business which the Church took
+in hand; it allowed him to stay the proceedings of the Presbyteries when
+they ran counter to the royal jurisdiction or to recognised rights. In
+Dundee the excommunicated lords were admitted to a reconciliation and
+acknowledged as true vassals of the King, after making a declaration by
+which they acknowledged the Scottish to be the true Church; although the
+stricter party would not even then forgive them. But the point of chief
+importance was that the King succeeded in getting a Commission formed to
+co-operate with him in maintaining peace and obedience in the kingdom.
+Invested with full powers by the Church but dependent on the King, this
+Commission procured him a preponderating influence in all ecclesiastical
+affairs. For the most part it consisted of men of moderate views.</p>
+
+<p>There is a contemporary narrative of the decay of the Church in Scotland
+which begins from this date. For here, it was thought, ended the period
+during which the word revealed from Sinai and Zion to the apostles and
+prophets was the only rule of doctrine and Church discipline without any
+mixture of Babylon or the City of the Seven Hills, or of policy of man's
+devising; when the Church was 'Beautiful as the morning, fair as the
+moon, clear as the sun, terrible as an army with banners.'</p>
+
+<p>James, who regarded all this as due merely to the opposition of enemies,
+went on his way without bestowing further consideration on the depth,
+strength, and inward significance of this spirit which was destined once
+more to agitate the world. He again took up in serious earnest the
+design of erecting a Protestant episcopacy which had been entertained by
+Mar and Morton. Not only was this necessary for the constitution but for
+the sake of the clergy also: as George Gladstaine explained before a
+large assembly at Dundee, it was desirable that they should take part in
+the exercise of the legislative power. A small majority, but still a
+majority, in this assembly decided in favour of the proposal. The King
+assured them that he wished neither for a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</a></span>
+Papistical nor for an English
+prelacy; he wished only that the best clergy should take cognizance of
+the affairs of the Church in the council of the nation. In order to
+unite both interests he desired that the General Assembly should propose
+to the King six candidates for each vacancy and should have the right of
+giving instructions to the King's nominee for his Parliamentary action,
+and of demanding an account from him of his execution of the same. The
+King esteemed it a great triumph when in the Parliament of 1600 he was
+able actually to introduce two bishops whom he had nominated with the
+concurrence of a Commission of the Synods.</p>
+
+<p>It appears a general result worth noticing that he had again brought
+both parties in the country into subjection to the crown, the one
+however by open battle, the other by compliance which had somewhat the
+air of inclination towards it.</p>
+
+<p class='sect'><a name="BIV_I_V" id="BIV_I_V"></a>Preparations for the Succession to the English Throne.</p>
+
+<p>That the former of these parties was properly speaking Protestant, and
+the latter in its sentiment Catholic, created a certain feeling of
+surprise. Queen Elizabeth, who had been attacked and insulted by the
+Presbyterians sometimes even from the pulpit, could not find fault with
+the crown for liberating itself from the ascendancy of the new Church as
+it had done from that of the old: on the contrary she had expressly
+approved of this policy; but she warned the King not to allow himself to
+be so blinded by personal preference as again to put confidence in any
+traitor, and not to separate himself from the flock which must fight for
+him if he wished to stand. In the case of Scotland, as well as in the
+case of her own dominions, she always kept before her eyes the contrast
+between the Catholic and the Protestant principle, in comparison with
+which all other differences appeared to her subordinate.</p>
+
+<p>In his own views less rigid and consistent, King James had on the
+contrary even made advances to the Papacy. He at one time found it
+advisable to enter into relations with Pope Clement VIII, whose
+behaviour about the absolution
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</a></span>
+of Henry IV showed that he did not at
+least belong to the party of Spain and the zealots. A letter to the Pope
+was forwarded from the Scottish cabinet addressing him as Holy Father,
+with the signature of the King as his obedient son. A Scot, by
+profession a Catholic, afterwards made the statement that, at the time
+when Pope Clement was encamped before Ferrara, he had been sent to him
+in order to seek his friendship, and to promise him religious liberty
+for the Catholics if King James should ascend the English
+throne.<a name="FNanchor_308_308" id="FNanchor_308_308"></a><a href="#Footnote_308_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a></p>
+
+<p>According to the account of King James himself Pope Clement invited him
+to return to the Catholic faith; to whom he made answer, that the
+prevailing controversies might be again submitted to a general council;
+and that to the decision of such a council he would submit himself
+unconditionally. Clement replied that he need not speak of a council,
+for at Rome no one would hear of it; that the King had better remain as
+he was. These transactions are still enveloped in doubt and obscurity:
+the announcements of pretended agents cannot be depended on. There were
+often men who did not fully share in the secret and who in consequence
+far outran their
+commission.<a name="FNanchor_309_309" id="FNanchor_309_309"></a><a href="#Footnote_309_309" class="fnanchor">[309]</a>
+But it cannot be denied that there
+were attempts at an approximation. Among the English refugees after
+Mary's death two parties had arisen, one of which supported the Spanish
+claims, while the other was quite ready to acknowledge King James
+supposing that some concessions were made. Every day men who were
+inclined to Catholicism were seen rising into favour at the Scottish
+court. It was remarked that the Secretary of State, the Lord Justice,
+and the tutors of the royal children, were Catholics. Queen Anne of
+Scotland does not deny that many attempts were made to bring her back to
+the old religion: though she assures us that she did not hearken to
+them, it is notwithstanding undeniable that she felt a strong impulse in
+that direction. She received relics which were sent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</a></span>
+her from Rome,
+probably from superstition rather than from reverence for the saints,
+but at all events she received them. Her intimate friend, the Countess
+of Huntly, who often shared the same bed with the Queen, fostered these
+views in her. King James remained unaffected by them. He attended
+sermons three times a week; he was riveted to Protestantism by
+convictions which rest on learning: but how did it come to pass that he
+allowed these deviations from Protestantism about him? Was it from
+weakness and connivance, or was it from policy?</p>
+
+<p>With the English Catholics also he established a connexion. Offers and
+conditions with a view to his succession were put before him; and
+English Catholics presented themselves at his court in order to proceed
+with the business or to maintain the connexion.</p>
+
+<p>All this threw Queen Elizabeth into a state of great excitement. It was
+insufferable to her that any one should even speak of her death, or, as
+she said, celebrate her funeral beforehand. But now when James without
+her knowledge formed relations with her subjects, she regarded his
+conduct as an affront. Through her ambassador in Scotland she had an
+English agent named Ashfield arrested, and gained possession of his
+papers. Great irritation on both sides ensued, of which the
+above-mentioned correspondence between the King and Queen gives
+evidence. In angry letters the latter complained of the disparaging
+expressions which James had let fall in his Parliament. In respectful
+language but with unusual emphasis the King complained that the
+accusations of an adventurer charging him with a plot against the life
+of the Queen were not repressed in England with proper severity. A
+period followed during which James expected nothing but further acts of
+hostility from Elizabeth's ministers. He pretended to know that the
+claims to the throne advanced by his cousin the Lady Arabella, daughter
+of Charles Darnley, the younger brother of his father Henry, who had the
+advantage of not being a foreigner, supplied them with a motive for
+their proceedings. He even thought it possible that a book published by
+Parsons under the name of Doleman, which maintained the claims of
+Isabella daughter of King Philip,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</a></span>
+was inspired by the English ministers
+themselves in order to throw his rights into the background. He ascribed
+to them the intention of coming to an agreement with the Spaniards to
+his disadvantage, only in order to maintain their own power.</p>
+
+<p>So far the dislikes of King James and the Earl of Essex coincided.
+Although a formal understanding between them cannot be proved, they were
+nevertheless allies up to the point of regarding the Queen's ministers
+as their enemies.</p>
+
+<p>Very significant were the instructions which James gave to an embassy
+which he despatched to England after the downfall of the Earl. His
+ambassadors were directed to ascertain whether the popular discontent
+went so far as to contemplate the overthrow of the Queen and her
+ministers, in which case they were to take care that the people 'invoked
+no other saint,' i.e. sought protection and support from no one else but
+him. Above all he wished to be assured with regard to the capital that
+it would acknowledge his right: he wished to form ties with the leading
+men in the civic and learned corporations; the greater and lesser nobles
+who inclined to him were to have early information what to do in certain
+contingencies, and to keep themselves under arms. As he had always
+thought it possible that he might require naval assistance from Denmark,
+so now he instigated a sort of free confederation of the magnates and
+barons of Scotland: they were to prepare their military retainers in
+order to enforce his rights. Not that he had formed any design against
+the Queen, but he believed that after her death he must give battle to
+her ministers in order to gain the crown, and he appeared determined not
+to decline the contest.</p>
+
+<p>In reality however this mode of action was foreign to his nature. How
+often he had said that a man must let fruit ripen before plucking it:
+and a foreign prince, to whose sayings he attached great value, had
+advised him to proceed by the safest path. This was the Grand Duke
+Ferdinand of Tuscany, who then played a certain part in Europe, as he
+had set on foot the alliance between Henry IV and the Pope
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</a></span>
+in opposition to Spain: Mary de' Medici, Queen of France, was his niece.
+With the house of Stuart also he stood on the footing of a relation: his
+consort, like the mother of King James, was a scion of the house of
+Lorraine, and a marriage at some future day between the King's eldest
+son and the daughter of the Grand Duke was already talked of. This
+relationship, and Ferdinand's reputation for great political
+far-sightedness and prudence, caused his advice to exercise great
+influence on James's decisions, as James himself tells us. So long as
+victory wavered between Essex and his opponents, or, as he conceived,
+between the existing government and the people, James did not declare
+himself: when the issue was decided he gave his policy a different
+direction and made advances to the ruling ministers, whom up to this
+time he had regarded as his enemies.</p>
+
+<p>They were quite ready and willing to meet him. Robert Cecil asserted
+later that he had by this means best provided for the safety and repose
+of the Queen, for that by an alliance between the government and the
+heir to the crown the jealousy of the Queen was best appeased: yet still
+he observed the closest secrecy with regard to it. It is known that he
+dismissed a secretary because he feared that he might see through the
+scheme and then betray it. He thought that he was justified in keeping
+the Queen in ignorance of a connexion that could only be distasteful to
+her at her advanced age, which had deepened the suspicion natural to her
+disposition, although at the same time this connexion was indispensable
+for her repose. These ministers were tolerably independent in their
+general conduct of affairs. They had embarked on other negotiations also
+without the knowledge of the Queen; they thought such conduct quite
+permissible, if it conduced to the advantage of England. And was not
+Robert Cecil moreover bound to seize an opportunity of calming the
+prejudices of the King of Scotland against himself and his house, which
+dated from his father's participation in the fate of Queen Mary? This
+was the only way of enabling him to prolong his authority beyond the
+death of his mistress, with which it would otherwise have expired.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</a></span>
+The letters are extant which were exchanged in these secret transactions
+between Henry Howard, whom the Secretary of State employed as his
+instrument, and a minister of King James. They are not so instructive as
+might have been expected; for the Asiatic style of Howard, which serves
+him as a mask, throws a veil even over much which we should like to
+know. But they now and then open a view into the movements of parties,
+especially in reference to the opposition of Cecil and his friends to
+Raleigh and Cobham, which towards the close of the Queen's reign filled
+the court with suppressed uneasiness.</p>
+
+<p>The intercourse which had been opened certainly had the effect of once
+more putting England and Scotland on a friendly footing. One of his most
+trusty councillors, Ludovic Earl of Lennox, son of that Esmé Stuart who
+at one time had stood so high in the King's esteem, was sent by James on
+a mission to the Queen, in order to convince her of his continued
+attachment;<a name="FNanchor_310_310" id="FNanchor_310_310"></a><a href="#Footnote_310_310" class="fnanchor">[310]</a>
+and this ambassador in fact found favour with her.
+James declared himself ready to send his Highlanders to the assistance
+of the Queen in Ireland, and to enter as a third party into the alliance
+with France against Spain, if it were brought about. He did not hesitate
+to give her information of the advances which had been made by the other
+side, even by the Roman court. Among these he mentioned a mission of
+James Lindsay for the purpose of bringing him to promise toleration to
+the Catholics. It may be doubted whether it is altogether true, as he
+affirms, that he declined the proposal: but the Roman records attest
+that Lindsay in fact could get nothing from him but
+words.<a name="FNanchor_311_311" id="FNanchor_311_311"></a><a href="#Footnote_311_311" class="fnanchor">[311]</a></p>
+
+<p>It is enough to remark that on the whole the views of James were again
+brought into harmony with those of the Queen: but that does not mean
+that he had also broken off all relations with the other side. It would
+have been extremely dangerous for him if Pope Clement had pronounced
+against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</a></span>
+him the excommunication which was suspended over Elizabeth, and
+he was very grateful to the Pope for not going so far. And if he would
+not agree to treat the Catholics with genuine toleration, yet without
+doubt he let them hope that he would not persecute those who remained
+quiet.<a name="FNanchor_312_312" id="FNanchor_312_312"></a><a href="#Footnote_312_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a>
+It was probably not disagreeable to him if they looked for
+more. He was of opinion that he ought to have two strings to his bow.</p>
+
+<p>He had now formed connexions with all the leading men in England of
+whatever belief. There was no family in which he had not won over one
+member to the support of his
+cause.<a name="FNanchor_313_313" id="FNanchor_313_313"></a><a href="#Footnote_313_313" class="fnanchor">[313]</a></p>
+
+<p class='sect'><a name="BIV_I_VI" id="BIV_I_VI"></a>Accession to the Throne.</p>
+
+<p>Thus on different sides everything had been carefully prepared
+beforehand when the Queen died. Although it may be doubtful whether she
+had in so many words declared that James should be her successor, yet it
+is historically certain that she had for a long time consented to this
+arrangement. The people had not yet so entirely conquered all hesitation
+on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>At the moment of the Queen's decease the capital fell into a state of
+general commotion. Perhaps 40,000 decided Catholics might be counted in
+London, who had considered the government of the Queen an unauthorised
+usurpation. Were they now to submit themselves to a King who like her
+was a schismatic? Or were there grounds for entertaining the hope held
+out to them that the new prince would grant them freedom in the exercise
+of their religion. People pretended to find Jesuits in their ranks who
+were accused of stimulating the excitement of their feelings: and the
+government thought it necessary to arrest or keep an eye upon a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</a></span>
+number of men who were regarded as leaders of the Catholic party.</p>
+
+<p>The trained bands of the town were called out to meet the danger, and
+they consisted entirely of Protestants. But they also were agitated by
+uncertainty about the intentions of their new sovereign. What the
+Catholics wished and demanded, the free exercise of their religion, the
+Protestants just as strongly held to be inadmissible and dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the Privy Council had met at Richmond, where they were joined
+by the lords who were in town. Some points of great importance were
+mooted&mdash;whether the Privy Council had still any authority, even after
+the death of the sovereign from whom their commission proceeded&mdash;whether
+this authority was not entirely transferred to the lords as the
+hereditary councillors of the crown. The question was probably raised
+whether conditions should not be prescribed beforehand to the King of
+Scotland with regard to his government. But the prevailing ferment did
+not allow time for the discussion of these questions. On the same day
+(March 24) the heralds proclaimed James king under the combined titles
+of King of England, Scotland, France, and Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>It could not be perceived that the pomp of this proclamation produced
+any extraordinary impression. No mourning for the death of the Queen was
+exhibited; still less joy at the accession of James: all other interests
+were absorbed by the anticipation of coming events. The tone of feeling
+first became decided some days afterwards, when a declaration from the
+new King was published, wherein he promised the maintenance of religion
+on its present footing, and the exclusion of every other form of
+it.<a name="FNanchor_314_314" id="FNanchor_314_314"></a><a href="#Footnote_314_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a>
+On this the Protestants were quieted; the Catholics shewed
+themselves discouraged and exasperated. Yet the heads of the party who
+were held in custody were released on bail, and assured by the King's
+agents, that if even they were not permitted to worship
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</a></span>
+in public, they should not have to fear either compulsion or persecution.</p>
+
+<p>No movement was made against the acknowledgment of King James, although
+this was contrary to the old arrangements recognised by Parliament. But
+no one was forthcoming who could have enforced rights based upon these.
+The aged Hertford came forward to sign the proclamation of the lords
+both for himself, and in the name of his son who represented the
+Suffolks. The Lady Arabella made a declaration that she desired no other
+position than that which the present King might allow her. The Privy
+Council besought King James,&mdash;according to its own expression 'falling
+at his feet with deep humility,'&mdash;to come and breathe new life into the
+kingdom of England that had been bereaved of its head.</p>
+
+<p>We must not stay to discuss incidental questions, e.g. how the first
+news reached James, and how he received it. He remained quiet until he
+had obtained sure intelligence, and then without delay prepared to take
+possession of the throne, to which his mother's ambition and his own had
+for so many years been directed. Once more he addressed the people of
+Edinburgh assembled in the great church after the sermon. He would not
+admit the statement which had occurred in the discourse, that Scotland
+would mourn for his departure; for he was going, as he said, only from
+one part of the island to the other: from Edinburgh it was hardly
+further to London than to Inverness. He intended to return often; to
+remove pernicious abuses in both countries; to provide for peace and
+prosperity; to unite the two countries to one another. One of them had
+wealth, the other had a superabundance of men: the one country could
+help the other. He added in conclusion that he had expected to need
+their weapons: that he now required only their hearts.</p>
+
+<p>What filled his soul with pride and the consciousness of a high calling,
+was the thought that he would now carry into effect what the Romans, and
+in later times the Anglo-Saxon and Plantagenet kings, and last of all
+the Tudors, had sought to achieve by force of arms or by policy, but
+ever in vain&mdash;the union of the whole island under one rule, like that
+which native legendary lore ascribed to the mythical
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</a></span>
+Arthur. When he came to Berwick, around which town the two nations had engaged in so
+many bloody frays, he gave utterance, so it is said, to his intention of
+being King not of the one or of the other country but of both united,
+and of assuming the name of King of Great
+Britain.<a name="FNanchor_315_315" id="FNanchor_315_315"></a><a href="#Footnote_315_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a></p>
+
+<p>At York he met his predecessor's Secretary of State, Robert Cecil. As no
+one knew the relations into which he had already entered with Cecil,
+every one was astonished at the kind reception which he accorded to him.
+That did not prevent him however from being just to the other side as
+well. He greeted the youthful Essex as the son of the most renowned
+cavalier whom the realm of England had possessed; he appointed him to be
+the companion of the Prince of Wales, and made him carry the bared sword
+before him at his entrance into some of the towns. Southampton and
+Neville were received into favour; the Earl of Westmoreland was placed
+in the Privy Council. He gave it to be understood that he would again
+raise to their former station the great men of the kingdom, who up to
+this time, as he said, had not been treated according to their merits.</p>
+
+<p>In order to begin the work of union at once in the highest place, he
+added some Scottish members to the Privy Council, and placed Scots side
+by side with the Secretary of State and Treasurer of England. The Keeper
+of the Privy Seal was raised to the Lord Chancellorship, but obliged to
+resign the post of Master of the Rolls, which fell to the share of a
+Scot, who however contented himself with drawing the income without
+discharging the duties of the office. The main feature of the condition
+of affairs which now grew up was the understanding between Cecil and
+those Scots who were most influential with the King. These were the
+leaders of the two parties, one of which hitherto had rather inclined to
+Spain and the other to France, Lennox and Mar, and especially the most
+active, perhaps the cleverest man of all, George Hume. These were
+consulted on affairs of importance.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</a></span>
+The Scots had the advantage, to
+which custom almost gave them a right, of seeing the King as often as
+they wished: but Cecil and his English friends, in consequence of their
+knowledge and practice in business, had the chief management of affairs
+in their hands.</p>
+
+<p>The times were gloomy owing to the prevalence of an infectious disease;
+still extraordinary numbers of the English nobility thronged to London,
+in order to see the King, who took up his residence at Greenwich. It is
+computed that there were 10,000 people at court. James felt infinitely
+happy amidst the homage which clergy and laity vied with one another in
+rendering him. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_296_296" id="Footnote_296_296"></a><a href="#FNanchor_296_296"><span class="label">[296]</span></a> M'Crie, Life of Andrew Melville, ch. iii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_297_297" id="Footnote_297_297"></a><a href="#FNanchor_297_297"><span class="label">[297]</span></a> In a memoir in the Barberini Library, 'De praesenti
+Scotiae statu in iis quae ad religionem spectant brevissima narratio,'
+it is said, 'supra hominum opinionem auctus est Catholicorum numerus.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_298_298" id="Footnote_298_298"></a><a href="#FNanchor_298_298"><span class="label">[298]</span></a> Abstract of Randolph's instructions, from his own pen
+(Strype, Annals iii. i. 442): 'Nothing shall be done prejudicial to the
+King's title, but the same to pass by private assurance from Her Majesty
+to the King.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_299_299" id="Footnote_299_299"></a><a href="#FNanchor_299_299"><span class="label">[299]</span></a> Tractatus foederis et arctioris amicitiae. Rymer vi. 4.
+Randolph says, 'Three were the causes (of the alliance), viz. the
+noblemen, the money, and the assurance.' Strype iii. i. 568.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_300_300" id="Footnote_300_300"></a><a href="#FNanchor_300_300"><span class="label">[300]</span></a> Courcelles, in Tytler vii. 333.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_301_301" id="Footnote_301_301"></a><a href="#FNanchor_301_301"><span class="label">[301]</span></a> Slangen, Geschichte Christians iv. i. 117. Chyträus,
+Saxonia 864, 870. Cp. Melvil, Memoires, 175.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_302_302" id="Footnote_302_302"></a><a href="#FNanchor_302_302"><span class="label">[302]</span></a> Thirlstane to Burleigh, Aug. 13, 1590. In Tytler ix. 49.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_303_303" id="Footnote_303_303"></a><a href="#FNanchor_303_303"><span class="label">[303]</span></a> Lord Burleigh's speech in the House of Lords, Strype,
+Annals iv. 192. According to the 'Narratio de rebus Scoticis,' the
+Scottish magnates were the first movers.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_304_304" id="Footnote_304_304"></a><a href="#FNanchor_304_304"><span class="label">[304]</span></a> James to Elizabeth. 'The sayde rebellis hadd so travelled
+by indirect means with everie nobleman, as quhen I feld thaier
+myndis&mdash;thay plainlie&mdash;refusid to yeild to any forfaiture.' 19 Sept.
+1593. In Bruce, Letters of Queen Elizabeth and King James VI of
+Scotland, 87.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_305_305" id="Footnote_305_305"></a><a href="#FNanchor_305_305"><span class="label">[305]</span></a> Calderwood, v. 440. 'As to the wisdom of your counsell,
+which I call devilish and pernicious, it is this: that yee must be
+served with all sorts of men to come to your purpose and grandour Jew
+and Gentile, Papist and Protestant. And becaus the ministers and
+protestants in Scotland are over strong and controll the king they must
+be weakenned and brought low.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_306_306" id="Footnote_306_306"></a><a href="#FNanchor_306_306"><span class="label">[306]</span></a> The tumult in Edinburgh, in Calderwood v. 511.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_307_307" id="Footnote_307_307"></a><a href="#FNanchor_307_307"><span class="label">[307]</span></a> In James Melville's Diary (p. 383) an act is mentioned
+with the date of January 1597, 'discharging the ministers stipends that
+wald not subscryve a Band acknawlaging the king to be only judge in
+matters of treassone or uther civill and criminall causses committed be
+preatching, prayer or what way so ever&mdash;Thair was keipit a frequent
+convention of esteates wharin war maid manie strange and seveire
+actes.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_308_308" id="Footnote_308_308"></a><a href="#FNanchor_308_308"><span class="label">[308]</span></a> So Crichton informs the Venetian secretary, Scaramelli,
+July 10, 1603.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_309_309" id="Footnote_309_309"></a><a href="#FNanchor_309_309"><span class="label">[309]</span></a> With regard to the offers brought by Ogilvy to Spain this
+has been undeniably proved on the evidence of another Jesuit. Winwood
+i.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_310_310" id="Footnote_310_310"></a><a href="#FNanchor_310_310"><span class="label">[310]</span></a> He expressed to her an 'humble desire that I would banish
+from mynde any evill opinion or doupt of your sincerity to me.' (Dec. 2,
+1601, in Bruce.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_311_311" id="Footnote_311_311"></a><a href="#FNanchor_311_311"><span class="label">[311]</span></a> 'Breve relazione di quanto si è trattato tra S. Sta ed il
+re d'Inghilterra.' MS. Rom. From no other quarter moreover is any direct
+proof adduced of a promise of toleration properly so called.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_312_312" id="Footnote_312_312"></a><a href="#FNanchor_312_312"><span class="label">[312]</span></a> The abbot of Kinloss told the Venetian secretary, 'che il
+re si trova obligatissimo col pontefice, chiamandolo veramente Clemente,
+perche per istanze che sono state più volte fatte a S. Be<sup>ne</sup> da
+principi, non ha voluto mai dishonorarlo con divenire ad
+escommunicatione di sua persona, e che perciò S. M. desirera di
+corresponderle, aggiungendo che i catolici mentre staranno quieti et
+honestamente occulti non saranno cercati nè perseguitati.' (Scaramelli,
+8 Maggio, 1603.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_313_313" id="Footnote_313_313"></a><a href="#FNanchor_313_313"><span class="label">[313]</span></a> Scaramelli, from the lips of one of the King's agents,
+March 27.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_314_314" id="Footnote_314_314"></a><a href="#FNanchor_314_314"><span class="label">[314]</span></a> Scaramelli (April 12) alludes to a declaration from the
+King, 'Per la conservatione della religione in che vive essa citta e
+regno. Questo aviso,' he proceeds, 'ha reso sicuri gli heretici.' In
+Halliwell, Letters of the Kings of England ii. 97, there is a letter
+from the King to the same effect addressed to his agent Hambleton, the
+contents of which were probably divulged at the moment.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_315_315" id="Footnote_315_315"></a><a href="#FNanchor_315_315"><span class="label">[315]</span></a> Scaramelli, April 17, 'Dicendosi che lasciando i nomi di
+uno e l'altro regno habbia qualche intentione di chiamarsi re della Gran
+Bretagna per abbracciar con un solo nome ad imitatione di quel antico e
+famoso re Arturo tutto quello che gira il spatio di 1700 miglia unito.'</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BIV_II" id="BIV_II"></a>
+FIRST MEASURES OF THE NEW REIGN.</p>
+
+<p>How often in former times, when England was in the midst of great and
+glorious undertakings, had the Scots, who feared lest they themselves
+should be subjected to the power of their neighbours, taken the side of
+the enemy and obstructed the victory! Even the last wars might have
+taken quite a different course had Scotland made common cause with
+Spain. It was this connexion between the two kingdoms which made union
+with Scotland a political necessity for England. Ralegh describes this
+union under the present circumstances as no less fortunate for England
+than the blending of the Red and White Rose had been, as the most
+advantageous of all the means of growth which were open to her.</p>
+
+<p>The kingdom of Scotland, like that of England, had extended the
+supremacy of the Teutonic over the Keltic races, for these two elements
+formed the main constituents of both kingdoms. The German in conflict
+with the Keltic race had developed its character and energy.</p>
+
+<p>The Orkney Islands, to which Scotland asserted its claim even against
+the kindred race of the Norwegians, and the Hebrides, which were reputed
+the home of warriors of extraordinary bravery, were now united in one
+kingdom with the Channel Islands, which still remained in the possession
+of England from the days of the old connexion between the Normans of
+Normandy and that country. The Gael of Scotland, the Gwythel of
+Erin&mdash;and the Irish still appear in most records as savages&mdash;the Cymry
+of Wales and their Cornish kinsmen, who still spoke their old language,
+now appeared as subjects of the same sceptre.
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1603.</span>
+The accession of James to the throne exercised
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</a></span>
+an immediate influence on Ireland. Tyrone, the
+O'Neil, threw aside the agreement which the Queen's ministers had
+concluded with him against their will, thinking that he no longer
+required it, since the right heir had ascended the throne. The people
+seemed willing to espouse the cause of the new King as that of the
+native head of their race, and a genealogy was concocted in which his
+descent was traced to the old Milesian kings. The whole circuit of the
+British Isles was united under the name of Stuart. As a hundred years
+before the last great province of France had been gradually united to
+the French crown, and even within human memory Portugal, like the other
+provinces of the Spanish peninsula, had been added to the crown of
+Spain, so now a united Britain was formed side by side with these two
+great powers. James himself noticed the resemblance, and a proud feeling
+of self-confidence filled his breast, when he reflected that the change
+had been made without the help of arms, as if by the force of the
+internal necessity of things. Just as formerly the claim to universal
+supremacy together with the spread of the Church had greatly increased
+the importance of the Papacy, so now the claim to hereditary right
+possessed by James seemed to him of immeasurable value, for by it he had
+won so great and coveted a prize: it appeared to him the expression of
+the will of God.</p>
+
+<p>Surprise might be felt that France, which for several centuries had
+exercised a ruling influence on Scotland, and which in this union of the
+two crowns might have seen a disadvantage if not a danger for herself,
+allowed it to take place without obstruction. This conduct may be
+explained principally by the violent opposition which existed between
+Henry IV and Spain even after the peace of Vervins, and by the hostile
+influence incessantly exercised by that power upon the internal
+relations of his kingdom, in the pacification of which he was still
+engaged. It would have been dangerous for Henry himself to revive the
+hatred between England and Scotland, which could only have redounded to
+the advantage of his foes.</p>
+
+<p>James I however did not intend, and could not be expected to occupy
+exactly the same position as his predecessor. If
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</a></span>
+he had adopted her views, yet this was a compliance exacted from him by a regard to the
+succession: he had felt that it was wrung from him. It is intelligible,
+and he did not attempt to disguise the fact, that he felt the death of
+Elizabeth to be in some sense his emancipation. He avoided appearing at
+her obsequies; every word showed that he did not love to recall her
+memory. In London people thought to please him by getting rid of the
+likenesses of the glorious Queen, and replacing them by those of his
+mother. The first matter which was submitted to him whilst still in
+Scotland, and which engaged him on the journey and immediately after his
+arrival, was the question whether he should proceed with the war which
+Elizabeth had planned; whether in fact he should continue her general
+policy. Henry IV sent without delay one of his most distinguished
+statesmen, who was moreover a Protestant, Maximilian de Bethune, Duke of
+Sully, as Ambassador Extraordinary; and Sully did not neglect to explain
+to the King the plan of an alliance between the States of Europe under
+the lead of France, that should be able to cope with the Austro-Spanish
+power, a plan which Sully had entertained all his life. James gave the
+ambassador, as he wished, a private audience in a retired chamber of his
+palace at Greenwich, asked many questions, and listened with attention,
+for he loved far-reaching schemes; but he was far from intending to
+embark on them. As he had reached the throne without arms, so he wished
+to maintain himself there by peaceful
+means.<a name="FNanchor_316_316" id="FNanchor_316_316"></a><a href="#Footnote_316_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a>
+It was natural that
+the Queen, who had been excommunicated by the Pope, and had carried on a
+war for life and death with the Spanish crown, should have intended to
+renew the struggle with all her might: such designs suited her personal
+position; but his own was different. Deeply penetrated by the idea of
+legitimacy, he even hesitated whether he should support the
+Netherlanders, who after all, in his judgment, were only rebels. To the
+remark that it would be a loss for England herself if the taking of
+Ostend, then besieged by the Spaniards, were not prevented, he replied
+by asking unconcernedly whether this place had not belonged
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</a></span>
+in former times to the Spanish crown, and whether the English trade had not
+flourished there for all that. In these first moments of his reign
+however the difficulties of his government were already brought into
+view, together with the opposition between different tendencies latent
+in it. If he was unwilling to continue the policy of his predecessor,
+yet he could not absolutely renounce it: there were pledges which he
+could not break, interests which he could not neglect. In order to meet
+his objections the argument employed by Elizabeth was adduced, that she
+supported the Provinces only because the agreements, in virtue of which
+they had submitted themselves to the house of Burgundy, had been first
+broken by the other
+side.<a name="FNanchor_317_317" id="FNanchor_317_317"></a><a href="#Footnote_317_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a>
+The King's tone of mind was such that
+this argument may well have had an effect upon him. At last he consented
+to bestow further assistance, although only indirectly. He conceded that
+one half of the sum which Henry IV paid to the States General should be
+subtracted from the demands which England had against France, and should
+be employed by the Netherlanders in recruiting in the English dominions.
+By this expedient he intended to satisfy the terms of the old alliance
+between England and the Provinces, and yet not be prevented from coming
+to an agreement with Spain.</p>
+
+<p>The ambassador of the Archduke and the Infanta, the Duke of Aremberg,
+was already in the country, but he was afflicted with gout and somewhat
+averse to transact business in writing; and nothing more than general
+assurances of friendship were exchanged. In October 1603 one of the
+Spanish envoys, Don Juan de Tassis, Count of Mediana, made his
+appearance. Astonishment was created when, on his entrance into the hall
+where the assembled Court awaited him, he advanced into the middle of
+the room before he uncovered his head. He spoke Spanish; the King
+answered in English: an interpreter was required between them, although
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1604.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</a></span>
+they were both masters of French. But however imperfect their
+communications were, they yet came to an understanding. The King and the
+ambassador agreed in holding that all grounds for hostility between
+Spain and England had disappeared with the death of Queen Elizabeth.</p>
+
+<p>After a fresh and long delay&mdash;for the Spaniards would have preferred to
+transfer the conference to some town on the continent&mdash;negotiations were
+first seriously undertaken in May 1604, and then after all in England.
+The affairs of the Netherlands formed the principal subject of
+discussion.</p>
+
+<p>The King of Spain demanded that the King of England should abstain from
+assisting his rebellious subjects. The English explained the reason why
+the United Netherlanders were not considered rebels. The Spaniards
+demanded that the fortresses at least, which the Provinces had formerly
+surrendered to the Queen as a security for the repayment of the loan
+made by her, should be restored to their lawful owner the King, who
+would not fail to repay the money advanced. King James answered that he
+was tied by the pledges of the Queen, and that he must maintain his word
+and honour.<a name="FNanchor_318_318" id="FNanchor_318_318"></a><a href="#Footnote_318_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a>
+The Spaniards on this started the proposal that the
+English on their part should break off their traffic with the United
+Provinces. The English replied that this would be most injurious to
+themselves. In these transactions James was mainly guided by the
+consideration that, if he decidedly threw off the Provinces, he would be
+giving them over into the hands of France, to the most serious injury of
+England, and without advantage to Spain. On this account principally he
+thought that he was obliged to maintain his previous relations with
+them. The English found a very characteristic reason for peace with
+Spain in the wish to restore their old commercial connexion with that
+country. The Spaniards were ready to make this concession, but only
+within the ancient limits, from which the trade with both the Indies was
+excluded. They argued that their government did not allow this even to
+all its own subjects; how then could
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</a></span>
+foreigners be admitted to a share
+in it? Cecil on this remarked that England by its insular position was
+adapted for trading with the whole world, and could not possibly allow
+these regions to be closed against her; that she already had relations
+with countries on which no Spaniard had ever set foot, and that a wide
+field for further discoveries was still open. At no price would he allow
+his countrymen to be again excluded from America or the East Indies, to
+which countries they had just begun to extend their
+voyages.<a name="FNanchor_319_319" id="FNanchor_319_319"></a><a href="#Footnote_319_319" class="fnanchor">[319]</a></p>
+
+<p>The peace which was at length brought about is remarkable for its
+indefiniteness. The English promised that they would not support the
+rebellious subjects and enemies of the King of Spain; and it was
+arranged that an unrestricted trade should again be opened with all
+countries, with which it had been carried on before the war. At the
+first glance this looked as if any further alliance with Holland, as
+well as the navigation to the Indies, was rendered impossible. The
+Venetian envoy once spoke with King James on the subject, who answered
+that it would soon be shown that this opinion was erroneous. In fact, as
+soon as the first ships returned from the East Indies, preparations were
+at once made for a second expedition. The States General were not
+interfered with in the enlistment which they had been allowed to begin;
+for it was maintained that they could not be included under the term
+rebellious subjects. The only difference made was that similar leave to
+enlist in the English dominions was granted to the Spaniards also, who
+for that purpose resorted especially to Ireland. In this way the peace
+exactly expressed the relations into which England was thrown by the
+change of government. James, who for his own part would have wished
+simply to renew the friendly relations which had formerly existed, found
+himself compelled to stipulate for exceptions owing to the form which
+the interests of England had now assumed. The Spaniards allowed them,
+because even on these terms the termination of the war was of the
+greatest advantage to them, and they did not surrender the hope of
+changing the peace into a full alliance later on,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</a></span>
+although their proposals to that effect were in the first instance declined.</p>
+
+<p>And notwithstanding any ambiguity which might arise as to the scope of
+the treaty with regard to individual questions, the conclusion of peace
+was in itself of great importance: it implied a change of policy which
+created the greatest stir. It affected the United Provinces and filled
+them with anxiety, for in their judgment not only was the action of
+Spain against them no longer fettered, but the Spanish ambassador in
+England was sure in time by means of gold and intrigues to acquire an
+influence which must be fatal to them.</p>
+
+<p>The King thought that he had achieved a great success. His intention was
+to be as fully acknowledged by the Catholic powers as by the Protestant;
+to occupy a neutral position between those who were favourable, and
+those who were opposed, to Spain, and to live in peace with all, without
+however losing sight of the interests of England. Men could not be blind
+to the correspondence between this policy and the general tendency of
+these times. From the epoch of the Absolution of Henry IV and the
+overthrow of the League, the separation between religious and political
+interests had begun. Men on either side no longer regarded the
+ascendancy of Spain as a support or as a danger to religion. The Spanish
+government itself under the guidance of the Duke of Lerma acquired a
+peaceful character. Thus King James was made happy by seeing embassies
+from the Catholic states arrive in England. Not until he stood between
+the two parties did he feel himself to be in truth a king, and to
+surpass his predecessor.</p>
+
+<p>This sovereign assumed a similar attitude towards the Catholics of
+England as well. He could not vouchsafe to them a real toleration; but a
+few months after his arrival in England he actually carried out what he
+had already promised, an alleviation of those burdens which weighed most
+heavily on them. The most grievous was the fine collected every month
+from those who refused to take part in the Protestant service. James
+declared to an assemblage of leading Catholics, that he would not
+enforce this fine so long as they behaved quietly, and did not show
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[Pg 393]</a></span>
+contempt towards himself and the State. The Catholics reminded him that
+their absence from the service of the Church might be interpreted as
+contempt. He assured them that he would not regard it in this light. The
+fines, which in late years had amounted to more than £10,000, decreased
+in the year 1603 to £300, and in 1604 to £200. The King, like his
+predecessor, would not tolerate Jesuits and Seminarists, but he was
+content with their banishment; it would have been contrary to his temper
+to have had them executed. He sought to avoid all the consequences that
+must have been provoked by the hostility of this element which was still
+so powerful in the world at large and among his own subjects.</p>
+
+<p>But even within the domain of Protestantism he was now encountered by a
+similar problem.</p>
+
+<p>The investigation of the influence which the Scots and English have
+exercised on one another in the last few centuries would be a task of
+essential importance for the history of intellectual life; for in the
+development of the prevailing spirit of the nation the Scots as well as
+the English have had a large share. Even under Elizabeth these relations
+had begun to exist. The growth of English Puritanism especially, which
+had already given the Queen much trouble, must be regarded as but the
+dissemination of the forms and ideas that had arisen in the Church of
+Scotland. But how much stronger must the action of this cause have
+become now that a Scottish king had ascended the English throne! The
+union between two populations which so nearly resembled one another in
+their original composition, and in the direction taken by their
+religious development, could not be a merely territorial union: it must
+lead to the closest relation between the spirit of the two peoples.</p>
+
+<p>It was natural from the state of the case, that on the accession of a
+Scottish king in England the English clergy who leaned to the Scottish
+system should embrace the hope of being emancipated to some extent from
+that strict subordination to their bishops which they endured with
+reluctance. On the first arrival of James, whilst he was still on his
+way to London, they laid before him an address signed by eight hundred
+of the clergy, in which they besought
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[Pg 394]</a></span>
+him, in accordance with God's
+word, to lighten the rigour of this jurisdiction and of their condition
+in general, and in the first place to allow them to set before him the
+feasibility of the alteration. They had nourished the hope that the King
+might be prevailed on to reduce the English episcopate to the level of
+the Scottish, in the shape in which he had just restored
+it.<a name="FNanchor_320_320" id="FNanchor_320_320"></a><a href="#Footnote_320_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a></p>
+
+<p>But the tendencies which the King brought with him out of Scotland ran
+in an altogether different direction. He had often been personally
+affronted by the Presbyterians: he hated their system; for in his
+opinion equality in the Church necessarily led to equality in the State.
+His intention was rather by degrees to develop further on the English
+model those beginnings of episcopacy which he had introduced into
+Scotland. In December 1603 he convened, as the Puritans wished, an
+assembly of the Church at Hampton Court, to which he also invited the
+leading men among the opponents of uniformity. But he opened the
+conference at once with a thanksgiving to Almighty God 'for bringing him
+into the promised land where religion was purely professed, where he sat
+among grave, learned, and reverend men, not, as before, elsewhere, a
+king without state, without honour, without order, where beardless boys
+would brave him to his face.' He declared that the government of the
+English Church had been approved by manifold blessings from God himself;
+and he said that he had not called this assembly in order to make
+innovations in the same, but in order to strengthen it by the removal of
+some abuses. In the conference which he opened he held the office of
+moderator himself. Certainly the suggestions of the Puritans were not
+altogether without result. When they expressed the wish to see the
+Sunday more strictly observed, to have a trustworthy and faithful
+translation of the Bible provided, and to have the Apocrypha excluded
+from the canonical scriptures, they met with a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[Pg 395]</a></span>
+favourable reception;
+but the King would neither allow the confessions of faith to be tampered
+with, nor the ceremonies which had been brought under discussion to
+undergo the least diminution. He thought that they were older than the
+Papacy, that the decision of deeper questions of doctrine ought to be
+left to the discussion of the Universities, and that the articles of the
+faith would only be encumbered by them. And every limitation of
+episcopal authority he entirely refused to discuss. The bishops
+themselves were amazed at the zeal with which the King espoused the
+cause of ecclesiastical jurisdiction, and allowed their justification of
+it even on a point of great importance for the constitution, the
+imposition of the oath <i>ex officio</i>.<a name="FNanchor_321_321" id="FNanchor_321_321"></a><a href="#Footnote_321_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a>
+They even exclaimed that God
+had bestowed on them a king, the like of whom had not been seen from the
+beginning of the world. It had been the intention and custom of other
+princes to limit the jurisdiction of the clergy, and to diminish their
+possessions. How much had they suffered from this even under Elizabeth!
+On the contrary it was one of the first endeavours of James I to put an
+end for ever to these attacks. For as in Scotland the abolition of
+bishoprics had been attended with a diminution of the authority of the
+crown, he had reason to be deeply convinced of the identity of episcopal
+and monarchical interests. In the heat of the conference at Hampton
+Court he laid down as his principle, 'No bishop no king.'</p>
+
+<p>But in all this did King James fall in with the spirit of the English
+constitution? Did he not rather at this point intrude into it the
+sharpness of his Scottish prejudices? The old statesmen of England had
+acknowledged the services of the English Puritans in saving the
+Protestant confession in the struggle with Catholicism. The Puritans
+only wished not to be oppressed. He confounded them altogether with
+their Scottish co-religionists with whom he had had to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[Pg 396]</a></span>
+contend for the sovereignty of the realm.</p>
+
+<p>In less than two months from the Hampton Court Conference the Book of
+Common Prayer was re-issued with some few alterations, with regard to
+which the King expressly stated that they were the only alterations
+which were to be expected; for that the safety of states consisted in
+clinging fast to what had been ordained after good consideration. This
+was soon followed by a new collection of ecclesiastical laws, in the
+shape which they had taken under the deliberations of Convocation. In
+them the royal supremacy was insisted on in the strongest terms, and
+that over the whole kingdom, Scotland included. The same competence with
+regard to the Church was therein assigned to the King which had belonged
+to the pious kings of Judah and to the earliest Christian emperors:
+their authority was declared to be second only to that of Heaven.
+Henceforward no one was to be ordained without promising to observe the
+Book of Common Prayer and to acknowledge the
+supremacy.<a name="FNanchor_322_322" id="FNanchor_322_322"></a><a href="#Footnote_322_322" class="fnanchor">[322]</a>
+And this statute had a retrospective application, even to those who were already
+in possession of an ecclesiastical benefice. The King and Archbishop
+Bancroft ordered that a short respite should be given to those who were
+inclined to acquiesce; but that those who made a decided resistance
+should without further ceremony be deprived of their benefices.</p>
+
+<p>On this the whole body of Puritans necessarily became agitated. A number
+of clergymen sought out the King at Royston in December 1604. While they
+announced to him their decision rather to resign their benefices than to
+submit to these ordinances, they called his attention to the danger to
+which the souls of the faithful would be subjected by this severity. In
+February a petition in favour of those ministers who refused to
+subscribe was presented to the King by some of the gentry of
+Northamptonshire. He expressed himself about this with great vehemence
+at a sitting of the Privy Council. He said that he had from his cradle
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[Pg 397]</a></span>
+suffered at the hands of these Puritans a persecution which would follow
+him to his grave. But in England the tribunals were quite ready to come
+to his assistance. In the Star Chamber it was declared a proceeding of
+seditious tendency to assail the King with joint petitions in a matter
+of religion.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the end of February 1605 the bishops cited the clergy of Puritan
+views to appear at St. Paul's in London in order to take the oath. There
+were some members of this party who held it lawful to conform to the
+Anglican Church because it at least acknowledged the true doctrine.
+These had time for reflection given them; the rest who persevered in an
+opposition of principle were deprived of their offices without delay.</p>
+
+<p>These proceedings for the first time recalled most vividly to men's
+minds the memory of the late Queen. People said that, though she
+disliked the Puritans, she had never consented to persecute them on
+religious grounds, for that she well knew how much she owed to them in
+every other respect. They saw a proof of the King's incapacity in his
+departure from her example and pattern. They thought him to blame for
+remitting in favour of Catholic recusants the execution of the penal
+laws enrolled among the statutes of the realm. And the foreign policy of
+the King awakened no less disapproval. It was felt as an injury, that he
+had put an end by the peace to the hostilities against Spain, which had
+now become even popular. Even the severe edicts issued against the
+piracy, which had found support in different quarters, produced in many
+places an unfavourable impression. The King was obliged to compensate
+the admiral for the losses which he affirmed that he had suffered in
+consequence.<a name="FNanchor_323_323" id="FNanchor_323_323"></a><a href="#Footnote_323_323" class="fnanchor">[323]</a>
+And how much greater were the apprehensions for the
+future which were connected with this policy! It was remarked that he
+sacrificed the interests of religion and of the country
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[Pg 398]</a></span>
+to those of the Catholics and the Catholic powers.</p>
+
+<p>But there was now an organ of political opposition in the country in
+which all these hostile feelings found their expression. The resentment
+of injured interests, the resistance of the Puritans, and the excitement
+of the capital, impressed themselves on the Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>All previous governments had exercised a systematic influence upon the
+election of members of the Lower House, and had encroached on their
+freedom. When the first elections under King James were about to be held
+he declared himself against the exercise of any such influence. He
+ordered that the elections should be conducted with freedom and
+impartiality, without regard to the bidding of any one and without the
+interference of strangers; and that the electors should be allowed to
+return the most deserving candidates in each county. He thought that, as
+he avoided unpopular measures, men would voluntarily meet his wishes. It
+appeared to him sufficient, if, in issuing the writs, he coupled with
+them the admonition to avoid all party spirit, and especially to abstain
+from electing such as from blind superstition on the one hand, or from
+fickleness or restlessness on the other, wished to disturb the
+uniformity of religion.<a name="FNanchor_324_324" id="FNanchor_324_324"></a><a href="#Footnote_324_324" class="fnanchor">[324]</a>
+But in politics personal gratitude is only
+a feeble motive. The elections followed the current of opinion which had
+been set in motion by the Hampton Court Conference. In the very first
+Parliament of King James many Puritans obtained entrance into the House:
+the new line which this Parliament struck out influenced the whole
+subsequent period.</p>
+
+<p>The speech with which King James opened the session on the 19th of March
+1604, immediately before the conclusion of the first year of his reign,
+has been often and often reproduced. It is full of the ideas with which
+his mind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[Pg 399]</a></span>
+was principally occupied, of the union of both kingdoms in one
+great whole, and of the establishment of religious uniformity. He
+thought that in neither of the two kingdoms ought the memory of their
+special privileges to be kept alive, for they were pure monarchies from
+the first: no privilege could separate them from their head. He
+explicitly called the Puritans an ochlocratic sect.</p>
+
+<p>It is extraordinary that, while he sought to win men's affections, it
+was his fortune to use expressions which were sure to provoke the
+strongest religious and political antipathies.</p>
+
+<p>Parliament acknowledged his succession to be rightful and lawful, and
+granted to him, as to his predecessors, tonnage and poundage, i.e. the
+right of levying customs, for his life: it arranged according to his
+wishes for the withdrawal of many sentences which had been pronounced
+against his interest; but in other matters it offered him from the very
+first persistent opposition. Contrary to what might have been expected,
+the first point concerned the validity of the elections.</p>
+
+<p>In Buckinghamshire the King's officers had annulled an election on the
+ground of illegality, and had held a second. The Lower House found that
+this was improper, on the ground that the right of deciding in matters
+concerning the election of representatives belonged from ancient times
+to the House of Commons alone. They declined to confer on this subject
+with the Privy Council, or with the Upper House. Ill-will and jealousy
+were excited against those of higher rank who had wished to bring one of
+their own party into the House of Commons, and the tempers of the
+members seemed to be becoming no little inflamed. At last, by the
+personal mediation of the
+King,<a name="FNanchor_325_325" id="FNanchor_325_325"></a><a href="#Footnote_325_325" class="fnanchor">[325]</a>
+the Lower House was induced to
+allow both of the elected candidates to be unseated, and a third to be
+elected in their place. Even this it agreed to reluctantly; but it was
+at least its own resolution, and not the result of official influence:
+and the Speaker issued his writ for a new election. One of the foremost
+principles of parliamentary life, that the scrutiny of elections
+belonged to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[Pg 400]</a></span>
+the Parliament alone, was in this manner indubitably
+established afresh.</p>
+
+<p>Even his ideas on the union of the two kingdoms, which were nearest to
+his heart, were shared by few members of the Lower House; and he was
+obliged to raise the question by a new and urgent address. A commission
+of both Houses was indeed nominated to deliberate together with the
+Scots on the execution of the plan. The commission however was so
+numerous, and so large a number was required to be actually present for
+the transaction of business, that it was evident beforehand that no
+result would be achieved; especially as it was confidently to be
+expected that the Scots would appoint just as numerous a commission on
+their side.<a name="FNanchor_326_326" id="FNanchor_326_326"></a><a href="#Footnote_326_326" class="fnanchor">[326]</a>
+And the King was already aware that the opposition
+against him was not confined to the Lower House, but in this matter at
+least was most widely diffused. The proclamation was already drawn up by
+which he intended to declare himself King of Great Britain. The judges
+were consulted by the Upper House, but their sentence favoured the view
+that this alteration could not take place without disadvantage to the
+State.</p>
+
+<p>The grant of a subsidy was most urgently needed by the King, whose purse
+had been emptied by the expenses of taking possession and by his
+prodigality; but the tone of feeling was so unfavourable that he forbore
+to apply for it, as he would not expose himself to a refusal which was
+certain beforehand.</p>
+
+<p>A petition in favour of some indulgence for the Puritans was drawn up in
+complete opposition to the King's views, although it seems not to have
+been carried through or sent in. A rigorous bill against the Jesuits and
+recusants on the other hand actually passed through the House. Lord
+Montague, who spoke against it, was brought before the House of Lords to
+answer for some expressions which he used on that occasion, and which
+savoured of Catholic principles.</p>
+
+<p>It is quite clear that the very first Parliament of King James set
+itself systematically in opposition to him. He
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[Pg 401]</a></span>
+desired union, clemency
+to the Catholics, and punishment of the Puritans; and he required
+subsidies: on all these subjects an opposite view prevailed in
+Parliament. And the divergence was not confined to single points. The
+maintenance of that extended prerogative which had been once
+established, had been endured under a sovereign who was a native of the
+country, had deserved well of her subjects, and was thoroughly English
+in her sentiments. But similar pretensions appeared insufferable in a
+king of foreign birth, who pursued ideas that were British rather than
+English, or rather who had combined for himself a number of tendencies
+arising out of the position in which, grand as it was, he stood alone
+among English sovereigns. We perceive that by this time the notion had
+been definitely formed of reviving the rights of Parliament which had
+fallen into abeyance in the late
+reigns.<a name="FNanchor_327_327" id="FNanchor_327_327"></a><a href="#Footnote_327_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a>
+Even under the Tudors
+Parliament had exercised a very considerable influence, but had more or
+less submitted to the ruling powers. Under the new government it thought
+of winning back the authority which it had wrung from more than one
+Plantagenet, and had possessed under the house of Lancaster. Already
+members were heard to assert that the legislative power lay in their
+hands; and that, if the King refused to approve the laws for which they
+demanded his sanction, they would refuse him the subsidies which he
+needed.</p>
+
+<p>And this resolution was strengthened by the ill-feeling which the
+treatment of the Puritan ministers excited. The Parliament had been
+adjourned from August 1604 until February 1605: but the King feared that
+these clergymen, who had been assailed just at that time, might apply to
+the Lower House in which so many Puritans had
+seats.<a name="FNanchor_328_328" id="FNanchor_328_328"></a><a href="#Footnote_328_328" class="fnanchor">[328]</a>
+He therefore prorogued it afresh in the hope of getting rid
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1605.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[Pg 402]</a></span>
+of certain persons who
+were especially hostile, or of bringing them over to his own side.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of this, new grievances were constantly accumulating. In the
+absence of regular subsidies the King helped himself to money by a
+voluntary loan, which gave great offence, and in this matter also led
+people to contrast the late Queen's conduct with that of James. She had,
+so people said, conducted the war in Spain, afforded help to the
+Netherlands, and maintained garrisons on the Scottish border, three
+measures which had cost her millions; of all this there was no mention
+under the present King. On the contrary he had additional revenues from
+Scotland; for what reason did he require extraordinary
+subsidies?<a name="FNanchor_329_329" id="FNanchor_329_329"></a><a href="#Footnote_329_329" class="fnanchor">[329]</a>
+Men complained of his movements to and fro in the country, and of the
+harshness with which the right of the court to transport and cheap
+entertainment on these occasions was enforced; of his hunting, by which
+the tillage was injured; most of all, of his intended advancement of the
+Customs Duties, for this would damage trade and certainly would benefit
+only the great men who were interested in the farming of the Customs.
+The King had once thought of dissolving Parliament, but afterwards
+renounced the idea. As it was, when Parliament was summoned for November
+1605, a stormy session lay before it, owing to the attack made by the
+Parliamentary and Puritan party upon the behaviour of the King in
+ecclesiastical and political questions, as well as upon the financial
+disorder which was gaining ground.</p>
+
+<p>An event intervened which gave an entirely different direction to the
+course of affairs. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_316_316" id="Footnote_316_316"></a><a href="#FNanchor_316_316"><span class="label">[316]</span></a> Économies royales v. 23.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_317_317" id="Footnote_317_317"></a><a href="#FNanchor_317_317"><span class="label">[317]</span></a> Molino, Giugno 9, 1604: 'Se ben è vero, ch'erano suddite
+del re di Spagna, è anco verissimo, che quei popoli si erano soggettati
+alla casa di Borgogna&mdash;con quelle conditioni e capitoli, che si sa: i
+quali se fossero stati osservati dalli ministri di Spagna, senza dubio
+quei popoli non se sariano ribellati. Da queste parole restarono li
+Spagnoli offesi.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_318_318" id="Footnote_318_318"></a><a href="#FNanchor_318_318"><span class="label">[318]</span></a> Cecil to Winwood, June 13. 'That he is tied by former
+contracts of his predecessors, which he must observe.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_319_319" id="Footnote_319_319"></a><a href="#FNanchor_319_319"><span class="label">[319]</span></a> From the reports of the French ambassador, in Siri,
+Memorie recondite i. 278.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_320_320" id="Footnote_320_320"></a><a href="#FNanchor_320_320"><span class="label">[320]</span></a> Letter from the South (Winchester) to Berwick, in
+Calderwood vi. 235. 'I would the scotish presbytereis would be
+petitioners that our bishops might be like theirs in autoritie though
+they keep their livings. The King is resolved to have a preaching
+ministry.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_321_321" id="Footnote_321_321"></a><a href="#FNanchor_321_321"><span class="label">[321]</span></a> The High Commission was compared with the Inquisition:
+'men are urged to subscribe more than law requireth and by the oath <i>ex
+officio</i> forced to accuse themselves.' The archbishop answered that this
+was a mistake: 'if the article touch the party for life, liberty, or
+scandall, he may refuse to answer.' State Trials ii. 86. The account in
+Wilkins iv. 374 is more unsatisfactory than the character of the book
+would lead us to expect.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_322_322" id="Footnote_322_322"></a><a href="#FNanchor_322_322"><span class="label">[322]</span></a> Art. 36: 'Neminem nisi praevia trium articulorum
+subscriptione ordinandum'.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_323_323" id="Footnote_323_323"></a><a href="#FNanchor_323_323"><span class="label">[323]</span></a> Duodo relates (Dec. 6, 1603) that the King said to him:
+'Che dubita, che li suoi capitani di mare siano alquanti interessati che
+anzi, e mostro di dirlo in gran confidenza era stato necessitato
+assegnar non so che provisione del suo proprio denaro all'Amiraglio;
+perche si doleva di non poterse sostentare per esserli mancato alcun
+utile di questa natura.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_324_324" id="Footnote_324_324"></a><a href="#FNanchor_324_324"><span class="label">[324]</span></a> 'The choice to be made freely and indifferentlye without
+respect of any commaunde sute prayer or other meanes to the contrary.'
+From a memorandum of the Lord Chancellor Egerton, Egerton Papers 385.
+Molino, May 12, 1604: 'Stimò il re che il concedere la liberta alle
+provincie di poter far elettione degli huomini per mandar al parlamento
+conforme agli antichi privilegi del regno et il non haver voluto
+osservare li molti tratti delli precessori suoi che non avrebbero
+permesso che la elettione cadesse in altre persone che in suoi
+confidenti e dipendenti, dovesse disponer gli animi di ogn'uno a
+sodisfarlo e compiacerlo.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_325_325" id="Footnote_325_325"></a><a href="#FNanchor_325_325"><span class="label">[325]</span></a> Molino: 'Havendo voluto troncar l'occasione di qualche
+maggior scandalo; perche di gia li sangui si andavano riscaldando
+molto.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_326_326" id="Footnote_326_326"></a><a href="#FNanchor_326_326"><span class="label">[326]</span></a> Molino (Dispaccio 19 Maggio) states this reason.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_327_327" id="Footnote_327_327"></a><a href="#FNanchor_327_327"><span class="label">[327]</span></a> Molino: 'Parlando molto liberamente della liberta e della
+autorita del parlamento in vista pero sempre degli antichi privilegi,
+quali erano andati in desuetudine e se saranno reassonti&mdash;senza dubio
+sera un detrimento dell'autorita e potesta regia.' (12 Maggio.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_328_328" id="Footnote_328_328"></a><a href="#FNanchor_328_328"><span class="label">[328]</span></a> Molino: 'Dubitando che quando li capi di questa setta
+facessero qualche moto al parlamento, dove ne sono tanti di questa
+professione, potesse nascer qualche inconveniente.'(20 Oct. 1604.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_329_329" id="Footnote_329_329"></a><a href="#FNanchor_329_329"><span class="label">[329]</span></a> Molino: 'Queste cose vanno spargendo quelli che han poco
+volunta di sodisfar alli desideri di S. M. che per se ne sta molto
+dubiosa.' (3 Nov. 1605.)</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BIV_III" id="BIV_III"></a>
+THE GUNPOWDER PLOT AND ITS CONSEQUENCES.</p>
+
+<p>James I was welcomed, if one may say so, by a conspiracy on his entrance
+into England.</p>
+
+<p>Two men of rank, Markham and Brook, who had before held communications
+with him, and had cherished bright expectations, but found themselves
+passed over in the composition of the new government, now imagined that
+they might rise to the highest offices if they could succeed in
+detaching the King from those who surrounded him, and in getting him
+into their own hands, perhaps within the walls of the Tower or even in
+Dover Castle. They conspired for this object with some Catholic priests,
+who could not forgive the King for having deceived their expectations of
+a declaration of toleration at the commencement of his reign. They
+intended to call out so great a number of Catholics ready for action,
+that there could be no doubt of the successful issue of a coup-de-main.
+A priest was then to receive the Great Seal and above all things to
+issue an edict of toleration. We are reminded of the combination under
+Essex, when even some Puritans offered their assistance in an
+undertaking directed against the government. One of their leaders, Lord
+Grey de Wilton, a young man of high spirit and hope, was now induced to
+join the plot. But on this occasion the Catholics were the predominant
+element. The priests thought that the pretence of the necessity of
+supporting the King against the effect of a Puritan rising would best
+contribute to set the zealous Catholics in motion; and it is undeniable
+that other persons of high rank were also connected with these
+intrigues. The principal opponents of Cecil and his friends, whose
+hostile influence on Elizabeth had at an earlier
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1603.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[Pg 404]</a></span>
+period been feared by
+the minister, were Lord Cobham, the brother of Brook, and Sir Walter
+Ralegh. Cobham, who like most others had looked for the overthrow of
+Cecil on the accession of the King, fell into an ungovernable fit of
+disappointed ambition when Cecil was more strongly confirmed in his
+position; and his anger was directed against the King himself, from whom
+he now had nothing to expect, and who had brought with him a family
+which made the hope of any further alteration appear impossible. He had
+let fall the expression in public that the fox and his cubs must be
+destroyed at one blow. Negotiations, aiming at the renewal of the Lady
+Arabella's claims, had been opened with the ambassador of the Archduke,
+who then perhaps felt anxiety lest King James, under the influence of
+Cecil, should adhere to the policy of his predecessor. In order to
+effect a revolution, Cobham launched into extravagant schemes which
+embraced all Europe.</p>
+
+<p>The affair might have been dangerous, if a man of the activity, weight,
+and intelligence of Walter Ralegh had taken part in it. Ralegh does not
+deny that Cobham had spoken to him on the subject, but he affirms that
+he had not heeded the idle words, and had even forgotten them
+again:<a name="FNanchor_330_330" id="FNanchor_330_330"></a><a href="#Footnote_330_330" class="fnanchor">[330]</a>
+and in fact nothing has been brought to light which proves
+his complicity, or even his remote participation, in this plot. Still
+without doubt he was among the opponents of the government. If it is
+true, as people say, that he made an attempt by means of a letter to the
+King to procure the fall of Cecil, it is easily conceivable that the
+latter and his friends availed themselves of every opportunity to
+involve him in the accusation. Ralegh defended himself with so much
+courage and vigour, that the listeners who had come wishing to see him
+condemned went away with a tenfold stronger desire that he might be
+acquitted. He himself did not deny that he might be condemned by the
+cruel laws of England: he reminded the King however of a passage in the
+old statutes, in which for that very reason mercy and pity were
+recommended to him. The accused were all condemned.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[Pg 405]</a></span>
+Brook and the priests paid the penalty of death: Markham, Cobham, and Grey were
+reprieved when they were already standing on the scaffold&mdash;reprieved
+moreover by an autograph mandate of James, which was entirely due to an
+unexpected resolution of the King, who wished to shine by showing mercy
+as well as by severity. The first of these lived henceforward in exile:
+the second continued to live in England, but weighed down by his
+disgrace: Grey and Walter Ralegh were imprisoned in the Tower. We shall
+meet with Ralegh once more: he never lost sight of the world, nor the
+world of him.</p>
+
+<p>This conspiracy which, although wrongly as we have seen, bears the name
+of Ralegh, was an attempt to put an end in some way or other to the
+government, in the shape in which it had been erected by the union of
+English statesmen with the Scottish King. Its movers wished to effect
+this object by getting rid either of the statesmen, or even of the King
+himself. But on the contrary they only succeeded in establishing the
+government so much the more firmly; and it then under the joint
+influence of both its components entered on the course which we have
+described. But if it was so seriously endangered at its commencement,
+its progress also could not be free from hostile attacks. The Puritans
+threw themselves into the ranks of the Parliamentary Opposition. The
+Catholics were brought into a most singular position.</p>
+
+<p>In public they found themselves far better off under James than they had
+been under Elizabeth. Far greater scope was allowed to the local
+influence of Catholic magnates in protecting their co-religionists. The
+penal laws, which as regards pecuniary payments were virtually
+abolished, were moreover no longer vigorously enforced in any other
+respect. Not only were the chapels of the Catholic ambassadors in the
+capital numerously attended, but in some provinces, especially in Wales,
+Catholic sermons were known to be delivered in the open air, and
+attended by thousands of
+hearers.<a name="FNanchor_331_331" id="FNanchor_331_331"></a><a href="#Footnote_331_331" class="fnanchor">[331]</a>
+At times the opinion revived that the King was inclined to go
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1604.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[Pg 406]</a></span>
+over to Catholicism. He repudiated the
+supposition with some show of indignation. But, as we stated, the Queen
+incontestably sympathised with the Papacy. She even refrained from
+attending the Anglican service, and formed relations with the Nuncio in
+Paris, from whom she received communications and presents. Though Pope
+Clement on a former occasion had issued breves which made the obedience
+of Catholics to a new government dependent on the profession of
+Catholicism by the sovereign, yet these were virtually recalled by a
+later issue. When the English ambassador in Paris complained to the
+Nuncio there of the above-mentioned participation of Catholic priests in
+a conspiracy against the King, the Nuncio laid before him a letter of
+the Pope's nephew, Cardinal Aldobrandini, in which he declared it to be
+the Pope's pleasure that the Catholics in England should be obedient to
+their king, and should pray for
+him.<a name="FNanchor_332_332" id="FNanchor_332_332"></a><a href="#Footnote_332_332" class="fnanchor">[332]</a>
+Thus it exactly fell in with
+the King's views to be a Protestant, as was absolutely necessary for his
+authority in England and Scotland, and yet at the same time not to have
+the Catholics against him, and to be able to reckon the Pope of Rome
+among his friends.</p>
+
+<p>It is evident that this state of affairs, as it was inconsistent with
+the laws of England, could not be permanently maintained. Even men of
+moderate views in other respects disapproved the middle course taken by
+the King: for they thought it necessary to concede nothing to the
+adherents of the Papacy, if they were to be saved from the necessity of
+conceding everything. The Catholics desired a public declaration of
+toleration. But this could only have emanated from Parliament: the King
+had not the courage, and his ministers had not the wish, to make a
+serious proposal to that effect. On the contrary, when the Protestant
+spirit of the capital displayed itself so unmistakably in consequence of
+the severities with which the Puritans were threatened,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[Pg 407]</a></span>
+the King and his Privy Council, while affirming that they were merely executing the
+laws, announced their intention of introducing a like severity in the
+treatment of the Catholics. James I appeared to feel himself insulted if
+any one threw a doubt on his wish to allow the laws to operate in both
+directions. And as the Parliament which was so zealously Protestant was
+expected to reassemble in the autumn of 1605, the laws against the
+Catholics began to be applied without forbearance. A renewed persecution
+was first set on foot against the priests, who it is true were not
+punished with death, at least in the vicinity of the Court, but were
+thrown into prison, where they not infrequently succumbed to the rough
+treatment which they had undergone. But even the laity daily suffered
+more and more from the violence of the spies who forced their way into
+their houses. They complained loudly and bitterly of the insecurity of
+their position, which had already gone so far that often no tenants
+could be found for their farms; and they considered that the least evil,
+for to-day they lost their possessions, to-morrow they would lose their
+freedom, and the day after their
+life.<a name="FNanchor_333_333" id="FNanchor_333_333"></a><a href="#Footnote_333_333" class="fnanchor">[333]</a>
+There had now for a long
+time been two parties among them, one of which submitted to what was
+inevitable, while the other offered a violent resistance. With the fresh
+increase of oppression, the latter party obtained the upper hand. They
+mocked at the hope, in which men indulged themselves, of a change of
+religion on the part of the King, who on the contrary was in their view
+an irreclaimable Protestant, and assumed an air of clemency to the
+Catholics, only to draw the rein tighter hereafter. A brief from the
+Pope exhorted them to acquiesce: but even the Pope could not persuade
+them to allow themselves to be sacrificed without further ceremony. Some
+of the most resolute once more applied to the Spanish court at this time
+as they had done before. But in that quarter not only had peace been
+concluded, but the hope of effecting a close alliance with England had
+been conceived.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[Pg 408]</a></span>
+A deaf ear was turned to all their applications.</p>
+
+<p>While they were thus hard pressed and desperate, the thought of helping
+themselves had, if not originated, at least ripened, in the breast of
+one or two of the boldest of them. They conceived a plan which in savage
+recklessness surpassed anything which was devised in this epoch so full
+of conspiracies.</p>
+
+<p>Among the families which sheltered the mission-priests on their arrival
+in England, and who were moved by them to throw off their reserve in the
+profession of Catholicism, the Treshams and Catesbys were especially
+prominent in Northamptonshire. They belonged to the wealthiest and most
+important families in that county; and the penal laws had borne upon
+them with especial severity. The Winters of Huddington, who also were
+very zealous Catholics, were related to them. It is easy to understand,
+how the young men who were growing up in this family, such as Thomas
+Winter and Robert Catesby, acknowledging no duty to the Protestant
+government, retorted the oppression which they experienced from it with
+bold resistance and schemes of violence. In these they were joined by
+two brothers of the same way of thinking, John and Christopher Wright,
+stout and soldier-like men, belonging to a family which came originally
+from York. They all participated in the attempt of the Earl of Essex,
+for above all things they were eager for the overthrow of the existing
+government: and Robert Catesby was set at liberty only on payment of a
+heavy fine, which he could hardly raise by the sale of one of the most
+productive of the family estates. They were among those who, when Queen
+Elizabeth lay on her death-bed, proclaimed most loudly their desire for
+a thorough change, and were arrested in
+consequence.<a name="FNanchor_334_334" id="FNanchor_334_334"></a><a href="#Footnote_334_334" class="fnanchor">[334]</a>
+They had expected toleration at least from the new government: as this was not
+granted them they set to work at once on new schemes of insurrection.
+Christopher Wright was one of those who had invited Philip III to
+support the Catholics. When the Con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[Pg 409]</a></span>stable of Castile came to Flanders
+to negotiate the peace, Thomas Winter visited him in order to lay their
+wish before him. Though they met with a refusal from him as well as from
+his master they found nevertheless a support which was independent of
+the approval of individuals. In the archducal Netherlands a combination
+of a peculiar kind, favourable to their views, had been formed, in
+consequence of the permission to recruit in the British dominions, which
+by the terms of the peace had been granted to Spain as well as to the
+Netherlands. An English regiment, about fifteen hundred strong, had been
+raised, in which the chaplains were all Jesuit fathers; and no officers
+were admitted but those who were entirely devoted to them. An English
+Jesuit named Baldwin, and a soldier of the same opinions, Owen by name,
+were the leading spirits among them. There was here, so to speak, a
+school of soldiers side by side with a school of priests, in which every
+act of the English government provoked slander, malediction, and schemes
+of opposition. Pope Clement was blamed for not threatening James with
+excommunication as Elizabeth had formerly been threatened; and the
+necessity for violent means of redress was canvassed without disguise.
+These views were repeated in congenial circles in Paris and reacted also
+upon their friends in England. Robert Catesby had been most active in
+the enlistment of the regiment. Christopher Wright on his journey to
+Spain was attended by one of the most resolute officers of this
+regiment, Guy Fawkes. The latter returned with Winter to England, and
+was pointed out by Owen as a man admirably qualified to conduct the
+horrible undertaking which was being prepared for execution. It must
+remain a question in whose head the thought of proceeding to it at this
+moment originated: we only know that Catesby first communicated it to
+another, and then with the aid of this comrade to the rest of the band.
+To this another member had been added, who was connected, if only in a
+remote degree, with one of the most distinguished families among the
+English nobility. I refer to Thomas Percy, a kinsman of the Earl of
+Northumberland, who through his influence had once received a place in
+the court establishment of King James of Scotland, and had then
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[Pg 410]</a></span>
+been the medium for forming a connexion between this prince and the
+Catholics. He was enraged because the assurances which he then thought
+that he might make to the Catholics in the name of the King, had not
+been fulfilled by the latter. In the spring of 1604, just at the time
+when the peace between England and Spain was concluded, by which no
+stipulations were made for the Catholics, they met one day in a lonely
+house near S. Clement's Inn, and bound themselves by a sacred and solemn
+oath to inviolable secrecy. It had been their intention once more to
+submit to the assembled Parliament an urgent petition in the name of the
+Catholics: but the resolutions of the House had sufficed to convince
+them that nothing could be gained by this step. Quite the contrary: it
+was apparent that the next session would impose far heavier conditions
+on them. An attack on the person of the King, or of his ministers, in
+the shape in which it had so often been resolved upon, could not do much
+even if it were successful: for the Parliament was always in reserve
+with its Protestant majority to establish anti-Catholic statutes, and
+the judges to execute them. Catesby now disclosed a plan which
+comprehended all their opponents at once. The King himself and his
+eldest son, the officers of state and of the court, the lords spiritual
+and temporal, the members of the House of Commons, one and all at the
+moment when they were collected to reopen Parliament, were to be blown
+into the air with gunpowder in the hall where they assembled&mdash;there
+where they issued the detested laws were they to be annihilated;
+vengeance was to be taken on them at the same time that room was to be
+made for another order of things in Church and State.</p>
+
+<p>This project was not altogether new. Already under Elizabeth there had
+been a talk of doing again to her what Bothwell had done or attempted to
+do to Henry Darnley: but men had perceived even at that time that this
+would not conduce to their purpose, and had hit upon a plan of blowing
+the Queen and her Parliament into the air together. Henry Garnet, the
+superior of the Jesuits, had been consulted on the subject; and he had
+declared the enterprise lawful, and had only advised them to spare as
+many of the innocent as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[Pg 411]</a></span>
+possible in its
+execution.<a name="FNanchor_335_335" id="FNanchor_335_335"></a><a href="#Footnote_335_335" class="fnanchor">[335]</a>
+The scheme which had been started under Elizabeth was resumed under King James,
+when men saw that his accession to the throne did not produce the
+hoped-for change. On this occasion also scruples were felt on the ground
+that many a Catholic would perish at the same time. To a question on the
+subject submitted to him without closer description of the case Garnet
+answered in the spirit of a mufti delivering his fettah, that if an end
+were indubitably a good one, and could be accomplished in no other way,
+it was lawful to destroy even some of the innocent with the
+guilty.<a name="FNanchor_336_336" id="FNanchor_336_336"></a><a href="#Footnote_336_336" class="fnanchor">[336]</a>
+Catesby had no compassion even for the innocent: he regarded the lords
+generally as only poltroons and atheists, whose place would be better
+filled by vigorous men.</p>
+
+<p>Without delay, before the end of December 1604, the conspirators
+proceeded to make their preparations. Percy, who was still numbered
+among the retainers of the court, hired a house which adjoined the
+Houses of Parliament. They were attempting to carry a mine through the
+foundation walls of that building&mdash;a design that says more for their
+zeal than for their intelligence, and one which could hardly have been
+effected&mdash;when a vault immediately under the House of Lords happened to
+fall vacant, and, as they were able to hire it, offered them a far
+better opportunity for the execution of their scheme. They filled it
+with a number of powder-barrels which are said to have contained the
+enormous quantity of 9,000 pounds of powder, and they confidently
+expected to bring about the great catastrophe with all its horrors on
+November 5, 1605, the day which after many changes had been appointed
+for the opening of Parliament. Their intention was, as soon as the King
+and the Prince of Wales had perished, to gain possession of the younger
+prince or of the princess, and to place one or other on the throne, with
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1605.</span>
+a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[Pg 412]</a></span>
+regency under a protector during their
+minority.<a name="FNanchor_337_337" id="FNanchor_337_337"></a><a href="#Footnote_337_337" class="fnanchor">[337]</a>
+All preparations had been made for bringing an effective force into the
+field; and its principal leaders were to assemble at Dunchurch in
+Warwickshire under pretence of hunting. The English regiment in Flanders
+was to be brought over and was to serve as the nucleus of a new force.
+There is no doubt that Owen was thoroughly conversant with their plans.
+Many other trustworthy people were admitted into the secret, and
+supported the project with their money. One of these was sent to Rome in
+order to convince the Pope of the necessity of the undertaking and to
+move him to resolutions in support of it. On All Saints' Day Father
+Garnet interrupted his prayer with a hymn of praise for the deliverance
+of the inheritance of the faithful from the generation of the ungodly.</p>
+
+<p>But warnings had already come to the government, especially from Paris,
+where the priests of the Jesuit party ventured to express themselves
+still more plainly than in London. The warning was conveyed with the
+express intimation that 'somewhat is at present in hand among these
+desperate hypocrites.'<a name="FNanchor_338_338" id="FNanchor_338_338"></a><a href="#Footnote_338_338" class="fnanchor">[338]</a>
+What an impression must now have been
+produced when one of the Catholic lords, who at an earlier period had
+followed this party, but had for some time withdrawn from it, Lord
+Mounteagle, communicated to the first minister a letter in which he was
+admonished in mysterious language to hold aloof from the opening of
+Parliament. It may be that the King, as he himself relates, in
+deciphering the sense of a word hit upon the supposition that a fate
+similar to that of his father was being prepared for him; or it may be
+that the ministers had, as they affirm, come upon the traces of the
+matter; but however this may have been, on the evening before the
+opening of Parliament the vaults were examined, when not only were the
+powder-barrels found among wood and faggots, but also one of the
+conspirators, Guy Fawkes, who was busy with the last preparations for
+the execution of the plot. With a smiling countenance he confessed his
+purpose, which he seemed to regard as the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[Pg 413]</a></span>fulfilment of a religious
+duty. The pedantic monarch thought himself in the presence of a
+fanatical Mutius Scaevola.</p>
+
+<p>The rest of the conspirators who were in London, alarmed by the
+discovery, hastened to the appointed rendezvous at Dunchurch; but the
+news which they brought with them caused general discouragement. With a
+band of about one hundred men, they set off to make their escape to
+Wales, the home of most of the Catholics, hoping to receive the promised
+reinforcements and the support of the population on their way. They once
+actually attempted to assure themselves of the latter; but on declaring
+that they were for God and the country, they received the answer that
+they ought also to be for the King. No one joined them, and many of
+their comrades had already dispersed when they were overtaken at
+Holbeach by the armed bands of Worcestershire under the Sheriff. Percy
+and Catesby, as they stood back to back, were shot dead by two balls
+from the same musket; the two Wrights were killed, and Thomas Winter
+taken prisoner.<a name="FNanchor_339_339" id="FNanchor_339_339"></a><a href="#Footnote_339_339" class="fnanchor">[339]</a></p>
+
+<p>The authority of government triumphed over this most frantic attempt to
+break through it, as it had triumphed in every similar case since the
+time of Henry VII.</p>
+
+<p>It was perhaps the most remarkable feature in this last, that it was
+directed especially against the Parliament. During the Wars of the
+Roses, it had only been necessary to drive the then reigning prince out
+of the field, or to chase him away, in order to create a new
+parliamentary rule. The attempts against Queen Elizabeth rested on the
+hope of producing a similar result by her death: but it was apparent in
+her last years that her death would be useless, and the comparatively
+free elections after that event returned a Parliament of the same
+character as the preceding. Even under the new reign the Protestant
+party secured their ascendancy in the elections; and the only
+possibility of an alteration for the future was to be found in the
+annihilation of the Parliament, not so much of the institution&mdash;at least
+this was not mooted&mdash;but of the men
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1606.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[Pg 414]</a></span>
+who composed it and gave it its
+character. The violent attempt on the Parliament is a proof of its
+power. The Gunpowder Plot was directed against the King, not in his
+personal capacity as monarch, but as head of the legislative authority.
+It was felt that this power itself with all its component parts must be
+destroyed without scruple or mercy, if an order of things in the State
+corresponding to the views of the hierarchical party was ever again to
+obtain a footing.</p>
+
+<p>The necessary and inevitable result of the conspiracy was that
+Parliament, which did not enter on the session until January 1606, still
+further increased the existing severity of its laws. The great body of
+Catholics had not in any way participated in the plot; but yet, as it
+had originated among them, and was intended for the redress of their
+common grievances, they were all affected by the reaction which it
+produced. The Catholic recusants were to be subjected to the former
+penalties: they were sentenced to exclusion from the palace and from the
+capital; they were forbidden to hold any appointment in the public
+service either in the administration of justice, or as government
+officials, or even as physicians; they were obliged to open their houses
+at any moment for examination; the solemnisation of their marriages and
+the baptism of their children were henceforth to be legal only if
+performed by Protestant clergymen. It is evident that the Papal See
+would have preferred to restrain the agitation of the Catholics at this
+juncture; but as the latter appealed to the principle which had been
+impressed on them by their missionaries, that men had no duties to a
+king who was a heretic, the Parliament thought it necessary to impose on
+them an oath which concerned the authority of their Church as well as
+that of the State. Not only were they to be compelled to acknowledge the
+King as their legitimate prince, to defend him against every conspiracy
+and every attack, even when made under the pretext of religion, and to
+promise to reveal any such to him; they must also renounce the doctrine
+that the authority of the Church gave the Pope the right of deposing a
+king, and absolving his subjects from their oath of allegiance; and they
+must condemn as impious and heretical the doctrine that princes
+excommunicated by the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[Pg 415]</a></span>
+Pope could be dethroned or put to death by their
+subjects.<a name="FNanchor_340_340" id="FNanchor_340_340"></a><a href="#Footnote_340_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a>
+Attention was directed to the English regiment in the
+service of the Archduke; and it was thought dangerous that so many
+malcontents should be assembled there, and should practise the use of
+arms, in order perhaps to turn them some day against their country. It
+was enacted that the Oath of Supremacy should be imposed on every one
+who took service abroad before his departure, with a pledge that he
+would not be reconciled to the Papacy: even securities for the
+observance of the oath were to be exacted.</p>
+
+<p>In the spring of the year 1605 the whole state of England still showed a
+tendency to clemency and conciliation. In the early part of 1606 the
+opposite tendency had completely obtained the upper hand.</p>
+
+<p>But this state of affairs necessarily reacted on Catholic countries and
+governments. In Spain, where it was easiest to rouse the
+susceptibilities of Catholicism, the severe measures of the Parliament
+of themselves created a feeling of bitterness: but besides this, Irish
+refugees resorted thither who gave an agitating account of the way in
+which these measures were carried out in
+Ireland:<a name="FNanchor_341_341" id="FNanchor_341_341"></a><a href="#Footnote_341_341" class="fnanchor">[341]</a>
+so that the nation felt itself affronted in the persons of its co-religionists. Both
+governments, that of Spain and that of the Netherlands, refused to hand
+over to the English government men like Baldwin and Owen, who were taxed
+with participating in the plot, or to banish others whom the English
+government considered dangerous. The pious were reminded of the will
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[Pg 416]</a></span>
+of Queen Mary, in which she had transferred her hereditary right over
+England, France, Ireland and Scotland, to the House of Spain in case her
+son should not be converted to the Church.</p>
+
+<p>And how deeply must the Court of Rome have felt itself injured by the
+imposition of the Oath of Supremacy. A Pope of the Borghese family had
+just been elected, Paul V, who was as deeply convinced of the truth of
+the Papal principles, and as firmly resolved to enforce them, as any of
+his predecessors; and who was surrounded by learned men and statesmen
+who looked upon the maintenance of these principles as the salvation of
+the world. Their religious pride was galled to the quick by the
+imposition of such an oath as that exacted in England, by which
+principles at that time zealously taught in Catholic schools were
+described not only as objectionable but as heretical. They thought it
+possible that the temporal power might prevail on the English Catholics
+to accept this oath, as in fact the archpriest Blackwell who had been
+appointed by Clement VIII took it, and advised others to do the same.
+But by this act the supremacy of the King would be practically
+acknowledged, and the connexion of the English Catholics with the Papacy
+dissolved. Moved by these considerations, Paul V, in a brief of
+September 1, 1606, declared that the oath contained much that was
+contrary to the faith, and could not be taken by any one without damage
+to his salvation. He expressed his anticipation that the English
+Catholics, whose constancy had been tested like gold in the fire of the
+persecutions, would show their firmness on this occasion also, and that
+they would rather undergo all tortures, even death itself, than insult
+the Divine Majesty. At first the archpriest and the moderate Catholics,
+who did not consider that the political claims referred to in the oath
+were the true principles of the Papacy, declared that the brief was
+spurious; but after some time it was confirmed in all due form, and an
+address appeared from the pen of the most eminent apologist of the See
+of Rome, Cardinal Bellarmin, in which he reminded the archpriest that
+the general apostolical authority of the Pope could not be impugned even
+in a single iota of the subtleties of dogma: how much less then in this
+instance,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[Pg 417]</a></span>
+where the question was simply whether men should look for the
+head of the Church in the successor of Henry VIII, or in the successor
+of S. Peter.</p>
+
+<p>These statements however greatly irritated the King, both as a man of
+learning and as a temporal potentate. He took pen in hand himself in
+order to defend the oath, in the wording of which he had a large share.
+He expressed his astonishment that so distinguished a scholar as
+Bellarmin should confound the Oath of Supremacy with the Oath of
+Allegiance, in which no word occurred affecting any article of faith,
+and which was only intended to distinguish the champions of an attempt
+like the Gunpowder Plot from his quiet subjects of the Catholic
+religion. He said that nothing more disastrous to these could have
+happened than that the Pope should condemn the oath, and thereby the
+original relation of obedience which bound them to their sovereign; for
+he was requiring them to repudiate this obedience and to abjure again
+the oath which had already been taken by many, after the example of the
+archpriest. James I took much trouble to justify the form of oath by the
+decrees of the old
+councils.<a name="FNanchor_342_342" id="FNanchor_342_342"></a><a href="#Footnote_342_342" class="fnanchor">[342]</a></p>
+
+<p>Criminal attempts, even when they fail, have at times the most extensive
+political consequences. James I had started with the idea of linking his
+subjects of every persuasion to himself in the bonds of a free and
+uniform obedience, and of creating harmonious relations between the
+rival powers of the world and his own realm of Great Britain. Then
+intervened this murderous attempt; and the measures to which he had
+recourse in order to secure his person and his country against the
+repetition of criminal attacks like this last, rekindled the national
+and religious animosities which he desired to lull, and fanned them into
+a bright flame. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_330_330" id="Footnote_330_330"></a><a href="#FNanchor_330_330"><span class="label">[330]</span></a> Letter to the King. Works viii, 647; cf. i. 671.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_331_331" id="Footnote_331_331"></a><a href="#FNanchor_331_331"><span class="label">[331]</span></a> Discursus status religionis, 1605: 'Ipsi magnates non
+verentur se profiteri catholicos et plerique alii ex nobilitate,
+praecipue in principatu Walliae et in provinciis septentrionalibus,&mdash;ubi
+numerus eorum non ita pridem crevit in immensum.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_332_332" id="Footnote_332_332"></a><a href="#FNanchor_332_332"><span class="label">[332]</span></a> 'S. S<sup>ta</sup> vole e comanda, che li Catolici siano obedienti
+al re d'Inghilterra, come a loro signore e re naturale. V<sup>ra</sup> S<sup>ria</sup>
+attenda con ogni diligenza e vigilanza a questi negotii d'Inghilterra
+procurando che conforme alla volonta di N. S<sup>ra</sup> obedischino al suo re e
+non s'intrighino in congiure tumulti ed altre cose, per le quali possino
+dispiacere a quella M<sup>a</sup>.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_333_333" id="Footnote_333_333"></a><a href="#FNanchor_333_333"><span class="label">[333]</span></a> The Venetian Ambassador in his reports mentions
+'doglienze e querelle accompagnate di lacrime di sangue.' The Roman
+reports are to the same effect. De vero Statu Angliae. La vera relatione
+dello stato. Agosto 1605. The persecution of the Catholics had begun on
+July 26.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_334_334" id="Footnote_334_334"></a><a href="#FNanchor_334_334"><span class="label">[334]</span></a> Camden in writing to Cotton names Bainham, Catesby,
+Tresham, and the two Wrights. He calls them 'gentlemen hunger-starved
+for innovation.' Camdeni Epistolae 347.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_335_335" id="Footnote_335_335"></a><a href="#FNanchor_335_335"><span class="label">[335]</span></a> Garnet says, in his conference with Hall, which was
+overheard, that he was accused of giving 'some advice in Queen
+Elizabeth's time of the blowing up of the parliament house with
+gunpowder; I told them it was lawful' Jardine, Gunpowder Plot 202.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_336_336" id="Footnote_336_336"></a><a href="#FNanchor_336_336"><span class="label">[336]</span></a> From his examination: Jardine 206.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_337_337" id="Footnote_337_337"></a><a href="#FNanchor_337_337"><span class="label">[337]</span></a> Lingard ix. 52. From Greenway's memoranda.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_338_338" id="Footnote_338_338"></a><a href="#FNanchor_338_338"><span class="label">[338]</span></a> From a letter of Parry to Sir T. Edmondes, Paris, October
+10, 1605; in Birch's Negotiations 234.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_339_339" id="Footnote_339_339"></a><a href="#FNanchor_339_339"><span class="label">[339]</span></a> Molino just at the time reports this, as the King also
+relates it in his 'Conjuratio sulphurea.' Cf. Barclay, Series patefacti
+parricidii 569.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_340_340" id="Footnote_340_340"></a><a href="#FNanchor_340_340"><span class="label">[340]</span></a> 'Juro quod ex corde abhorreo detestor et abjuro tanquam
+impiam et haereticam hanc damnabilem doctrinam et propositionem quod
+principes per papam excommunicati vel deprivati possint per suos
+subditos vel alios quoscunque deponi aut occidi'. The form originally
+drawn up had asserted that the Pope generally had no right to
+excommunicate kings. But King James, in his fondness for weighing every
+side of the question, did not wish to go so far as this.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_341_341" id="Footnote_341_341"></a><a href="#FNanchor_341_341"><span class="label">[341]</span></a> June 1606. Winwood, Memorials ii. 224. Cornwallis to
+Salisbury: 'Such an apprehension of despair here they have of late
+received to make any conjunction or further amitie with us, by reason of
+the extreame lawes and bitter persecution, as they terme it, against
+those of their religion both in England and especially in Ireland.' June
+20, 229. 'They repair to the Jesuits, priests, fryars, and fugitives;
+the first three joyne with the last children of lost hope, who having
+given a farewell to all laws of nature&mdash;dispose themselves to become the
+executioneris of the&mdash;inventions of the others.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_342_342" id="Footnote_342_342"></a><a href="#FNanchor_342_342"><span class="label">[342]</span></a> Apologia pro juramento fidelitatis, opposita duobus
+brevibus ... et literis Bellarmini ad Blackwellum Archipresbyterum.
+Opera Jacobi Regis, p. 237. Lond. 1619.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BIV_IV" id="BIV_IV"></a>
+FOREIGN POLICY OF THE NEXT TEN YEARS.</p>
+
+<p>What had already taken place before James ascended the throne, occurred
+again under these circumstances. Although belonging to one of the two
+religious parties which divided the world between them, he had sought to
+form relations with the other, when circumstances which were beyond all
+calculation caused and almost compelled him to return to his original
+position.</p>
+
+<p>The Republic of Venice enjoyed his full sympathies in the quarrel in
+which at this time it became involved with the Papacy. The laws which it
+had made for limiting the influence of the clergy appeared to him in the
+highest degree just and wise. He thought that Europe would be happy if
+other princes as well would open their eyes, for they would not then
+experience so many usurpations on the part of the See of Rome; and he
+showed himself ready to form an alliance with the Republic. The
+Venetians always affirmed that the lively interest of the King of
+England in their cause had already, by provoking the jealousy of the
+French, strengthened their resolution to arrange these disputes in
+conjunction with Spain.<a name="FNanchor_343_343" id="FNanchor_343_343"></a><a href="#Footnote_343_343" class="fnanchor">[343]</a>
+When the Republic, although compelled to
+make some concessions, yet came out of this contest without losing its
+independence, it continued to believe that for this result also it was
+indebted to King James.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sidenote">A.D. 1609.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[Pg 419]</a></span>
+In the same way, there can be no serious doubt that the refusal of the
+alliance, which the Spaniards had more than once proposed to the King of
+England, impelled the former to turn their thoughts to a peaceful
+adjustment of their differences with the Netherlands. They had made
+similar overtures to France also, but these had been shipwrecked by the
+firmness and mistrust of Henry IV. They were convinced however that,
+without winning over at least one of these two powers, they would never
+even by their strongest efforts again become masters of the Netherlands.
+In spite of some advantages which they had obtained on the mainland,
+they were so hard pressed by the superiority of the Dutch fleet, that
+they at last came forward with more acceptable proposals than they had
+before made. The English government advised the States-General to show
+compliance on all other points if their independence were acknowledged:
+not to stand out even if this were recognised only for a while through a
+truce, for in that case they would obtain better conditions on the other
+points: and that in regard to these England would protect
+them.<a name="FNanchor_344_344" id="FNanchor_344_344"></a><a href="#Footnote_344_344" class="fnanchor">[344]</a>
+By their conduct to both sides, by standing aloof from the one and by
+bestowing good advice on the other, the English thus promoted the
+conclusion of the twelve years truce, and thereby procured for the
+United Provinces an independent position which they did not allow to be
+wrested from them again. The Spaniards attributed the result not so much
+to the Provinces themselves as to the two Powers allied with them: they
+thought that the articles of the treaty had been drawn up by the former,
+but devised and dictated by the latter. It was their serious intention
+that this agreement should be only temporary; they reckoned upon the
+speedy death of the King of France, and upon future troubles in England,
+for an opportunity of resuming the
+war.<a name="FNanchor_345_345" id="FNanchor_345_345"></a><a href="#Footnote_345_345" class="fnanchor">[345]</a>
+But whatever the future
+might bring to pass, England, as well as France, derived an incalculable
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1610.</span>
+advantage at the time from the erection of an independent state under
+their protection,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[Pg 420]</a></span>
+which could not but ally itself with them against the
+still dominant power of Spain.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole the general understanding which King James maintained with
+Henry IV secured a support for his State, and imparted to himself a
+political courage which was otherwise foreign to his nature. The two
+sovereigns also made common cause in the Cleves-Juliers question. Two
+Protestant princes with the consent of the Estates had taken possession
+of it on the strength of their hereditary title. When an Archduke laid
+hands on the principal fortress in the country, a general feeling of
+jealousy was roused: and even in England it was thought that the point
+at issue here was not the possession of a small principality, but the
+confirmation of the House of Austria and the Papacy in their already
+tottering dominion over these provinces of the Lower Rhine, which might
+exercise such an important influence on the State of
+Europe.<a name="FNanchor_346_346" id="FNanchor_346_346"></a><a href="#Footnote_346_346" class="fnanchor">[346]</a>
+When Henry IV joined the German Union and the Dutch for the protection of the
+two princes and for the conquest of Juliers, James also decided to
+bestow his aid. He took into his own pay 4000 of the troops who were
+still in the service of the Republic, sent them a general, and
+despatched them to the contested dominions to take part in the struggle.</p>
+
+<p>It does not appear that any one in England was aware of the great
+designs which Henry IV connected with this enterprise. When, on the eve
+of its execution, he was struck down in the centre of his capital by the
+dagger of a fanatic, friends and foes alike were thrilled with the
+feeling that the event affected them all, and would have an immeasurable
+influence on the world. In England also it was felt as a domestic
+calamity. Robert Cecil, now Earl of Salisbury, said in Parliament that
+Henry IV had been as it were their advanced guard against conspiracies
+of which he had always given the first information: that the first
+warning of the Gunpowder Plot must have come from him; that he had as it
+were stood in the breach, and that now he had been the first victim. The
+crimes of Ravaillac and of Catesby
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[Pg 421]</a></span>
+had sprung from the same source.</p>
+
+<p>The enterprise against Juliers was not hindered by this event. The
+forces of the Union under the Prince of Anhalt, and the Dutch and
+English troops under Maurice of Orange and Edward Cecil, with the
+addition of a number of volunteers from such leading families in England
+as those of Winchester, Somerset, Rich, Herbert, had already made
+considerable progress in the siege when, at last, at the orders of the
+widowed Queen, the French also arrived, but in the worst plight and
+suffering severely from illness, so that they could not carry out the
+intention, with which they came, of sequestrating the place in the
+interests of France. When the fortress had been taken it was delivered
+to the two princes, who now possessed the whole country. This was an
+event of general historical importance, for by this means Brandenburg
+first planted its foot on the Rhine, and came into greater prominence in
+Europe on this side also. It took place, like the foundation of the
+Republic of the Netherlands, with the concurrence of England and France,
+and in opposition to Austria and Spain, but at the same time by the help
+of the Republic itself and of those members of the Estates of the German
+empire who professed the same creed.</p>
+
+<p>The times had gone by when the Spaniards had taken arms as if for the
+conquest of the world; but their pretensions remained the same. It was
+still their intention, in virtue of the privileges assigned them by the
+Pope, to exclude all others from the colonisation of America and from
+commerce with the East Indies. They laid claim to Northern Africa
+because it had been tributary to the crown of Aragon, to Athens and
+Neopatras because they had belonged to the Catalans, to Jerusalem
+because it had belonged to the King of Naples, and even to
+Constantinople because it had passed by will to Ferdinand II of Aragon
+from the last of the Palaeologi. On the strength of the claims made by
+the old dukes of Milan they deemed themselves to have a right to the
+towns of the Venetian mainland, and to Liguria. Philip III was in their
+eyes the true heir of the Maximilian branch of the German house of
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1611.</span>
+Austria: according to their view the succession
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[Pg 422]</a></span>
+in Bohemia and Hungary fell to him. The progress of the Catholic revival afforded them an
+opportunity of exercising a profound influence on the German empire,
+while the same cause extended their influence over Poland; they obtained
+through their commercial relations even the friendship of Protestant
+princes and towns in the North. Their intention was now to associate the
+two antagonistic powers of the West with their policy by means of
+alliances with the reigning families. The first considerable step in
+this direction was made after the death of Henry IV, when they succeeded
+in concerting with his widow a double marriage, between the young King
+of France and an Infanta of Spain, and between the future King of Spain
+and a French princess. It was thought certain beforehand that they would
+get the conduct of French policy into their hands during the minority of
+Louis XIII. But they were already seeking to draw the house of Stuart
+also into this alliance in spite of the difference of religion. In
+August 1611 the Spanish ambassador, whose overtures had hitherto been
+fruitless, came forward to announce that an alliance between the Prince
+of Wales and a Spanish infanta would meet with no obstacle on the part
+of Spain, if it should be desired on the part of England. It was thought
+that the Queen, who found a satisfaction of her ambition in this
+brilliant alliance, and the old Spanish and Catholic party, who were
+still very numerous in the highest ranks and among the people, might
+employ their whole influence in its favour.</p>
+
+<p>But there was still at the head of affairs a man who was resolved to
+oppose this design, Robert Cecil, to whom it is generally owing that the
+tendencies of Elizabeth's policy lasted on so long into the time of the
+Stuarts as they did. I do not know whether the two Cecils can be
+reckoned among the great men of England: they would almost seem to have
+lacked that independent attitude and that soaring and brilliant genius
+which would be requisite for such an eminence; but without doubt few
+have had so much influence on its history. Robert Cecil inherited the
+employments, the experiences, and the personal connexions of his father
+William. He knew how to rid himself
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[Pg 423]</a></span>
+of all rivals that rose to the
+surface<a name="FNanchor_347_347" id="FNanchor_347_347"></a><a href="#Footnote_347_347" class="fnanchor">[347]</a>
+by counteracting their proceedings in secret or openly,
+justifiably or not: enmity and friendship he reciprocated with equal
+warmth. He made no change in the method of transacting business which
+was conducted by the whole Privy Council; but his natural superiority
+and the importance that he gradually acquired always brought the
+decision into accordance with his views. The King himself gave
+intimations that he did not look upon his predominance as altogether
+proper. In one of his letters he jests over the supremacy calmly
+exercised by his minister at the centre of affairs, while he, the King,
+so soon as his minister summoned him, must hasten in, and yet at last
+could do nothing but accept the resolutions which he put into his hands.
+A small deformed man, to whom James, as was his wont, gave a jesting
+nickname on this account, he yet impressed men by the intelligence which
+flashed from his countenance and from every word he spoke; and even his
+outward bearing had a certain dignity. His independence was increased by
+his enormous wealth, acquired mainly by investments in the Dutch funds,
+which at that time returned an extraordinarily high interest. Surrounded
+by many who accepted presents, he showed himself inaccessible to such
+seductions and incorruptible. At this time he was the oracle of
+England.<a name="FNanchor_348_348" id="FNanchor_348_348"></a><a href="#Footnote_348_348" class="fnanchor">[348]</a></p>
+
+<p>Among the English youth the wish was constantly reviving that the war
+with Spain, in which success was expected without any doubt, might be
+renewed with all vigour. Robert Cecil was as little in favour of this as
+his father formerly had been. Peaceful relations with Spain were
+rendered especially necessary by the condition of Ireland, where Tyrone,
+not less dissatisfied with James than he had been with Elizabeth, had
+again thrown off his allegiance, and had at last gone abroad to procure
+foreign aid for his discontented countrymen. But if Cecil could not
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1612.</span>break with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[Pg 424]</a></span>
+Spain, yet he would not allow that power to strengthen
+itself or to obtain influence over England herself. In regard to the
+proposal of marriage that was made he had said that the gallant Prince
+of Wales could find blooming roses everywhere and did not need to search
+for an olive.</p>
+
+<p>The notion continued to prevail that James I, even if he did not take
+arms, ought to put himself at the head of the anti-Spanish party in
+Europe, now that Henry IV was no more.</p>
+
+<p>The King and his ministers thought that for maintaining in the first
+place the state of affairs established in Cleves and Juliers, an
+alliance of the countries which had co-operated in producing it was the
+only appropriate means. In March 1612 we find the English ambassador at
+the Hague, Sir Ralph Winwood, at Wesel, where a defensive alliance that
+had long been mooted between James I and the princes of the Union,
+including those of the Palatinate, Brandenburg, Hesse, Wurtemberg,
+Baden, and Anhalt, was actually concluded. Both contracting parties
+promised one another mutual support against all who should attack them
+on account of the Union or of the aid they had given in settling and
+maintaining the tenure of Cleves and Juliers. The King was accordingly
+pledged to bring 4000 men into the field, and the Princes 2000 as their
+contingent, or to pay a sum of money fixed by rule at the choice of the
+country which should be
+attacked.<a name="FNanchor_349_349" id="FNanchor_349_349"></a><a href="#Footnote_349_349" class="fnanchor">[349]</a>
+The agreement was concluded for
+six years, the period for which it was also agreed that the Union should
+still continue. The idea was started, I do not know whether by King
+James or rather by the leading English statesmen, of making this
+alliance the basis of a general European coalition against the
+encroachments of the
+Spaniards.<a name="FNanchor_350_350" id="FNanchor_350_350"></a><a href="#Footnote_350_350" class="fnanchor">[350]</a>
+The German princes invited the
+Queen-Regent of France to join it, and to bring the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[Pg 425]</a></span>
+Republic of the United Provinces into it. Mary de' Medici refused, on the ground that
+this was unnecessary, as the Republic was sufficiently secured by the
+defensive alliance previously concluded; but her ministers at that time
+still lent their assistance for the object immediately in view. The
+Spaniards had conceived the intention of raising the Archduke Albert to
+the imperial throne after the death of the Emperor Rudolph. A portion of
+the Electors, among others the Elector of Saxony, which had been
+prejudiced by the settlement of Juliers, was in his favour. He possessed
+the sympathies of all zealous Catholics; but England and France saw in
+the union of the imperial power with the possession of the Spanish
+Netherlands a danger for themselves and for the republic founded under
+their auspices. They plainly declared to the Spaniards that they would
+not permit it, but would set themselves against it with their allies,
+that is to say, of course, with the Republic and the
+Union.<a name="FNanchor_351_351" id="FNanchor_351_351"></a><a href="#Footnote_351_351" class="fnanchor">[351]</a></p>
+
+<p>Little seems to have been heard in Germany of the protest of the powers
+in regard to the imperial succession: but it was effectual. The imperial
+throne was ascended not by Albert but by Matthias, who had far more
+sympathy with the efforts of the Protestants and approved of the Union.
+Indeed the Spaniards too, under the guidance of the pacific Lerma, were
+not inclined to drive matters to extremities.</p>
+
+<p>In the youthful republic of the Netherlands an estrangement, involving
+also a difference of opinion on religious questions, arose at that time
+between the Stadtholder and the magistrates of the aristocracy. The
+party of the Stadtholder clung to the strict Calvinistic doctrines; the
+aristocratic party were in favour of milder and more conciliatory views,
+which besides allotted to the temporal power no small influence over the
+clergy, as Arminius had maintained in his lectures at Leyden. After his
+death a German professor, Conrad Vorstius, had been invited to Holland,
+who added to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[Pg 426]</a></span>
+the opinions of his predecessor others which deviated
+still more widely from Calvinism, and inclined to Socinianism. The world
+has always felt astonished that King James took a side in this
+controversy, wrote a book against Vorstius, and did not rest till he had
+been ejected from his office. In fact learned rivalry was not the only
+motive which induced him to take pen in hand: we perceive that the
+adherents of Arminius, the supporters of Vorstius, were obnoxious to him
+on political grounds also. The leaders of the burgher aristocracy showed
+a marked coldness to the interests of England after the conclusion of
+the truce, and a leaning to those of France. The King moreover was of
+opinion that positive orthodoxy was necessary for maintaining the
+conflict with Catholicism, and for upholding a state founded on
+religion: and he sent an invitation to the Prince of Orange to unite
+with him in this cause. The strict Calvinism of the prince was at the
+same time an act of homage to England.</p>
+
+<p>While religious and political affairs were in this state of perplexity,
+which extended to the French Reformed Church as well, a marriage was
+settled between the Princess Elizabeth of England and the Elector
+Palatine, Frederick V.</p>
+
+<p>This young prince, who at that time was still a ward, had the prospect
+of succeeding at an unusually early age to a position in which he could
+exert an influence on the German empire. By the mother's side he was
+grandson of the founder of Dutch independence, William of Orange; his
+uncles were the Stadtholder Maurice and the Duke of Bouillon, who might
+be considered the head of the Reformed Communion in France, and who had
+married another daughter of William. Frederick had spent some years with
+the Duke at Sedan. The Duke of Bouillon, like Maurice, took an active
+part in various ways in the European politics of that age: these two men
+stood at the head of that party on the continent which most zealously
+opposed the Papacy and the house of Austria. Bouillon had first directed
+the attention of James to the young Frederick, and had painted to him
+his good qualities and his great prospects, and, although not without
+reserve, had pronounced a match between him and the Princess Elizabeth
+desirable,<a name="FNanchor_352_352" id="FNanchor_352_352"></a><a href="#Footnote_352_352" class="fnanchor">[352]</a>
+as it would
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[Pg 427]</a></span>
+form a dynastic tie between the
+Protestantism of England and that of the continent. The brother of the
+Duke of Wurtemberg, Louis Frederick, who then resided in England on
+behalf of the Union, still more decidedly advocated the match. He told
+the King that he would have in the young count not so much a son-in-law,
+as a servant who depended on his nod; and that he would pledge all the
+German princes to his interest by this
+means.<a name="FNanchor_353_353" id="FNanchor_353_353"></a><a href="#Footnote_353_353" class="fnanchor">[353]</a>
+After the conclusion
+of the alliance at Wesel the Count of Hanau, who was likewise married to
+a daughter of William, visited London with two privy councillors of the
+Palatinate, in order to bring the matter to an issue: they were to meet
+there with the Duke of Bouillon, to whose advice they had been expressly
+referred. Another suit for the hand of the Princess was then before the
+English court. The Duke of Savoy had made proposals for a double
+marriage between his two children and the English prince and princess.
+There appeared to be almost a match between Catholic and Protestant
+princes to decide which party should bear off 'this pearl,' the Princess
+of England. Without doubt religious considerations mainly carried the
+day in favour of the German suitor. The Princess displayed great zeal in
+behalf of Protestantism; and James said that he would not allow his
+daughter to be restricted in the exercise of her religion, not even if
+she were to be Queen of the
+world.<a name="FNanchor_354_354" id="FNanchor_354_354"></a><a href="#Footnote_354_354" class="fnanchor">[354]</a>
+On the 16th of May the members
+of the Privy Council signed the contract in which the marriage was
+agreed upon between 'My Lady Elizabeth,' only daughter of the King, and
+the Grand-Master of the Household and Elector of the Holy Roman Empire,
+Frederick Count Palatine, and the necessary provisions were made as to
+dower and settlements. This may be regarded as the last work of Robert
+Cecil: he died a few days after. The pulpits had attacked the marriage
+of the princess with a Catholic, and had exhorted the people to pray for
+her marriage with a Protestant. The common feeling of Protestants was
+gratified
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[Pg 428]</a></span>
+when this result came to pass.</p>
+
+<p>The question of the future marriage of Henry Frederick Prince of Wales
+was treated in a kindred spirit though not exactly in the same way.</p>
+
+<p>All eyes were already directed to this young prince and his future
+prospects. He was serious and reserved; a man of few words, sound
+judgment, and lofty ideas; and he gave signs of an ambitious desire to
+rival his most famous predecessors on the
+throne.<a name="FNanchor_355_355" id="FNanchor_355_355"></a><a href="#Footnote_355_355" class="fnanchor">[355]</a>
+He understood the
+calling of sovereign in a different sense from his father. On one
+occasion when his father set his younger brother before him as a model
+of industry in the pursuit of science, he replied that he would make a
+very good archbishop of Canterbury. For one who was to wear the crown
+skill in arms and knowledge of seamanship seemed to him indispensable;
+he made it his most zealous study to acquire both the one and the other.
+His intention undoubtedly was to make every provision for the great war
+against the Spanish monarchy which was anticipated. He wished to escort
+his sister to Germany in order to form a personal acquaintance with the
+princes of the Union, whom he regarded as his natural allies. These
+views could not have been thwarted if the proposal of the Duke of Savoy,
+which had been rejected in behalf of the Princess, had been accepted in
+behalf of the Prince.<a name="FNanchor_356_356" id="FNanchor_356_356"></a><a href="#Footnote_356_356" class="fnanchor">[356]</a>
+For every day the Duke separated himself more
+and more from the policy of Spain: he had even wished at one time to be
+admitted into the Union. He offered a large portion with the hand of his
+daughter, and was ready to agree to those restrictions in the exercise
+of her religion which it might be thought necessary to prescribe.
+Meanwhile, however, another project came up. The grandees of France
+wished to bring a prince of such high endowments and decided views into
+the closest relations with the house of Bourbon, in order to oppose the
+action of Spain
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[Pg 429]</a></span>
+on the French court by another influence. They made
+proposals for a marriage between the Prince of Wales and the second
+daughter of Henry IV, the Lady Christine of France. They found the most
+cordial reception for this scheme among the English who favoured
+Protestantism, and understood the course of the world. It was thought
+that the new League, for this was the designation given to the
+increasing preponderance of Spanish and Catholic views in France, would
+by this means be thrown into confusion in its own camp; the French
+government would be brought back to its old attitude of hostility
+towards Spain, and would only thus be completely sure of the States
+General, which could never separate themselves both from England and
+France at the same time. The Prince embraced the notion that the
+Princess must immediately be brought to England to be instructed in the
+Protestant faith, and perhaps to be converted to it. As she was still
+very young his notion was so far reasonable, although in other respects
+her age was a considerable obstacle. While he referred the decision to
+his father, he yet made a remark which shows his own leanings, that this
+marriage would certainly be most acceptable to all his brother
+Protestants.<a name="FNanchor_357_357" id="FNanchor_357_357"></a><a href="#Footnote_357_357" class="fnanchor">[357]</a>
+What a prospect would have dawned on these if a young
+and energetic king of England, confederate with Germany and Holland, and
+looked up to in France for a double reason, both on account of the old
+and still unforgotten
+claims,<a name="FNanchor_358_358" id="FNanchor_358_358"></a><a href="#Footnote_358_358" class="fnanchor">[358]</a>
+and on account of his marriage, had
+taken the Huguenots under his protection or actually appealed to them in
+his own behalf!</p>
+
+<p>The 5th of November 1612 was fixed as the day on which the question was
+to be decided by a commission expressly appointed for this purpose. King
+James, who is represented as favourable to the connexion with France,
+went from Theobald's to the meeting: the Prince had drawn out for
+himself the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[Pg 430]</a></span>
+arguments by which he thought to refute the objections of
+opponents. On the very same day he was taken ill, and was obliged to ask
+for an adjournment; but from day to day and hour to hour his illness
+became more dangerous. He exhibited a composed and, when addressed on
+religious questions, a devout frame of mind, but he did not wish to die.
+When some one said to him that God only could heal him, he replied that
+perhaps the physicians also might do something. On the 17th of November,
+two hours after midnight, he died&mdash;'the flower of his house,' as men
+said, 'the palladium of the country, the terror of his foes.' They even
+went so far as to put him at this early age on a level with Henry IV,
+who had been proved by a life full of struggles and vicissitudes. The
+comparison rested on the circumstance that the young and highly-gifted
+prince was forced to succumb to an unexpected misfortune while preparing
+for great undertakings which, like those of Henry IV, were to be
+directed against Spain.</p>
+
+<p>It is very probable that this prince, if he had lived to ascend the
+English throne, would have attempted to give to affairs a turn suitable
+to the vigorous designs which engrossed his thoughts. According to all
+appearance he would not have trodden in the footsteps of his father. He
+appeared quite capable of reviving the old plans of conquest entertained
+by the house of Lancaster: he would have united outspoken Protestant
+tendencies with the monarchical views of Edward VI, or rather of
+Elizabeth. With the men who then held the chief power in England he had
+no points of agreement, and they already feared
+him.<a name="FNanchor_359_359" id="FNanchor_359_359"></a><a href="#Footnote_359_359" class="fnanchor">[359]</a>
+They were even accused of having caused his premature death.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the course which had been struck out with the co-operation of the
+young prince was not abandoned at his death.</p>
+
+<p>The Elector Palatine had already arrived in London. His demeanour and
+behaviour quieted the doubts of one party and put to shame the
+predictions of the other: he appeared manly,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[Pg 431]</a></span>
+firm, bent on high aims, and dignified: he knew how to win over even the Queen who at first was
+unfavourable to him. Letters exchanged at that time are full of the joy
+with which the marriage was welcomed by the Protestants. But it was just
+as decidedly unwelcome to the other party. An expression which was then
+reported in Brussels shewed how lively the hatred was, and how widely
+and how far into the future political combinations extended. It was said
+that this marriage was designed to wrest the Imperial throne from the
+house of Austria; but it was added, with haughty reliance on the
+strength of Catholic Europe, that this design should never
+succeed.<a name="FNanchor_360_360" id="FNanchor_360_360"></a><a href="#Footnote_360_360" class="fnanchor">[360]</a></p>
+
+<p>Another collision seemed at times to be immediately impending. In the
+year 1613 the English government sent to ask the districts most exposed
+to a Spanish invasion, how many troops they could severally oppose to
+it, and had appointed the fire signals which were to announce the coming
+danger. It is indeed not wonderful that under such circumstances it
+continued the policy which was calculated to promote a general European
+opposition to the Spaniards.</p>
+
+<p>When the French grandees though fit to contest the Spanish marriages
+which Mary de' Medici made up, they had King James on their side, who
+regarded it as the natural right of princes of the blood to undertake
+the charge of public affairs during a minority. At the meeting of the
+Estates in 1614, it was their intention to get the government into their
+hands, and then to bring it back again to the line of policy of Henry
+IV. The English ambassador, Edmonds, showed that he concurred with them.</p>
+
+<p>Soon afterwards the differences between the Duke of Savoy and the
+Spanish governor in Milan terminated in an open rupture. The French
+grandees, though they had not carried their point in the States-General,
+yet showed themselves independent and strong enough to follow their own
+wishes in interfering in this matter. While the Queen-Regent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[Pg 432]</a></span>
+supported the Spaniards, they came to the assistance of the Duke. In this struggle
+King James also came forward on his side in concert with the Republic of
+Venice, which was still able to throw a considerable weight into the
+scale on an Italian question.</p>
+
+<p>The cause of Savoy appeared the common cause of opposition to Spain.
+James deemed himself happy in being able to do something further for
+that object by removing the misunderstanding which existed between
+Protestant Switzerland and the Duke. On his own side he carefully upheld
+the old connexion between England and the Cantons. He gave out that in
+this manner the territories of his allies would extend to the very
+borders of Italy, for Protestant Switzerland formed the connecting link
+between his friends in that country and the German Union which, in turn,
+bordered on the Netherlands.</p>
+
+<p>With the same view, in order that his allies might not have their hands
+tied elsewhere, he laboured to remove the dissensions between Saxony and
+Brandenburg, and between the States-General and Denmark. At the repeated
+request of certain German princes, he made it his business to put an
+end, by his intervention, to the war that had broken out between Sweden
+and Denmark. By the mediation of his ambassadors the agreement of Knäröd
+was arrived at, which regulated the relations between the Northern
+kingdoms for a considerable time. James saw his name at the head of an
+agreement which settled the rights of sovereignty in the extreme North
+'from Tittisfiord to Weranger,' and had the satisfaction of finding that
+the ratification of this agreement by his own hand was deemed
+necessary.<a name="FNanchor_361_361" id="FNanchor_361_361"></a><a href="#Footnote_361_361" class="fnanchor">[361]</a>
+A general union of the Protestant kingdoms and states
+was contemplated in this arrangement.</p>
+
+<p>In connexion with this, the commercial relations that had been long ago
+concluded with Russia assumed a political character. During the quarrels
+about the succession to the throne, when Moscow was in danger of falling
+under the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[Pg 433]</a></span>
+dominion of Poland, which in this matter was supported by
+Catholic Europe, the Russians sought the help of Germany, of the
+Netherlands, and especially of England. We learn that the house of
+Romanoff offered to put itself in a position of inferiority to King
+James, who appeared as the supreme head of the Protestant world, if he
+would free Russia from the invasion of the Poles.</p>
+
+<p>Already in the time of Elizabeth the opposition to the Spanish monarchy
+had caused the English government to make advances to the Turks.</p>
+
+<p>Just at the period when the fiercest struggle was preparing, at the time
+when Philip II was making preparations for annexing Portugal, the Queen
+determined to shut her eyes to the scruples which hitherto had generally
+deterred Christian princes from entering into an alliance with
+unbelievers. It is worth noticing that from the beginning East Indian
+interests were the means of drawing these powers nearer to one another.
+Elizabeth directed the attention of the Turks to the serious obstacles
+that would be thrown in their way, if the Portuguese colonies in that
+quarter were conquered by the far more powerful
+Spaniards.<a name="FNanchor_362_362" id="FNanchor_362_362"></a><a href="#Footnote_362_362" class="fnanchor">[362]</a>
+The commercial relations between the two kingdoms themselves presented
+another obvious consideration. England seized the first opportunity for
+throwing off the protection of the French flag, which had hitherto
+sheltered her, and in a short time was much rather able to protect the
+Dutch who were still closely allied with her. The Turks greatly desired
+to form a connexion with a naval power independent of the religious
+impulses which threatened to bring the neighbouring powers of the West
+into the field against them. They knew that the English would never
+co-operate against them with Spaniards and French. Political and
+commercial interests were thus intertwined with one another. A Levant
+company was founded, at the proposal of which the ambassadors were
+nominated, both of whom enjoyed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[Pg 434]</a></span>
+a considerable influence under James I.</p>
+
+<p>As in these transactions attention was principally directed to the
+commerce in the products of the East Indies carried on through the
+medium of Turkish harbours, was it not to be expected that an attempt
+should be made to open direct communication with that country? The Dutch
+had already anticipated the English in that quarter; but Elizabeth was
+for a long time withheld by anxiety lest the negotiations for peace with
+Spain, which were just about to be opened, should be interrupted by such
+an enterprise. Yet under her government the company was formed for
+trading with the East Indies, to which, among other exceptional
+privileges, the right of acquiring territory was granted. It was only
+bound to hold aloof from those provinces which were in the possession of
+Christian sovereigns. We have seen how carefully in the peace which
+James I concluded with Spain everything was avoided which could have
+interrupted this commerce. James confirmed this company by a charter
+which was not limited to any particular time. And in the very first
+contracts which this company concluded with the great Mogul, Jehangir,
+they had the right bestowed on them of fortifying the principal
+factories which were made over to them. The native powers regarded the
+English as their allies against the Spaniards and Portuguese.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1612 Shirley, a former friend of Essex, who had been induced
+by the Earl himself to go to the East, and who had there formed a close
+alliance with Shah Abbas, returned to England, where he appeared wearing
+a turban and accompanied by a Persian wife. He entrusted the child of
+this marriage to the guardianship of the Queen, when he again set off
+for Persia, in order to open up the commerce of England in the Persian
+Gulf.</p>
+
+<p>But it was a still more important matter that the attempts which had
+been made under the Queen to set foot permanently on the other
+hemisphere could now be brought to a successful issue under King James.
+It may perhaps be affirmed that, so long as the countries were at open
+war, these attempts could not have been made, unless Spain had first
+been completely conquered. England could not resume her old designs
+until<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[Pg 435]</a></span>
+a peace had been concluded, which, if it did not expressly allow
+new settlements, yet did not expressly forbid them, but rather perhaps
+tacitly reserved the right of forming them. Under the impulse which the
+discovery of the Gunpowder Plot gave, I will not say to war, but
+certainly to continued opposition to Spain, the King bestowed on the
+companies formed for that purpose the charters on which the colonisation
+of North America was founded. The settlement of Virginia was again
+undertaken, and, although in constant danger of destruction from the
+opposition of warlike natives and the dissensions of its founders, yet
+at last by the union of strict law and personal energy it was quickened
+into life, and kindled the jealousy of the Spaniards. They feared
+especially that it would throw obstacles in the way of the homeward and
+outward voyages of their
+fleets.<a name="FNanchor_363_363" id="FNanchor_363_363"></a><a href="#Footnote_363_363" class="fnanchor">[363]</a>
+Their hands, however, were tied by
+the peace: and we learn that when they made overtures for the marriage
+of the Prince of Wales with a Spanish Infanta, they proposed at the same
+time that this colony should be given up. But the Prince of Wales from
+the interest which he took in all maritime enterprises was just the man
+to exert himself most warmly in its behalf. Under his auspices a new
+expedition was equipped, which did not sail till after his death, and
+then materially contributed to secure the colony. Not without good
+reason have the colonists commemorated his name.</p>
+
+<p>How immensely important at least for England have her relations with the
+Spanish monarchy been shown to be! She had been formerly its ally, its
+attacks she had then withstood, and now resisted it at every turn. Only
+in rivalry with this power, and in opposition to it, was the great
+Island of the West brought into relations, for which it was suited by
+its geographical position, with every part of the known world. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_343_343" id="Footnote_343_343"></a><a href="#FNanchor_343_343"><span class="label">[343]</span></a> Contarini, Relatione 1610: 'Pareva che nelli moti passati
+col papa havesse la republica aggradito Più l'offerte dei Inglesi che
+gli offizii et interpositioni di Franza e da quelle pia che da questi
+riconosciuto l'accommodamento: il che per tutta la Franza si è potuto
+comprendere.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_344_344" id="Footnote_344_344"></a><a href="#FNanchor_344_344"><span class="label">[344]</span></a> The Lords of the Privy Council to Sir Richard Spencer and
+Sir Ralph Winwood. Aug. 1, 1608. In Winwood ii. 429.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_345_345" id="Footnote_345_345"></a><a href="#FNanchor_345_345"><span class="label">[345]</span></a> This is affirmed by Bentivoglio, who as Nuncio at
+Brussels was closely acquainted with these transactions. Historia della
+guerra di Fiandra iii. 490.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_346_346" id="Footnote_346_346"></a><a href="#FNanchor_346_346"><span class="label">[346]</span></a> Winwood to Salisbury, October 7, 1609. Memorials iii.
+78.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_347_347" id="Footnote_347_347"></a><a href="#FNanchor_347_347"><span class="label">[347]</span></a> Molino: 'E huomo astuto sagace e persecutore acerrimo de'
+suoi nemici ... ne a avuto multi et tutti egli a fatto precipitare.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_348_348" id="Footnote_348_348"></a><a href="#FNanchor_348_348"><span class="label">[348]</span></a> Ibid.: 'L'autorità del quale è cosi assoluta, che con
+verità si puo dire essere egli il re e governatore di quella monarchia'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_349_349" id="Footnote_349_349"></a><a href="#FNanchor_349_349"><span class="label">[349]</span></a> Alligantia inter regem et electores Germaniae, in Rymer
+vii. ii. 178.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_350_350" id="Footnote_350_350"></a><a href="#FNanchor_350_350"><span class="label">[350]</span></a> Francesco Contarini visited him in September 1610 in the
+country, and joined him in the chase, on which occasion James touched on
+various topics in conversation: 'De' pensieri di Spagnoli con poca loro
+laude ... non mostro far alcun conto del Duca di Sassonia suo cognato ni
+della investitura data li dall'imperatore nel ducato di Cleves.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_351_351" id="Footnote_351_351"></a><a href="#FNanchor_351_351"><span class="label">[351]</span></a> Beaulieu to Trumbull, Paris, June 29, 1612: 'Both from
+this state (France) and the state of England it hath been plainly enough
+intimated unto them (the Spaniards) that if they would go about to make
+the Archduke Albert Emperor or king of the Romans, both these states
+with their allies would set the rest to hinder it.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_352_352" id="Footnote_352_352"></a><a href="#FNanchor_352_352"><span class="label">[352]</span></a> Green, Princesses of England v. 180; De la Boderie ii.
+248.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_353_353" id="Footnote_353_353"></a><a href="#FNanchor_353_353"><span class="label">[353]</span></a> This is the report of A. Foscarini, Jan. 20, 1612.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_354_354" id="Footnote_354_354"></a><a href="#FNanchor_354_354"><span class="label">[354]</span></a> Winwood to Trumbull, Memorials iii. 357.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_355_355" id="Footnote_355_355"></a><a href="#FNanchor_355_355"><span class="label">[355]</span></a> Correro 1609, May 20: 'Non solo riesce esquisitamente in
+tutti gli esercitii del corpo, ma si dimostra nelle attioni sue molto
+giudicioso e prudente.'&mdash;Ant. Foscarini 1612: 'Amplissimi erano i suoi
+concetti; di natura grave severa ritenuta di pochissime parole.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_356_356" id="Footnote_356_356"></a><a href="#FNanchor_356_356"><span class="label">[356]</span></a> W. Ralegh: On a marriage between Prince Henry and a
+daughter of Savoy. Works viii. 237.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_357_357" id="Footnote_357_357"></a><a href="#FNanchor_357_357"><span class="label">[357]</span></a> Given in French by Levassor, Histoire de Louis XIII, i.
+2, 347. So far as I know, the original has not yet been brought to
+light, although its genuineness cannot be doubted, as Levassor was
+acquainted with Robert Carr's letter to the Prince, which was first
+printed by Ellis ii. iii. 229.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_358_358" id="Footnote_358_358"></a><a href="#FNanchor_358_358"><span class="label">[358]</span></a> Foscarini, to whom we are indebted for information on
+many of these points: 'teneva mal animo contra Spagna e pretension in
+Francia.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_359_359" id="Footnote_359_359"></a><a href="#FNanchor_359_359"><span class="label">[359]</span></a> It was affirmed that Henry Howard (Earl of Northampton)
+had been heard to say that 'the prince if ever he came to reign would
+prove a tyrant.' Bacon: Somerset's Business and Charge. Works vi. 100.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_360_360" id="Footnote_360_360"></a><a href="#FNanchor_360_360"><span class="label">[360]</span></a> Trumbull to Winwood, March 2, 1613. 'These men are
+enraged, fearing that we do aim at the wresting of the empire out of the
+Austrians hand which they say shall never be effected so long as the
+conjoyned forces of all the Catholiques in Christendom shall be able to
+maintain them in that right.' Winwood, Mem. iii. 439.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_361_361" id="Footnote_361_361"></a><a href="#FNanchor_361_361"><span class="label">[361]</span></a> Dispaccio di Antonio Foscarini, 5 Luglio 1612: 'Si aplica
+il re assai il pensiero a metter in pace li due re di Suecia e Danimarca
+et hieri fu qui di ritorno uno de' gentilhuomini inviati per tal
+fine:&mdash;poi si camineva immediatamente a stringere unione con tutti li
+principi di religione riformata.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_362_362" id="Footnote_362_362"></a><a href="#FNanchor_362_362"><span class="label">[362]</span></a> A letter of Germigny in Charrière, Negociations de la
+France dans le Levant iii. 885 n, mentions the representations of the
+first agent. 'Cet Anglais avait remontré l'importance de
+l'agrandissement du roy d'Espagne mesmes où il s'impatroniroit de
+Portugal et des terres despendantes du dit royaume voisines à ce
+Seigneur au Levant.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_363_363" id="Footnote_363_363"></a><a href="#FNanchor_363_363"><span class="label">[363]</span></a> A. Foscarini 1612, 9 Ag.: 'Preme grandemente a Spagnoli
+veder sempre Più stabilirsi la colonia in Virginia non perche stimino
+quel paese nel quale non è abondanza nè minera d'oro&mdash;ma perche
+fermandovisi Inglesi con li vascelli loro, correndo quel mare
+impedirebbono la flotte.' 1613 Marzo 8: 'Le navi destinate per Virginia
+al numero di tre sono passate a quella volta e se ne allestiranno anco
+altre degli interessati in quella popolatione.'</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BIV_V" id="BIV_V"></a>
+PARLIAMENTS OF 1610 AND 1614.</p>
+
+<p>For the full occupation of this position in the world, and for
+maintaining and extending it, nothing was more necessary than internal
+harmony in Great Britain, not only between the two kingdoms, but also in
+each of them at home. While Robert Cecil procured full recognition for
+considerations of foreign policy, he conceived the further design of
+bringing about such an unity above all things in England itself, as, if
+successful, would have procured for the power of the King an authority
+paramount to all the other elements of the constitution.</p>
+
+<p>The greatest standing evil from which the existing government suffered,
+was the inequality between income and expenditure; and if the lavish
+profusion of the King was partly responsible for this, yet there were
+also many other reasons for it. The late Queen had left behind no
+inconsiderable weight of debt, occasioned by the cost of the Irish war:
+to this were added the expenses of her obsequies, of the coronation, and
+of the first arrangements under the new reign. Visits of foreign
+princes, the reception and the despatch of great embassies, had caused
+still further extraordinary outlay; and the separate
+court-establishments of the King, the Queen, and the Prince, made a
+constant deficit inevitable. Perpetual embarrassment was the result.</p>
+
+<p>James I expresses himself with a sort of naive ingenuousness in a letter
+to the Lords of Council of the year 1607. In this letter he exhorts them
+not to present to him any 'sute wherof none of yourselves can guess what
+the vallew may prove,' but rather to help him to cut off superfluous
+expenses, as far as was consistent with the honour of the kingdom, and
+to assist him to new lawful sources of revenue,
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1610.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[Pg 437]</a></span>
+without throwing an
+unjust burden upon the people. 'The only disease and consumption which I
+can ever apprehend as likeliest to endanger me, is this eating canker of
+want, which being removed I could think myself as happy in all other
+respects as any other king or monarch that ever was since the birth of
+Christ: in this disease I am the patient, and yee have promised to be
+the physicians, and to use the best care uppon me that your witte,
+faithfulnes and diligence can reach
+unto.'<a name="FNanchor_364_364" id="FNanchor_364_364"></a><a href="#Footnote_364_364" class="fnanchor">[364]</a></p>
+
+<p>As Lord Treasurer, Robert Cecil had the task of taking in hand the
+conduct of this affair also. He had refused to make disbursements which
+he thought improper, but to which the King had notwithstanding allowed
+himself to be led away: he would not hear of increasing the revenue by
+such means as the sale of offices, a custom which seemed to be at that
+time transplanting itself from France into England. He sought to add to
+the revenue in the first place by further taxation of the largely
+increasing commerce of the country. And as tonnage and poundage had been
+once for all granted to the King, he thought it appropriate and
+permissible to raise the custom-house duties as an administrative
+measure. Soon after the new government had come into power it had
+undertaken the rearrangement of the tariff to suit the circumstances of
+the time. Cecil, who was confirmed in his purpose by a decision of the
+judges to the effect that his conduct was perfectly legal, conferred
+with the principal members of the commercial class on the amount and
+nature of the increase of
+duty.<a name="FNanchor_365_365" id="FNanchor_365_365"></a><a href="#Footnote_365_365" class="fnanchor">[365]</a>
+The plan which they embraced in
+accordance with the views prevalent at the time contemplated that the
+burden should principally fall upon foreigners.</p>
+
+<p>The advantages which were obtained by this means were not
+inconsiderable. The Custom-House receipts were gradually increased under
+King James by one-half; but yet this was a slow process and could not
+meet the wants that likewise kept growing. The Lord Treasurer decided to
+submit a comprehensive
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[Pg 438]</a></span>
+scheme to Parliament, in order to effect a
+radical cure of the evil. The importance of the matter will be our
+excuse for examining it in detail.</p>
+
+<p>He explained to them that a considerable increase of income (which he
+put down at £82,000) was required to cover the regular expenditure, but
+that a still greater sum was needed for casual expenses, for which in
+the state, as in every household, certainly a quarter of the sum reached
+by the regular expenditure was required. He therefore proposed that
+£600,000 should be at once granted him for paying off the debt, and that
+in future years the royal income should be raised by £200,000.</p>
+
+<p>This request was so comprehensive and so far beyond all precedent, that
+it could never have been made without a corresponding offer of
+concessions on a large scale. The Earl of Salisbury in his proposal
+formally invited the Parliament to adduce the grievances which it had,
+and promised in the King's name to redress all such so far as lay in his
+power. It is affirmed that his clear-sighted and vigorous speech made a
+favourable impression. Parliament in turn acceded to the proposal, and
+alleged its most important grievances. They affected both ecclesiastical
+and financial interests: among the latter class that which concerned the
+Court of Wards is the most important historically.</p>
+
+<p>Of the institutions by which the Normans and Plantagenets held their
+feudal state together, none perhaps was more effectual than the right of
+guardianship over minors, whose property the kings managed for their own
+advantage. They stepped as it were into the rights of fathers; even the
+marriage of wards depended on their pleasure. From the time of Henry
+VIII a court for the exercise of this jurisdiction and for feudal
+tenures generally had existed, which instituted enquiries into the
+neglect of prescriptive custom, and punished it. One of the most
+important offices was that of President of the Court, which was very
+lucrative, and conferred personal influence in various ways. It had been
+long filled by Robert Cecil himself.</p>
+
+<p>The Lower House now proposed in the first place that this right and the
+machinery created to enforce it,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[Pg 439]</a></span>
+which gave birth to various acts of
+despotism, should be abolished. How often had the property of wards been
+ruined by those to whom the rights of the state were transferred. The
+debts which were chargeable against them were never
+paid.<a name="FNanchor_366_366" id="FNanchor_366_366"></a><a href="#Footnote_366_366" class="fnanchor">[366]</a>
+The Lower House desired that not only the royal prerogatives, but also that the
+kindred rights of the great men of the kingdom over their vassals should
+cease, and especially that property held on feudal tenures should be
+made allodial.</p>
+
+<p>It is evident what great interests were involved in this scheme, which
+was thoroughly monarchical, and at the same time was opposed to
+feudalism. Its execution would have put an end to the feudal tie which
+now had no more vitality, and appeared nothing more than a burden; but
+at the same time the crown would have been provided with a regular and
+sufficient income, and, what is more, would have been tolerably
+independent of the grants of Parliament, so soon as an orderly domestic
+system was introduced. We can understand that in bringing this matter to
+an issue a minister of monarchical views might see an appropriate
+conclusion to a life or rather two lives, his father's and his own,
+dedicated to the service of the sovereign. And it appeared that he might
+well hope to succeed, as a considerable alleviation was offered at the
+same time to the King's subjects as well.</p>
+
+<p>The King reminded them that the feudal prerogative formed one of the
+fairest jewels of his crown, that it was an heirloom from his
+forefathers which he could not surrender; honour, conscience, and
+interest, equally forbade it. The Lower House replied that it would not
+dispute about honour and conscience, but as to interest, that might be
+arranged. They were ready by formal contract to indemnify the crown for
+the loss which it would suffer.<a name="FNanchor_367_367" id="FNanchor_367_367"></a><a href="#Footnote_367_367" class="fnanchor">[367]</a></p>
+
+<p>The crown demanded £100,000 as a compensation for the loss it would
+suffer; and besides this, the £200,000 before mentioned which it
+required for restoring the balance between
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[Pg 440]</a></span>
+income and expenditure. We
+need not here reproduce the repulsive spectacle presented by the
+abatement of demands on the one side, and the increase of offers on the
+other. At last the Lord Treasurer adhered to the demand for £200,000
+everything included. He declared that if this was refused the King would
+never again make a similar offer. On this at last the Parliament
+declared itself ready to grant the sum; but, even then, set up further
+conditions about which they could not come to an immediate agreement, so
+that their mutual claims were not yet definitively adjusted.</p>
+
+<p>On the contrary these negotiations had by degrees assumed a tone of some
+irritation. Parliament found that the Earl of Salisbury had acted
+unconstitutionally in proposing to raise the scale of duties without its
+consent, and would not be content with his reference to the decision of
+the judges mentioned above, and to the conferences with the merchants.
+He endeavoured at a private interview with some of the leading members
+to bring round the opinion to his side: but the House was angry with
+those who had been present at it, and their good intentions were called
+in question.<a name="FNanchor_368_368" id="FNanchor_368_368"></a><a href="#Footnote_368_368" class="fnanchor">[368]</a></p>
+
+<p>The speeches also, with which the King twice interrupted the
+proceedings, produced an undesirable effect. He was inclined to meet the
+general wishes, without surrendering however any part of his
+prerogatives. But at the same time he expressed himself about these in
+the exaggerated manner peculiar to him, which was exactly calculated to
+arouse contradiction.<a name="FNanchor_369_369" id="FNanchor_369_369"></a><a href="#Footnote_369_369" class="fnanchor">[369]</a> Whilst he was comparing the royal power to
+the divine, he found that the House on one pretext or another refused
+even to open a letter which he had addressed to them about the speech of
+some member which had displeased him: on the contrary he was obliged to
+receive back into favour the very member who had affronted him.
+Parliament regarded liberty of speech as the Palladium of its
+efficiency; <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[Pg 441]</a></span>foreigners were astonished at the recklessness with which
+members expressed themselves about the government.</p>
+
+<p>As a rule the investigation of relative rights has an unfavourable
+result for those who are in actual possession of authority. The
+prerogative which the King exalted so highly presented itself to the
+Parliament in an obnoxious aspect. In the debates on the contract the
+question was raised, how Sampson's hands could be bound, that is to say,
+how the King's prerogative could be so far restricted as to prevent him
+from breaking or overstepping the agreement.</p>
+
+<p>During a dispute with the House of Lords the sentiment was uttered, that
+the members of the Lower House as representing the Commons ranked higher
+than the Lords, each of whom represented only
+himself.<a name="FNanchor_370_370" id="FNanchor_370_370"></a><a href="#Footnote_370_370" class="fnanchor">[370]</a>
+It is easy to see how far this principle might lead.</p>
+
+<p>Even his darling project of combining England and Scotland into a single
+kingdom could not be carried out by the King in the successive sessions
+of Parliament. One of the leading spirits of the age, Francis Bacon, was
+on his side in this matter as in others. When it was objected that it
+was no advantage to the English to take the poverty-stricken Scots into
+partnership, as for example in commercial affairs, he returned answer,
+that merchants might reckon in this way, but no one who rose to great
+views: united with Scotland, England would become one of the greatest
+monarchies that the world had ever seen; but who did not perceive that a
+complete fusion of both elements was needed for this? Security against
+the recurrence of the old divisions could not be obtained until this was
+effected. Owing to the influence of Bacon, who at that time had become
+Solicitor-General, the question of the naturalisation of all those born
+in Scotland after James had ascended the English throne, was decided
+with but slight opposition, in a sense favourable to the union of the
+two kingdoms, by the Lord Chancellor and the Judges. The decision
+however was not accepted by Parliament.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[Pg 442]</a></span>
+And when the question was now
+raised how far the assent of Parliament was necessary in a case like
+this, the adverse declaration of the Lord Chancellor was exactly
+calculated to provoke a contest of principle in this matter
+also.<a name="FNanchor_371_371" id="FNanchor_371_371"></a><a href="#Footnote_371_371" class="fnanchor">[371]</a>
+With the advice of the Lord Chancellor and the Council James had
+declared himself King of Great Britain, and had expressed the wish that
+the names of England and Scotland might be henceforth obliterated; but
+his Proclamation was not considered sufficient without the assent of
+Parliament; and in this case the judges took the side of the Parliament.
+The dynastic ideas with which James had commenced his reign could not
+but serve to resuscitate the claim of Parliament to the possession of
+the legislative power. At other times the precedents adduced by the Lord
+Chancellor in the debate on the 'post-nati' might have controlled their
+decision: at the present time they no longer made any impression. The
+opposition of political ideas came to the surface in this matter as in
+others. The King held the strongly monarchical view that the populations
+of both countries were united with one another by the mere fact of their
+being both subject to him. To this the Parliament opposed the doctrine
+that the two crowns were distinct sovereignties, and that the
+legislation of the two countries could not be united. They wished to
+fetter the King to the old legal position which they were far more
+anxious to contract than to expand.</p>
+
+<p>The consequences must have been incalculable, if the Earl of Salisbury
+and the Lord Chancellor had succeeded in carrying out their intentions.
+A common government of the two countries would have held in all
+important questions a position independent of the two Parliaments, and
+the person of the sovereign would have been the ruling centre of this
+government. If besides an adequate income had been definitely assigned
+to the crown independent of the regularly recurring assent of
+Parliament, what would have become of the rights of that body? Not only
+would Elizabeth's mode of government have been continued, but the
+monarchical<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1613.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[Pg 443]</a></span>
+element which could appeal to various precedents in its own
+favour would probably have obtained a complete ascendancy.</p>
+
+<p>But for that very reason these efforts were met by a most decided
+opposition. It is plain that these rival pretensions, and the motive
+from which they sprang, paved the way for controversies of the most
+extensive kind.</p>
+
+<p>The scheme of the contract was as little successful as that of the union
+of the two kingdoms. The parties were contented with merely removing the
+occasion for an immediate rupture; and after some short prorogations
+Parliament was finally dissolved.</p>
+
+<p>The King, who felt himself aggrieved by its whole attitude as well as by
+many single expressions, was reluctant to call another. In order to meet
+his extraordinary necessities recourse was had to various old devices
+and to some new ones; for instance, the creation of a great number of
+baronets in 1612, on payment of considerable sums: but notwithstanding
+all this, in the year 1613 matters had gone so far, that neither the
+ambassadors to foreign courts, nor even the troops which were maintained
+could be paid. In the garrison of Brill a mutiny had arisen on this
+account; the strongholds on the coast and the fortifications on the
+adjacent islands went to ruin. For this as well as for other reasons the
+death of the Earl of Salisbury was a misfortune. The man on whom James I
+next bestowed his principal confidence, Robert Carr, then Lord
+Rochester, later Earl of Somerset, was already condemned by the popular
+voice because he was a Scot, who moreover had no other merit than a
+pleasing person, which procured him the favour of the King. The
+authority enjoyed by the Howards had already provoked dissatisfaction.
+The Prince of Wales had been their decided adversary, and this enmity
+was kept up by all his friends. Robert Carr, however, thought it
+advisable to win over to his side this powerful family to which he had
+at first found himself in opposition. Whether from personal ambition or
+from a temper that really mocked at all law and morality he married
+Frances Howard, whose union with the Earl of Essex had to be dissolved
+for this object.<a name="FNanchor_372_372" id="FNanchor_372_372"></a><a href="#Footnote_372_372" class="fnanchor">[372]</a>
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1614.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[Pg 444]</a></span>
+The old enemies of the Howards, the adherents of
+the house of Essex, many of whom had inherited this enmity, now became
+the opponents of the favourite and his government. When at last urgent
+financial necessities allowed no other alternative, and absolutely
+compelled the issue of a summons for a new parliament, the contending
+parties seized the opportunity of confronting one another. The creatures
+of the government neglected no means of controlling the elections by
+their influence; but they were everywhere encountered by the other
+party, who were favoured by the increasing dissatisfaction of the
+people.</p>
+
+<p>At the opening of Parliament in April 1614, and on two occasions
+afterwards, the King addressed the Lower House. Among all the scholastic
+distinctions, complaints of the past, and assurances for the future, in
+which after his usual fashion he indulges, we can still perceive the
+fundamental idea, that if even the subsidies which he required and asked
+were granted him, he would notwithstanding agree to no conditions on his
+side, and take upon himself no distinct pledges. He was resolved no
+longer to play the game of making concessions in order to ask for
+something in return, as he had done some years before; he found that far
+beneath his dignity. Still less could he consent that all the grievances
+that might have arisen should be heaped up and presented to him, for
+that would be injurious to the honour of the government. Each one, he
+said, might lay before him the grievances which he experienced in his
+own town or in his own county; he would then attend to their redress one
+by one. In the same way he would deal with each House separately. If he
+is reproached with endeavouring to extend his prerogatives he denies the
+charge; but he affirms that he cannot allow them to be abridged, but
+that, in exercising them, he would behave as well as the best prince
+England ever had.<a name="FNanchor_373_373" id="FNanchor_373_373"></a><a href="#Footnote_373_373" class="fnanchor">[373]</a>
+He has no conception of a relation based on
+mutual rights; he acknowledges
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[Pg 445]</a></span>
+only a relation of confidence and
+affection. In return for liberal concessions he promises liberal favour.</p>
+
+<p>This was a view of things resting upon a patriarchal conception of
+kingly power, in favour of which analogies might no doubt have been
+found in the early state of the kingdoms of the West, but which was now
+becoming more and more obsolete. What had still been possible under
+Elizabeth, when the sovereign and her Parliament formed one party, was
+no longer so now; especially as a man who had attracted universal hatred
+stood at the head of affairs. Besides this a dispute was already going
+on which we cannot pass over in silence.</p>
+
+<p>It arose upon the same matter which had caused such grave embarrassment
+to the Earl of Salisbury, the unlimited exercise of the right of levying
+tonnage and poundage entirely at the discretion of the government. It
+was affirmed that the Custom-House receipts had increased more than
+twentyfold since the commencement of James's reign, and that a great
+part of the increased returns was enjoyed by favoured private
+individuals. The Lower House demanded first of all an examination into
+the right of the government, and declared that without it they would not
+proceed to vote any grant.<a name="FNanchor_374_374" id="FNanchor_374_374"></a><a href="#Footnote_374_374" class="fnanchor">[374]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the Lower House itself on one occasion a lively debate arose on the
+subject. The opinion was advanced on the part of the friends of the
+government that, in this respect as in others, a difference existed
+between hereditary and elective monarchies, that in the first class,
+which included England, the prerogative was far more extensive than in
+the latter. Henry Wotton, and Winwood, who had been long employed on
+foreign embassies, explained what a great advantage in regard to their
+collective revenues other states derived from indirect taxes and
+customs. But by this statement they awakened redoubled opposition. They
+were told that the raising of these imposts in France had not been
+approved by the Estates and was in fact illegal; that the King of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[Pg 446]</a></span>
+Spain had been forced to atone for the attempt to introduce them into the
+Netherlands by the loss of the greater part of the provinces. Thomas
+Wentworth especially broke out into violent invectives against the
+neighbouring sovereigns, which even called forth remonstrances from the
+embassies. He warned the King of England that in his case also similar
+measures would lead to his complete
+ruin.<a name="FNanchor_375_375" id="FNanchor_375_375"></a><a href="#Footnote_375_375" class="fnanchor">[375]</a>
+It was not only urged
+that England ought not to take example by any foreign country, but the
+very distinction drawn between elective and hereditary monarchies
+suggested a question whether England after all was so entirely a
+hereditary monarchy as was asserted. It was asked if it might not rather
+be said that James I, who was one of a number of claimants who had all
+equally good rights, owed his accession to a voluntary preference on the
+part of the nation, which might be regarded as a sort of election. These
+were ideas of unlimited range, and flatly contradicted those which James
+had formed on the rights of birth and inheritance. He felt himself
+outraged by their expression in the Lower House.</p>
+
+<p>In order to give the force of a general resolution to their assertion,
+that in England the prerogative did not include the fixing of the amount
+of taxes and customs without the consent of Parliament, the Commons had
+made proposals for a conference with the Upper House. But hereupon the
+higher clergy declared themselves hostile, not only to their opinion,
+but even to the bare project of a conference. Neil, Bishop of Lincoln,
+affirmed that the oath taken to the King in itself forbade them to
+participate in such a conference; that the matter affected not so much a
+branch of the royal prerogative as its very root; that the Lords
+moreover would have to listen to seditious speeches, the aim and
+intention of which could only be to bring about a division between the
+King and his subjects. The Lord Chancellor had asked the judges for
+their opinion; but they had declined to give any. The result was that
+the Upper House did not accede to the proposal of a conference.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[Pg 447]</a></span>
+The Commons were greatly irritated at the resistance which was offered
+to their first step. They too in conferences which related to other
+matters disdained to enter into the subjects brought before them. They
+complained loudly of the insulting expressions of the bishop which had
+been repeated to them. An exculpatory statement of the Upper House did
+not content them; they demanded full satisfaction as in an affair of
+honour, and until this had been furnished them they declared themselves
+determined to make no progress with any other matter.</p>
+
+<p>The King however on his side now lost patience at this. He considered
+that an attack was made on the highest power when the general progress
+of business was hindered for the sake of a single question, and he
+appointed a day on which this affair of the subsidy must be disposed of.
+He said that, if it were not settled, he would dissolve Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>One would not expect such a declaration to change the temper of the
+Lower House. Speeches were heard still more violent than those
+previously made. The Scots, to whose influence every untoward occurrence
+was imputed, were threatened with a repetition of the Sicilian Vespers.
+There were other members however who counselled moderation; for it
+almost appeared as if the dissolution of this Parliament might be the
+dissolution of all parliaments. Commissioners were once more sent to the
+King in order to give another turn to the negotiations. The King
+declared that he knew full well how far his rights extended, and that he
+could not allow his prerogatives to be called in
+question.<a name="FNanchor_376_376" id="FNanchor_376_376"></a><a href="#Footnote_376_376" class="fnanchor">[376]</a></p>
+
+<p>These passionate ebullitions of feeling against the Scots, although they
+referred to matters of a more alarming, but happily of an entirely
+different nature, made the King anxious lest the destruction of his
+favourites, or even his own ruin, might be required to content his
+adversaries. On the 7th of June he dissolved Parliament. He thought
+himself entitled to bring up for punishment the loudest and most
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[Pg 448]</a></span>
+reckless speakers, as well as some other noted men from whom these
+speakers had received their impulse, for instance Cornwallis, the former
+ambassador in Spain. He considered that they had intended to upset the
+government: not only had they failed, but they themselves must atone for
+the attempt.<a name="FNanchor_377_377" id="FNanchor_377_377"></a><a href="#Footnote_377_377" class="fnanchor">[377]</a></p>
+
+<p>The estrangement was not too great to allow the hope of a
+reconciliation. It had been represented to the King that he ought not to
+be ready to regard financial concessions as a compliance unbecoming to
+the crown, for that in these matters he was at no disadvantage as
+compared with any person or any foreign power; that on the contrary the
+decision always proceeded from himself; that he was the head who cared
+for the welfare of the members. It was said that he need by no means
+fear that men would make use of his wants to lay fetters on him; that
+bonds laid by subjects on their sovereigns were merely cobwebs which he
+might tear asunder at any moment. Even Walter Ralegh had stated
+this.<a name="FNanchor_378_378" id="FNanchor_378_378"></a><a href="#Footnote_378_378" class="fnanchor">[378]</a>
+But the King had no inclination, after the Parliament had
+repelled his overtures with rude opposition, to expose himself by
+summoning a new one to new attacks on his prerogatives as he understood
+them. By the voluntary or forced contributions of different
+corporations, especially of the clergy and of the great men of the
+kingdom, he was placed in a condition to carry on his government in the
+ordinary way. Every measure which would have necessitated a great outlay
+was avoided.</p>
+
+<p>It is plain however into what a disagreeable position he was thus
+brought. His whole method of government was based upon the superiority
+of England. He had at that time brought the system of the Church in
+Scotland nearer to the English model. The bishops in that country had
+even received their consecration from the English. But he had not
+effected this without violent acts of usurpation. He had been obliged to
+remove his most active opponents out of the country; but even in their
+absence they kept up the excitement of men's feelings by their writings.
+The Presbyterians saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[Pg 449]</a></span>
+in everything which he succeeded in doing, the
+work of cunning on the one side and treachery on the other, and gave
+vent to the deepest displeasure at his deviation from their solemn
+Covenant with God.</p>
+
+<p>Relying on the right of England, but for the first time inviting
+immigrants from Scotland, James undertook the systematic establishment
+of colonies in Ireland. The additional strength however which by this
+means accrued to the Protestant and Teutonic element entirely
+annihilated all leanings which had been shown in his favour at his
+accession to the crown, and aroused against him the strongest national
+and religious antipathies of the native population in that country.</p>
+
+<p>He then met with this opposition in Parliament which hampered all his
+movements. It was foreign to his natural disposition to think of
+effecting a radical removal of the misunderstanding that had arisen. On
+the contrary he kept adding fresh fuel to it on account of the
+deficiencies of his government, which began to impair his former
+importance. The immediate consequence was that in foreign affairs he was
+no longer able to maintain the position which he had taken up as
+vigorously as might have been wished. His allies pressed him incessantly
+to bestow help on them: but if even he had wished it, this was no longer
+in his power. It was not that Parliament in withholding his supplies had
+disapproved of the object which they were intended to serve. On the
+contrary the Parliament lamented that this object was not pursued with
+sufficient earnestness; but it wished above all to extend its right of
+sanction over the whole domain of the public revenues. But the King was
+not inclined to treat with Parliament for the supplies of money
+required; he feared to incur the necessity of repaying its grants by
+concessions which would abridge the ancient rights of his crown. The
+centre of gravity of public affairs must lie somewhere or other. The
+question was already raised in England whether for the future it was to
+be in the power of the King and his ministers, or in the authority of
+Parliament. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_364_364" id="Footnote_364_364"></a><a href="#FNanchor_364_364"><span class="label">[364]</span></a> Letter to the Lords, anno 1607: in Strype, Annals iv.
+560.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_365_365" id="Footnote_365_365"></a><a href="#FNanchor_365_365"><span class="label">[365]</span></a> Antonio Correro, 25 Giugno 1608: 'Con l'autorità ch'egli
+tiene con li mercanti di questa piazza li ha indutti a sottoporsi ad una
+nova gravezza posta sopra le merci che vengono e vanno da questo
+regno.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_366_366" id="Footnote_366_366"></a><a href="#FNanchor_366_366"><span class="label">[366]</span></a> Molino: 'La gabella dei pupilli porge materia grande a
+sudditi di dolorsene e d'esclamare sino al celo studiando ogn'uno di
+liberasi da simili bene.&mdash;Se uno aveva due campi di questa ragione e
+cento d'altra natura, i due hanno questa forza, di sottomettere i cento
+alla medesima gravezza.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_367_367" id="Footnote_367_367"></a><a href="#FNanchor_367_367"><span class="label">[367]</span></a> Beaulieu to Trumbull. Winwood, Memorials iii. 123.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_368_368" id="Footnote_368_368"></a><a href="#FNanchor_368_368"><span class="label">[368]</span></a> Carleton to Edmonds: Court and Times of James I, i. 12,
+123.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_369_369" id="Footnote_369_369"></a><a href="#FNanchor_369_369"><span class="label">[369]</span></a> Chamberlain to Winwood. Mem. iii. 175. 'Yf the practise
+should follow the positions, we should not leave to our successor that
+freedome we received from our forefathers.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_370_370" id="Footnote_370_370"></a><a href="#FNanchor_370_370"><span class="label">[370]</span></a> Tommaso Contarini, 23 Giugno 1610: 'Che le loro persone,
+come representanti le communita, siano di maggior qualita che li signori
+titolati quali representano le loro sole persone, il che diede
+grandissimo fastidio al re.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_371_371" id="Footnote_371_371"></a><a href="#FNanchor_371_371"><span class="label">[371]</span></a> Campbell, Lives of the Lord Chancellors ii. 225.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_372_372" id="Footnote_372_372"></a><a href="#FNanchor_372_372"><span class="label">[372]</span></a> Lorking, writing to Puckering (The Court and Times of
+James the First i. 254), remarks as early as July 1613 on the first
+mention of the marriage, that its design was 'to reconcile him (Lord
+Rochester) and the house of Howard together, who are now far enough
+asunder.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_373_373" id="Footnote_373_373"></a><a href="#FNanchor_373_373"><span class="label">[373]</span></a> The King's second speech. Parliamentary History v. 285.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_374_374" id="Footnote_374_374"></a><a href="#FNanchor_374_374"><span class="label">[374]</span></a> A. Foscarini 1614, 20 Giugno. 'Il re ha sempre avuto seco
+(on his side) la camera superiore e parte dell'inferiore: il rimanente
+ha mostrato di voler contribuir ogni quantita di sussidio ma a
+conditione che si vedesse prima qual fosse l'autorità del re, sull'impor
+gravezze.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_375_375" id="Footnote_375_375"></a><a href="#FNanchor_375_375"><span class="label">[375]</span></a> Chamberlain to Carleton, May 28. Court and Times of James
+I, i. 312.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_376_376" id="Footnote_376_376"></a><a href="#FNanchor_376_376"><span class="label">[376]</span></a> According to a report furnished by A. Foscarini:
+'Elessero 40 d'essi a quali diede Lunedi audienza S. M.&mdash;dissero che la
+supplicavano per tanto lasciar per ultima da risolvere la materia di
+danari.' Unfortunately we have only very scanty information about this
+Parliament.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_377_377" id="Footnote_377_377"></a><a href="#FNanchor_377_377"><span class="label">[377]</span></a> Extract from a letter of Winwood to Carleton, June 16.
+Green, Calendar of State Papers, James I, vol. ii. 237.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_378_378" id="Footnote_378_378"></a><a href="#FNanchor_378_378"><span class="label">[378]</span></a> The Prerogative of Parliaments. Works viii. 154.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BIV_VI" id="BIV_VI"></a>
+SURVEY OF THE LITERATURE OF THE EPOCH.</p>
+
+<p>The times in which great political struggles are actually going on are
+not the most favourable for production in the fields of literature and
+art. These flourish best in the preceding or following ages, during
+which the impulse attending those movements begins or continues to be
+felt. Just such an epoch was the period of thirty or forty years between
+the defeat of the Armada and the outbreak of the Parliamentary troubles,
+a period comprising the later years of Queen Elizabeth and the earlier
+years of King James I. This was the epoch in which the English nation
+attained to a position of influence on the world at large, and in which
+at the same time those far-reaching differences about the most important
+questions of the inner life of the nation arose. The antagonism of ideas
+which stirred men's minds generally could not but reproduce itself in
+literature. But we also see other grand products of the age far
+transcending the limits of the present struggle. Our survey of the
+history will gain in completeness if we cast even but a transient
+glance, first at the former and then at the latter class of these
+products.</p>
+
+<p>In Scotland the studies connected with classical antiquity were
+prosecuted with as much zeal as anywhere else in Europe; not however in
+order to imitate its forms in the native idiom, which no one at that
+time even in Germany thought of doing, but in order to use it in learned
+theological controversies, and to maintain connexion with brother
+Protestants of other tongues. S. Andrew's was at one time a centre for
+Protestant learning: Poles and Danes, Germans and French visited this
+university in order to study under Melville. Even Latin verse was
+written with a certain elegance.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[Pg 451]</a></span>
+A fit monument of these studies and
+their direction is to be found in Buchanan's History of Scotland, a work
+without value for the earlier period, and full of party spirit in
+describing his own, as Buchanan is one of the most violent accusers of
+Mary Stuart, but pervaded by that warmth and decision which carry the
+reader along with it: at that time it was read all over the world.
+Buchanan and Melville were among the champions of popular ideas on the
+constitution of states and the relations between sovereign and people.
+It cannot be affirmed that classical studies were without influence upon
+their views, but the doctrine to which they adhered grew out of a
+different root. It rests historically upon the doctrine of the
+superiority of the Church, and the councils representing the Church,
+over the Papacy, as it was put forth in the fifteenth century at Paris.
+A Scottish student there, John Major, made this doctrine his own, and
+after his return to his native country, when he himself had obtained a
+professorship, he applied it to temporal relations. The positions of the
+advocates of the councils affirmed that the Pope, it was true, received
+his authority from God, but that he might be again deprived of it in
+cases of urgent necessity by the Church, which virtually included the
+sum of all authority in itself. In the same way John Major taught that
+an original power transmitted from father to son pertained to kings, but
+that the fundamental authority resided in the people; so that a king
+mischievous to the commonwealth, who showed himself incorrigible, might
+be deposed again. His scholars, who took so large a part in the first
+disturbances in Scotland, and their scholars in turn, firmly maintained
+this doctrine. They differed from their contemporaries the Jesuits, who
+considered the monarchy to be an institution set up by the national
+will, in ascribing to it a divine right, but they urged that a king
+existed for the sake of the people, and that as he was bound by the laws
+agreed on by common consent, resistance to him was not only allowed, but
+under certain circumstances might even be a duty. We must also remark
+the opposite view, which was developed in contradiction to this, but yet
+rested on the same foundation. It was admitted that the king, if
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[Pg 452]</a></span>
+the people were considered as a whole, existed for their sake, and not the
+people for his; but the king, it was said, was at the same time the head
+of the people; he possessed superiority over all individuals: there was
+no one who could say in any case that the contract between king and
+people had been broken: no such general contract existed at all; there
+could be no question at all of resistance, much less of deposition, for
+how could the members rebel against the head? King James maintained that
+the legislative power belonged to the king by divine and human right,
+that he exercised it with the participation of his subjects, and always
+remained superior to the laws. His position rests on these views, in the
+development of which he himself had certainly a great share; he, like
+his opponents, had his political and ecclesiastical adherents. In the
+Scottish literature of the time both tendencies are embodied in
+important historical works; the latter principally in Spottiswood's
+Church History, which represents the royalist views and is not without
+merit in point of form, so that even at the present day it can be read
+with pleasure; the former in contemporary notices of passing events
+which were composed in the language and even in the dialect of the
+country, and which in many places are the foundation even of Buchanan's
+history. They are the most direct expression of national and religious
+views, as they found vent in the assemblies of preachers and elders; in
+them we feel the life-breath of Presbyterianism. Calderwood and the
+younger Melville, who collected everything which came to hand, espoused
+the popular ideas; for information on facts and their causes they are
+invaluable, although in respect of form they do not rival Spottiswood,
+who, like them, employs the language of the country.</p>
+
+<p>It might perhaps be said that it was in Scotland that the two systems
+arose which since that time, although in various shapes, have divided
+Britain and Europe. In the historians just mentioned we might see the
+types of two schools, whose opposite conceptions of universal and
+especially of English history, set forth by writers of brilliant
+ability, have exercised the greatest influence upon prevailing ideas.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[Pg 453]</a></span>
+In England these ideas certainly gained admission, but they did not make
+way at that time. When Richard Hooker expresses the popular ideas as to
+the primitive free development of society, this is done principally in
+order to point out the extensive authority of the legislative power even
+over the clergy, and to defend the ecclesiastical supremacy of the
+English crown, which had been established by the enactments of that very
+power. The question was mooted how far the sovereign was above the laws.
+Many wished to derive these prerogatives from the laws; others rejected
+them. Among those who maintained them unconditionally Walter Ralegh
+appears, in whose works we find a peculiar deduction of them in the
+statement that the sovereign, according to Justinian's phrase, was the
+living law: he derives the royal authority from the Divine Will, which
+the will of man could only acknowledge. He says in one place that the
+sovereign stands in the same relation to the law, as a living man to a
+dead body.</p>
+
+<p>What a remarkable work would it have been, had Walter Ralegh himself
+recorded the history of his time. But the opposition between parties was
+not so outspoken in England as in Scotland; it had not to justify itself
+by general principles, to which men could give their adhesion; it
+contained too much personal ill-feeling and hatred for any one who was
+involved in the strife to have been able to find satisfaction in
+expressing himself on this head. The history of the world which Walter
+Ralegh had leisure to write in his prison, is an endeavour to put
+together the materials of Universal History as they lay before him from
+ancient times, and so make them more intelligible. He touches on the
+events of his age only in allusions, which excited attention at the
+time, but remain obscure to posterity.</p>
+
+<p>In direct opposition to the Scots, especially to Buchanan, Camden, who
+wrote in Latin like the former, composed his Annals of the Reign of
+Queen Elizabeth. His contemporary, De Thou, borrowed much from Buchanan.
+Camden reproaches him with this, partly because in Scotland men preached
+atrocious principles with regard to the authority of the people and
+their right of keeping their kings in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[Pg 454]</a></span>
+order. The elder Cecil had
+invited him to write the history of the Queen, and had communicated to
+him numerous documents for this purpose, which were either in his own
+possession or belonged to the national archives. Camden set cautiously
+to work, and went slowly on. He has himself depicted the trouble it cost
+him to decipher the historical contents of these scattered and dusty
+papers. He has certainly not surmounted all the difficulties which stand
+in the way of composing a contemporary history. Here and there we find
+even in his pages a regard paid to the living, especially to King James
+himself, which we would rather see away. But such passages are rare.
+Camden's Annals take a high rank among histories of contemporary
+transactions. They are of such authenticity in regard to facts, and show
+so intimate an acquaintance with causes gathered from trustworthy
+information, that we can follow the author, even where we do not possess
+the documents to which he refers. His judgments are moderate and at the
+same time in all important questions they are decided.</p>
+
+<p>When we read Camden's letters we become acquainted with a circle of
+scholars engaged in the severest studies. In his Britannia, which gives
+a more complete and instructive picture of the country than any other
+work, they all took a lively interest. Their works are clumsy and
+old-fashioned, but they breathe a spirit of thoroughness and breadth
+which does honour to the age. With what zeal were ecclesiastical
+antiquities studied in Cambridge, after Whitaker had pointed the way!
+Men sought to weed out what was spurious, and in what was genuine to set
+aside the part due to the accidental forms of the time, and to penetrate
+to the bottom of the sentiments, the belief, and activity of the
+writers. The constitution of the Church naturally led them to devote
+special study to the old provincial councils. For the history of the
+country they referred to the monuments of Anglo-Saxon times, and began
+even in treating of other subjects to bring the original sources to
+light. Everywhere men advanced beyond the old limits which had been
+drawn by the tradition
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[Pg 455]</a></span>
+of chroniclers and the lack of historical
+investigation hitherto shown.</p>
+
+<p>Francis Bacon was attracted by the task of depicting at length a modern
+epoch, the history of the Tudors, with the various changes which it
+presented and the great results it had introduced, in which he saw the
+unity of a connected series of events. Yet he has only treated the
+history of the first of that line. He furnishes one of the first
+examples of exact investigation of details combined with reflective
+treatment of history, and has exercised a controlling influence on the
+manner and style of writing English history, especially by the
+introduction of considerations of law, which play a great part in his
+work. The political points of view which are present to the author are
+almost more those of the beginning of the seventeenth than those of the
+beginning of the sixteenth century. But these epochs are closely
+connected with each other. For what Henry VII established is just what
+James I, who loved to connect himself immediately with the former
+monarch, wished to continue. Bacon was a staunch defender of the
+prerogative.</p>
+
+<p>The dispute which arose between Bacon as a lawyer and Edward Coke
+deserves notice.</p>
+
+<p>Coke also has a place in literature. His reports are, even at the
+present day, known without his name simply as 'The Reports,' and his
+'Institutes' is one of the most learned works which this age produced.
+It is rather a collection provided with notes, but is instructive and
+suggestive from the variety of and the contrast of its contents. Coke
+traced the English laws to the remotest antiquity; he considered them as
+the common production of the wisest men of earlier ages, and at the same
+time as the great inheritance of the English people, and its best
+protection against every kind of tyranny, spiritual or temporal. Even
+the old Norman French, in which they were to a great extent composed, he
+would not part with, for a peculiar meaning attached itself, in his
+view, to every word.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand Bacon as Attorney-General formed the plan of
+comprising the common law in a code, by which a limit should be set to
+the caprice of the judges,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[Pg 456]</a></span>
+and the private citizen be better assured of
+his rights. He thought of revising the Statute-Book, and wished to erase
+everything useless, to remove difficulties, and to bring what was
+contradictory into harmony.</p>
+
+<p>Bacon's purpose coincided with the idea of a general system of
+legislation entertained by the King: he would have preferred the Roman
+law to the statute law of England. Coke was a man devoted to the letter
+of the law, and was inclined to offer that resistance to the sovereign
+which was implied in a strict adherence to the law as it was. In the
+conflict that arose the judges, influenced by his example, appealed to
+the laws as they were laid down, according to the verbal meaning of
+which they thought themselves bound to decide. Bacon maintained that the
+Judges' oath was meant to include obedience to the King also, to whom
+application must be made in every matter affecting his prerogative. This
+is probably what Queen Elizabeth also thought, and it was the decided
+opinion of King James. He made the man who cherished similar views his
+Lord Chancellor, and dismissed Coke from his service. Bacon when in
+office was responsible for a catastrophe which, as we shall see, not
+only ruined himself, but reacted upon the monarchy. The English,
+contemporaries and posterity alike, have taken the side of Coke. Yet
+Bacon's industry in business is not therefore altogether to be despised.
+He urged the King, who was disposed to judge hastily, to take time and
+to weigh the reasons of both parties. He gave the judges who went on
+circuit through the country the most pertinent advice. The directions
+which he drew up for the Court of Chancery have laid the foundations of
+the practice of that court, and are still an authority for it. His
+scheme of collecting and reforming the English laws still, even at the
+present day, appears to statesmen learned in the law to be an
+unavoidable necessity; and the opinion is spreading that steps must be
+taken in this matter in the direction already pointed out by Bacon.</p>
+
+<p>Bacon was one of the last men who identified the welfare of England with
+the development of the monarchical element in the constitution, or at
+all events with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[Pg 457]</a></span>
+the preponderance of the authority of the sovereign
+within constitutional limits. The union of the three kingdoms under the
+ruling authority of the King appeared to him to contain the foundation
+of the future greatness of Britain. With the assertion of the authority
+of the sovereign he connected the hope of a reform of the laws of
+England, of the establishment of a comprehensive system of colonisation
+in Ireland, and of the assimilation of the ecclesiastical and judicial
+constitution of Scotland to English customs. He loved the monarchy
+because he expected great things from it.</p>
+
+<p>But it cannot be denied that he brought his ideas into a connexion with
+his interests, which was fatal to the acceptance of the former. His is
+just a case in which we feel relieved when we turn from the disputes of
+the day to the free domain of scientific activity, in which his true
+life was spent. He has indeed said himself that he was better fitted to
+hold a book in his hands than to shine upon the stage of the world. In
+his studies he had only science itself and the whole of the world before
+his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The scholastic system founded on Aristotle, the inheritance of centuries
+of ecclesiastical supremacy, had been assailed some time before he took
+up the subject; and the inductive method which he opposed to that system
+was not anything quite new. But the idea of Bacon had the most
+comprehensive tendency: it tended to free the thoughts and enquiries of
+men of science from the assumptions of a speculative theology which
+regulated their spiritual horizon. The most renowned adversaries of
+scholasticism he had to encounter in turn, because they covered things
+with a new web of words and theories which he could not accept. He
+thought to free men from the deceptive notions by which their minds are
+prepossessed, from the fascination of words which throw a veil over
+things, and of tradition consecrated by great names, and to open to them
+the sphere of the certain knowledge of experience. Nature is in his eyes
+God's book, which man must study directly for His glory and for the
+relief of man's estate; he thought that men must start from sense and
+experience, in order that by intercourse with things they might discover
+the cause of phenomena.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[Pg 458]</a></span>
+He would have preferred for his own part to
+have been the architect of an universal science, an outline of which he
+had already composed; but he possessed the self-restraint to hold back
+from this in the first instance, to work at details, and to make
+experiments, or, as he once says, to contribute the bricks and stones
+which might serve for the great work in the future. He only wanted more
+complete devotion and more adequate knowledge for his task. His method
+is imperfect, his results are untrustworthy in points of detail; but his
+object is grand. He designates the insight for which he labours by the
+Heraclitean name of dry light, that is, a light which is obscured by no
+partiality and no subordinate aim. He would place the man who possesses
+it as it were upon the mountain top, at the foot of which errors chase
+one another like clouds. And in his eyes the satisfaction of the mind is
+not the only interest at stake, but such discoveries as rouse the
+activity of men and promote their welfare. Nature is at the same time
+the great storehouse of God: the dominion over nature which men
+originally possessed must be restored to them.</p>
+
+<p>In these speculations the philosopher became aware that there was a risk
+lest men should imagine that by this means they could also discover the
+nature of God. Bacon lays down a complete separation of these two
+provinces; for he thinks that men can only attain to second causes, not
+to the first cause, which is God; and that the human mind can only cope
+with natural things; that divine things on the contrary confuse it. He
+will not even investigate the nature of the human soul, for it does not
+owe its origin to the productive powers of nature, but to the breath of
+God.</p>
+
+<p>It had been from the beginning the tendency of those schools of
+philosophy erected on the basis of ancient systems, in which Latin and
+Teutonic elements were blended, to transfuse faith with scientific
+knowledge; but Bacon renounces this attempt from the beginning. He puts
+forward with almost repulsive abruptness the paradoxes which the
+Christian must believe: he declares it an Icarian flight to wish to
+penetrate these secrets: but so much stronger is the impulse he seeks to
+give the human mind in the direction of enquiry
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[Pg 459]</a></span>
+into natural objects.<a name="FNanchor_379_379" id="FNanchor_379_379"></a><a href="#Footnote_379_379" class="fnanchor">[379]</a></p>
+
+<p>Among these he ranks the state of human society, to which all his life
+long he devoted a careful and searching observation. His Essays are not
+at all sceptical, like the French essays, from which he may have
+borrowed this appellation: they are thoroughly dogmatic. They consist of
+remarks on the relations of life as they then presented themselves,
+especially upon the points of contact between private and public life,
+and of counsels drawn from the perception of the conflicting qualities
+of things. They are extremely instructive for the internal relations of
+English society. They show wide observation and calm wisdom, and, like
+his philosophical works, are a treasure for the English nation, whose
+views of life have been built upon them.</p>
+
+<p>What better legacy can one generation leave to another than the sum of
+its experiences which have an importance extending beyond the fleeting
+moment, when they are couched in a form which makes them useful for all
+time? Herein consists the earthly immortality of the soul.</p>
+
+<p>But another possession of still richer contents and of incomparable
+value was secured to the English nation by the development of the drama,
+which falls just within this epoch.</p>
+
+<p>In former times there had been theatrical representations in the palaces
+of the kings and of great men, in the universities, and among judicial
+and civic societies. They formed part of the enjoyments of the Carnival
+or contributed to the brilliancy of other festivities; but they did not
+come into full existence until Elizabeth allowed them to the people by a
+general permission. In earlier times the scholars of the higher schools
+or the members of learned fraternities, the artisans in the towns, and
+the members of the household of great men and princes, had themselves
+conducted the representation. Actors by profession now arose, who
+received pay and performed the whole year
+round.<a name="FNanchor_380_380" id="FNanchor_380_380"></a><a href="#Footnote_380_380" class="fnanchor">[380]</a>
+A number of small<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[Pg 460]</a></span>
+theatres grew up which, as they charged but low entrance-fees, attracted
+the crowd, and while they influenced it, were influenced by it in turn.
+The government could not object to the theatre, as the principal
+opposition which it had to fear, that of the Puritans, shut itself out
+from exercising any influence over the drama, owing to the aversion of
+their party to it. The theatres vied with one another: each sought to
+bring out something new, and then to keep it to itself. The authors,
+among whom men of distinguished talent were found, were not unfrequently
+players as well. All materials from fable and from history, from the
+whole range of literature, which had been widely extended by native
+productions and by appropriation from foreign sources, were seized, and
+by constant elaboration adapted for an appreciative public.</p>
+
+<p>While the town theatres and their productions were thus struggling to
+rise in mutual rivalry, the genius of William Shakspeare developed
+itself: at that time he was lost among the crowd of rivals, but his fame
+has increased from age to age among posterity.</p>
+
+<p>It especially concerns us to notice that he brought on the stage a
+number of events taken from English history itself. In the praise which
+has been lavishly bestowed on him, of having rendered them with
+historical truth, we cannot entirely agree. For who could affirm that
+his King John and Henry VIII, his Gloucester and Winchester, or even his
+Maid of Orleans, resemble the originals whose names they bear? The
+author forms his own conception of the great questions at issue. While
+he follows the chronicle as closely as possible, and adopts its
+characteristic traits, he yet assigns to each of the personages a part
+corresponding to the peculiar view he adopts: he gives life to the
+action by introducing motives which the historian cannot find or accept:
+characters which stand close together in tradition, as they probably did
+in fact, are set apart in his pages, each of them in a separately
+developed homogeneous existence of its own: natural human motives, which
+elsewhere appe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[Pg 461]</a></span>ar only in private life, break the continuity of the
+political action, and thus obtain a twofold dramatic influence. But if
+deviations from fact are found in individual points, yet the choice of
+events to be brought upon the stage shows a deep sense of what is
+historically great. These are almost always situations and entanglements
+of the most important character: the interference of the spiritual power
+in an intestine political quarrel in King John: the sudden fall of a
+firmly seated monarchy as soon as ever it departs from the strict path
+of right in Richard III: the opposition which a usurping prince, Henry
+IV, meets with at the hands of the great vassals who have placed him on
+the throne, and which brings him by incessant anxiety and mental labour
+to a premature grave: the happy issue of a successful foreign
+enterprise, the course of which we follow from the determination to
+prepare for it, to the risk of battle and to final victory; and then
+again in Henry V and Henry VI, the unhappy position into which a prince
+not formed by nature to be a ruler falls between violent contending
+parties, until he envies the homely swain who tends his flocks and lets
+the years run by in peace: lastly the path of horrible crime which a
+king's son not destined for the throne has to tread in order to ascend
+it: all these are great elements in the history of states, and are not
+only important for England, but are symbolic for all people and their
+sovereigns. The poet touches on parliamentary or religions questions
+extremely seldom; and it may be observed that in King John the great
+movements which led to Magna Charta are as good as left out of sight; on
+the contrary he lives and moves among the personal contrasts offered by
+the feudal system, and its mutual rights and duties. Bolingbroke's
+feeling that though his cousin is King of England yet he is Duke of
+Lancaster reveals the conception of these rights in the middle ages. The
+speech which Shakspeare puts into the mouth of the Bishop of Carlisle is
+applicable to all times. The crown that secures the highest independence
+appears to the poet the most desirable of all possessions, but the
+honoured gold consumes him who wears it by the restless care which it
+brings with it. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[Pg 462]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Shakspeare depicts the popular storms which are wont to accompany a free
+constitution in the plots of some of his Roman dramas: of these Plutarch
+instead of Holinshed furnishes the basis. He is right in taking them
+from a foreign country: for events nearer to his audience would have
+roused an interest of a different kind, and yet would not have had so
+universal a meaning. What could be more dramatic, for example, and at
+the same time more widely applicable than the contrast between the two
+speeches, by the first of which Caesar's murder is justified, while by
+the second the memory of his services is revived? The conception of
+freedom which the first brings to life is set in opposition to the
+thought of the virtues and services of the possessor of absolute power,
+and thrust by them into the background; but these same feelings are the
+deepest and most active in all ages and among all nations.</p>
+
+<p>But the attested traditions of ancient and modern times do not satisfy
+the poet in his wish to lay bare the depths of human existence. He takes
+us into the cloudy regions of British and Northern antiquity only known
+to fable, in which other contrasts between persons and in public affairs
+make their appearance. A king comes on the stage who in the plenitude of
+enjoyment and power is brought by overhasty confidence in his nearest
+kin to the extremest wretchedness into which men can fall. We see the
+heir to a throne who, dispossessed of his rights by his own mother and
+his father's murderer, is directed by mysterious influences to take
+revenge. We have before us a great nobleman, who by atrocious murders
+has gained possession of the throne, and is slain in fighting for it:
+the poet brings us into immediate proximity with the crime, its
+execution, and its recoil: it seems like an inspiration of hell and of
+its deceitful prophecies: we wander on the confines of the visible world
+and of that other world which lies on the other side, but extends over
+into this, where it forms the border-land between conscious sense and
+unconscious madness: the abysses of the human breast are opened to view,
+in which men are chained down and brought to destruction by powers of
+nature that dwell there unknown to them: all questions about existence
+and non-existence; about heaven, hell, and earth; about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[Pg 463]</a></span> freedom and
+necessity, are raised in these struggles for the crown. Even the
+tenderest feelings that rivet human souls to one another he loves to
+display upon a background of political life. Then we follow him from the
+cloudy North into sunny Italy. Shakspeare is one of the intellectual
+powers of nature; he takes away the veil by which the inward springs of
+action are hidden from the vulgar eye. The extension of the range of
+human vision over the mysterious being of things which his works offer
+constitutes them a great historical fact.</p>
+
+<p>We do not here enter upon a discussion of Shakspeare's art and
+characteristics, of their merits and defects: they were no doubt of a
+piece with the needs, habits, and mode of thought of his audience; for
+in what case could there be a stronger reciprocal action between an
+author and his public, than in that of a young stage depending upon
+voluntary support? The very absence of conventional rule made it easier
+to put on the stage a drama by which all that is grandest and mightiest
+is brought before the eyes as if actually present in that medley of
+great and small things which is characteristic of human life. Genius is
+an independent gift of God: whether it is allowed to expand or not
+depends on the receptivity and taste of its contemporaries.</p>
+
+<p>It is certainly no unimportant circumstance that Shakspeare brought out
+King Lear soon after the accession of James I, who, like his
+predecessor, loved the theatre; and that Francis Bacon dedicated to the
+King his work on the Advancement of Learning in the same year 1605.</p>
+
+<p>Of these two great minds the first bodied forth in imperishable forms
+the tradition, the poetry, and the view of the world that belonged to
+the past: the second banished from the domain of science the analogies
+which they offered, and made a new path for the activity displayed by
+succeeding centuries in the conquest of nature, and for a new view of
+the world.</p>
+
+<p>Many others laboured side by side with them. The investigation of nature
+had already entered on the path indicated by Bacon, and was welcomed
+with lively interest, especially among the upper classes. Together wit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[Pg 464]</a></span>h
+Shakspeare the less distinguished poets of the time have always been
+remembered. In many other departments works of solid value were written
+which laid a foundation for subsequent studies. Their characteristic
+feature is the union of the knowledge of particulars, which are grasped
+in their individuality, with a scientific effort directed towards the
+universal.</p>
+
+<p>These were the days of calm between the storms; halcyon days, as they
+have well been named, in which genius had sufficient freedom in
+determining its own direction to devote itself with all its strength to
+great creations.</p>
+
+<p>As the German spirit at the epoch of the Reformation, so the English
+spirit at the beginning of the seventeenth century, took its place among
+the rival nationalities which stood apart from one another on the domain
+of Western Christendom, and on whose exertions the advance of the human
+race depends. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_379_379" id="Footnote_379_379"></a><a href="#FNanchor_379_379"><span class="label">[379]</span></a> In a letter to Casaubon he says 'vitam et res humanas et
+medias earum turbas per contemplationes sanas et veras instructiores
+esse volo.' (Works vi. 51).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_380_380" id="Footnote_380_380"></a><a href="#FNanchor_380_380"><span class="label">[380]</span></a> Sam. Cox in Nicolas' Memoirs of Hatton, App. XXX.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="INT_V" id="INT_V"></a>BOOK V.</h2>
+
+<p class='center'><br />DISPUTES WITH PARLIAMENT DURING THE LATER YEARS OF THE REIGN OF JAMES I
+AND THE EARLIER YEARS OF THE REIGN OF CHARLES I. </p>
+
+<p>It has been my wish hitherto in my narrative to suppress myself as it
+were, and only to let the events speak and the mighty forces be seen
+which, arising out of and strengthened by each other's action in the
+course of centuries, now stood up against one another, and became
+involved in a stormy contest, which discharged itself in bloody and
+terrible outbursts, and at the same time was fraught with the decision
+of questions most important for the European world.</p>
+
+<p>The British islands, which in ancient times had been the extreme
+border-land, or even beyond the extreme border-land of civilisation, had
+now become one of its most important centres, and, owing to the union
+just effected, had taken a grand position among the powers of the world.
+But it is nevertheless clear at first sight that the constituent
+elements of the population were far from being completely fused. In many
+places in the two great islands the old Celtic stock still existed with
+its original character unaltered. The Germanic race, which certainly had
+an indubitable preponderance and was sovereign over the other, was split
+into two different kingdoms, which, despite the union of the two crowns,
+still remained distinct. The hostility of the two races was increased by
+a difference of religion, which was closely connected with this
+hostility though it was not merged in it. As a general rule the men of
+Celtic extraction remained true to the Roman Catholic faith, while the
+Germanic race was penetrated by Protestant convictions. Yet there were
+Protestants among the former, and we know how numerous and how powerful
+the Catholics were among the latter. Besides this, moreover, opposite
+tendencies with regard to ecclesiastical forms struck root in the two
+kingdoms. It was now the principal aim of the family by whose hereditary
+claim the two kingdoms and the islands had been united, not only to
+avert the strife of hostile elements, but also to reconcile them with
+one another, and to unite them in a single commonwealth under its
+authority, which all acknowledged and which it was desired to extend by
+such an union. This was a scheme which opened a great prospect, but at
+the same time involved no inconsiderable danger. Each of the two
+kingdoms watched jealously over its separate independence. They would
+not allow the dynasty to bring about a common government, which would
+thus have set itself up above them, and would have established a new
+kind of sovereignty over them. While the crown sought to enforce
+prerogatives which were contested, it had to encounter in both kingdoms
+the claims advanced by the holders of power in the nation, whom in turn
+it endeavoured to repress. The quarrel was complicated by a conception
+of the relations of the crown to foreign powers answering to its new
+position, and running counter to the national view. At the same time
+very perceptible analogies to this state of things were offered by the
+religious wars, which began to convulse the continent more violently
+than ever, and aroused corresponding feelings in the British isles. The
+dynasty which tried to appease the prevailing opposition of principles
+might find that, on the contrary, it rather fomented the strife, and was
+itself drawn into it. This in fact took place. Springs of action of the
+most opposite nature and antagonisms growing out of nationality,
+religion, and politics, which could not be understood apart from one
+another, co-operated in giving rise to events which do not form a single
+continuous course of action, but rather present a varied and changing
+result, due to elements which were grand and full of life, but still
+waited for their final settlement. It is clear how much this depended on
+the character and discernment of the king. </p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BV_I" id="BV_I"></a>
+JAMES I AND HIS ADMINISTRATION OF DOMESTIC GOVERNMENT.</p>
+
+<p>At one period of his youth James I had been accustomed to vary his
+application to his lessons with bodily exercises. At that age he had
+divided his days between learned studies and the chase of the smaller
+game in Stirling Park, accompanied in both pursuits by friends and
+comrades of the same age; and he retained during all his life the habits
+he had then formed.<a name="FNanchor_381_381" id="FNanchor_381_381"></a><a href="#Footnote_381_381" class="fnanchor">[381]</a>
+He spent only a couple of months in the year in
+London, or at Greenwich: he preferred Theobald's, and still more distant
+country seats like Royston and Newmarket, where he could give himself up
+to hunting. Even before sunrise he was in motion, surrounded by a small
+number of companions practised in the chase and selected for that
+object, amongst whom he was himself one of the most skilful. He thought
+that he might vie with Henry IV even in field sports; but he was not
+hindered by his fondness for these amusements from continuing his
+studies with unwearied application. He was impelled to these not,
+strictly speaking, by thirst for general knowledge, although he was not
+deficient in this, but principally by interest in the theological
+controversies which engaged the attention of the world. He more than
+once went through the voluminous works of Bellarmin; and, in order to
+verify the citations, he had the old editions of the Fathers and of the
+Decrees of the Councils sent him from Cambridge. In this task a learned
+bishop stood at his side to assist him. He endeavoured with many a work
+of his own to thrust himself forward in the conflict of opinions. He had
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">[Pg 470]</a></span>
+the vanity of wishing to be regarded as the most learned man in the two
+kingdoms, but he could only succeed in passing for a storehouse of all
+sorts of knowledge; for a man who overestimates himself is commonly
+punished by disregard even of his real merits. These may not meet with
+recognition until later times. The writings of James I wore the pedantic
+dress of the age; but in the midst of scholastic argumentation we yet
+stumble upon apt thoughts and allusions. The images which he frequently
+employs have not that delicacy of literary feeling which avoids what is
+ungraceful, but they are original and sometimes striking in their
+simplicity. Naturally thorough and acute, he labours not without success
+to prove to his adversaries the untenableness of the grounds on which
+they proceed, or the logical fallacy of their conclusions. Here and
+there we catch the elevated tone of a consciousness that rests upon firm
+conviction. Even in conversation he sought to turn away from particulars
+as soon as they came under discussion, and to pass to general
+considerations, a province in which he felt most at home. In his
+incidental utterances which have been taken down, he displays sound
+sense and knowledge of mankind. It is especially worth noticing how he
+considers virtue and religion to be immediately connected with
+knowledge&mdash;the confusions in the world appear to him for the most part
+to arise from mediocrity of
+knowledge<a name="FNanchor_382_382" id="FNanchor_382_382"></a><a href="#Footnote_382_382" class="fnanchor">[382]</a>&mdash;and
+how highly moreover he
+estimates a sense for truth. He finds the most material difference
+between virtue and vice in the greater inward truthfulness of the
+former. King James delivers many other well-weighed principles of calm
+wisdom: it is only extraordinary how little his own practice
+corresponded with them.<a name="FNanchor_383_383" id="FNanchor_383_383"></a><a href="#Footnote_383_383" class="fnanchor">[383]</a>
+When in one of his earlier writings we mark
+the seriousness with which he speaks of the duty
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">[Pg 471]</a></span>
+incumbent on a king of
+testing men of talent, of measuring their capacity, and of appointing
+his servants not according to inclination but according to merit, we
+should expect to find him in this respect a careful and conscientious
+ruler. Instead of this we find that he always has favourites, whose
+merits no one can discover; to whom he stands in the extraordinarily
+compound relation of father, teacher, and friend, and to whom he allows
+a share in the power which he possesses. He could never free himself
+from a ruinous prodigality towards those about him, in spite of
+resolutions of amendment. How soon were the costly objects flung away
+which Elizabeth had collected and left behind at her
+death!<a name="FNanchor_384_384" id="FNanchor_384_384"></a><a href="#Footnote_384_384" class="fnanchor">[384]</a>
+How many possessions or sources of revenue accruing to the crown did he
+allow to pass into private hands! Any regulation of his household
+expenditure was as little to be expected from him in England as in
+Scotland. Like the princes of the thirteenth century he considered that
+the royal power assigned him privileges and advantages in which he had a
+full right to allow his favourites and servants to share. Not seldom the
+most scandalous abuses were connected with these: for instance, when the
+court was to be provided with the common necessaries of life during its
+journeys, it was required that they should be delivered to it at low
+prices: the servants exacted more supplies than were wanted, and then
+sold the surplus for their own profit. In grotesque contrast with the
+disgraceful cupidity of his attendants is the exaggerated conception
+which James had formed for himself of the ideal importance of the royal
+authority, which at that time some persons attempted with metaphysical
+acuteness to lay down almost in the same terms as the attributes of the
+Deity. He had similar notions about his dignity and the unconditional
+obligation of his subjects. Even in his Parliamentary speeches he did
+not refrain from expressing them. He made no secret of them in his life
+in the country, where he met with unbounded veneration from every one.
+It was remarked as a point of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">[Pg 472]</a></span>
+contrast between him and Elizabeth, that
+while she had always spoken of the love of her subjects, James on the
+contrary was always talking of the obedience which they owed him on the
+ground of divine and human right. And people recognised many other
+points of contrast between them besides
+this.<a name="FNanchor_385_385" id="FNanchor_385_385"></a><a href="#Footnote_385_385" class="fnanchor">[385]</a>
+When the Queen had formed a resolution, she had never shrunk from the trouble of directing
+her attention to its execution even in the minutest details. King James
+did not possess this ardour; for he could not descend from the world of
+studies and general views in which he lived, to take a searching
+interest in the business of the government or of justice. He had indeed
+been known to say that it was annoying to him to hear the arguments on
+both sides quietly discussed in a question of right submitted to him;
+for that in that case he was unable to come to any conclusion. The Queen
+loved gallant men and characters distinguished for boldness: the King
+was without any sense of military merit, and felt uncomfortable in the
+presence of men of enterprising spirit. He thought that he could only
+trust those whom he had chained to himself by favours, presents, and
+benefits. The Queen served as a pattern of everything which was proper
+and becoming. James, who restricted himself to the intercourse of a few
+intimate friends, formed attachments which he thought were to serve as
+the rule of life. He himself was slovenly; in England, as formerly in
+Scotland, he neglected his appearance, and indulged in eccentricities
+which appeared repulsive to others, and were taken amiss from him. Even
+at that time there was a common feeling in England in favour of what is
+becoming in good society; and although the feeling was for a long time
+less deeply engraved on men's minds, and less sensitive to every outrage
+than it became at a later period, men did not pardon the King for coming
+into collision with it.</p>
+
+<p>Hence this sovereign appeared in complete contradiction with himself.
+Careless, petty, and at the same time most unusually proud; a lover of
+pomp and ceremony, yet fond of solitude and retirement; fiery and at the
+same time<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">[Pg 473]</a></span>
+lax; a man of genius and yet pedantic; eager to acquire and
+reckless in giving away; confidential and imperious; even in little
+matters of daily life not master of himself, he often did what he would
+afterwards rather have left undone. With all his knowledge and
+acuteness, the high flight of his thoughts was often allied to a moral
+weakness which among all circles did serious injury to that reverence
+which had hitherto been reserved for those who held the highest
+authority, and which was partly bestowed even on him. It could not seem
+likely that such a man should be able to exercise great influence on the
+fortunes of Britain.</p>
+
+<p>He did however exercise such an influence. He gave the tone to the
+policy of the Stuart dynasty, and introduced the complication in which
+the destiny of his descendants was involved.</p>
+
+<p>In the first years of his reign in England, so long as Robert Cecil was
+alive, King James exercised no deep influence. The Privy Council
+possessed to the full the authority which belonged to it by old custom.
+James used simply to confirm the resolutions which were adopted in the
+bosom of the Council under the influence of the Treasurer: he appears in
+the reports of ambassadors as a phantom-king, and the minister as the
+real ruler of the country.<a name="FNanchor_386_386" id="FNanchor_386_386"></a><a href="#Footnote_386_386" class="fnanchor">[386]</a>
+After the death of Cecil all this was
+changed. The King knew the party-divisions which prevailed in the
+Council: he let its members have their own way, and even connived at the
+relations they formed with foreign powers for their own interest; but he
+knew how to hold the balance between them, and in the midst of their
+divisions to carry out his own views. In those country seats, where no
+one seemed to take thought for anything except the pleasures of the
+chase and learned pursuits, the business of the state also was carried
+on in course of time with ever-increasing ardour.<a name="FNanchor_387_387" id="FNanchor_387_387"></a><a href="#Footnote_387_387" class="fnanchor">[387]</a>
+The secretaries about the King were incessantly busy, while the secretaries' chambers
+in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">[Pg 474]</a></span>
+London were idle. Great affairs were generally transacted between
+the King and the favourite in the ascendant at the time, in conferences
+to which only a few others were admitted, and sometimes not even these.
+The King himself decided; and the resolutions which were taken were
+communicated to the Privy Council, which gradually became accustomed to
+do nothing more than invest them with the customary forms. If it be
+asked what the object of the King's efforts was, the answer must be that
+it was to set the exercise of the supreme power free from the
+controlling influence of the men of high rank to whom the King had
+deferred on his first accession. This was generally the aim of the great
+rulers of that century. This had been the principal end of the policy of
+Philip II of Spain during his long political life: however the Kings and
+Queens of France may have differed on other points, they were all, both
+Henry III and Henry IV, Mary de' Medici while she was regent, and Lewis
+XIII so soon as he succeeded to the exercise of power, at one in this
+endeavour. James, who was a new sovereign in one of his kingdoms, and
+almost always absent from the other, had more difficulties in his way
+than other monarchs. Wherever it was possible he proceeded with energy
+and rigour. People were astonished when they reckoned up the number of
+considerable men who served him in high offices, and were then deprived
+of them. He laboured incessantly to make way for the impartial exercise
+of justice in the King's name throughout Scotland, in spite of the
+privileges of the great Scottish nobles as its administrators. In his
+ecclesiastical arrangements in that country, he was fond of insisting on
+his personal wishes: in cases of emergency indeed he made known that all
+the treasures of India were not of so much value in his eyes as the
+observance of his ordinances; and he threatened the opponents of the
+royal will with the King's anger, to which he then gave
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">[Pg 475]</a></span>
+unbridled indulgence.<a name="FNanchor_388_388" id="FNanchor_388_388"></a><a href="#Footnote_388_388" class="fnanchor">[388]</a>
+As he looked upon the Church of England as the best
+bulwark against the influence of the Jesuits which he feared on the one
+side, and that of the Puritans which he hated on the other, it was
+naturally his foremost endeavour to fortify his power, and to unite the
+two kingdoms with one another by the promotion and spread of the forms
+of that Church. The essential motive of his system of colonisation in
+Ireland was the wish to establish the Church, by the aid of which he
+designed to subjugate or to suppress hostile elements. In England he
+imparted to it a character still more clerical and removed from
+Presbyterianism than that which had previously distinguished it: he
+wished it to be as much withdrawn as possible from the action of civil
+legislation. But in proportion as he supported himself on the Church he
+fell out with the Parliament, in which aristocratic tendencies and
+sympathies with popular rights and with Puritanism were blended with a
+feeling of independence that was hateful to him. He once said that five
+hundred kings were assembled there, and he thought that he was
+fulfilling a duty in resisting them. The most momentous questions
+affecting constitutional rights in regard to the freedom of elections,
+freedom of speech, the limits of legislative power, and above all the
+right of granting taxes, were brought forward under King James. And on
+every other side he saw himself involved in a struggle with hostile
+privileges and proud independent powers, from whose ascendancy both in
+Church and State he was careful to keep himself free, while at the same
+time he did not proceed to extremities or come to an absolute rupture.
+He was naturally disposed, and was moreover led by circumstances, to
+make it a leading rule of conduct, to adhere immovably to principles
+which he had once espoused, and never to lose sight of them; but, having
+done this, to appear vacillating and irresolute in matters of detail.
+His position abroad involved the same apparent contradiction. Placed in
+the midst of great rival powers, and never completely certain of the
+obedience of his subjects, he sought
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">[Pg 476]</a></span>
+to ensure the future for himself
+by crafty and hesitating conduct. All the world complained that they
+could not depend on him; each party thought that he was blinded by the
+other. Those however who knew him more intimately assure us that we must
+not suppose that he did not apprehend the snares which were laid for
+him; that if only he were willing to use his eyes, he was as
+clear-sighted as Argus; that there was no prince in the world who had
+more insight into affairs or more cleverness in transacting them. They
+say that if he appeared to lack decision, this arose from his fine
+perception of the difficulties arising from the nature of things and
+their necessary consequences; that he was just as slow and circumspect
+in the execution as he was lively and expeditious in the discussion of
+measures; that he knew how to moderate his choleric temperament by an
+intentional reserve,<a name="FNanchor_389_389" id="FNanchor_389_389"></a><a href="#Footnote_389_389" class="fnanchor">[389]</a>
+and that even his absence from the capital and
+his residence in the country were made to second this systematic
+hesitation; that, if a disputed point awaited decision, instead of
+attending a meeting with the Privy Councillors who were with him, he
+would take advantage of a fine day to fly his falcons, for he thought
+that something might happen in the meanwhile, or some news be brought
+in, and that the delay of an hour had often ere now been found
+profitable.</p>
+
+<p>It was then through no mere weakness on King James's part that he
+conceded power to a favourite. In a letter to Robert Carr he describes
+what he thought he had found in him, viz. a man who did not allow
+himself to be diverted a hair's-breadth from his
+service,<a name="FNanchor_390_390" id="FNanchor_390_390"></a><a href="#Footnote_390_390" class="fnanchor">[390]</a>
+who never betrayed a secret, and who had nothing before his eyes but the advantage
+and good name of his sovereign. The greater share that he secured for
+such a man in the management of affairs the greater the power which he
+believed that he himself exercised in them. The
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1613.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">[Pg 477]</a></span>
+favourite who depended
+entirely on the will of the king and knew his secrets, he supposed would
+be both feared and powerful as a first minister, and would pave the way
+by his influence upon the state for the carrying out of the views of the
+sovereign. He thought that he could combine the government of the state
+and the advance of monarchical ideas, with the comfort of a domestic
+friendship with an inferior.</p>
+
+<p>James himself brought about the alliance, which we noticed, between
+Robert Carr, whom he raised to the earldom of Somerset, and the house of
+Howard. By the union of the hereditary importance of an old family that
+had almost always held the highest and most influential offices, with
+the favour of the King which carried with it the fullest authority, a
+power was in fact consolidated which for a while governed England. Henry
+Howard, Earl of Northampton, the Lord Treasurer Thomas Howard, Earl of
+Suffolk, and Robert Carr were considered the triumvirs of
+England.<a name="FNanchor_391_391" id="FNanchor_391_391"></a><a href="#Footnote_391_391" class="fnanchor">[391]</a>
+In the midst of this combination appears Lady Frances Howard, the
+daughter of the Earl of Suffolk, whose divorce from Essex and marriage
+with Somerset had sealed the political alliance between the two
+families. She was young and beautiful, with an expression of modesty and
+gentleness, but at the same time stately and brilliant, a fit creature
+to move in a society that revelled in the enjoyment of life, in the
+culture of the century, and in the possession of high rank. But what an
+abyss of dark impulses and unbridled passion sometimes lies hid under
+such a shining exterior! The Lady Frances had once sought to draw Prince
+Henry into her net. Many said that she had employed magic for this
+purpose; indeed they assumed that the early death of the Prince had been
+brought on partly by this
+means.<a name="FNanchor_392_392" id="FNanchor_392_392"></a><a href="#Footnote_392_392" class="fnanchor">[392]</a>
+Her marriage with the king's
+favourite was, if this be true, only a secondary satisfaction of her
+ambition, but yet a satisfaction which she could not forego. Somerset
+had an intimate friend, whose advice and services at a former period
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1615.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">[Pg 478]</a></span>
+had been very useful to him, but who opposed this marriage and fell out
+with him on account of it&mdash;his name was
+Overbury.<a name="FNanchor_393_393" id="FNanchor_393_393"></a><a href="#Footnote_393_393" class="fnanchor">[393]</a>
+Lady Frances swore to effect his death. We are revolted at the licence which personal
+hate enjoyed of misusing the power of the state, when we read that
+Overbury was first brought to the Tower, and then had creatures who
+could be relied on set about him there, with whose help the victim was
+removed out of the way by means of poison. Lady Frances was not the only
+female poisoner among the higher classes of society. This mode of
+assassination had spread in England as it had done in Italy and at times
+in France. In these transactions the most abandoned profligacy allied
+itself with the brilliancy and the advantages of a high position, but
+they foreboded a speedy ruin. The authority of Somerset awakened
+discontent and secret counterplots. He was naturally turbulent,
+obstinate, and insolent, and had the presumption to behave in his usual
+manner even to the King whom he set right with an air of intellectual
+superiority which revived in the King's breast bitter recollection of
+the years of his childhood. James put up with this conduct for a while;
+he then, against the will of the favourite, set his hand to raise to a
+level with him another young man, for whom he entertained a personal
+liking: at last the misunderstanding came to an open rupture. And at the
+same time an accident brought to light the circumstances of Overbury's
+death.<a name="FNanchor_394_394" id="FNanchor_394_394"></a><a href="#Footnote_394_394" class="fnanchor">[394]</a>
+All Somerset's old enemies raised their heads again, and
+proceedings were instituted against him and his wife which terminated in
+their condemnation.<a name="FNanchor_395_395" id="FNanchor_395_395"></a><a href="#Footnote_395_395" class="fnanchor">[395]</a>
+The King pardoned them, to the extent of
+allowing them to lead a life secluded from
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">[Pg 479]</a></span>
+the world; they resided afterwards in the same house, but, as far as is known, in complete
+separation without even seeing one another.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly before this event Henry Howard had died. Thomas Howard, whose
+wife was accused of exercising a pernicious and corrupt influence upon
+affairs, lost his office of High Treasurer. The place of Carr was
+occupied by the young man above referred to, whom Carr's adversaries had
+combined to push forward, George Villiers, a native of Leicestershire,
+where his family had lived upon their own ancestral property from the
+time of the Conquest. After the early death of his father, his mother, a
+Beaumont by birth, a lady still young and full of ambition and knowledge
+of the world, had educated him not only in the training of English
+schools but in French ways and manners, and had then brought him to
+court. He differed from Carr in being naturally good-tempered, and of a
+courteous obliging disposition, which won the heart of every
+one.<a name="FNanchor_396_396" id="FNanchor_396_396"></a><a href="#Footnote_396_396" class="fnanchor">[396]</a>
+Although no one doubted that he would be spoilt by a higher position,
+yet people thought that he could never become malicious like Somerset.
+Lord Pembroke and Archbishop Abbot both gave him a helping hand in his
+rise: the latter moved the Queen also, although she was not without
+scruples, to aid in it. Villiers was a man after the King's own heart,
+well-formed, capable of intellectual cultivation, devoted: in
+consequence of the favour and confidence of the King the youth, who
+after a time was created Duke of Buckingham, acquired a ruling position
+in the English state. The old Admiral Effingham, Earl of Nottingham,
+resigned his office in order to make room for him: some other high
+officials were appointed under his influence and according to his views;
+in a short time the white wands of the royal household and the
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1617.</span>
+under-secretaryships
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">[Pg 480]</a></span>
+and subordinate offices had been transferred to
+the hands of his adherents and friends.</p>
+
+<p>But foreign as well as domestic relations were affected by this change.
+Somerset had stood in the most confidential relations with the Spanish
+ambassador: he was accused of having betrayed to him the secrets of the
+state from his office.<a name="FNanchor_397_397" id="FNanchor_397_397"></a><a href="#Footnote_397_397" class="fnanchor">[397]</a>
+His wife, if not himself, was thought to
+have drawn money from Spain. Probably the intelligence of this
+behaviour, which came to the King's ears, contributed most to the
+downfall of Somerset. This event did not in itself involve a change of
+policy. In the advice which was given to the young favourite from a
+well-informed source, it is presupposed that the good understanding with
+Spain would continue: but it was now possible for the adversaries of
+this power to bestir themselves again. Some of the most conspicuous men
+of the other party, such as Winwood, the Secretary of State, would even
+have been glad if open war with Spain had immediately broken out.</p>
+
+<p>The mutual opposition between these powerful tendencies, and the men who
+made them their own, brought the career of Walter Ralegh to a close.</p>
+
+<p>Somerset was Ralegh's personal enemy, and had gained possession of his
+best estate. After his fall Ralegh was liberated from the Tower. He
+still lay under the weight of a sentence which had been pronounced
+against him on the occasion of the plot which bears his name. He might
+have purchased its removal; but he was assured by the most influential
+voices that he had nothing more to fear from it; and he thought that he
+could apply the money more profitably to the execution of the great
+design which he had long ago formed, and which he had never for an
+instant lost sight of during his captivity. A story was then afloat that
+after the destruction of the kingdom of Peru the descendants of the
+Incas had founded another kingdom
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">[Pg 481]</a></span>
+between the Amazon and the Orinoco,
+the Dorado of the Spaniards. It was Ralegh's ambition to open to his
+countrymen this region which would be easily accessible from the coasts,
+of which he had formerly taken possession in the name of England. The
+old reputation of Ralegh's name procured him sufficient support for his
+expedition, not only from the merchants, but also from wealthy private
+individuals; and the King gave him a patent which empowered him to sail
+to the ports of America still in possession of the heathen, in order to
+open commercial intercourse with them, and to spread the Christian,
+especially the Reformed, faith among
+them.<a name="FNanchor_398_398" id="FNanchor_398_398"></a><a href="#Footnote_398_398" class="fnanchor">[398]</a>
+In July 1617 Ralegh set sail from Plymouth harbour for this object, with seven ships of war and
+a number of small transports carrying about 700 men.</p>
+
+<p>It was presupposed that in such an enterprise all hostilities against
+the Spaniards would be avoided. When the Spanish ambassador complained
+of this expedition undertaken by a man who had already on one occasion
+been very troublesome to the Spanish colonies, the Privy Council
+answered that Ralegh was pledged by his instructions to do no damage to
+the Spaniards; and that 'if he violated them his head was there to pay
+for it.'<a name="FNanchor_399_399" id="FNanchor_399_399"></a><a href="#Footnote_399_399" class="fnanchor">[399]</a>
+The King himself repeated this answer to him.</p>
+
+<p>Ralegh in fact guarded against any collision with the Spaniards on his
+voyage. He was said not to have taken a single Spanish vessel, and he
+directed his course without stopping to Guiana, the goal which he had
+set before himself. But the Spaniards had become powerful there,
+although not until after his former visit. From Caraccas they had
+conquered the natives, who were engaged in internal wars, and had firmly
+established themselves at a short distance
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">[Pg 482]</a></span>
+from the coast. What was
+likely to happen if they opposed the forces which Ralegh landed to
+search for the gold mines which he had formerly seen there? Ralegh
+remembered full well what a danger he ran if he engaged in a struggle
+and fought with them: he knew that he was thereby forfeiting his life.
+But on the other side, was he to return without fulfilling his purpose,
+and to burden himself with the reproach of not having told the truth?
+Worst of all, was he to fail in effecting the object which he had
+entertained all his life long, and not to achieve the discovery on which
+he staked the future glory of his name? It was perhaps the greatest
+moment in a life that almost always lifts itself above the ordinary
+level, when the thirst for discovery gained the victory over
+considerations of legality and the danger involved in discarding them.
+And well might he have hoped that not only pardon but praise would have
+been accorded him, if he had actually obtained possession of the gold
+mines, by whatever means. He commanded his men when they advanced inland
+to behave to the Spaniards as the Spaniards behaved to them. A collision
+was thus unavoidable. It took place at S. Thomas, which was destroyed,
+but the Spaniards nevertheless had completely the superiority: Ralegh's
+only son was killed; and the captain who had the charge of the
+expedition was so disheartened that he committed suicide. These
+disasters involved the utter failure of the expedition. His crews, who
+were naturally insubordinate, quarrelled among themselves, and on the
+voyage home the fleet dispersed. Ralegh came back to England without an
+ounce of gold, and without having effected any result whatever: he
+appeared in the light of an adventurer who had wantonly desired to break
+the peace with Spain. And when the ambassador of this power asked for
+full and signal satisfaction, in order to restore the good understanding
+which Ralegh's enterprise had at once interrupted, was it to be expected
+that the King should take under his protection the man who had not
+complied with the conditions prescribed to him, and whom for other
+reasons he did not love? And moreover the pulse of free generosity which
+befits a sovereign did not beat in the breast of King James. He
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1618.</span>
+consented that the old
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">[Pg 483]</a></span>
+sentence of condemnation, for fifteen years
+suspended over Ralegh's head, should now be enforced against him. It had
+been pronounced against him for entering into a secret alliance with
+Spain; an attack on Spain led to its execution. Ralegh and the King
+exhibit a contrast between ambition that scorns danger on the one side,
+and caution that supports itself by the forms of law on the other, such
+as even in England has hardly ever been so sharply drawn. The King could
+not possibly get any good by his conduct. The position of England in the
+world depended upon the resistance that she offered to the preponderance
+of Spain in both the Indies and in Europe. The King detached himself
+from one of the chief interests of the nation when he allowed a felon's
+death to be inflicted on the man of lofty genius, who had undertaken, by
+an ill-advised attempt it is true, to give effect in America to this
+feeling of world-wide opposition. James thought that his welfare lay in
+maintaining the peace with Spain. But we know that at an earlier date he
+had entered on a course adverse to Spain, and that even now he had not
+entirely renounced it. What confusion must eventually follow from this
+divided policy! </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_381_381" id="Footnote_381_381"></a><a href="#FNanchor_381_381"><span class="label">[381]</span></a> Ant. Foscarini, Relatione 1618: 'Il re ritiene questa
+sorte di vita nella quale fu habituato, e spende tutto il tempo che puo
+nella caccia e ne studj.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_382_382" id="Footnote_382_382"></a><a href="#FNanchor_382_382"><span class="label">[382]</span></a> 'Crums fallen from King James' Table, or his Table Talk.'
+MS. in the British Museum.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_383_383" id="Footnote_383_383"></a><a href="#FNanchor_383_383"><span class="label">[383]</span></a> Wilson, James I, 289: 'He had pure notions in conception,
+but could bring few of them into action, though they tended to his own
+preservation.' Wilson, Weldon, and the notices in Balfour, are certainly
+all of them deeply tinged with party feeling. The elder Disraeli is
+quite right in rejecting them: but his own conception is very
+unsatisfactory. Gardiner (1863) avoids unauthenticated statements; but
+the views of James' character which have grown up and established
+themselves owing to the commonplace repetition of such statements,
+control his representation of it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_384_384" id="Footnote_384_384"></a><a href="#FNanchor_384_384"><span class="label">[384]</span></a> Foscarini: 'A due sorti di persone dona particolarmente,
+a grandi et a quelli che gli assistono che sono quasi tutti Scocesi, e
+non vaca cosa alcuna della quale possino cavar utile, che non la
+demandino e nello stesso momento obtengono.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_385_385" id="Footnote_385_385"></a><a href="#FNanchor_385_385"><span class="label">[385]</span></a> Harrington: Nugae Antiquae i.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_386_386" id="Footnote_386_386"></a><a href="#FNanchor_386_386"><span class="label">[386]</span></a> Niccolo Molino, Relatione 1607: 'A abandonato e messo
+dietro le spalle tutti gli affari li quali lascia al suo consiglio ed a
+suoi ministri, onde si puo dire con verità ch'egli sia principe di nome
+e Più tosto d'apparenza che d'effetto.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_387_387" id="Footnote_387_387"></a><a href="#FNanchor_387_387"><span class="label">[387]</span></a> A. Foscarini 1618: 'In campagna gli viene di giorno in
+giorno dal consiglio che risiede per ordinario in Londra dato conto di
+quanto passa et inviatigli spacci e corrieri: tratta e risolve molte
+cose con il consiglio solo de suoi favoriti.&mdash;Risolve per ordinario in
+momenti et havendo seco segretarii per gli affari d'Inghilterra, per
+quelli di Scotia e Ibernia comanda ciascuno di essi, quanto occorre e
+vuol che si faccia in tutti i suoi regni.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_388_388" id="Footnote_388_388"></a><a href="#FNanchor_388_388"><span class="label">[388]</span></a> Calderwood, vii. 311, 434, &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_389_389" id="Footnote_389_389"></a><a href="#FNanchor_389_389"><span class="label">[389]</span></a> Girolamo Lando, Relatione 1622: '(S. M. è) inclinata
+all'ambiguita et alla dimora non gia per naturale complessione impastata
+di foco, colerico et molto ardente, ma perche vuol darsi a credere di
+cavare della protrattione del tempo ciò, che desidera&mdash;conli scemi
+dell'ira tenendo pure quelli della mansuetudine.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_390_390" id="Footnote_390_390"></a><a href="#FNanchor_390_390"><span class="label">[390]</span></a> 'Unmoveable in one hair that might concern me against the
+whole world.' James to Somerset, in Halliwell ii. 127; certainly one of
+the most important documents in this collection.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_391_391" id="Footnote_391_391"></a><a href="#FNanchor_391_391"><span class="label">[391]</span></a> Narrative of Abbot in Rushworth i. 460.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_392_392" id="Footnote_392_392"></a><a href="#FNanchor_392_392"><span class="label">[392]</span></a> A. Foscarini, 1615 Nov. 13. 'Si mantiene viva la voce e
+sospetto del principe defonto.' Nov. 20, 'Avanthieri parti il re, che
+per questo accidente e per le gravi dissensioni ed odii che regna in
+corte si mostra molto addolorato.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_393_393" id="Footnote_393_393"></a><a href="#FNanchor_393_393"><span class="label">[393]</span></a> The personal motive of the estrangement might have lain
+in Overbury's speech to Somerset, mentioned by Payton during the trial:
+'"I will leave you free to yourself to stand on your own legs." My lord
+of Somerset answered his legs were strong enough to bear himself.'
+(State Trials ii. 978.) He wished to show that he could dispense with
+Overbury.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_394_394" id="Footnote_394_394"></a><a href="#FNanchor_394_394"><span class="label">[394]</span></a> According to Wilson, Ralph Winwood was informed by a
+confession made at Vliessingen. From a letter of Winwood extracted by
+Gardiner (History of England ii. 216) we only learn that Winwood
+received the first intimation: he reckons it as a proof of the justice
+of the King of England that he allowed the investigation to be made.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_395_395" id="Footnote_395_395"></a><a href="#FNanchor_395_395"><span class="label">[395]</span></a> Somerset intimated that he possessed secrets the
+disclosure of which would compromise the King: and there is nothing,
+however conjectural or infamous, which has not seemed to some among
+posterity to be probable on this ground. James I says, 'God knows it is
+only a trick of his idle brain, hoping thereby to shift his trial. I
+cannot hear a private message from him without laying an aspersion upon
+myself of being an accessory to his crime.' (Halliwell ii. 138.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_396_396" id="Footnote_396_396"></a><a href="#FNanchor_396_396"><span class="label">[396]</span></a> Girolamo Lando, Relatione 1622, praises him for
+'apparenza di modestia, benignita e cortesia,&mdash;bellezza, gratia,
+leggiadria del corpo, a tutti gli esercitii mirabilmente disposto.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_397_397" id="Footnote_397_397"></a><a href="#FNanchor_397_397"><span class="label">[397]</span></a> 'Che le lettere Più importanti del re sono passate in
+mano di Spagna.' Ant. Foscarini, Nov. 13, 1615. There is a letter of
+James I of October 20 which likewise supposes acts of treachery of this
+kind. What is true in this supposition we now learn from Digby's letter,
+in Gardiner, App. iii. 2.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_398_398" id="Footnote_398_398"></a><a href="#FNanchor_398_398"><span class="label">[398]</span></a> 'To the south parts of America or elsewhere within
+America possessed and inhabited by heathen and savage people.' So run
+the words of the commission: it is therein said expressly 'Sir Walter
+Ralegh being under the peril of the law.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_399_399" id="Footnote_399_399"></a><a href="#FNanchor_399_399"><span class="label">[399]</span></a> Dispaccio Veneto Feb. 10, 1617: 'Che le cose erano
+concertate che S. M. cattolica non avrebbe occasione di riceverne
+disgusto&mdash;che era fermamente del re, che il Rale andasse al suo viaggio,
+nel quale se avesse contravenuto alle suoi instruttioni&mdash;haveva la testa
+con che pagherebbe la disubbidienza.'</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BV_II" id="BV_II"></a>
+COMPLICATIONS ARISING OUT OF THE AFFAIRS OF THE PALATINATE.</p>
+
+<p>During these years there had been persons at the helm of state in most
+countries, who either from natural disposition or from a calculation of
+present circumstances had cherished peaceful views. In spite of all the
+activity of Spanish policy, Philip III and his minister Lerma clung to
+the principle that the rest needed to restore the strength of the
+exhausted monarchy must be granted to it. The Emperor Matthias owed the
+crown he wore to his alliance with the Protestants: his first minister
+Klesel, although a cardinal, was a lukewarm Catholic, and a man of
+conciliatory views in general. The Regent of France, Mary de' Medici,
+had surrendered the warlike designs of her husband when she entered on
+the exercise of sovereign power. Christian IV of Denmark held similar
+views. He declined the proposals of the Poles, which were aimed at a
+renewal of the war against Sweden: he preferred, with the approval of
+his council of state, to proceed with the building of towns and harbours
+in which he was engaged.</p>
+
+<p>Hence it was possible on the whole to carry out a policy such as that
+maintained by James I. It corresponded to the tone prevalent among the
+other powers.</p>
+
+<p>From time to time it seemed probable that the opposing forces which were
+contending with one another in the depths of European life, would burst
+forth and shatter the peaceful state of affairs. For the advancing
+revival of Catholicism roused the hostile feelings of Protestants, while
+the union of the German and the independent feeling of the Italian
+princes resisted the extension of the alliances of Spain. In the
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1617.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">[Pg 485]</a></span>
+year 1615, on the Netherland frontier, and in the year 1616 on the boundaries
+between Austria and Venice, warlike movements began which threatened to
+prove the commencement of a general struggle: but these were disputes of
+an essentially local nature, and peaceful dispositions still maintained
+the upper hand.</p>
+
+<p>But in the year 1617 and 1618 a question arose which no longer allowed
+this state of things to continue. It concerned the imperial dignity of
+Germany, but it exercised so powerful a secondary influence upon affairs
+most thoroughly English that even in a history of England a short
+discussion must be devoted to it.</p>
+
+<p>The increasing weakness of the Emperor Matthias rendered his speedy end
+probable; and all preparations were already being made in the house of
+Austria to secure the succession of the Archduke Ferdinand of Styria to
+the imperial throne, as well as to his own hereditary kingdoms and
+provinces. No arrangement could in itself have been more suitable in the
+nature of things. Ferdinand was the most vigorous scion of his house;
+and both the German Archdukes laid their own well-founded claims at his
+feet. A resignation on the part of Philip III of the claims which he
+inherited from his mother was thought indispensable: but even this
+created no difficulty. It was merely stipulated that Ferdinand should
+indemnify him for resigning them; and this he was willing to do. It only
+remained that the crown of the German Empire should also be assured to
+him. The Archdukes were eager for an immediate negotiation on the
+subject, and were already certain of the support of the spiritual
+electors.</p>
+
+<p>It is clear however that the succession was not merely a change of
+persons. The place of the peaceable and moderate Matthias would be
+filled by one of the most devoted pupils of the Jesuits in the person of
+Ferdinand, who had made himself terrible to the Protestants by an
+unsparing restoration of Catholicism in his own country. Moreover the
+alliance between the German and Spanish line, which had been loosened in
+the last few years, was to be consolidated into a union resting on
+common interests: so that it seemed likely that Austria would enjoy a
+supremacy like that which had been
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">[Pg 486]</a></span>
+established in the time of Charles
+V. The letters which passed between the members of that house, and which
+had accidentally been divulged, excited surprise by the note of general
+hostility which they struck, while the share of the Palatinate and of
+Brandenburg in the election was treated in them as a formality which
+could be dispensed with in case of
+necessity.<a name="FNanchor_400_400" id="FNanchor_400_400"></a><a href="#Footnote_400_400" class="fnanchor">[400]</a></p>
+
+<p>It is quite intelligible that the Protestants should be agitated by this
+discovery, and should entertain the idea of opposing the election of
+Ferdinand. Not that one of them thought of acquiring the throne for
+himself; they did not resist the election of a Catholic emperor as such,
+but they wished to guard against the resumption of the combination
+between the Austro-Spanish power and the prerogatives of the imperial
+crown. At first their eyes fell upon Duke Maximilian of Bavaria, whom
+they would by this means have for ever detached from that power. The
+Elector Frederick controlled the jealousy which, as Elector Palatine, he
+felt for a branch of the same house, and went to Munich in order to
+prevail on his cousin to consent to this arrangement; for, according to
+the plea advanced on grounds of imperial right, the imperial crown could
+not be allowed to become hereditary in the house of Austria. He hoped
+that the Archbishop Ferdinand of Cologne, the brother of the Duke of
+Bavaria, would support him, and that his influence would win over the
+other spiritual electors also. The Union and the League would then have
+combined to oppose the house of Austria.</p>
+
+<p>But meanwhile open resistance to the claims of this family had already
+broken out in its own provinces. While the Emperor Matthias was still
+alive, the Archduke Ferdinand, through the combination, as prescribed by
+Bohemian usage, of an election with the recognition of his hereditary
+claims,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_487" id="Page_487">[Pg 487]</a></span>
+had been acknowledged future King of Bohemia, and had been
+already crowned, on condition that he would not mix in public affairs
+before the death of his predecessor. But immediately after the
+coronation people thought that they could discover his hand in every act
+of the government. Cardinal Klesel, the man in whom the greatest
+confidence was reposed, especially by the Protestant portion of the
+Estates, had been overthrown owing to the influence of the Spanish
+ambassador. In opposition to the influence thus exercised, 'against the
+practices and snares of the Jesuits,' as the phrase ran, the zealous
+Protestants who, when Ferdinand was accepted as King, had been thrust
+into the background or had retired, now obtained the upper hand in the
+country, and proceeded to open insurrection while the Emperor Matthias
+was still alive. This Prince was the first who was overturned by the
+collision of the two parties, whose enmity was again reviving, and
+between whom he had thought of mediating. He was bitterly disappointed
+by his failure. After his death the Bohemians thought themselves
+justified in refusing any longer to acknowledge Ferdinand as their King,
+and in seeking on the contrary for a worthier successor to the throne,
+on the ground that in Ferdinand's election the traditional forms had not
+been accurately observed, and that he was undermining all religious and
+political freedom. Their eyes had even fallen on Catholic princes; but
+as the motive which prompted their resistance was certainly the
+religious one, their attention was still more drawn to the most eminent
+Protestant prince in their vicinity, Frederick Elector Palatine, who as
+head of the Union was himself the principal opponent of the election of
+Ferdinand as Emperor.</p>
+
+<p>On the very first steps taken in this matter, the King of England was
+affected by these movements. We learn that, on the occasion of the
+overtures made by Frederick, Maximilian of Bavaria had been moved to
+write to James I, and to express to him his satisfaction at the family
+connexion which had sprung up between them. The interest of the
+Palatinate and of England seemed one and the same, especially as the
+King was still considered a member and protector
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1618.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_488" id="Page_488">[Pg 488]</a></span>
+of the Union. The presumption that the son-in-law of the King of England would find
+support from his power, contributed greatly to the importance which the
+Elector at this moment enjoyed.</p>
+
+<p>But at the same time it was evident in what an embarrassing position
+James I was now placed, and that not only on account of the danger
+threatening the continuance of peace, which he thought no price too high
+to secure: his hands were tied not merely by this general consideration,
+but by another special reason as well. He was at that moment seriously
+engaged in a treaty for the marriage of his son with a Spanish infanta,
+which was to carry out the long-talked-of alliance between his family
+and the Austro-Spanish line.</p>
+
+<p>The first overtures in regard to the present Prince of Wales had been
+made by the Duke of Lerma to the English envoy, Digby, to whom he opened
+a proposal for the marriage of Prince Charles with Mary, daughter of
+Philip III. The Spanish ambassador, Gondomar, had then taken the
+management of the affair in hand. We should do him wrong by supposing
+that he wished to deceive the King. Gondomar rather belonged to the
+party who looked for the welfare of the Spanish monarchy in the
+maintenance of peace, especially with England. The scheme of the
+marriage was part of the system of powerful alliances by which it was
+sought to prop the greatness of Spain. Even the uncertain rumour of this
+scheme, which was instantly propagated, sufficed to agitate the
+Protestant party in Europe and in England itself. The King declared that
+he moved only with leaden foot towards the proposal which had been made
+to him; and that, if it were seen that the alliance was dangerous to
+religion or to existing agreements, it should never take effect. But
+even the Secretary of State, Ralph Winwood, who repeated this
+declaration, disapproved of the scheme, as did also the whole school of
+Robert Cecil. They had wished to marry the Prince to the daughter of a
+German line, perhaps to a Brandenburg princess; and the States General
+offered their money and their services in order to win the consent of
+any such princess, and to convey her to England. Many would have
+preferred even a domestic
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1619.</span>
+alliance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_489" id="Page_489">[Pg 489]</a></span>
+after the old fashion. Opposition
+was also offered on the part of the Church of England. Archbishop Abbot
+only delayed to urge it until the conditions of the marriage should come
+under discussion. But the King likewise had the approval of influential
+voices on his side. It was considered possible to conclude the marriage,
+and yet to preserve the other alliances of the country. People thought
+that England would in that case be only the more courted by both
+parties, and that the peace of the world would rest on the shoulders of
+the King.</p>
+
+<p>But what a contradiction was involved in the ascendancy which these
+ideas obtained? The hereditary right to the crown of Bohemia, which the
+estates of that country would no longer acknowledge, belonged to the
+house of Spain. It was intended that the Elector Palatine should step
+into its place by election; and this prince was son-in-law to the King.
+After James had married his daughter to the head of the Protestants in
+Germany, he conceived the thought of marrying his son to the member of a
+family which had made the patronage and protection of Catholicism its
+special calling. It seemed as if he was purposely introducing into his
+own family the disunion which rent Europe in twain.</p>
+
+<p>The negotiations in Germany after a time resulted in the victory of the
+house of Austria, which in spite of all opposition carried the day in
+the election of the Emperor. The Elector Palatine acknowledged Ferdinand
+II without hesitation. But almost at the same moment he received the
+news that he had himself been elected king by the Estates of Bohemia. It
+cannot be proved that he was privy to this beforehand: even the rumour
+that his wife urged him to accept the crown because she was a king's
+daughter meets with no confirmation. They were not so blind as not to
+perceive the enormous danger in which the acceptance of this offer would
+involve them. In reply to a question of the Elector, his wife answered
+that she regarded the election as a divine dispensation, that if he
+determined to accept it, which she left entirely to his consideration,
+she for her part was resolved to undergo everything that might follow
+from it. We must not regard as hypocrisy the prominence
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_490" id="Page_490">[Pg 490]</a></span>
+which the prince and the princess alike gave to religious considerations. Such was
+the fashion of the times generally, and especially of the party to which
+they belonged.</p>
+
+<p>The Elector Frederick however did not yet declare his decision. The
+question of the acceptance of the crown of Bohemia was debated from
+every point of view by the very councillors who had just been present at
+the election of the Emperor. Their decision was in favour of the prince
+inviting first of all the advice of his friends in the empire, of the
+States-General, but especially of the King of England, and making sure
+of their support.<a name="FNanchor_401_401" id="FNanchor_401_401"></a><a href="#Footnote_401_401" class="fnanchor">[401]</a>
+The Bohemian envoys, who most urgently requested
+an immediate answer, were put off with the reply that the Elector must
+first of all be certain of the consent of the father of his consort.
+Count Christopher Dohna was sent to England to persuade King James to
+give it. He was commissioned to deliver to him a letter from the
+Princess-Electress in which she most urgently entreated her father to
+support her husband and to prove his paternal love to them both.</p>
+
+<p>King James came now face to face with the greatest question of his life,
+which summed up and brought to light, so to speak, all the cross
+purposes and conflicting political aims among which he had long moved. A
+word from him was now of the greater consequence, as the States-General
+declared that they would act as he did. But what was his decision to be?
+He was not unmoved by the thought that the prospect of possessing a
+crown was opened to his son-in-law and grandchildren. On the other hand
+he was greatly impressed by a representation which the King of Spain
+forwarded to him, that his right to the crown of Bohemia was
+indisputable&mdash;as in fact the Spanish line had a contingent claim to the
+succession&mdash;and that he would contend for it with all his strength: on
+which King James said that he also as a great
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_491" id="Page_491">[Pg 491]</a></span>
+sovereign had an interest
+in seeing that no one was deprived of his own. The theories of James I
+about the hereditary rights of princes, the electoral rights of the
+Estates, and the influence of religious profession in these matters,
+presented themselves to his mind together with his wishes on the
+question of the aggrandisement of his dynasty. He remarked that it could
+not be allowed that subjects should presume to fall away from their
+sovereign on a question of religion; he even feared that this doctrine
+might react to his own prejudice on England. In these considerations the
+balance evidently was in favour of a refusal. James would have deserved
+well of the world if he had given utterance to that refusal, and had
+decisively dissuaded his son-in-law from accepting the crown. And from
+his oft-repeated assertions at a later period, to the effect that the
+Elector had proceeded on his own responsibility, we might think that he
+had expressed himself in definite terms in favour of a different course.</p>
+
+<p>In reality however this is not the case. He condemned the revolt of the
+Bohemians against Matthias: in regard to Ferdinand it was his opinion
+that they should prove from the old capitulations their right to declare
+his election and coronation invalid, and to proceed to a new election,
+in which case he would himself support
+them.<a name="FNanchor_402_402" id="FNanchor_402_402"></a><a href="#Footnote_402_402" class="fnanchor">[402]</a>
+He expressed himself
+in such a manner, that even members of the Privy Council received the
+impression that he would approve of and even support the acceptance of
+the crown when once it had taken place. Christopher Dohna relates that
+in the negotiations at that time he one day declared that his master,
+the Elector, was ready to refuse the crown if the King required him to
+do so; and that James replied, 'I do not say
+that.'<a name="FNanchor_403_403" id="FNanchor_403_403"></a><a href="#Footnote_403_403" class="fnanchor">[403]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_492" id="Page_492">[Pg 492]</a></span>
+Monarchs are set in authority in order that they may pronounce
+definitive decisions according to the best of their own judgment. It is
+sometimes their duty to take a decided line. James, who hitherto had
+always stood between different parties, could not nerve himself at this
+eventful moment for a firm and straightforward resolve. In the monstrous
+dilemma in which the various questions at issue were becoming involved
+he could not come to any decision. The kindest thing that can be said of
+him is that at this moment his nature was not equal to the requirements
+of the situation.</p>
+
+<p>Count Dohna, following the example of James's councillors, concluded
+from his expressions that he was not only not opposed to the acceptance
+of the crown, but that he would allow himself to be enlisted in its
+favour, and would support it. And there is no doubt that this view
+exercised a decisive influence upon the final resolution of the Elector
+Frederick. He certainly was already strongly inclined to accept the
+crown in opposition to his more clear-sighted and sagacious mother, but
+in agreement with his ardent wife: but he had not yet uttered the final
+words when Dohna's report came
+in.<a name="FNanchor_404_404" id="FNanchor_404_404"></a><a href="#Footnote_404_404" class="fnanchor">[404]</a>
+When he learned from this that
+the King was not decidedly unfavourable, the Elector thought that he
+recognised a dispensation of God which he would not decline to carry
+out. In the presence of his councillors at the castle of Heidelberg he
+declared to the Bohemian ambassadors that he accepted the crown; and
+soon afterwards he set out for Bohemia. In October 1619 (Oct. 25/Nov. 4)
+he was crowned at Prague.</p>
+
+<p>What unforeseen consequences however for himself and his friends, for
+Germany and for England, were destined to spring out of this
+undertaking!</p>
+
+<p>In London, where the popular party had already from the first fixed
+their eyes on the Princess, this step was welcomed with the most joyous
+approval. It was represented to the King that the most brilliant
+prospect was
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1620.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_493" id="Page_493">[Pg 493]</a></span>
+thus opened to his family; that on the next vacancy his
+son-in-law, who already himself held two votes in the electoral body,
+could not fail to be chosen Emperor; and that England would by this
+means acquire the greatest influence on the continent. It was expected
+that these feelings for his family, and the successful issue of events,
+would work together to detach him again from Spain.</p>
+
+<p>James on one occasion, on receiving the news of the confinement of his
+daughter, drank a bowl of wine 'to the health of the King and Queen of
+Bohemia.' He went so far as this, and people thought it worth while to
+record the event; but he could not be brought to acknowledge Frederick
+openly. He was not satisfied with the proof of their right advanced by
+the Bohemians: in conversation he advocated the right of Austria.</p>
+
+<p>Spain and the League, as was inevitable, joined forces with Austria. In
+the first instance the Palatinate itself was the object of their joint
+attack. How could men have helped thinking that King James would
+resolutely take the inheritance of his grandsons under his protection?
+The Union invited him to do so, reminding him of the obligation imposed
+on him by his connexion with them mentioned above: they said it was no
+favour, but justice which they demanded of him. But James replied that
+he had pledged himself only to repel open and unjustifiable attacks, but
+that in the present case the Palatinate was the attacking party, and
+that Austria stood on the defensive. The Union presently saw itself
+compelled to conclude a treaty with the League, which left that power
+free to act against Bohemia. The Palatinate however was not secured
+thereby against the
+Spaniards.<a name="FNanchor_405_405" id="FNanchor_405_405"></a><a href="#Footnote_405_405" class="fnanchor">[405]</a>
+To effect this, it would have been
+deemed advisable to make an attack from Holland on the Spanish
+Netherlands; for if a single fortified place had been occupied there,
+the Palatinate would have had nothing more to fear
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_494" id="Page_494">[Pg 494]</a></span>
+from Spain. But to this measure also James refused his consent: he thought that this would
+be equivalent to beginning war, which he did not wish.</p>
+
+<p>The general sympathy of the nation was strong enough at last to cause a
+large English regiment of 2500 men, under Horace Vere, to be sent on the
+continent, in order that the Palatinate, on which the Spaniards now
+advanced, might not become utterly a prey to them. The Earls of Essex
+and Oxford, who had contributed most to raise the regiment, themselves
+took part in the campaign. They were joined by many other young men of
+leading families, who wished to learn the art of war. But they had
+received from the King positive commands to commit no act of hostility.
+The troops of the Union, who showed themselves quite ready to fight the
+Spaniards, were withheld by the threat that in that case the King would
+recall these troops instead of sending two more regiments to join them,
+the hope of which he held out to them in the event of their obedience.
+It was enough for the King that the English troops occupied the most
+important places. Vere held Mannheim, Herbert Heidelberg, Burrows
+Frankenthal; while the greater part of the country fell into the hands
+of the Spaniards.</p>
+
+<p>Europe had reason to be alarmed at the advantage which accrued to the
+Spanish monarchy from this affair. The Tyrol and Alsace were already
+promised them to form links between Lombardy and the Netherlands: the
+possession of the Lower Palatinate completed their chain of
+communication.</p>
+
+<p>The action of Spain and England presented a marked contrast. Spain,
+while it forsook Lerma's policy, held together all its friends&mdash;Germany,
+Austria, the League, the Pope, the Archducal Netherlands&mdash;and combined
+their forces for joint action on a large scale; while King James, in
+clinging to the policy of peace, let his allies fall asunder and
+crippled their activity.</p>
+
+<p>But if James so acted in the case of the Palatinate which he wished to
+save, what might be fully expected in the case of Bohemia, with regard
+to which he openly declared, after some hesitation, that he could take
+no further part in its affairs? The new King found no hearty obedience
+among<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_495" id="Page_495">[Pg 495]</a></span>
+the Bohemians, partly because they found themselves deceived in
+their expectation of being assisted with troops by the Union, and with
+money by England. But worse than all, the ill-disciplined soldiery being
+without pay, broke out in mutiny: they were almost more ready to help
+themselves to their arrears by an attack upon the capital than to defend
+their sovereign or their country. On the other hand the soldiers of
+Austria and of the League, well paid and well disciplined, were spurred
+on by zealous priests. On their first attack they scattered the troops
+of Frederick to the four winds (November 1620). It would not have been
+impossible for Frederick to wage a defensive war in Bohemia; but regard
+to the danger into which the Queen would have been thrown in consequence
+prevented the attempt. That one day cost them both crown and country.</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible to describe the impression which the news of this
+defeat produced in London. The King was held blameable because not a
+single soldier commissioned by him had been found beside his daughter to
+draw the sword in her defence. This was attributed either to culpable
+negligence of his own affairs, or to the influence of the Spanish
+ambassador. Not Gondomar himself, who was too shrewd to act thus, but
+certainly his friends and Catholics generally, let their joy at this
+event be known. The citizens responded with manifestations that were
+directed against the King himself. A placard was put up in which he was
+told that he would be made to feel the anger of the people, if in this
+affair he any longer followed a policy opposed to its views.</p>
+
+<p>James I could no longer put off the question what steps he was to take.
+The tidings reached him at Newmarket, where he was spending the cold and
+gloomy days in hunting. He broke off this amusement and hastened to
+Westminster, in order to attend council with his ministers.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the end of December a meeting was held, in which the secretary
+Naunton depicted the whole position of the foreign policy of England,
+and drew from it the conclusion that the King must above all arm, as in
+that case he could carry on war, or at least negotiate with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_496" id="Page_496">[Pg 496]</a></span>
+firmness and some prospect of success. King James himself brought the affair of
+Bohemia under discussion. He complained, and seemed to feel it as an
+injury to his paternal authority, that the Elector Frederick even now
+continued to make the acknowledgment of his right to the crown of
+Bohemia a condition of his accepting the mediation offered by the King.
+Viscount Doncaster, who had just returned from a mission to Germany,
+fell on his knees before him, in order to remark to him that Frederick
+deserved no blame for clinging to a right which he supposed to be valid:
+that his refusal was not addressed to James as a father, but as King of
+England.<a name="FNanchor_406_406" id="FNanchor_406_406"></a><a href="#Footnote_406_406" class="fnanchor">[406]</a>
+James I distinctly stated afresh that he could not and
+would not espouse the cause of his son-in-law in Bohemia. But by this
+time not only was Frederick's new crown as good as lost, but his whole
+existence was endangered; the greater part of his hereditary territory
+was in the enemy's hands. James declared with unusual decision that he
+would not allow the Palatinate, which would one day descend to his
+grandchildren, to be wrested from them; that he was resolved to send to
+the Continent in the next year an army sufficient to reconquer it. It
+might be asked if this measure also would not inevitably lead to a
+breach with Spain. King James did not think so. He thought that he could
+carry on a merely local quarrel, and yet at the same time avoid a war on
+the part of the one power against the other. He did not intend to attack
+the King of Spain's own dominion, so long as that sovereign did not
+meddle with his.</p>
+
+<p>But however that might be, whether he was to begin war, though only on a
+limited scale, or whether he wished to prosecute negotiations with
+success, in any case it was necessary for him to arm. But for this
+purpose he required other means besides those of which he could dispose
+at his own discretion. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_400_400" id="Footnote_400_400"></a><a href="#FNanchor_400_400"><span class="label">[400]</span></a> Memorial of the Archduke Maximilian of Feb. 1, 1616, in
+Lunig, Europäische Staatsconsilia i. 918. It is clear from this that the
+anxiety of the members of the Union with regard to the Venetian war was
+not so groundless as it might otherwise appear. The Archduke lays before
+the Emperor the question whether 'in the event of the continuance of the
+Venetian disturbances he would use the opportunity to bring a numerous
+force into the field, and maintain it until the laudable work had been
+everywhere set in train, and had been prosecuted with the wished-for
+result.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_401_401" id="Footnote_401_401"></a><a href="#FNanchor_401_401"><span class="label">[401]</span></a> Reasons for hesitating advanced by the Privy Councillors
+of the Prince Elector, in Moser, who calls them prophetic, Patriotisches
+Archiv. vii. 118. The Palatinate 'will not well be able to decide
+anything certain and final: she has therefore made everything depend on
+England and the States-General, and has asked them, as well other her
+friends and potentates in the empire, for trusty counsel and declaration
+of what they will do in every case by her.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_402_402" id="Footnote_402_402"></a><a href="#FNanchor_402_402"><span class="label">[402]</span></a> 'Non approbare che in vita del imperatore li populi si
+sollevassero, ma che bene consigliava dopo morte dassero in luce le loro
+ragioni del jus eligendi sopra nullita dell'elettione di Ferdinando, con
+elegerne un altro, nel qual caso offeriva anche l'ajuto et il soccorso
+suo.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_403_403" id="Footnote_403_403"></a><a href="#FNanchor_403_403"><span class="label">[403]</span></a> 'S. M., se non assenti all accettare della corona, non
+disse ne anche mai all ora di dissentire: che anzi alla venuta di lui in
+questa corte offerendole al nome dell'istesso suo signore, che quando
+ella havesse voluto, l'averebbe anche lasciata, egli rispondesse: io non
+dico questo.' Girolamo Lando, Feb. 5, 1621.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_404_404" id="Footnote_404_404"></a><a href="#FNanchor_404_404"><span class="label">[404]</span></a> Dohna mentioned that 'the leading English councillors
+held that, if the Prince Elector would but soon accept the crown, the
+King on his part would soon declare himself and give his approval, which
+accordingly threw almost the greatest weight into the scale.' Secret
+Report in Moser vii. 51.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_405_405" id="Footnote_405_405"></a><a href="#FNanchor_405_405"><span class="label">[405]</span></a> From the documents relating to these proceedings, it is
+proved that Spinola had received instructions in June 1620 to gain
+possession of the Palatinate; that assurances however were given to King
+James even in August that nothing was really known of the object of his
+expedition. Senkenberg iii. 545 n.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_406_406" id="Footnote_406_406"></a><a href="#FNanchor_406_406"><span class="label">[406]</span></a> Dispaccio Veneto, 8 Gennaio 1621.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BV_III" id="BV_III"></a>
+PARLIAMENT OF THE YEAR 1621.</p>
+
+<p>We already know the antipathy of James to the Parliament, which had
+become a power to which, as soon as it was manifested in a newly
+assembled House, the power of the King was obliged to bend. James had
+already often felt the ascendancy of Parliament. The schemes of union
+with Scotland, which filled his soul with ambition, had been shattered
+by the resistance of that body. The exclusively Protestant disposition
+which prevailed there had made it impossible for him to give a legal
+sanction to the favour which he entertained for the Catholics, and which
+his views of policy naturally disposed him to show. He had been obliged
+to desist from the attempt to secure financial independence by
+surrendering the feudal privileges of the crown. The Parliament raised
+claims which the King regarded as attacks on the prerogative of the
+crown: even his advances to it had been met by a stubborn resistance. In
+the ordinary course of things he would never again have summoned
+Parliament together.</p>
+
+<p>This complication in foreign affairs then arose. All parties, including
+even the King himself, were convinced that England must step forth armed
+among the contending powers of the world: and that, not in the fashion
+of the last expedition, so little in keeping with the situation, when
+private support and tacit sympathy found the means, but on a large
+scale, as the position of the kingdom among the great powers demanded.
+But without Parliamentary grants this was impossible. The summoning of a
+new Parliament was therefore an incontestable necessity.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sidenote">A.D. 1621.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_498" id="Page_498">[Pg 498]</a></span>
+But on the other hand there was not wanting reasons for hesitation, for
+it could not be disguised that concessions would be inevitable. King
+James saw that as plainly as any one, and declared himself beforehand
+ready to make them. In contradiction to his former assertions he gave
+out that he would this time allow grievances to be freely alleged, and
+would give his best assistance in removing them. He said that he wished
+to meet Parliament half way, and that it should find him an honourable
+man. From the investigation of abuses the less was feared because the
+late opposition was ascribed to a factious resistance to Somerset's
+administration. But that favourite had since fallen: and of the leaders
+of that opposition several had gone over to the government, and some had
+died.<a name="FNanchor_407_407" id="FNanchor_407_407"></a><a href="#Footnote_407_407" class="fnanchor">[407]</a>
+The declared purpose of arming for the reconquest of the
+Palatinate was in accordance with the feelings of the nation and of the
+Protestants: no doubt was felt that it would win universal sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>This was in fact the case. The most favourable impression was produced
+when the King in his speech from the throne (January 30, 1621), which
+was principally taken up with this subject, declared his resolution to
+defend the hereditary claim of his grandchildren to the territories of
+the Palatine Electorate, and the free profession of Protestantism; to
+compel peace if it were necessary sword in hand; for which objects he
+claimed the assistance of the country. Parliament did not hesitate for
+an instant to express its concurrence with him in these designs. Two
+subsidies were granted on the spot, and the resolution was carried into
+effect during the continuance of the debates, a step which was
+altogether unprecedented. The King thanked the Parliament for this
+extraordinary readiness, which would, he said, increase his importance
+both at home and abroad.</p>
+
+<p>But this did not prevent Parliament on the other hand from bringing
+forward its claims with all possible energy. The power of granting money
+was the sinew of all its powers. The necessity of asking assistance from
+Parliament in urgent embarrassments, which the Tudors had avoided as far
+as possible, now appeared as pressing as ever. Was it not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_499" id="Page_499">[Pg 499]</a></span>
+to be expected that demands should call forth counter-demands? And the
+opposition in the previous Parliament rested on a far wider basis than
+that of hostility to Somerset: at the present election also the
+candidates of the government were rejected in most of the counties and
+towns.<a name="FNanchor_408_408" id="FNanchor_408_408"></a><a href="#Footnote_408_408" class="fnanchor">[408]</a></p>
+
+<p>The commission appointed for the investigation of abuses did not deal
+only with those which were acknowledged to be such. The principal
+question rather concerned the competence of the crown to confer such
+privileges as those out of which the abuses originated. Under the lead
+of Edward Coke, the great lawyer, Parliament adopted a principle which
+secured for it a firm standing ground.</p>
+
+<p>Coke, who moreover did not think it necessary to ask the King's consent
+for liberty of speech, because this was, he thought, an independent
+right of Parliament, vindicated the position that no royal proclamation
+had validity if it contradicted an act of Parliament or an existing law.
+He took his stand on the times of the later Plantagenet and of the
+Lancastrian kings: and he considered that the form which the relation
+between the government and Parliament then assumed was the only legal
+form. But the government of James I had granted extraordinarily
+obnoxious privileges&mdash;for instance, the right of setting up taverns with
+a restriction on the entertainment of guests by private individuals, or
+by the old inns; and again the right of arresting acknowledged vagrants.
+But the most obnoxious grants were those of patents for the monopoly of
+some trade, which were annoying to the whole mercantile class, and
+brought profit only to a few favoured individuals. Coke argued that the
+patents were either in themselves illegal, or injurious in their
+enforcement, or both together. While he proved to Parliament its
+forgotten or disregarded rights, Coke won the full confidence of both
+Houses alike: the Upper and the Lower House made common cause. Thus the
+system of government as it had been
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_500" id="Page_500">[Pg 500]</a></span>
+developed under the Tudors and
+continued under the Stuarts was encountered face to face by another
+system, which rested upon other precedents and principles.</p>
+
+<p>And people were not content with merely declaring the patents invalid;
+they called those to account who had got possession of them, and even
+the high officials who had contributed to issue them. A general
+commotion ensued: every day fresh information came in and fresh
+complaints were drawn
+up.<a name="FNanchor_409_409" id="FNanchor_409_409"></a><a href="#Footnote_409_409" class="fnanchor">[409]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Lord Chancellor Bacon had been already brought into danger by this
+affair. He had assisted in introducing monopolies of different
+manufactures under the pretence that work would be found for the poor by
+means of them. It was well known that in matters of this sort he had for
+the most part followed the suggestions of the Prime Minister. While
+Bacon was defending the ideal mission of the monarchy, he had the
+weakness to identify himself too closely with the accidental form which
+authority just at that particular moment took. In return he found on the
+other hand that the attacks really aimed at the government recoiled in
+the first instance upon him. In reality they were directed principally
+against Buckingham. In order to save him from destruction, suggestions
+had been made to the King that he might prefer to dissolve Parliament,
+as it seemed plain that he had far more reason to expect harm from the
+attacks than advantage from the grants made by that body. Buckingham
+saved himself only by coming forward against the monopolies himself, in
+accordance with the advice of his ecclesiastical confidant, Dean
+Williams. Claims had been made against two of his brothers also on
+account of the monopolies. Far from taking them under his protection, he
+said on the contrary that his father had still a third son who was
+determined to root out abuses; and that not until the present
+proceedings had been taken had he recognised the advantages of
+parliamentary government. Upon this, the leading men with whom Williams
+had formed a connexion, desisted from attacking the First Minister.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_501" id="Page_501">[Pg 501]</a></span>
+It even came about that a person of high rank, accused at the bar of the
+House of Lords, who had let fall an expression, comparing Buckingham to
+old favourites of hateful memory, was obliged to retract it with
+considerable ceremony. But a victim was required: one was found in the
+Lord Chancellor Bacon.</p>
+
+<p>Although condemned by law and morality, an evil practice still prevailed
+of receiving presents of money in official transactions. The sums were
+known and have been registered, by means of which Gondomar retained the
+services of a number of statesmen in the interest of Spain. How many
+similar abuses in the control of the Treasury had been brought to light
+only a short time before! Even the great philosopher, who in his
+writings is so zealous against bribes, contracted during his
+administration the stain of receiving them. That he might stand on an
+equality with the great lords, he incurred inordinate expenses, which
+these bribes assisted him to meet. Edward Coke was wholly in the right
+when he exclaimed that a corrupt judge was 'the grievance of
+grievances.'<a name="FNanchor_410_410" id="FNanchor_410_410"></a><a href="#Footnote_410_410" class="fnanchor">[410]</a>
+Two-and-twenty cases were proved in which the supreme
+judge, the Lord Chancellor of England, had taken presents from the
+parties concerned. Lord Bacon made no attempt to justify his conduct; he
+only affirmed&mdash;and this appears in fact to have been the case&mdash;that in
+his decisions he never was influenced by the presents that had been made
+him. When he was called to account for them, he acquiesced himself in
+the justice of the proceeding, for he allowed that a reform was
+necessary, and only deemed himself unfortunate in being the person with
+whom it began. The Lords pronounced sentence upon him that he should
+never again fill an official position, nor be capable of sitting in
+Parliament, and that he should be banished from the precincts of the
+court.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_502" id="Page_502">[Pg 502]</a></span>
+Apart from its importance as affecting individuals, this event is very
+important in the history of the constitution, which now returned to its
+former paths. That the Lower House again as in old times was able to
+procure the fall of one of the highest officials, is an evidence of its
+growing power. That the First Minister and favourite allowed his
+intimate friend to fall is a proof of the weakness of the highest
+authority, which moreover ought itself to have attacked abuses of this
+kind. Bacon justly remarked that reform would soon reach higher regions.</p>
+
+<p>But while Parliament, which the government had no inclination to
+withstand openly, thus obtained the ascendancy in domestic matters, it
+was also already turning its eyes in the direction of foreign affairs.
+These were times in which a warm religious sympathy was awakened by the
+advance which the counter-reformation was making in the hereditary
+dominions of Austria, as well as in France, and by the persecutions
+which befell the Protestants in both countries. The Spaniards were again
+engaging in war for the subjugation of the Netherlands. In Parliament,
+on the other hand, it was thought necessary to combine with the
+Republic, and to equip a fleet to assist the Huguenots, and even to
+attack Spain, in order thus to make a diversion in favour of the
+Palatinate. At the very time of the opening of Parliament the ban of the
+empire was pronounced against Frederick Elector Palatine amid the sound
+of trumpets and drums in the Palace at Vienna. This was regarded in the
+whole Protestant world as an injustice, for it was thought that
+Ferdinand II had been injured by Frederick only as King of Bohemia, and
+not as Emperor: and on the same grounds the English Parliament was of
+opinion that the execution of the ban ought to be hindered by force of
+arms; and it showed itself dissatisfied that the King sought to meet the
+evil only by demonstrations and embassies.</p>
+
+<p>We can easily understand that the attitude of Parliament aroused the
+anxiety of the King. He caused the debates on the war to be put a stop
+to, remarking that they infringed his prerogative, for which great
+affairs of this kind were exclusively reserved. And yet, so
+extraordinary was the complication of affairs that the declarations made
+in Parliament
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_503" id="Page_503">[Pg 503]</a></span>
+were not altogether displeasing to him. In June he
+adjourned Parliament, without formally proroguing it. What was the
+reason of this? Because Parliament had brought in a new bill containing
+the severest enactments against Jesuits and Catholic recusants. The King
+refused to accept it, as by this means the persecution of Protestants in
+Catholic countries would receive a new impulse. But he was also
+unwilling to express his refusal in a final shape, because he knew that
+the wish to hinder the adoption of harsh measures against the Catholics
+would exercise an influence upon the Spaniards in their negotiations
+with him.<a name="FNanchor_411_411" id="FNanchor_411_411"></a><a href="#Footnote_411_411" class="fnanchor">[411]</a>
+If he had proceeded to a prorogation, he would have been
+obliged to reject the laws; and he preferred to keep the prospect of
+them still open, which he was able to do by resorting to the form of an
+adjournment. He made it a merit in the eyes of the Spaniards that, far
+from increasing the severity of the penal laws, he did not even enforce
+them in their existing form, when moreover, if enforced, they would
+bring him in a large sum. But he was glad to see that people feared that
+he might do at some future time what at present he had refrained from
+doing. When he promised the Parliament on his royal word, that he would
+call it together again without fail in the autumn, he was also
+influenced by the consideration that he intended the Spaniards to look
+forward with fear to the resolution which might then be taken. He was
+greatly pleased that Parliament before dispersing drew up an energetic
+remonstrance against the persecutions of the Protestants all over the
+world, and especially against the oppression of his children. Not that
+he wished to give effect to it: on the contrary he adhered to the policy
+of assisting his son-in-law only by means of diplomacy: but he desired
+that the Spaniards should fear a war with England, and he thought that
+anxiety on this point would induce them and their friends to show
+themselves conciliatory and respectful.</p>
+
+<p>Sir John Digby, who was commissioned with the negotiations at the
+Spanish court, was referred by that power to Brussels
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_504" id="Page_504">[Pg 504]</a></span>
+and Vienna; and in fact he received favourable answers, not only from the Infanta
+Isabella in the former, but even from the Emperor himself in the latter
+city. The Emperor held out to him the hope that the matter would be
+reconsidered at a future assembly of the Estates of the Empire, which he
+intended to convene at Ratisbon. But meanwhile warlike operations and
+the execution of the ban held their course undisturbed. In Bohemia the
+counter-reformation was carried through with extreme severity.
+Four-and-twenty Protestant nobles and leaders were executed, and their
+heads with hoary beards were seen exposed on the Bridge at Prague.
+Silesia hastened to make its peace with the Emperor: the Princes of the
+Union laid down their arms, but they did not yet make their peace by
+this means. Tilly took possession of the Upper Palatinate, and then
+turned with his victorious army to the Lower Palatinate in order to
+complete the subjugation of this province, notwithstanding all the
+protection of England. On the Lower Rhine the forces of the Spaniards
+and of the States General confronted each other in arms. Under these
+circumstances the Princes, who were invited, refused to appear at an
+Assembly of the Empire,<a name="FNanchor_412_412" id="FNanchor_412_412"></a><a href="#Footnote_412_412" class="fnanchor">[412]</a>
+for none of them thought that he could
+leave his home without incurring evident danger. The Infanta Isabella
+too in Brussels declined to conclude the truce which Sir John Digby
+proposed.</p>
+
+<p>While affairs were in this position, Parliament resumed its interrupted
+sittings in November 1621. Dean Williams, who after Bacon's fall had
+received the Great Seal, opened the session with a request for the
+immediate grant of new subsidies, which he said would be required even
+before Christmas. He promised that in the coming February, when they
+resumed their sittings, the other affairs should be brought under
+discussion.<a name="FNanchor_413_413" id="FNanchor_413_413"></a><a href="#Footnote_413_413" class="fnanchor">[413]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_505" id="Page_505">[Pg 505]</a></span>
+On this occasion as on a previous one, the King wished for nothing more
+than a renewed and stronger demonstration. Even now he lived and moved
+in a policy of compromise between opposite views. While his son-in-law
+was being robbed of his country in the interest of Spain, he adhered to
+the wish of marrying his son to a Spanish Infanta: he thought that he
+would bring about the restoration of the Palatinate most easily by the
+influence which this new alliance would confer. But he thought that his
+friendly advances should also be accompanied by threats, and he wished
+to be placed by the grants of Parliament in a position to arm more
+effectually than before. It would have been in accordance with his
+views, if Parliament had repeated its former declarations, according to
+which it was ready to put forth all its power in his behalf, in order to
+place him in a position to compel by force of arms what might be refused
+to his peaceful negotiations.</p>
+
+<p>It is worth noticing in all this that James not only met the wishes of
+Parliament because he required support, but that he also encouraged the
+disposition which it showed in favour of Protestantism, in order to
+avail himself of it: he thought that he would always be able to control
+it. But how often has a policy been shipwrecked, which has thought to
+avail itself of great interests and great passions for some end
+immediately in view!</p>
+
+<p>How could it be expected that while religious parties on the continent
+were meeting in a struggle for life and death, the English Parliament
+would approve of the wavering policy of James I, which aimed at
+compromise and had hitherto been without
+results?<a name="FNanchor_414_414" id="FNanchor_414_414"></a><a href="#Footnote_414_414" class="fnanchor">[414]</a>
+Quite the contrary: starting with the view that England was the centre of
+Protestantism and must avert the dangers which assailed it, Parliament
+declared itself ready, it is true, to pay the King new subsidies, but
+not until the following year, and on the presumption that he should have
+accepted and ratified the bills for the welfare
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_506" id="Page_506">[Pg 506]</a></span>
+of the people which had passed the
+House.<a name="FNanchor_415_415" id="FNanchor_415_415"></a><a href="#Footnote_415_415" class="fnanchor">[415]</a>
+They thought that the common danger to religion
+arising from the alliance between the Pope and the King of Spain had
+been brought upon England also by the indulgence hitherto shown to the
+recusants. Parliament invited the King to draw the sword without further
+circumlocution for the rescue of the foreign Protestants; in the first
+instance to break with the power whose army had carried on the war in
+the Palatinate, but above all to marry the Prince his successor to a
+lady of the Protestant faith.</p>
+
+<p>The King wished to avoid war because he was anxious lest he should be
+constantly compelled by Parliament, owing to his repeated want of
+subsidies, to make fresh concessions, which would affect and diminish
+the substance of his authority. The Parliament wished for war because it
+expected that such a proceeding would furnish it with great
+opportunities for establishing its power.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the rival powers encountered each other on this ground, all
+agreement between them was at an end. Parliament interfered still more
+vigorously than before with the affairs which the King reserved for
+himself: it wished to induce him to adopt those very measures which he
+was resolved to avoid. He was expected to break with that power with
+which it was his principal ambition to become most closely connected. He
+was expected to take the sword in order to defend the common cause of
+Protestantism. He was expected to put an end to the indulgence which he
+had hitherto shown to his Catholic subjects; to do what ran counter to
+all the expectations which he had raised at Rome and Madrid; and what
+perhaps, considering the strength of the Catholic element in England,
+was not without danger to the maintenance of quiet at home. Meanwhile
+the payment of the subsidies, which he required at once in order to
+maintain his political position, was indefinitely deferred. Although it
+was not actually stated, yet it was quite clear that Parliament made the
+validity of its grants dependent on his compliance with its
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_507" id="Page_507">[Pg 507]</a></span>
+advice. And on what important matters was that advice offered! The King complained
+that his prerogative was openly infringed by it; that Parliament wished
+to decide on his alliances with other sovereigns, and to dictate to him
+how to conduct the war; that it brought under debate questions of
+religion and state, and the marriage of his son: what portion of the
+sovereign power, he asked, was left to him? On the competence which
+Parliament claimed as its hereditary right, he remarked that it had to
+thank the favour of his ancestors and himself for this: that he would
+protect Parliament, but only in proportion to the regard which it showed
+for the prerogative of his crown.</p>
+
+<p>If we had to specify the moment in which the quarrel between the
+Parliament and the Crown once more found its full expression, we should
+choose this.<a name="FNanchor_416_416" id="FNanchor_416_416"></a><a href="#Footnote_416_416" class="fnanchor">[416]</a>
+The Parliament, which had dissolution in immediate
+prospect, employed its last moments in making a protest, in which it
+again affirmed that its liberties and privileges were a birthright and
+heirloom of the subjects of the English crown, that it certainly was
+within its power to bring under debate public matters affecting the
+King, the State, the Church, and the defence of the country; and that
+full liberty of speech without any subsequent molestation on that
+account must be secured to every member in the exercise of these rights.</p>
+
+<p>The King would not forego the satisfaction of punishing by arrest a
+number of members who were peculiarly hateful to him; he declared the
+protestation null and void, and struck it out of the clerks' book with
+his own hand. In a detailed exposition of his view of these
+transactions, in which he gives the assurance that he will still
+henceforth continue to summon Parliament, he emphatically repudiates
+this protestation, which he affirms to be drawn up in such terms that
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_508" id="Page_508">[Pg 508]</a></span>
+inalienable rights of the crown are called in question by it,
+rights in the possession of which the crown had found itself in the
+times of Queen Elizabeth of glorious memory. He affirms that as King he
+cannot tolerate any such pretensions.</p>
+
+<p>Parliament demanded the policy of Queen Elizabeth; King James demanded
+her rights. The privileges accorded to the crown and the opposition to
+Spain had formerly gone together: the surrender of the latter under King
+James served to supply Parliament on its part with a motive for making
+an attack upon the former.</p>
+
+<p>The cause of Parliament was of great importance, even when it stood
+alone: deeper impulses and fresh life and vigour were first imparted to
+it by its combination with foreign policy and with religion. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_407_407" id="Footnote_407_407"></a><a href="#FNanchor_407_407"><span class="label">[407]</span></a> From a letter of Bacon to Buckingham.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_408_408" id="Footnote_408_408"></a><a href="#FNanchor_408_408"><span class="label">[408]</span></a> Lando, Relatione: 'Se bene procurò S. M. di ristringere e
+captivare fino l'autorità, che hanno li communi d'eleggere li deputati,
+benche in qualche citta e provincia gli è riuscito, nell'universale non
+ha potuto, rifiutati i privati del favorito e dei consiglieri li lei.'
+Lando describes the Parliament as 'republica altretanto mal pratica,
+quanto molto pretendente.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_409_409" id="Footnote_409_409"></a><a href="#FNanchor_409_409"><span class="label">[409]</span></a> Chamberlain to Carleton, March 24: 'They find it more
+than Hercules' labour purgare hoc stabulum Augiae of monopolies, patents
+and the like.' (St. P. O.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_410_410" id="Footnote_410_410"></a><a href="#FNanchor_410_410"><span class="label">[410]</span></a> Chamberlain to Carleton: 'All men approve E. Coke, who
+upon discovery of those matters exclaimed that a corrupt judge is the
+grievance of grievances.' Chamberlain relates that an officer of the
+Court of Chancery, when accused on account of various irregularities,
+exclaimed 'that he would not sink alone, but draw others after him.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_411_411" id="Footnote_411_411"></a><a href="#FNanchor_411_411"><span class="label">[411]</span></a> Buckingham on one occasion very aptly characterises his
+policy and its danger: 'So long as you waver between the Spaniards and
+your subjects, to make your advantage of both, you are sure to do with
+neither.' Hardwicke Papers i. 466.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_412_412" id="Footnote_412_412"></a><a href="#FNanchor_412_412"><span class="label">[412]</span></a> 'The princes denied their appearance.' (Digby, Recital of
+his Speech, Parl. Hist. v. 483.) So that the notice by Struv, rejected
+by Senkenberg (Fortsetzung Häberlins xxv. § 80) is nevertheless
+correct.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_413_413" id="Footnote_413_413"></a><a href="#FNanchor_413_413"><span class="label">[413]</span></a> A gap in Williams' speech at this part, occurring in the
+Journals and in both Parliamentary Histories, is to a certain extent
+filled up by a letter of Chamberlain to Carleton of Nov. 24; 'intimating
+that they should forbear needless and impertinent discourses, long and
+extravagant orations which the king would not indure.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_414_414" id="Footnote_414_414"></a><a href="#FNanchor_414_414"><span class="label">[414]</span></a> Lando, Relatione: 'Non potendosi accordare con spiriti
+discordanti dei proprii impressi di non lasciarsi levare un punto
+dell'autorita.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_415_415" id="Footnote_415_415"></a><a href="#FNanchor_415_415"><span class="label">[415]</span></a> John Locke to Carleton, Nov. 29: 'They have put up a
+petition, that this may be a session and laws enacted, that the laws
+made against recusants may be executed, so that the promise of the
+subsidy seemeth yet to be conditional.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_416_416" id="Footnote_416_416"></a><a href="#FNanchor_416_416"><span class="label">[416]</span></a> Chamberlain to Carleton on December 22. The Parliament,
+on receiving a message enjoining the speedy continuance of their
+business, answered the King two hours after it had been brought before
+them: 'but with all for fear of surprise gave order to the speaker and
+the whole house to meet at four o'clock: where they conceived sat down
+and entered this proposition enclosed which is nothing pleasing above
+and for preventing where of there came a commission next morning to
+adjourn the Parliament.' Cf. the Commons' protestation: Parl. Hist. v.
+513.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BV_IV" id="BV_IV"></a>
+NEGOTIATIONS FOR THE MARRIAGE OF THE PRINCE OF WALES WITH A SPANISH
+INFANTA.</p>
+
+<p>It is a general consequence of the dynastic constitution of the states
+of Europe that marriages between the reigning families are at the same
+time political transactions, and as a rule not only affect public
+interests, but also stir up the rivalry of parties: this effect however
+has hardly ever come more prominently into notice than when it was
+proposed to marry the heir to the throne of England with an Infanta of
+Spain.</p>
+
+<p>We have remarked that the scheme originated in Spain, had already been
+once rejected, and then had been mooted a second time by the leading
+minister of Philip III, the Duke of Lerma. It formed part of Lerma's
+characteristic idea of fortifying the greatness of the Spanish monarchy
+by a dynastic alliance with the two royal families which were able to
+threaten it with the greatest danger, those of France and England. This
+design brought him into contact with a current of policy and personal
+feeling in England which was favourable to him: but at the same time the
+great difficulty which the difference of religion presented, came at
+once into prominence. Not that it would have been difficult for King
+James to make the concessions requisite for obtaining the Papal
+dispensation; on the contrary he was personally inclined to do so: but
+he feared unpleasant embarrassments with his allies and with his
+subjects. Count Gondomar, the ambassador, assured the King that he
+should never be pressed to do anything which violated his conscience or
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1622.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_510" id="Page_510">[Pg 510]</a></span>
+his honour, or by which he might run a risk of losing the love of his
+people.<a name="FNanchor_417_417" id="FNanchor_417_417"></a><a href="#Footnote_417_417" class="fnanchor">[417]</a></p>
+
+<p>On this, negotiations which had already been opened for the marriage of
+the Prince with a French princess were broken off. Besides, the
+intermarriage with the house of Spain appeared to be far more deserving
+of preference, as being likely to pacify the feelings of English
+Catholics, who were accustomed to side principally with Spain, and even
+to promote the calm of the world, as Spain was a more prominent
+representative of the Catholic principle than France. It was thought
+advisable to leave the conditions of the dispensation to be arranged in
+the sense indicated by negotiation between the Papal see and the Spanish
+crown.</p>
+
+<p>But a new and serious hindrance now arose in consequence of the
+embarrassments caused by the affairs of the Palatinate, in which the
+interests of the two dynasties came into immediate collision with one
+another. It is clear that King James could not marry his son to an
+Infanta of Spain while a Spanish army was taking possession of his
+son-in-law's territory. He therefore made the restoration of the
+Palatinate a condition of the marriage. All his tortuous efforts were
+directed to combine the latter object with the former, and at the same
+time to avoid a disadvantageous reaction upon his domestic policy.</p>
+
+<p>While he invoked the Protestant sympathies of Parliament in order to
+give weight to his demands, he nevertheless checked them again as soon
+as he was in danger of being forced to make war, or even to resume the
+measures against the Catholics, which might displease the Spanish court.
+Whilst he made the Spaniards aware that if he were refused the
+consideration he required, he would throw himself entirely into the
+hands of his Parliament and proceed to extremities, he at the same time
+employed every means of effecting a peaceful accommodation, by which he
+would then at once be saved the necessity of making concessions to
+Parliament.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_511" id="Page_511">[Pg 511]</a></span>
+The most active negotiations were opened in Brussels with
+the Infanta Isabella, upon whom the issue seemed most to depend. James I
+had sent thither Richard Weston, the man whom Gondomar himself declared
+to be the most appropriate instrument for this affair; and an agreement
+was concluded with the personal co-operation of the Infanta, which held
+out expectations of the restoration of the Elector. On the side of the
+Palatinate and England everything was done to promote the conclusion of
+this agreement, and to ensure its execution. The expelled Elector was
+induced to recall Mansfeld and Christian of Brunswick from the Upper
+Rhine, where they were then moving vigorously forward, lest the treaty
+should be obstructed by their
+operations.<a name="FNanchor_418_418" id="FNanchor_418_418"></a><a href="#Footnote_418_418" class="fnanchor">[418]</a>
+He himself removed to
+Sedan, in order not to arouse the suspicions of the House of Austria by
+his residence in the Netherlands. In the summer of 1622 he had no other
+troops in the Palatinate but the English garrisons; and King James
+engaged that, if the treaty were concluded, he would take arms himself
+against the allies of his son-in-law. But while expectation was directed
+to the conclusion of the contract by which the Elector should be
+re-established in his country, the League advanced against those
+strongholds which the English held in his name. Neither Heidelberg nor
+Mannheim could hold out. The English troops were obliged to bend to
+necessity and to march out, although with the honours of war. Only in
+Frankenthal did they still maintain themselves for a while. When Weston
+at Brussels complained of this conduct he was actually told that the
+League must have everything in their hands first, in order to restore
+everything hereafter. He was astounded at this subterfuge, and asked for
+his recall.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_512" id="Page_512">[Pg 512]</a></span>
+In England the friends of Spain fell into a sort of despair at the
+course of events. For what could follow from it but open war between the
+King of England and the Emperor? But on whose side would Spain then be
+found? Would that power pledge itself to fight to the end against every
+one, even against the Emperor, in behalf of the treaty when concluded?
+To prevent England from coming into closer alliance with France, the
+government of Spain had planned the marriage and opened direct
+negotiations: would it now, when its cause appeared to be advancing,
+withdraw in violation of its word of honour? Even the Privy Council
+represented to the King that he was bringing dishonour and danger on his
+country. The Duke of Buckingham, who also had himself been in close
+agreement with Gondomar, and was considered to be the man who held the
+threads of politics in his hand, regarded the increasing discontent as
+dangerous to his own
+position.<a name="FNanchor_419_419" id="FNanchor_419_419"></a><a href="#Footnote_419_419" class="fnanchor">[419]</a></p>
+
+<p>While affairs were in this situation and these impressions afloat, a
+plan for bringing this uncertainty to an end was embraced by the King,
+the Prince, and the Duke, in those private discussions in which the
+general course of affairs was decided. It was determined that the
+Prince, accompanied by Buckingham, should visit Spain himself, in order
+to bring about the marriage and arrange the conditions. None of the
+Privy Councillors, not even Williams, who on other occasions was in
+their intimate confidence, knew anything about this plan. It pleased the
+King's sense of the romantic, that as he himself had formerly brought
+home his newly married wife from the icy North, so now his son should in
+person win the hand of his bride in the distant South. But however much
+in earnest the King was in the matter, we learn that he still
+contemplated the possibility of failure. He once said to the Duke of
+Soubise, that if the marriage came to pass, he would take up the cause
+of the Huguenots in alliance with Spain: but that if he did not succeed
+in his design they might still reckon upon him, for that his son would
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1623.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_513" id="Page_513">[Pg 513]</a></span>
+contract a marriage with a French princess, which would
+procure him great influence at the French
+court.<a name="FNanchor_420_420" id="FNanchor_420_420"></a><a href="#Footnote_420_420" class="fnanchor">[420]</a></p>
+
+<p>On March 7, 1623, the Prince of Wales and the Duke of Buckingham arrived
+in Madrid, with an escort including Cottington and Endymion Porter, both
+of whom afterwards enjoyed great influence. Their arrival was not
+altogether welcome to the ambassador in residence there, Digby, now Lord
+Bristol, who would rather have retained this important business in his
+own hands: but the Spanish court and the nation itself found a certain
+satisfaction for their pride in the personal suit urged by the
+heir-apparent of one of the most powerful kingdoms for the hand of the
+younger Infanta.</p>
+
+<p>At first the Prince of Wales could only see the Infanta as she drove
+past along a sort of Corso in the Prado. He was then presented to her,
+but the words which she was to use to him were written down for her
+beforehand; for she was to receive him merely as a foreign prince
+without any reference whatsoever to his suit. Some surprise was created
+when the principal lady of the court one day condescended to say to the
+Prince that the Infanta in conversation gave signs of an inclination for
+him. In the country no doubt was felt that the marriage would come to
+pass, and the prospect was welcomed with joy. Often did a 'Viva' resound
+under the windows of the Prince. Lope de Vega dedicated some happily
+expressed stanzas to him; and splendid shows were given in his
+honour.<a name="FNanchor_421_421" id="FNanchor_421_421"></a><a href="#Footnote_421_421" class="fnanchor">[421]</a>
+All that was now wanting was an agreement as to the
+conditions.</p>
+
+<p>This depended however in large part on the resolutions which might be
+arrived at in England. Conditions affecting religion were laid before
+King James, which he might certainly have hesitated to approve. It was
+not only that the Infanta was to be indulged in the free exercise of her
+religion&mdash;for how else could the consent of the Spanish clergy or a
+dispensation from the Pope have been hoped for?&mdash;nor even that the
+children born from this marriage were to be educated under her eyes
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_514" id="Page_514">[Pg 514]</a></span>
+for the first ten years of their life, for this seemed the natural privilege
+of a mother: but the presumption that the children might become
+Catholics involved wide consequences. It was stipulated that the laws
+against Catholics should not apply to such children, nor prejudice their
+succession. Still more displeasing however were some other articles of
+general import, which were carefully kept back from the knowledge of the
+public. They amounted to this:&mdash;that the laws against the Catholics
+should no longer be carried into execution, and that the Councillors of
+the sovereign should be pledged by an oath to abstain from enforcing
+them.<a name="FNanchor_422_422" id="FNanchor_422_422"></a><a href="#Footnote_422_422" class="fnanchor">[422]</a>
+The King met with some opposition to these articles in the
+Privy Council. But he said that the question was not whether they were
+advisable, but whether they were not necessary at a time when part of
+the domain under dispute, and the Prince himself, were in the hands of
+the Spaniards. And moreover they did not amount to a complete concession
+to the wishes of the Catholics, for they spoke only of tolerating their
+worship in private, not in public: the articles were in harmony with the
+old ideas of the King. James solemnly swore to the first articles, on
+July 20, in the presence of the Spanish ambassador; and immediately
+after him the members of the Council took the same oath. The King alone
+then pledged himself to carry out the second set of articles.</p>
+
+<p>An extensive alteration had already taken place in the treatment of the
+Catholics. Priests and recusants had been discharged from prison and
+enjoyed full liberty. An injunction was issued to the preachers and to
+the Universities to abstain from all invectives against the Papacy. Men
+had to see individual preachers who transgressed these orders thrown
+into prisons which had been just emptied. The families which openly
+expressed their hitherto secret adherence to Catholicism were already
+counted by hundreds. Then came these transactions. What was learnt of
+the articles was enough to spread universal dismay among
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_515" id="Page_515">[Pg 515]</a></span>
+the Protestants, but they expected yet worse things. They thought they saw a
+pronounced Catholic tendency becoming ascendant in the conduct of
+affairs. An universal danger seemed to be hanging over the religion
+which they professed. Every one hastened to church to pray against it;
+the churches had never been more crowded. The second ecclesiastic in the
+country, the Archbishop of York, put the King in mind that by his
+project of toleration he was encouraging doctrines which he had himself
+proved in his writings to be superstitious and idolatrous. At this time
+moreover religious profession and political freedom were most closely
+connected: all these penal laws which the King was removing had been
+passed in Parliament, and were the work of the legislative power as a
+whole. The Archbishop reminded the King in conclusion that when he
+annulled the statutes of parliament by royal proclamation, he created an
+impression that he thought himself at liberty to trample on the laws of
+the land.<a name="FNanchor_423_423" id="FNanchor_423_423"></a><a href="#Footnote_423_423" class="fnanchor">[423]</a></p>
+
+<p>The wishes of the King did not lean so decidedly in that direction as
+people assumed. Buckingham and the Prince, who recommended him to take
+the oath, remarked to him, among other observations, that his promise
+that Parliament should repeal the penal laws against the Catholics
+within three years would be fulfilled, if he merely exerted himself to
+the extent of his strength for that object, even if it should prove
+impossible to attain
+it.<a name="FNanchor_424_424" id="FNanchor_424_424"></a><a href="#Footnote_424_424" class="fnanchor">[424]</a>
+In general everything was merely
+preliminary, and depended on further agreement. The Prince entreated his
+father to transmit to him the ratification of the articles, that he
+might decline them or not according to circumstances. He even wished
+that, in order to put an end to the dilatoriness of the Spaniards, his
+father should make an express declaration that any longer delay would
+compel him again to enforce the penal laws against the
+Catholics.<a name="FNanchor_425_425" id="FNanchor_425_425"></a><a href="#Footnote_425_425" class="fnanchor">[425]</a>
+All these announcements, which filled the Catholics with joy and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_516" id="Page_516">[Pg 516]</a></span>
+hope, but the Protestants with dejection, mistrust, and anxiety, were however
+only political agencies, and were intended to serve a definite end. The
+object was in the first instance to put an end by this means to all
+delay in sending the Infanta to England.</p>
+
+<p>Although some religious scruples were still awake in the minds of the
+Spaniards yet they presented no further obstacle. The conditions for
+granting a dispensation which had been prescribed by the Pope to the
+Spanish Court, had been accepted; the Spanish ambassadors had been
+satisfied: the only question now was whether the Infanta should be
+conveyed to England at once with the Prince on his return, or in the
+following spring. As formerly the Tudors so now the Stuarts appeared to
+be taking their position as a dynasty in Europe in connexion with the
+Spanish monarchy.</p>
+
+<p>Only one difficulty remained, that connected with the Palatinate; but at
+the present moment it was more serious than ever.</p>
+
+<p>In his negotiations King James started with the supposition, that the
+Spanish court could control the Imperial, and bring it over to its own
+point of view. The inclusion of the German line in this dynastic
+combination was contemplated. A proposal was made that the eldest son of
+the expelled Frederick should contract a marriage with a daughter of the
+Emperor, which would make the task of reconciliation and restitution far
+easier.</p>
+
+<p>The Emperor however had to take other interests into consideration; not
+only those of the Duke of Bavaria, to whom he was so deeply pledged, but
+those of the whole Catholic party, which thought of seizing this
+occasion to establish for ever its ascendancy in the Empire. The
+Emperor, who was also instigated by Rome to this step, solemnly
+transferred the electoral dignity previously held by the Elector
+Palatine to Maximilian of Bavaria in February 1623, with the intention
+of satisfying him, and at the same time of obtaining a majority of
+Catholic votes in the electoral body. It has indeed been assumed, both
+then and at a later time, that Spain, only bent on deceiving England,
+had agreed to all these proceedings. But in fact the Spanish ambassador
+had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_517" id="Page_517">[Pg 517]</a></span>
+opposed them most strenuously at Ratisbon in the name of his king,
+as well as in that of the Infanta
+Isabella.<a name="FNanchor_426_426" id="FNanchor_426_426"></a><a href="#Footnote_426_426" class="fnanchor">[426]</a>
+He prophesied with accurate foresight new and inextricable embarrassments as the
+consequence. The Papal Nuncio complained that the resistance of the
+ambassador weakened the Catholics and emboldened the Protestants. But
+his remonstrance had no effect on the Emperor. After his previous
+experiences Ferdinand II had no more fear of his adversaries, least of
+all of King James, who would certainly not in his old age make his first
+appearance as a warrior and try the doubtful fortune of war. He thought
+besides that he always consulted his security best when he had nothing
+before his eyes but the advantage of the Catholic Church.</p>
+
+<p>The negotiation about these matters took place just at the time when the
+Prince of Wales was in Spain. There no one despaired of finding an
+arrangement with which the Prince could still be satisfied. It was
+thought that, when the Palsgrave Frederick had been reconciled with the
+Emperor, and admitted into his family, the electoral dignity might be
+enjoyed in turn by Bavaria and the Palatinate, or that a new electorship
+might be founded for Bavaria. The Imperial ambassador, Count
+Khevenhiller, however rejected these proposals, for no other reason than
+that King James was not the proper person to make arrangements for his
+grandson. He did not accept the supposition that the youth, whose
+education it was proposed to complete in Vienna, would join the Catholic
+faith, for he said that his mother would never allow that. He set aside
+the expectation that the Imperial court might send to Spain a full
+authorisation to negotiate for the marriage. He moreover affirmed that,
+if the Imperial court wished to secure its influence in Germany, it
+could not allow the opinion to gain ground that it depended on Spain and
+was guided by her.</p>
+
+<p>And in Spain also, after the fall of Lerma, which was brought on by this
+affair, the old aspirations after the supremacy of the world had again
+obtained the upper hand.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_518" id="Page_518">[Pg 518]</a></span>
+It is true that at the moment a feeling prevailed in favour of
+maintaining peace on the very advantageous footing which had then been
+obtained. Cardinal Zapata, Don Pedro of Toledo, and above all Count
+Gondomar, who had at that time been made a member of the Council,
+declared before that body that Spain ought to have no higher political
+aim than to secure her union with England. These were men of experience
+in European affairs, who recollected the evils which had sprung from the
+policy of Philip II. But there were others who were again seized with
+the old ambition, so interwoven with Catholicism, and who would not
+separate themselves from the interests of the Emperor at any price&mdash;men
+like the Marquis de Aytona, Don Augustin Mexia. And Count Olivarez,
+under the influence of the Imperial ambassador, now espoused the same
+opinion, a man who, as favourite of the King and chief minister, filled
+the same position in Spain that Buckingham did in England. At the
+decisive meeting of the Council, he stated that the King of Spain would
+not venture to separate from the Emperor, even if he had been mortally
+affronted by him: if he could stand in friendly relations with the
+Emperor and the King of England at the same time, well and good; but if
+not, he must break with the King of England without any regard to the
+marriage: this step was demanded of him for the preservation of
+Christendom, of the Catholic religion, and of his family. He added that
+a marriage between the young Count Palatine and a daughter of the
+Emperor was only to be thought of, if the former became a Catholic: that
+the complete restoration of the father was by no means advisable; and
+that he ought to be dealt with as the Duke of Saxony had been dealt with
+by Charles V.<a name="FNanchor_427_427" id="FNanchor_427_427"></a><a href="#Footnote_427_427" class="fnanchor">[427]</a>
+Olivarez carried the Council with him in favour of
+this policy. The strictly Catholic point of view, which had been
+asserted by the German line of the house of Austria, was again adopted
+as the rule of policy in Spain.</p>
+
+<p>This was a resolution that decided the destinies of Spain. That power
+again renounced the policy of compromise which it had observed for a
+quarter of a century. The young King
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_519" id="Page_519">[Pg 519]</a></span>
+Philip IV and his ambitious
+favourite revived the designs of Philip II, or, as the former once
+expressed it, of Charles V: to the restoration of Catholic ascendancy in
+Germany they sacrificed the friendship of King James, which was of
+inestimable advantage to the monarchy, inasmuch as it kept the coasts of
+Spain free from all danger of attack from the English
+forces.<a name="FNanchor_428_428" id="FNanchor_428_428"></a><a href="#Footnote_428_428" class="fnanchor">[428]</a>
+Olivarez was too violent, too young, and too ill-informed to have any
+clear conception of the influence of these relations.</p>
+
+<p>But as in great transactions every step has consequences, it is clear
+that the Spanish predilections of King James, and the policy founded on
+them, were thus brought to an end. For maintaining these it was
+necessary not only that they should be advantageous to the Catholics in
+England, but that they should be equally serviceable to the Protestant
+interests in Germany, which in the present instance were his own:
+otherwise he would never have found rest again in his own country, or
+his own family, or perhaps even in his own breast. He had asked for the
+reinstatement of his son-in-law in the electorship as well as in the
+possession of his hereditary dominions, or at least for the hearty
+assistance of Spain in effecting this
+object.<a name="FNanchor_429_429" id="FNanchor_429_429"></a><a href="#Footnote_429_429" class="fnanchor">[429]</a>
+And the Prince of Wales shared these views. He once said to Count Olivarez that, without
+the restoration of the Elector Palatine, the marriage was impossible,
+and the friendship of England could not be expected. The Spaniards did
+not think fit to impart to him the resolution which had been taken in
+the Council of State; but still this implied a new direction given to
+the course of affairs which could be followed although it was not talked
+of. The Spaniards contented themselves with dwelling on the necessity of
+sending the youthful Count Palatine to Vienna for education: as to his
+father, who was under the ban, they held out indeed a prospect of the
+restoration of his dominions but not of his electoral dignity. The
+Prince declared that it was not to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_520" id="Page_520">[Pg 520]</a></span>
+be imagined that his brother-in-law
+would be content with that and would agree to
+it.<a name="FNanchor_430_430" id="FNanchor_430_430"></a><a href="#Footnote_430_430" class="fnanchor">[430]</a>
+And how was even as much as this to be obtained from the court of Vienna? It was now
+certain that in the affair of the Palatinate Spain would not interfere
+with decision. But besides this, the resolutions which had been taken in
+the Spanish Council of State must lead to much wider consequences.</p>
+
+<p>The miscarriage of the negotiations has been ascribed to the
+misunderstanding between Olivarez and Buckingham; and it is no wonder
+that such a misunderstanding arose, for the latter was conceited and
+irritable, the former imperious and assuming. But these causes are only
+of a secondary character; the root of the failure lies in the political,
+or in the combination of the religious with the political relations of
+the two countries. While in England Protestantism was moving in a
+direction opposed to the intentions of King James, and could hardly be
+held down, it was met by the Catholic interest in Spain and Germany,
+which was fully conscious of its position. Now these were the powerful
+elements which divided the whole world: the strife between them could
+not be adjusted by political considerations.</p>
+
+<p>It is hardly necessary to state further how Buckingham, who regarded the
+somewhat unmeaning delays of the Spaniards as affronts, and who would
+have had reason to fear for his authority in England in the event of his
+prolonged absence, now urged the return of the Prince. Charles concurred
+with him: King James, who moreover was impatient, as he said, to see the
+two men whom he most loved about him again, commanded it; and the
+Spanish court could not object.</p>
+
+<p>Yet no estrangement arose in consequence, nor was the proposal for the
+marriage withdrawn. The Infanta was treated as Princess of Wales; and
+Philip IV in a letter once styled the Prince of Wales his
+brother-in-law. The Papal dispensation, for which they had long been
+kept waiting, at last arrived; and the marriage ceremony might have been
+performed any day. The other negotiations also still kept advancing.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_521" id="Page_521">[Pg 521]</a></span>
+King James then once more demanded an express declaration with regard to
+the affair of the Palatinate. He wished to know what Spain thought of
+doing if the Emperor refused to accede to the agreement that was to be
+made between the two powers. The answer of the Spaniards was evasive:
+how could it have been otherwise? But the English would not advance
+further without better security. The Prince sent to request the
+ambassador not to use the full powers, which he already had in his
+hands, until he received fresh
+orders.<a name="FNanchor_431_431" id="FNanchor_431_431"></a><a href="#Footnote_431_431" class="fnanchor">[431]</a>
+King James declared that the
+marriage could not be solemnised till the Spanish court consented to
+take upon itself obligations with regard to the Palatinate.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_417_417" id="Footnote_417_417"></a><a href="#FNanchor_417_417"><span class="label">[417]</span></a> Letter to Gondomar, as it appears, from Buckingham
+himself, Cabala 236. 'You promised that the King should be pressed to
+nothing that should not be agreeable to his conscience, to his honour,
+and the love of his people.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_418_418" id="Footnote_418_418"></a><a href="#FNanchor_418_418"><span class="label">[418]</span></a> So writes Richard Weston to Buckingham: 'The prince
+elector hath conformed himself to what was demanded, that the count
+Mansfelt and Duke of Brunswik, the pretended obstacles of the treatie,
+are now with all their forces removed.' Sept. 3, 1622. Cabala 201. How
+difficult this was for him we see from a letter of Nethersole to
+Carlisle, Oct. 18, 1622. 'The slowness of resolution of this side may
+move H. Mai. [the King of Bohemia] to precipitate his before the time,
+which will be then to lose the fruits of two long years patience.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_419_419" id="Footnote_419_419"></a><a href="#FNanchor_419_419"><span class="label">[419]</span></a> Valaresso: 'Temendo di se stesso e di riuscir l'oggetto
+di tutta la colpa e forse della pena.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_420_420" id="Footnote_420_420"></a><a href="#FNanchor_420_420"><span class="label">[420]</span></a> Valaresso: Disp. 19 Luglio 1623.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_421_421" id="Footnote_421_421"></a><a href="#FNanchor_421_421"><span class="label">[421]</span></a> A true relation of the arrival and entertainment given to
+the Prince Charles: in Somers' Tracts ii. 625.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_422_422" id="Footnote_422_422"></a><a href="#FNanchor_422_422"><span class="label">[422]</span></a> Arcana quatuor capitula ad religionem pertinentia: in
+Dumont v. ii. 442. Their contents also appear in the Spanish reports.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_423_423" id="Footnote_423_423"></a><a href="#FNanchor_423_423"><span class="label">[423]</span></a> 'That you now take unto yourself liberty to throw down
+the laws of the land at your pleasure.' Cabala 13.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_424_424" id="Footnote_424_424"></a><a href="#FNanchor_424_424"><span class="label">[424]</span></a> The Duke and the Prince to the King, 6 June. Hardwicke
+Papers i. 419.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_425_425" id="Footnote_425_425"></a><a href="#FNanchor_425_425"><span class="label">[425]</span></a> Instructions received from His Highness June 7, 1623: in
+Clarendon State Papers I. xviii. App.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_426_426" id="Footnote_426_426"></a><a href="#FNanchor_426_426"><span class="label">[426]</span></a> Protestation of the Conde Oñate, in Khevenhiller, Ann.
+Ferd. viii. 66.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_427_427" id="Footnote_427_427"></a><a href="#FNanchor_427_427"><span class="label">[427]</span></a> From Khevenhiller's letter, Ann. Ferd. x. 95.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_428_428" id="Footnote_428_428"></a><a href="#FNanchor_428_428"><span class="label">[428]</span></a> In a Letter of Pope Urban to Olivarez, this passage
+occurs: 'Diceris in Britannico matrimonio differendo religionis
+dignitatem privatis omnibus rationibus praetulisse.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_429_429" id="Footnote_429_429"></a><a href="#FNanchor_429_429"><span class="label">[429]</span></a> 'We have expected the total restitution of the
+palatinate, and of the electorship.' James to Bristol, in Halliwell ii.
+228.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_430_430" id="Footnote_430_430"></a><a href="#FNanchor_430_430"><span class="label">[430]</span></a> Prince Charles and the Duke to James, Aug. 30, 1623.
+Hardwicke Papers i. 449.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_431_431" id="Footnote_431_431"></a><a href="#FNanchor_431_431"><span class="label">[431]</span></a> Prince Charles to the Earl of Bristol. Halliwell 229.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BV_V" id="BV_V"></a>
+THE PARLIAMENT OF 1624. ALLIANCE WITH FRANCE.</p>
+
+<p>After the Prince had taken leave of his Spanish escort, and had gone on
+board an English fleet at Santander, whither it had put in to fetch him
+away, contrary winds, or, in the words of a contemporary narrative, 'the
+brothers Boreas and Eurus,' for a while delayed his departure. We are
+assured that people in England never regarded the weathercocks and the
+direction of the smoke and of the clouds with more painful anxiety than
+at that time. Even among the dependents of the royal house many almost
+gave up the Prince as lost; for who, they said, could trust the word of
+the Spaniards? The Protestant part of the population thought that he
+would at least be compelled to abjure his religion. At last the wind
+subsided. On October 5, after an absence of almost eight months, the
+Prince arrived in Portsmouth, and the day after in London. The universal
+joy with which he was received was indescribable: all business was at a
+standstill; the shops were shut; nothing was seen but waggons driving
+backwards and forwards, laden with the wood intended for the bonfires
+which blazed at evening in all the open squares, at all corners of the
+streets, even in the inner courts, but were most brilliant and costly at
+the Guildhall.<a name="FNanchor_432_432" id="FNanchor_432_432"></a><a href="#Footnote_432_432" class="fnanchor">[432]</a>
+The joyful acclamations of the multitude mingled
+with the sound of the bells; people congratulated each other that the
+heir to the throne had returned as he had gone, and that without the
+Infanta; for this marriage had never been popular; but above all, that
+he returned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_523" id="Page_523">[Pg 523]</a></span>
+rather confirmed than shaken in his religion. They praised
+God for his deliverance out of the land of Egypt. Even Buckingham, who
+was not loved at other times, enjoyed a moment of universal popularity.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless the effect which would have been most welcome to the
+majority, that of banishing all thoughts of an alliance with Catholic
+powers, and of causing a wife to be sought for the Prince among
+Protestants, was certainly not produced, for the King had long been
+revolving another plan. The combination with Spain, although it had best
+corresponded to his wishes and ideas, had nevertheless been only an
+experiment: when it miscarried, he was predisposed to return to the
+thought of an alliance with France. The Prince, on his way through
+France, had already seized the opportunity of seeing the Princess, his
+possible bride, while she was dancing, without being remarked by her;
+and the impression which she made upon him had been by no means
+unfavourable.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly on his return from Spain Buckingham opened communications with
+Mary de' Medici, Queen of France, and that through means of a Franciscan
+monk, who could not be suspected, and who presented himself to her while
+she was at dinner. Buckingham made secret overtures to her, intimating
+that he wished to resume the old negotiations for an alliance between
+the royal families of England and France, for that he was a Frenchman at
+heart.<a name="FNanchor_433_433" id="FNanchor_433_433"></a><a href="#Footnote_433_433" class="fnanchor">[433]</a>
+As the Queen expressed herself favourably inclined, Henry
+Rich, who then bore the title of Lord Kensington, and afterwards that of
+Lord Holland, was sent before the end of the year 1623 on a secret
+mission to France in order to set the affair in motion. Rich was one of
+the most intimate friends of Buckingham, and to a certain extent
+resembled him in character.</p>
+
+<p>In this affair Buckingham had two circumstances in his favour. It was
+the main ambition of the Queen-mother to see her daughter on the throne
+of the neighbouring kingdom. The preference accorded by the English
+court to an Infanta of Spain over a daughter of France had had
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1624.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_524" id="Page_524">[Pg 524]</a></span>
+a painful effect upon her: she was the more gratified when that court now
+resumed the negotiations which had been broken off. Nevertheless she did
+not embark on so delicate an affair, the failure of which was still
+possible, without the necessary reserve. The French court could not but
+ask for religious concessions in favour of the Princess, as Spain had
+for the Infanta: but on the very first approach to the subject it hinted
+that it would not urge the King to such strict pledges as had been
+demanded on the side of the
+Spaniards.<a name="FNanchor_434_434" id="FNanchor_434_434"></a><a href="#Footnote_434_434" class="fnanchor">[434]</a>
+The second influence in
+Buckingham's favour was the political. The advance of the alliance, and
+of the power of the Spaniards, especially their establishment in the
+Palatinate, aroused the jealousy of the French. The opinion, which
+Cardinal Richelieu so often emphatically expressed, that France,
+everywhere enclosed by the power of the Spaniards, might some day be
+prostrated by it, was generally held. The interests of his country
+seemed to be deeply interested when England, from whose close connexion
+with Spain the greatest danger was to be apprehended, separated herself
+from that power, and showed a disposition to adopt a policy in harmony
+with that of France. Henry Rich assures us that so universal an
+agreement had never been known among Frenchmen as was shown at that time
+in the wish to ally themselves with England. Already agents of Mansfeld
+and Brunswick were seen at Court: an intended mission to Maximilian of
+Bavaria was given up on the representation of the English ambassador.
+Envoys from the expelled King of Bohemia also soon arrived, in order to
+gain the co-operation of the French in his restoration. The negotiations
+with England actually began: they were directed to an alliance and a
+marriage at the same time: in each case it was made a preliminary
+condition that England should openly and completely break with Spain.</p>
+
+<p>But this condition could not be fulfilled in England quite easily and
+without opposition.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_525" id="Page_525">[Pg 525]</a></span>
+And how indeed could it have been expected that the members of the Privy
+Council, who had followed the King in the direction given to his policy
+in favour of Spain, if not without any reserve, yet with an ardour which
+might be turned to their reproach, would now, as it were, turn round,
+and follow the example of the favourite in entering on another path? A
+commission chosen from their body was appointed in order to take into
+consideration the complaints made by Buckingham about the behaviour of
+the Spanish court. But the report which Buckingham made was by no means
+so convincing as to win their concurrence. He rather depended on
+impressions, which had no doubt in his own eyes a certain truth, than on
+facts which might have served as evidence for others as well. The
+commission declared itself almost unanimously against
+him.<a name="FNanchor_435_435" id="FNanchor_435_435"></a><a href="#Footnote_435_435" class="fnanchor">[435]</a>
+Its sentence was, that Philip IV had seriously intended to marry his sister
+to the Prince; and that in the affair of the Palatinate he had behaved,
+if not as a friend, yet at any rate not as an enemy. The first part is
+undoubtedly correct; with regard to the second however, neither the
+members of the Privy Council had any suspicion, nor had Buckingham
+himself any real information, that the Spaniards had made the interests
+of Austria in the Palatinate so decidedly their own. The Council was
+moreover in an ill humour with the favourite on account of the arbitrary
+authority which he arrogated to himself. When Lord Bristol came to
+England in the beginning of the year 1624, and then laid all the blame
+on Buckingham himself, a party was formed against the latter, which
+sought to overthrow him, and was even thought to have already secured a
+new favourite, with whom to replace Buckingham, just as he had formerly
+stepped into the place of Somerset. It was remarked that the friends and
+adherents of Somerset, who had always been on the side of Spain, came
+together and bestirred themselves. It was clear, and was generally said,
+that if relations with Spain were not broken off, the minister must
+fall. As people expressed it, 'either the marriage must break or
+Buckingham.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_526" id="Page_526">[Pg 526]</a></span>
+In this danger Buckingham resolved on a step of the greatest
+significance, in order to be able at once to attack the Spaniards, and
+to meet his rivals at home. He turned to those who had for many years
+demanded war with Spain on principle, the popular and zealous Protestant
+party. The King assented to his request for the summoning of a new
+Parliament, of which he had in fact for other reasons already given
+notice. As was to be expected from the connexion of affairs, the result
+of the elections corresponded with the views of the last Parliament. Men
+like Coke, who had been called to account for their attitude at that
+time, were re-elected two or three times over. The ruling minister now
+regarded them even as his allies.</p>
+
+<p>What an indescribable advantage however for the supporters of the claims
+of Parliament was this change! As the ill-success of the German policy
+of the King in the year 1621 had turned to their advantage, so now they
+profited by the failure of his negotiations with Spain. The political
+leanings of James I in favour of Spain, which they had originally
+opposed, had led to embarrassments in which the First Minister himself
+invoked their aid.</p>
+
+<p>But not only did party rivalries display themselves at this important
+moment, but a general opposition also arose on constitutional grounds.
+The Earl of Carlisle represented to the King that he had been visited by
+members of Parliament, no mere popular leaders or speakers, but quiet
+men and good patriots, who feared God and honoured the King: that he had
+learned from them that the agitation observed in the country had
+principally arisen because the last grants of Parliament had not been
+met by any favours on the part of the King, but on the contrary the
+expression of opinions displeasing to him on the part of certain members
+had been subsequently punished by their arrest. Carlisle reminded the
+King that nothing could be more hateful to his enemies, or more
+strengthening and encouraging to his friends, than the removal of these
+disagreements; that no king had ever had better subjects if he would but
+trust them; that if he would but show them that he relied on their
+counsel and support, he would win their hearts and command their
+fortunes; and that the people would then work with him for the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_527" id="Page_527">[Pg 527]</a></span>
+welfare and honour of the
+State.<a name="FNanchor_436_436" id="FNanchor_436_436"></a><a href="#Footnote_436_436" class="fnanchor">[436]</a></p>
+
+<p>These views prevailed when Parliament was opened on the 19th of
+February, 1624. Hitherto it had been one of the principal grievances of
+the King that Parliament wished to have a voice in affairs that
+concerned his state and his family. The new Parliament was opened with a
+detailed account from Buckingham of his negotiations with Spain, which
+affected both these interests, and with a request that Parliament would
+report on the great questions awaiting
+settlement.<a name="FNanchor_437_437" id="FNanchor_437_437"></a><a href="#Footnote_437_437" class="fnanchor">[437]</a></p>
+
+<p>The answer of both Houses was, that it was contrary to the honour of the
+King, to the welfare of his people, to the interest of his children, and
+even to the terms of his former alliances, to continue the negotiations
+with Spain any longer: they prayed him to break off negotiations on both
+subjects, with regard to the Palatinate, as well as with regard to the
+marriage. It was hailed as a public blessing that the conditions
+accepted for the sake of the latter would not now be fulfilled.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment Buckingham's wishes were on the side of this policy; for
+otherwise he could not have advanced a step in his dealings with France.
+But the King had not so fully made up his mind. He had approved the
+overtures made to France: but when he was now asked to break with Spain,
+the power which he most feared, and whose friendship it was the first
+principle of his policy to cultivate, there was something in him which
+recoiled from the step. Buckingham acknowledged for the first time that
+he was not of the same mind with the King. He said that he wished to
+tread only in one path, whereas the King thought that he could walk in
+two different paths at once; but that the King must choose between the
+Spaniards and his own subjects. He asked him whether, supposing that
+sufficient subsidies of a definite amount were at once granted him, and
+the support of his subjects with their lives and fortunes were promised
+him for the future, so far as it might be necessary&mdash;whether
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_528" id="Page_528">[Pg 528]</a></span>
+in that
+case he would resolve to break off the matrimonial alliance with Spain.
+He asked for a straightforward and definite answer, that he might be
+able to give information on the subject beforehand to some members of
+Parliament. It is evident that this was no longer the attitude of a
+favourite, who has only to express the opinions and wishes of his
+prince. Buckingham came forward as a statesman, who opposes his own
+insight to the aims of his sovereign. He says that if he should concur
+with the King, he should be a flatterer; that if he should fail to
+express his own opinion, he should be a traitor. In this matter he could
+rely on the support of the Prince, who, without estranging himself from
+his father, still appeared to be less dependent on his will than
+before.<a name="FNanchor_438_438" id="FNanchor_438_438"></a><a href="#Footnote_438_438" class="fnanchor">[438]</a>
+The result was that James I again gave way. He named the
+sum which he should require for the defence of his kingdom, for the
+support of his neighbours, and for the discharge of his own debts.
+Parliament, although it did not grant the whole amount demanded, yet
+granted a very considerable sum: it agreed to pay three full subsidies
+and three fifteenths within a year, if the negotiations were broken off.
+At the beginning of April Buckingham was able to announce to Parliament
+that the King, in consequence of the advice given to him, had finally
+broken off negotiations with Spain on both matters.</p>
+
+<p>Other and further concessions of the greatest extent were coupled with
+this announcement. The King promised that, if a war should break out, he
+would not entertain any proposals for peace without the advice of
+Parliament. It was of still more importance, for the moment at least,
+that he declared himself willing to allow Parliament itself to dispose
+of the sums it had granted. He said that he wished to have nothing to do
+with them: that Parliament itself might nominate a treasurer. These
+likewise were admissions which Buckingham had demanded from the
+King:<a name="FNanchor_439_439" id="FNanchor_439_439"></a><a href="#Footnote_439_439" class="fnanchor">[439]</a>
+but it maybe supposed that he had a previous understanding on
+the subject
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_529" id="Page_529">[Pg 529]</a></span>
+with the leaders of the Parliament. He also represented to
+the King that the removal of the old grievances was an absolute
+necessity. The monopolies to which James had so long clung, and which he
+had so obstinately defended, he now in turn gave up; while the penal
+laws against the Catholics, to which he was averse, were revived.</p>
+
+<p>This was an intestine struggle between the different powers in the
+state, as well as a question of policy. Parliament and the favourite
+made common cause against the Privy Council, which was on the side of
+Spain.</p>
+
+<p>Among his opponents in the Privy Council, Buckingham hated none so much
+as the Lord Treasurer Cranfield, then Earl of Middlesex, for Cranfield,
+although raised from a humble station by Buckingham himself, had the
+courage to resist him on the Spanish
+question.<a name="FNanchor_440_440" id="FNanchor_440_440"></a><a href="#Footnote_440_440" class="fnanchor">[440]</a>
+By his strict and successful management of business, Cranfield had won the favour of the
+King, who believed that he had found in him a second Sully. It seems
+that Cranfield himself had intended to effect the ruin of Buckingham:
+but Buckingham was too strong for him. Certain accusations, which were
+partly well founded, were made available in bringing him to trial by
+Parliamentary means, and in removing him from his office like Bacon; for
+he had incurred the enmity of many by his strictness and
+incorruptibility. The King professed to regard this case as even worse
+than the former, because Bacon had acknowledged his guilt, while
+Cranfield denied all guilt. The doctrine of the responsibility of
+ministers was by this means advanced still further, for it was now
+becoming more dangerous to fall out with Parliament than with the King.</p>
+
+<p>The authority of Parliament in general made important strides. It now
+threw paramount weight into those deliberations which concerned the
+general affairs of the kingdom, war and peace, and the royal family.
+What became of the principle on which the King had hitherto taken his
+stand,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_530" id="Page_530">[Pg 530]</a></span>
+that the decision of these matters must be left exclusively to
+his discretion? Parliament again assumed the attitude which three years
+before had led to its dissolution.</p>
+
+<p>It was not possible that James I could look on all this without
+displeasure and uneasiness. Sometimes the thought occurred to him that
+Buckingham had not been the right man to conduct the negotiations with
+Spain. The words escaped him that, if he had sent the Lord Keeper
+Williams with his son instead of Buckingham, his honour would then have
+been saved, and his heart would now beat more lightly. He did not
+approve of the decided turn which was being given to foreign politics.
+He was once heard to say that he was a poor old man, who in former times
+had known something about politics, but who now knew nothing more about
+them.</p>
+
+<p>It seems indeed that he had fancied that he could still continue to hold
+the balance between parties: so at least those who knew James understood
+him. He had no intention of allowing Buckingham's fall, as the enemies
+of that nobleman wished, but he perhaps thought of finding a
+counterpoise for him: he did not wish to let him become lord and master
+of affairs. On the other hand Buckingham, by his connexion with the
+leading men of the Lower House, had already won an independent position,
+in which he was no longer at the mercy of the King. He may perhaps be
+set down as the first English minister who, supported by Parliament and
+by public opinion, induced or compelled the King to adopt a policy on
+which of his own accord he would not have resolved. In conjunction with
+his new friends Buckingham succeeded in breaking up the Spanish party,
+with which he now for the first time came into conflict: his adherents
+congratulated him on his
+success.<a name="FNanchor_441_441" id="FNanchor_441_441"></a><a href="#Footnote_441_441" class="fnanchor">[441]</a>
+In court and state a kind of
+reaction against the previous importance of this party set in. The
+offices which were vacated by the fall of Cranfield were conferred on
+men of the other party, the kind of men who had formerly been displaced
+under the influence of Gondomar.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_531" id="Page_531">[Pg 531]</a></span>
+Seamen were acquitted who had shown
+the same disregard for orders as Walter Ralegh had once done, and
+preparations were made to indemnify Ralegh's posterity for the loss of
+property which they had suffered. The Spanish ambassadors at court
+availed themselves of a moment of ill humour on the part of the King, to
+whom indeed they had again obtained access, to call his attention to the
+loss of authority which threatened him on account of Buckingham's
+combination with the leading men in the Parliament. But in what they
+said they mingled so much falsehood with the truth that they could be
+easily refuted; and Buckingham successfully resisted this attack also.</p>
+
+<p>People still perceived in the King his old indecision. He consented, it
+is true, that Mansfeld, whom he had formerly helped the Spaniards to
+expel from his strong position on the Upper Rhine, should now be
+supported by English as well as French money in a new campaign to
+recover the Palatinate. But nevertheless he wished at the same time to
+enjoin him as a condition to abstain from attacking any country which
+rightfully belonged to the Archduchess Isabella, or to the crown of
+Spain.<a name="FNanchor_442_442" id="FNanchor_442_442"></a><a href="#Footnote_442_442" class="fnanchor">[442]</a>
+So far was he still from undertaking open war against Spain,
+as his subjects hoped and expected.</p>
+
+<p>And though he acceded to the negotiations with France, yet in this
+transaction the very circumstance which displeased the majority of his
+subjects&mdash;namely that he was hereby making an alliance with a Catholic
+power&mdash;was acceptable to him. For even then he would not have consented
+at any price to have interfered in the general religious quarrel merely
+on religious grounds. He felt no hesitation in promising the French, as
+he had the Spaniards, not only freedom of religion in behalf of the
+future queen, but even relief for his Catholic subjects in regard to the
+penal laws imposed by Parliament. Yet he could have wished that they had
+contented themselves with his simple promise. One of his envoys, Lord
+Nithisdale, was himself of this opinion. On the other side it was
+remarked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_532" id="Page_532">[Pg 532]</a></span>
+that perhaps the Catholics, of whom he also was one, might be
+contented with a promise from their sovereign, on whom their whole
+welfare depended, but that the French government could not, as it must
+have a dispensation from the Pope, which could not be obtained without a
+written assurance. James I at first declared himself ready to give such
+a declaration in a letter to the king of France, and La Vieuville, who
+was minister at the time, expressed himself content with that. But after
+his fall and Richelieu's accession to power this arrangement was
+rejected. It was in vain that the King's ambassadors held out a prospect
+that the letter should be signed by the Prince and by the chief
+Secretary of State; the French insisted that the King should ratify not
+only the treaty, but also a special engagement which they themselves
+wished to frame and to lay before Urban VIII. The English
+plenipotentiaries at the French court, Holland and Carlisle, were still
+refusing to agree to this, when King James had already given way to the
+French ambassador in England.</p>
+
+<p>The agreement, in the form in which it was at last concluded, was in
+some points more advantageous for England than that with Spain had been.
+While the latter stipulated that the laws which had been passed, or
+might hereafter be passed, in England against the Catholics were not to
+be applied to the royal children, but that these on the contrary were
+still to be secured in their right to the succession, an agreement
+which, as was mentioned, opened a prospect of an alteration in the
+religion of the reigning family; this supposition was avoided in the
+contract with France. But it was agreed on the other hand that the
+future queen was to conduct the education of her children, not merely
+till their tenth year, as had been stipulated with Spain, but till their
+thirteenth. She herself and her household were also to enjoy a higher
+degree of ecclesiastical independence; the superintendence of a bishop
+was even allowed them. It was the ambition of the Pope to demand not
+much less from the French than his predecessor had demanded from the
+Spaniards as the price of bestowing a dispensation for the marriage of a
+Catholic princess with a Protestant prince; and it was the ambition of
+the French court to offer him, or at least to appear to offer him, no
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_533" id="Page_533">[Pg 533]</a></span>
+less. In the special assurance above mentioned James gave a promise that
+his Catholic subjects should look forward to the enjoyment of still
+greater freedom than that which would have been conferred on them by the
+agreement with Spain. They were not to be molested for the sake of
+religion, either in their persons or in their possessions, supposing
+that in other respects they conducted themselves as good and loyal
+subjects.<a name="FNanchor_443_443" id="FNanchor_443_443"></a><a href="#Footnote_443_443" class="fnanchor">[443]</a></p>
+
+<p>The English ambassadors took exception to single expressions: the King
+himself passed lightly over them. He was mainly induced to do so by the
+absence from the agreement with France of the most offensive and
+burdensome clauses which had been contained in the secret articles of
+the treaty with Spain. On December 12, 1624, the treaty was signed at
+Cambridge by the King, and the special assurance both by the King and by
+the Prince.</p>
+
+<p>James I wished to see his son married. At the Christmas immediately
+following he greeted him according to English fashion with the tenderest
+expressions: he said that he existed only for his sake; that he had
+rather live with him in banishment than lead a desolate life without
+him. He thought that the treaty of marriage which had just been
+concluded would establish his happiness for ever.</p>
+
+<p>An alliance between France and England for the recovery of the
+Palatinate was now moreover in contemplation. From the first moment the
+French had acknowledged that this would be to their own interest, and
+had promised to assist in that object to the extent of their power.
+Nevertheless they hesitated to conclude an express agreement for this
+object; for what would the Pope say if they allied
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1625.</span>
+themselves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_534" id="Page_534">[Pg 534]</a></span>
+with Protestants against Catholics? At last they submitted a declaration in
+writing, but this appeared to the English ambassadors so unsatisfactory,
+that they preferred to return it to them. The French said that this time
+they would perform more than they promised. Although exceptions of many
+kinds might be made to their performances, yet they were really
+seriously bent on doing as much as possible for the recovery of the
+Palatinate. Just at that time Richelieu had stepped into power, and he
+expressly directed the policy of France to the destruction of the
+position which the Spaniards had occupied on the Middle Rhine. In spite
+of the obstructive efforts of a party which had both ecclesiastical and
+political objects in view, he concluded the arrangements for the
+marriage of the Princess to the Prince of Wales without any delay, even
+without waiting for the last word of the Pope.</p>
+
+<p>By this means the connexion which the King had formed in earlier years
+seemed once more to be revived. The Duke of Savoy and the Republic of
+Venice supported Mansfeld's preparations with subsidies of money. The
+States General took the most lively interest in the warlike movements in
+Germany, on which the Elector of Brandenburg also set his hopes. The
+King of Denmark offered his help in the matter with a readiness which
+created astonishment. While the English ambassadors were busy in
+adjusting the disputes that were constantly springing up afresh between
+him and Sweden, he gathered the estates of Lower Saxony around him, in
+order to check the swift advance of the Catholic
+League.<a name="FNanchor_444_444" id="FNanchor_444_444"></a><a href="#Footnote_444_444" class="fnanchor">[444]</a>
+Of the members of the old alliance the princes of Upper Germany alone were
+absent. It was hoped that the Union would be revived by the efforts of
+Lower Germany, and above all that its head, the Elector Palatine, would
+be restored to his country.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_535" id="Page_535">[Pg 535]</a></span>
+Induced by the failure of peaceful negotiations for the restoration of
+his son-in-law, James allowed greater progress to be made in the
+direction of war than he had ever done before. He took an eager interest
+in the preliminaries and preparations for war, even for a naval war. But
+would he ever have proceeded to action? While preparing to attack the
+Emperor and the League did he intend to do anything more than make a
+demonstration against Spain? In truth it may be doubted. He never
+allowed his English troops to attempt anything for the relief of Breda,
+which at that time was still blockaded by the
+Spaniards.<a name="FNanchor_445_445" id="FNanchor_445_445"></a><a href="#Footnote_445_445" class="fnanchor">[445]</a></p>
+
+<p>And in his alliance with France he certainly still held fast to his
+original principles.</p>
+
+<p>The marriage of his son to a Catholic princess, and the indulgence
+towards the Catholics to which he thereby pledged himself, express the
+most characteristic tendencies of his policy. Notwithstanding all the
+concessions which he made to Parliament, he still refused to grant many
+of the demands which were addressed to him. The special agreement which
+he made with France corresponded to the conception which he had formed
+of his prerogative. By means of it he imported into relations controlled
+by the law of nations his claim to give by virtue of his royal power a
+dispensation even from laws that had been passed by Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>After, as well as before, this event his idea was to control and to
+combine into harmony the conflicting elements within his kingdom by his
+personal will; outside his kingdom, to guide or to regulate events by
+clever policy. This is the important feature in the position and in the
+pacific attitude of this sovereign. But the blame which attaches to him
+is also connected with it. He made each and everything, however
+important it might be in itself, merely secondary to his political
+calculation. His high-flying thoughts have something laboured and flat
+about them; they are almost too closely connected with a conscious, and
+at the same time personal, end; they want that free sweep which is
+necessary for enlisting the interest of contemporaries and of posterity.
+And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_536" id="Page_536">[Pg 536]</a></span>
+could the policy of James ever have prevailed? Was it not in its
+own nature already a failure? A great crisis was hanging over England
+when King James died (March 1625). He had once more received the Lord's
+Supper after the Anglican use, with edifying expressions of contrition:
+a numerous assembly had been present, for he wished every one to know
+that he died holding the same views which he had professed, and had
+contended for in his writings during his lifetime. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_432_432" id="Footnote_432_432"></a><a href="#FNanchor_432_432"><span class="label">[432]</span></a> 'True mirth and gladness was in every face, and healths
+ran bravely round in every place.' John Taylor, Prince Charles his
+Welcome from Spaine: in Somers ii. 552.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_433_433" id="Footnote_433_433"></a><a href="#FNanchor_433_433"><span class="label">[433]</span></a> Mémoires de Richelieu. Ranke, Französische Geschichte v.
+133 (Werke xii. 162).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_434_434" id="Footnote_434_434"></a><a href="#FNanchor_434_434"><span class="label">[434]</span></a> Kensington to Buckingham: 'Neither will they strain us to
+any unreasonablenesse in conditions for our Catholics.' Cabala 275.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_435_435" id="Footnote_435_435"></a><a href="#FNanchor_435_435"><span class="label">[435]</span></a> Hacket, Life of Williams 169. 'Scarce any in all the
+Consulto did vote to my Lords satisfaction.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_436_436" id="Footnote_436_436"></a><a href="#FNanchor_436_436"><span class="label">[436]</span></a> The Earl of Carlisle to His Majesty, Feb. 14, 1624. He
+signs himself 'Your Majesty's most humble, most obedient obliged
+creature subject and servant.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_437_437" id="Footnote_437_437"></a><a href="#FNanchor_437_437"><span class="label">[437]</span></a> Valaresso already observes this, March 8, 1624:
+'Nell'ultimo parlamento si chiamava felonia di parlare di quello, che
+hora si transmette alla libera consultatione del presente.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_438_438" id="Footnote_438_438"></a><a href="#FNanchor_438_438"><span class="label">[438]</span></a> A. Valaresso, Dec. 15, 1623: 'Col re usa qualche minor
+rispetto; agli altri da maggior sodisfattione del solito. Parla con Più
+liberta della Spagna.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_439_439" id="Footnote_439_439"></a><a href="#FNanchor_439_439"><span class="label">[439]</span></a> Of all Buckingham's letters to the King, without doubt
+the most remarkable. Hardwicke i. 466: 'Risolve constantly to run one
+way.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_440_440" id="Footnote_440_440"></a><a href="#FNanchor_440_440"><span class="label">[440]</span></a> Valaresso, April 26. 'La persona merita male perche certo
+fu d'affetto Spagnola.' He accuses him of a 'Somma scarsezza di pagare.'
+Chamberlain says of him at his appearance on the scene October 1621:
+'whom the King, in his piercing judgment, finds best able to do him
+service.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_441_441" id="Footnote_441_441"></a><a href="#FNanchor_441_441"><span class="label">[441]</span></a> Robert Philips to Buckingham, August 9, 1624. 'You have
+to your perpetual glory already dissolved and broken the Spanish
+party.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_442_442" id="Footnote_442_442"></a><a href="#FNanchor_442_442"><span class="label">[442]</span></a> 'Not to attempt any act of hostility upon any of the
+lawful dominions or possessions of the king of spain or the
+Archiduchess.' He then at any rate supposed certain cases in which this
+might take place. Hardwicke Papers i. 548.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_443_443" id="Footnote_443_443"></a><a href="#FNanchor_443_443"><span class="label">[443]</span></a> Escrit particulier: 'qu'il permettra a tous ses subjects
+Catholiques Romains de jouir de plus de liberté et franchise en ce qui
+regarde leur religion qu'ils n'eussent fait en vertu d'articles
+quelconques accordés par le traité de mariage fait avec l'Espagne, ne
+voulant que ses subjects Catholiques puissent estre inquiétés en leurs
+personnes et biens pour faire profession de la dite religion et vivre en
+Catholiques pourvu toutesfois qu'ils en usent modestement, et rendent
+l'obéissance que de bons et vrays subjects doivent à leur roy, qu'il par
+sa bonté ne les restreindra pas à aucun sentiment contraire à leur
+religion.' Hardwicke Papers i. 546. The English ambassadors complain
+that the word 'liberté' had been inserted by the French without first
+informing them.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_444_444" id="Footnote_444_444"></a><a href="#FNanchor_444_444"><span class="label">[444]</span></a> Conway to Carlisle, Feb. 24, 1624-25: 'In contemplation
+of H. Majesty the king of Denmark hath come to the propositions&mdash;upon
+which H. M. upon good grounds hath made dispatche to the king of Denmark
+agreeing to the kings of Denmarks propositions.' Hardwicke Papers i.
+560.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_445_445" id="Footnote_445_445"></a><a href="#FNanchor_445_445"><span class="label">[445]</span></a> Valaresso: 'Non è possibile di rimoverlo di contravenire
+alle tante promesse verso Spagnoli et alle sue prime dichiarationi.'</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BV_VI" id="BV_VI"></a>
+BEGINNING OF THE REIGN OF CHARLES I, AND HIS FIRST AND SECOND
+PARLIAMENT.</p>
+
+<p>The prince who now ascended the throne was in the bloom of life: he had
+just completed his twenty-fifth year. He had been weak and delicate in
+childhood: among the defects from which he suffered was that of
+stammering, which he did not get over throughout life; but he had grown
+up stronger in other ways than had been expected. He looked well on
+horseback: men saw him govern with safety horses that were hard to
+manage: he was expert in knightly exercises: he was a good shot with the
+cross-bow, as well as with the gun, and even learned how to load a
+cannon. He was hardly less unweariedly devoted to the chase than his
+father. He could not vie with him in intelligence and knowledge, nor
+with his deceased brother Henry in vivacious energy and in popularity of
+disposition; but he had learnt much from his father, at whose feet he
+loved to sit; and his brother's tastes for the arts and for the
+experimental sciences, especially the former, had passed to him. In
+moral qualities he was superior to both. He was one of those young men
+of whom it is said that they have no fault. His strict propriety of
+demeanour bordered on maiden bashfulness: a serious and temperate soul
+spoke from his calm eyes. He had a natural gift for apprehending even
+the most complicated questions, and he was a good writer. From his youth
+he shewed himself economical; not profuse, but at the same time not
+niggardly; in all matters precise. All the world had been wearied by the
+frequent proofs which his father had given of his untrustworthiness, and
+by the unfathomable mystery in which he enveloped his ever-wavering
+intentions: they expected from the son more openness, uprightness, and
+consistency. They
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_538" id="Page_538">[Pg 538]</a></span>
+asked if he would not also be more decidedly
+Protestant. He showed, at least at first, that he had a more sensitive
+feeling with regard to his princely
+honour.<a name="FNanchor_446_446" id="FNanchor_446_446"></a><a href="#Footnote_446_446" class="fnanchor">[446]</a>
+He had expected that his personal suit for the hand of the Infanta would remove all
+difficulties on the part of the Spaniards, even those of a political
+character, which obstructed the marriage. They had paid him every
+attention suitable to his rank, but in the business which was under
+discussion they had not given way a hair's breadth: it rather appeared
+as if they wished to avail themselves of his presence to impose harder
+conditions upon him. He was deeply affronted at this. When he found
+himself again among his countrymen on board an English ship, he
+expressed his astonishment that he had not been detained after he had
+been so ill-treated.<a name="FNanchor_447_447" id="FNanchor_447_447"></a><a href="#Footnote_447_447" class="fnanchor">[447]</a>
+Quiet and taciturn by nature, he knew while in
+Spain how to disguise his real feelings by appearing to feel
+differently: but we have seen how on his return his whole attitude with
+regard to affairs in general, both foreign and domestic, in matters
+which concerned his father and the Parliament alike, assumed an altered
+character which corresponded to the general feeling of the nation far
+more closely than the policy previously pursued.</p>
+
+<p>In the last days of James doubts had still been felt whether he would
+ever allow a marriage to take place between his son and a French
+princess, and large sums had been wagered on the issue. Charles I at
+once put an end to all hesitation. He did not allow himself to be
+induced to defer his marriage even by the death of his father, or by a
+pestilential sickness which then prevailed, or by the lack of the
+desirable preparations in the royal palaces. He wished to show the world
+that he adhered to his policy of opposition to Spain. He even allowed
+the privateering, which his father had formerly suppressed with so much
+zeal, to begin again. The royal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_539" id="Page_539">[Pg 539]</a></span>
+navy, for the improvement of which
+Buckingham actively exerted himself, was put in a complete state of
+efficiency, and the money granted by Parliament was principally employed
+for this purpose.</p>
+
+<p>But to enable him to undertake war in earnest he required fresh grants.
+It was almost the first thought of the King after his accession to the
+throne to call a Parliament for this purpose, and that the same
+Parliament which had last sat in the reign of his
+father.<a name="FNanchor_448_448" id="FNanchor_448_448"></a><a href="#Footnote_448_448" class="fnanchor">[448]</a>
+He bent, although unwillingly, to the necessity, imposed by the constitution, of
+ordering new elections to be proceeded with, for he would rather have
+avoided all delay: but he entertained no doubt that the Parliament, as
+it was composed after the elections, would give him its full support.
+After what had taken place he considered this almost a matter of course.</p>
+
+<p>On June 18/28, 1625, Charles I opened his first Parliament at
+Westminster. He reminded the members that his father had been induced by
+the advice of the Parliament, whose wishes he had himself represented to
+the King, to break off all further negotiations with Spain. He said that
+this was done in their interest: that on their instigation he had
+embarked on the affair as a young man joyfully and with good courage:
+that this had been his first undertaking: what a reproach would it be
+both for himself and for them if they now refused him the support which
+he necessarily required for bringing to a successful issue the quarrel
+which had already begun!</p>
+
+<p>And certainly if war with Spain had been the only question, he might
+have reckoned upon abundant grants: but the matter was not quite so
+simple. Parliament thought above all of its own designs, which it had
+not been possible to effect in the lifetime of James I, but which
+Charles had advocated in the last session. If the new King inferred the
+obligation of Parliament to furnish the money required for a foreign war
+from the share it had had in the counsels which had led to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_540" id="Page_540">[Pg 540]</a></span>
+that war, Parliament also considered that he was no less bound on his part to
+fulfil the wishes that had been expressed in regard to internal policy.
+In the very first debate which preceded the election of the Speaker,
+this point of view was very distinctly put forward. The King was told
+that in the last session he had sought to remove all differences between
+Parliament and his father, and to induce the latter to grant the
+petitions of Parliament: that if he had not succeeded then, that result
+had been due only to his want of power; but now he had power as well as
+inclination: what he before had only been able to will, he now was
+enabled to effect, and everything depended solely on
+him.<a name="FNanchor_449_449" id="FNanchor_449_449"></a><a href="#Footnote_449_449" class="fnanchor">[449]</a>
+It had been especially the execution of the Acts of Parliament directed against
+the Catholics which the Parliament demanded, and which the Prince in his
+ardour against Spain had then thought advisable. His father had refused
+to grant this: it was now expected that he should grant it himself. They
+expected this from him as much as he expected from them a subsidy
+sufficient for carrying on the war. It may be asked, however, whether it
+was possible for him to give ear to their wishes. The complication in
+his fortunes arose from his inability to comply.</p>
+
+<p>If Charles I, when Prince of Wales, had wished to identify his cause
+entirely with the aims of Parliament, he would have been obliged to
+marry the daughter of a Protestant prince. But this was prevented by the
+political danger which would then have arisen in the event of a breach
+with Spain. Neither James nor Charles I believed that they could
+withstand this great monarchy without an alliance with France. Political
+and dynastic interests had led to the marriage which had just been
+concluded. But by this a relation with the Catholic world had again been
+contracted which rendered impossible a purely Protestant system of
+government such as Queen
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_541" id="Page_541">[Pg 541]</a></span>
+Elizabeth desired to establish. A dispensation
+from Rome had been required which expressed even without any disguise
+the hope that the French princess would convert the King and his realm
+to the old faith.<a name="FNanchor_450_450" id="FNanchor_450_450"></a><a href="#Footnote_450_450" class="fnanchor">[450]</a>
+The marriage could not have been concluded
+without entering into obligations which were in open contradiction to
+the Acts of Parliament. Those obligations were not yet fully known, but
+what was learnt of them caused great agitation. Charles was reminded of
+a promise, which he was said to have given at an earlier time, to agree
+to no conditions on his marriage which might be prejudicial to the
+Church existing in England. Men asked how that promise had been
+fulfilled; and why any secret was made of the compact which had been
+concluded. Would not the Queen's chapel, they asked, now serve to unite
+the Catholics of England; or would they be forbidden to hear mass there?
+In a forcible petition Parliament asked for the execution of the laws
+issued against Papists and
+recusants.<a name="FNanchor_451_451" id="FNanchor_451_451"></a><a href="#Footnote_451_451" class="fnanchor">[451]</a></p>
+
+<p>Charles I was not in a position to be able to regard it. It was not that
+he had any thought of curtailing the rights of the English Church or of
+entering on any other course in great questions of general policy than
+that which had been laid down in conjunction with Parliament. His
+marriage also was a preparation for the conflict with Spain; but if it
+was not so decidedly opposed to the common feeling of the country as a
+Spanish marriage, yet it was far from being in accordance with it. The
+pledges which had been given on that occasion prevented the King from
+adopting exclusively Protestant points of view, and from identifying
+himself completely with his people.</p>
+
+<p>But there was another reason for the King's adherence to his agreement.
+He was as little inclined as his father had been to allow the Parliament
+to exercise any influence on ecclesiastical affairs. Much unpleasant
+surprise was created at that time by the writings of Dr. Montague, in
+which he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_542" id="Page_542">[Pg 542]</a></span>
+treated the Roman Church with forbearance, and Puritanism with
+scorn and hatred. Parliament wished to institute proceedings against the
+author. The King did not take him under his protection; but on the
+request of some dignitaries of the English Church he transferred the
+matter to his own tribunal. He regarded it moreover as an undoubted
+element of his prerogative to dispense with the statutes passed by
+Parliament, so that the concessions which were expressed in the marriage
+compact appeared to him quite justifiable.</p>
+
+<p>We see how closely this affected the most important question of English
+constitutional law. The universal competence of Parliament is here
+opposed to the authority of the King, strengthened by his ecclesiastical
+functions. And we understand how Parliament, in spite of the urgent need
+created by itself, hesitated to fulfil the expectations of the King.</p>
+
+<p>It could not absolutely refuse to make any grant: it offered him two
+subsidies, 'fruits of its love' as they were termed. But the King had
+expected a far stronger proof of devotion. What importance could be
+attached to such an insignificant sum in prospect of so tremendous an
+undertaking as a war against Spain? The grant itself implied a sort of
+refusal.</p>
+
+<p>But the Lower House also attempted to introduce a most extensive
+innovation in regard to finance. The customs formed one of the main
+sources of the revenue of the crown, without which it could not be
+supported. They had been increased by the last government on the ground
+of its right to tonnage and poundage, although, as we saw, not without
+opposition.<a name="FNanchor_452_452" id="FNanchor_452_452"></a><a href="#Footnote_452_452" class="fnanchor">[452]</a>
+The constitutional question was whether the customs
+were properly to be regarded as a tax, and accordingly dependent on the
+grant of Parliament, or whether they were absolutely appropriated to the
+crown by right derived from long prescription: for since the time of
+Edward IV, tonnage and poundage had been granted to every king for the
+whole period of his reign. The controversies arising
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_543" id="Page_543">[Pg 543]</a></span>
+on the subject under James had brought to light the daily increasing importance
+conferred by the growth of commerce on this source of revenue, which
+certainly assured to the crown, if not for extraordinary undertakings,
+yet for the conduct of the ordinary business of the state, a certain
+independence of the grants of Parliament. The Lower House was now
+disinclined, both on principle and under the painful excitement of the
+moment, to renew the grant on these terms: it therefore conferred the
+right to tonnage and poundage on the King only for a year. But the
+import of this restriction was plain enough. The popular leaders were
+not satisfied with granting the King very inadequate support for the
+war, but they sought to make him dependent even in time of peace on the
+goodwill of the Lower House. The resolution was rejected by the Upper
+House, and it appeared to the King himself as an affront. For why should
+he be refused what had been secured to his predecessors during a century
+and a half? The granting of supplies for life he regarded as a mere
+form, which after such long prescription was not even necessary. He
+thought himself entitled, even without such a grant, to have the duties
+levied in his own name as before.</p>
+
+<p>These were differences of the most thoroughgoing character, which had
+descended to Charles I with the crown itself from the earlier kings and
+from his father. The change of government, and certain previous
+occurrences caused these differences to come into greater prominence
+than ever; but they received their peculiar character from something in
+his personal relations which had also been transmitted from the father
+to the son.</p>
+
+<p>Or rather, we may say, James I would certainly have been inclined to get
+rid of Buckingham as he had formerly got rid of Somerset: under Charles
+I this favourite occupied a still stronger position than he had held
+before.</p>
+
+<p>Between the two men personally there was a great contrast. In the
+favourite there was nothing of the precision, calmness, and moral
+behaviour of the King. Buckingham was dissolute, talkative, and vain.
+His appearance had made his fortune, and he endeavoured to add to it by
+a splendour of attire,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_544" id="Page_544">[Pg 544]</a></span>
+which later times would have allowed only in
+women. Jewels were displayed in his ears, and precious stones served as
+buttons for his doublet. It was affirmed that on his journey to France,
+which preceded the marriage of the King, he had taken with him about
+thirty different suits, each more costly than the last. It was for him
+as much an affair of ambition as of sensual pleasure to make an
+impression upon women, and to achieve what are called conquests in the
+highest circles. He revelled in the enjoyment of successes in society.
+Moments of lassitude followed, when those who had to speak with him on
+business found him extended upon his couch, without giving them a sign
+of interest or attention, especially when their proposals were not
+altogether to his mind. Immediately afterwards however he would pass
+from this state to one of the most highly-strained activity, for which
+he by no means wanted ability: he then knew neither rest nor weariness.
+He was spurred on most of all by the necessity of making head
+alternately against such powerful and active rivals as the two ministers
+who at that time conducted the affairs of France and Spain. He was bound
+to Charles I by a common interest in one or two of those employments
+which fill up daily life, for instance by fondness for art and art
+collections, but principally by the companionship into which they had
+been thrown, first in the cabinet of James I, who weighed his
+conclusions by their assistance, and afterwards in their journey to
+Spain. The Spaniards, who were accustomed to treat persons of the
+highest rank with respect and reverence, were greatly scandalised to see
+how entirely Buckingham indulged his own humours in the presence of the
+Prince. He allowed himself to use playful nicknames, such as might have
+been often applied in the hunting-seats of James or in letters to him,
+but which at other times appeared very much out of place. He remained
+sitting when the Prince was standing: in his presence he had indeed the
+audacity to consult his ease by stretching his legs on another chair.
+The Prince appeared to find this quite proper: Buckingham was for him
+not so much a servant as an equal and intimate friend. It would have
+been impossible to say which of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_545" id="Page_545">[Pg 545]</a></span>
+two was the chief cause of the
+alienation which arose between them and the Spaniards. Rumour made the
+favourite responsible for this estrangement: better informed people
+traced it to the Prince himself. The intimacy formed during their
+previous association had been made still closer by the policy which they
+pursued since their return from Spain. Many persons hoped
+notwithstanding that, in spite of appearances to the contrary, an
+alteration would take place with the change of government. But on the
+first entry of Charles I into London, Buckingham was seen sitting by him
+in his carriage in the usual intimate proximity. His share in the
+marriage of the King increased their friendship: they both equally
+agreed even in the subsequent change of policy. Buckingham had allied
+himself most closely with the leaders of the Puritan opposition in
+Parliament: by their support principally he had broken up the party
+favourable to Spain. But in return for these services he had now not the
+least intention of doing justice to their claims. If it had depended on
+him, still greater concessions would afterwards have been granted in
+favour of the Catholics than in fact were made; for Catholic sympathies
+were very strongly represented in his family: he himself had far less
+feeling in favour of Anglican orthodoxy than the King. And when the
+rights of the prerogative were called in question, he again espoused
+them most zealously, seeing that his own power rested on their validity.
+He looked at the Parliamentary constitution from the point of view of a
+holder of power, who wishes to avail himself of it for the end before
+him without deeming himself bound by it, so soon as it becomes
+inconvenient to him. He cared only for success in his immediate object:
+all means of obtaining it seemed fair.</p>
+
+<p>The continuance of the session in London was at that time rendered
+impossible by the pestilential sickness already referred to, which every
+day increased in severity. Buckingham, who although pliant and adroit
+yet had no regard whatever for others, wished to keep Parliament sitting
+until it had made satisfactory grants. While the members, and even the
+Privy Council, wished for a prorogation, he urged with success that the
+sitting should only be transferred to Oxford.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_546" id="Page_546">[Pg 546]</a></span>
+Thither the two Houses
+very unwillingly went, for there also symptoms of the plague were
+already showing themselves; and each member would have preferred to be
+at home with his family. And when Buckingham came before them at Oxford
+with his proposal for a further grant, the ill-humour of the assembly
+openly broke out. He was reproached with the illegality of his conduct
+in asking for a grant of subsidies more than once in a session; the
+members said that if this was the object of their meeting they might
+well have been at home.<a name="FNanchor_453_453" id="FNanchor_453_453"></a><a href="#Footnote_453_453" class="fnanchor">[453]</a>
+But they were not content with rejecting
+the proposal: they said that if they must remain together, they would,
+according to former precedent, bring under debate the prevailing abuses
+and their removal.</p>
+
+<p>Buckingham had been warned that by now changing his demeanour he would
+run the risk of forfeiting those sympathies of Parliament, which he had
+won by his Protestant attitude. In the very first session at Oxford an
+event took place which set religious passions in agitation.</p>
+
+<p>Before the departure of the Parliament from London Lord Keeper Williams
+had promised in the King's name that the laws against Catholic priests
+should be observed. Immediately after the Speaker had taken his seat at
+Oxford, a complaint was made that an order for the pardon of six priests
+had been since issued. Williams had had no share in it; he had refused
+to seal it. It had been necessary to complete it in the presence of the
+King, who was induced at the urgent request of Buckingham to give his
+assent in pursuance of the conditions of the agreement executed with
+France. This conduct however, the failure to execute laws that had been
+ratified, especially after a renewed promise to the contrary, appeared
+to the Parliament an attack upon its rights and upon the constitution of
+the country. The ill-feeling was directed against Buckingham, whose
+exceptional position was now the general object of public and private
+hatred.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_547" id="Page_547">[Pg 547]</a></span>
+This was a time in which the power of a first minister in France, who
+came forward as the representative of the monarchy, was winning its way
+amid the strife of factions, and above all in opposition to the claims
+of aristocratic independence. What Concini and Luynes had begun,
+Richelieu with a strong arm carried systematically into effect.
+Something similar seemed to be at hand in England also. It had been the
+fashion of James I to give effect to his will in the state by means of a
+minister, to whom he confided the most important affairs, and whom he
+wished to be dependent solely on the King himself; and Charles I, in
+this as in other matters, followed his father's example. Buckingham
+became more powerful under him than ever. At the meetings of the Privy
+Council the King hardly allowed any one else to speak: without taking
+the votes of the members he accepted Buckingham's opinion as conclusive.
+And yet it was apparent at the same time that this opinion did not
+deserve preference from any worth of its own. The public administration,
+so far as it was influenced by him, and his special department, the
+Admiralty, furnished much occasion for just censure; and the general
+policy on which he embarked appeared questionable and dangerous. He was
+coarsely compared to a mule which took its rider into a wrong road.
+Oxford suggested to men's minds the recollection of the opposition which
+the great nobles had once offered to Henry III. People said that they
+might perhaps have been to blame in form, but not in substance. It was
+wished that Charles I might also govern the state by the help of his
+wise and dignified councillors, and not with the aid of a single young
+man. Parliament, the great men of the country, and those who filled the
+highest offices, were almost unanimous against Buckingham. The Lord
+Keeper Williams told the King openly at a meeting of the Privy Council
+at Oxford, that nothing would quiet the apprehensions of his Parliament
+but an assurance 'that in actions of importance and in the disposition
+of what sums of money the people should bestow upon him, he would take
+the advice of a settled and constant
+council.'<a name="FNanchor_454_454" id="FNanchor_454_454"></a><a href="#Footnote_454_454" class="fnanchor">[454]</a>
+The misconduct of the favourite in not applying the money
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_548" id="Page_548">[Pg 548]</a></span>
+granted to the objects for which it was voted, was exactly the ground of the complaint urged
+against him. Not only the real importance of the points in dispute, but
+also the intention of driving Buckingham from his position, led
+Parliament to reject all his proposals.</p>
+
+<p>The King's adherence to his resolution of supporting his minister
+greatly affected the state of affairs in England, which even at that
+time presupposed and required an agreement between the Crown and the
+Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>Buckingham attributed the rejection of his proposals in Parliament to
+personal enmity; and this he thought he could certainly overcome.
+Williams, who in the time of James I had been entirely in the confidence
+of the King, was after a time dismissed, not without harshness, and was
+replaced by Thomas Coventry. The post of Lord Keeper was again filled by
+a lawyer who troubled himself less about political affairs. Parliament
+was not prorogued, as the rest of the members of the Privy Council
+wished: the King agreed with Buckingham that it must be dissolved. The
+Duke hoped that new elections, held under his influence, would give
+better results. He did not doubt that another Parliament might be
+hurried away to make extensive grants under the pressure of the great
+interest opposed to Spain. But in order to effect this object it
+appeared to him necessary to exclude from the Lower House its most
+active members, who were his personal antagonists. He adopted the odious
+means of advancing them to offices which could not be held compatible
+with a seat in Parliament. In this way Edward Coke, who revived and
+found arguments for the constitutional claims of Parliament, was
+nominated sheriff of Buckinghamshire, and Thomas Wentworth High Sheriff
+of Yorkshire. Francis Seymour, Robert Phillips, and some others, had a
+similar fate.<a name="FNanchor_455_455" id="FNanchor_455_455"></a><a href="#Footnote_455_455" class="fnanchor">[455]</a>
+When the lists were submitted as usual the King
+unexpectedly announced these nominations. Some peers, whose views
+inspired no confidence, were not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_549" id="Page_549">[Pg 549]</a></span>
+summoned to attend the sittings of the Upper House.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps too much weight has been attributed to the circumstance&mdash;but yet
+it proves the discontent which was widely spreading&mdash;that at the
+coronation of the King, which took place during these days, the
+traditional question addressed from four sides of the tribune to the
+surrounding multitude, asking whether they approved, was not answered
+from one side at least with the joyful readiness usually
+displayed.<a name="FNanchor_456_456" id="FNanchor_456_456"></a><a href="#Footnote_456_456" class="fnanchor">[456]</a></p>
+
+<p>On February 6, 1626, the new Parliament was opened at Westminster. It
+made no great objection to the exclusion of some of the former members,
+as the means by which this had been effected could not be regarded as
+exactly illegal. Among the members assembled an ambition was rather felt
+to prove that their opinions and resolutions were not dependent on the
+influence of some few men. For all Buckingham's efforts to prevent it,
+on this occasion also those opinions were in the ascendant which he
+wished to oppose. In the place of the members excluded others arose, and
+at times they were the very men from whom he feared nothing. A great
+impression was made when a personal friend of Buckingham, his
+vice-admiral in Devonshire, John Eliot, came forward as his decided
+political opponent. He first brought under discussion the mismanagement
+of the money granted, which was laid to the charge of the First
+Minister. With this was connected a transaction of great importance
+which affected the general relation between the Parliament and the
+Crown.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1624 a council of war, consisting of seven members, had been
+nominated to manage the money then granted. They were now summoned to
+account for it. Although this measure appeared an innovation, yet the
+government could do nothing against it&mdash;it had even consented to it: but
+Parliament at the same time submitted to the members the invidious
+question, whether their advice for the attainment of the ends in view
+had always been followed. King James had said on a former occasion, that
+if Parliament granted him subsidies, he had to
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1626.</span>
+account<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_550" id="Page_550">[Pg 550]</a></span>
+to it for their disposal as little as to a merchant from whom he received money; for he
+loved to lay as much emphasis upon his prerogative as possible. How
+entirely opposed to the prerogative were the claims which Parliament now
+advanced! It is clear that if the members of the council should make the
+communications they were asked for, all freedom of action on the part of
+the minister and of the King himself would be called in question.</p>
+
+<p>The members of the new council for war were thrown into great
+embarrassment. They answered that they must first consult the lawyers on
+the subject, and the King conveyed to them his approval of this
+declaration. He informed them that he had had the Act of Parliament laid
+before him: that they were bound to submit to questions only about the
+application of the money, but about nothing else: he even threatened
+them with his displeasure if they should go beyond this. The president
+of the council for war, George Carew, called his attention to the
+probability that the grant of the subsidies which he demanded from
+Parliament might be hindered by such an answer: it would be better, he
+said, that the Council should be sent to the Tower,&mdash;for it would come
+to this,&mdash;than that the good relations between the King and the
+Parliament should be impaired, and the payment of the subsidies
+hindered. Charles I said that it was not merely a question of money, and
+that gold might be bought too dear. He thanked them for the regard which
+they had shown to him; but he added that Parliament was aiming not at
+them but at himself.<a name="FNanchor_457_457" id="FNanchor_457_457"></a><a href="#Footnote_457_457" class="fnanchor">[457]</a></p>
+
+<p>The controversy about tonnage and poundage coincided with this quarrel.
+The grant, as has been mentioned, had been obtained only for a short
+period. Parliament was incensed, that after this had expired, the King
+had the customs levied just as before. 'How,' it was said, 'did the King
+wish to raise taxes that had never been voted? Was not this
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_551" id="Page_551">[Pg 551]</a></span>
+altogether contrary to the form of government of the country? Whoever had
+counselled the King to this step, he was without doubt the sworn enemy
+of King and country.'</p>
+
+<p>Parliament declared to the King that if he insisted on those subsidies
+which were absolutely necessary, it would support him as fully as ever a
+prince had been supported by a Parliament, but in Parliamentary fashion,
+or, as they expressed it, 'via
+parlamentaria.'<a name="FNanchor_458_458" id="FNanchor_458_458"></a><a href="#Footnote_458_458" class="fnanchor">[458]</a>
+The claims of Parliament included both the right of granting money in its widest
+extent, and the supervision of its application when granted. The King
+considered that a grant was not necessary in respect of every source of
+revenue&mdash;for instance, not in respect to tonnage and poundage, and was
+determined to keep the management entirely in his own hands, and to
+submit to no kind of control over it.</p>
+
+<p>Many other questions, in which wide interests were involved, were
+brought forward for discussion in Parliament, especially in regard to
+ecclesiastical matters: the proceedings of the High Commission were
+attacked again. But the question of the widest range of all was the
+decided attempt to alter the government and to overthrow the great
+minister, which gave perhaps the greatest employment to the
+assembly.<a name="FNanchor_459_459" id="FNanchor_459_459"></a><a href="#Footnote_459_459" class="fnanchor">[459]</a>
+It was directed against the favourite personally, for he
+had now incurred universal hatred, but at bottom there also lay the
+definite intention of confirming the doctrine of ministerial
+responsibility by a new and signal example.</p>
+
+<p>How quickly was Buckingham overtaken by Nemesis; that is to say, in
+this, as in so many other instances, how soon was he visited by the
+consequences which in the nature of things attended his actions! First,
+owing to his influence the establishment of that council for war had
+been granted which now gave occasion to the demand for Parliamentary
+control: and next, he had allowed the fall of Bacon, and had most
+deliberately overthrown Cranfield by the help of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_552" id="Page_552">[Pg 552]</a></span>
+Parliament. These were just the transactions which endangered his own existence by the
+consequences of the principles involved in both cases alike.</p>
+
+<p>The King was certainly moved by personal inclination to take the part of
+his minister; but he was also moved by anxiety about the application of
+these principles. He complained that without actually established facts
+forthcoming, on the strength of general rumour, people wished to attack
+the man on whom he bestowed his confidence: but Parliament, he said, was
+altogether overstepping its competence. It was wishing to inspect the
+books of the royal officers, to pass judgment upon the letters of his
+secretary of state, nay, even upon his own: it permitted and sheltered
+seditious speeches within its bosom. There never had been a king, he
+affirmed, who was more inclined to remove real abuses, and to observe a
+truly Parliamentary course; but also there had never been one who was
+more jealous of his royal honour. The more violently Buckingham was
+attacked, the more it appeared to the King a point of honour to take him
+under his protection against charges which he considered futile.</p>
+
+<p>The Lower House did not take up all the points in dispute which the King
+proposed for discussion. It excused some things which had occurred to
+the prejudice of the royal dignity, but in the principal matter it was
+immovable. It asserted, and adhered to its assertion, that it was the
+constant undoubted right of Parliament, exercised as well under the most
+glorious of former reigns as under the last, to hold all persons
+accountable, however high their rank, who should abuse the power
+transferred to them by their sovereign and oppress the commonwealth.
+They maintained that without this liberty no one would ever venture to
+say a word against influential men, and that the common-weal would be
+forced to languish under their violence.</p>
+
+<p>The impeachment was drawn up in regular form by eight members, among
+whom we find the names of Selden, Glanvil, Pym, and Eliot. On the 8th of
+May it was carried by 225 votes to 116 to send up to the Lords a
+proposal for the arrest of Buckingham.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_553" id="Page_553">[Pg 553]</a></span>
+In the Upper House, the members of which were by no means more
+favourable to the Duke, and feared the nomination of a large number of
+peers, Lord Bristol independently brought an accusation against
+Buckingham relating to the failure of the Spanish marriage. The conduct
+of which he is accused may rather have shown ambition and foolish
+assumption than any real criminality; and Buckingham's defence is not
+without force. The Lower House, to whom it was communicated,
+nevertheless expressed their opinion that a formal prosecution must take
+place. It seemed that Buckingham must surely but sink under the combined
+weight of various complaints.</p>
+
+<p>But the King would not allow matters to go so far. Without paying any
+regard to the wish of the Lords to the contrary, he proceeded to
+dissolve this Parliament also (June 15, 1626). In the declaration which
+he issued on the subject, he said that he recognised Joab's hand in
+these estrangements: but in spite of them he would fulfil his duty as
+king of this great nation, and would himself redress their grievances
+and defend them with the sword against foreign enemies.</p>
+
+<p>The opposition between Parliament and the Crown did not develop by slow
+degrees. In its main principles at least it appears immediately after
+the accession of Charles I as a historical necessity. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_446_446" id="Footnote_446_446"></a><a href="#FNanchor_446_446"><span class="label">[446]</span></a> Lando, Relatione 1622: 'Tiene presenza veramente regia
+fronte, sopraciglio grave, negli occhi e nelli movimenti del corpo
+gratia notabile, indicante prudente temperanza&mdash;di pensieri maniere
+costumi commendabilissimi attrahenti la benevolenza et l'amore
+universale.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_447_447" id="Footnote_447_447"></a><a href="#FNanchor_447_447"><span class="label">[447]</span></a> Thus Kensington states to the Queen-mother in France: 'He
+was used ill, not in his entertainment, but in their frivolous delayes,
+and in the unreasonable conditions which they propounded and pressed
+upon the advantage they had of his princely person.' Cabala 289.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_448_448" id="Footnote_448_448"></a><a href="#FNanchor_448_448"><span class="label">[448]</span></a> Consultation at St. James's on the day after he ascended
+the throne (March 28). 'That which was much insisted upon was a
+parliament, H. Majesty being so forward to have it sit that he did both
+propound and dispute it to have no writs go forth to call a new one.'
+Hacket, Life of Williams ii. 4.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_449_449" id="Footnote_449_449"></a><a href="#FNanchor_449_449"><span class="label">[449]</span></a> Speech of Sir Thomas Edwards, St. P. O. (not mentioned in
+the Parliamentary Histories). It is there said 'He did not only become a
+continual advocate to his deceased father for the favourable graunting
+of our petitions, but also did interpose his mediation for the pacefying
+and removing of all misunderstandings. God having now added the posse to
+the velle, the kingly power to the willing mind, enabled him to execute
+what before he could but will.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_450_450" id="Footnote_450_450"></a><a href="#FNanchor_450_450"><span class="label">[450]</span></a> Letter from the Pope to the Princess, Dec. 28, 1624:
+'Cogitans ad quorum triumphorum gloriam vadis, fruere interim
+expectatione tui.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_451_451" id="Footnote_451_451"></a><a href="#FNanchor_451_451"><span class="label">[451]</span></a> 'Some spare not to say that all goes backward since this
+connivance in religion came in, both in all wealth valour honour and
+reputation.' Letter of Chamberlain, June 25, 1625.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_452_452" id="Footnote_452_452"></a><a href="#FNanchor_452_452"><span class="label">[452]</span></a> 'Tonnage, a duty upon all wines imported; poundage, a
+duty imposed ad valorem on all other merchandises whatsoever.'
+Blackstone, Commentaries i. 315.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_453_453" id="Footnote_453_453"></a><a href="#FNanchor_453_453"><span class="label">[453]</span></a> 'Whosoever gave the counsel (of the meeting in Oxford)
+had the intention to set the king and his people at variance.'
+Nethersole to Carleton, Aug. 9, 1625: a circumstantial and very
+instructive document (St. P. O.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_454_454" id="Footnote_454_454"></a><a href="#FNanchor_454_454"><span class="label">[454]</span></a> Hacket ii. 20.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_455_455" id="Footnote_455_455"></a><a href="#FNanchor_455_455"><span class="label">[455]</span></a> Arthur Ingram to Wentworth, Nov. 1625 (Strafford Papers,
+i. 29), names besides Guy Palmer, Edward Alford, and a seventh, who had
+not had a seat in the last Parliament, Sir W. Fleetwood.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_456_456" id="Footnote_456_456"></a><a href="#FNanchor_456_456"><span class="label">[456]</span></a> Ewis in Ellis, i. 3, 217. The Dutch ambassador present in
+England, Joachimi, to whose letter I referred, does not seem to have
+mentioned it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_457_457" id="Footnote_457_457"></a><a href="#FNanchor_457_457"><span class="label">[457]</span></a> A memorial of what passed in speech from H. M. to the
+Earl of Totness, March 8, 1625-26; St. P. O. The King says 'Let them doe
+what they list: you shall not go to the Tower. It is not you that they
+aim at, but it is me, upon whom they make inquisition. And for subsidies
+that will not hinder it; gold may be bought too dear.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_458_458" id="Footnote_458_458"></a><a href="#FNanchor_458_458"><span class="label">[458]</span></a> Correro: 'Questo termino di via parlamentaria vuol dire
+libere concessioni secondo la loro dispositione e di haver cognitione in
+qualche maniera delli impieghi.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_459_459" id="Footnote_459_459"></a><a href="#FNanchor_459_459"><span class="label">[459]</span></a> 'Ils disent' (so it is said in Ruszdorf, Negotiations i.
+596) 'que tout alloit mal, que les deniers qu'ils ont contribué ont été
+mal employés: il falloit toujours et avant toutes choses redresser et
+regler le gouvernement de l'état.'</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BV_VII" id="BV_VII"></a>
+THE COURSE OF FOREIGN POLICY FROM 1625 TO 1627.</p>
+
+<p>In reviewing so important a conflict as that which had broken out at
+home, it almost requires an effort of will to bestow deep interest upon
+foreign affairs in turn. But not only is this necessary from the
+connexion between the two, but we should not be able to understand the
+history of England if we left out of consideration its relation to those
+great events of European importance which absorbed even the largest
+share of public attention.</p>
+
+<p>Charles I had undertaken to do what his father avoided to the end of his
+life,&mdash;to offer open opposition to the Spanish monarchy and its aims.
+Like Queen Elizabeth he took this step in alliance with France, Holland,
+and the Protestants of Germany and the North, but yet not in full
+agreement with his own people. This was due mainly to the circumstance
+that France had become far more Catholic under Mary de' Medici and Louis
+XIII than it had been under Henry IV. The offensive alliance between
+France and England now developed a character which rather irritated than
+quieted the religious feelings which prevailed in England.</p>
+
+<p>On the first shocks sustained by the close alliance which had existed
+between the Catholic powers, the Huguenots in France rose in order to
+recover their former rights which had been curtailed. But the French
+government was not at all inclined to give fresh life to these powerful
+and dangerous movements: on the contrary it invoked the assistance of
+England and Holland to put them down. For the great strength of the
+Huguenots lay in their naval resources, and without the help of the
+maritime powers the French government
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1625.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_555" id="Page_555">[Pg 555]</a></span>
+would never have been able to
+overcome them. And so imperative seemed the necessity of internal peace
+in France,<a name="FNanchor_460_460" id="FNanchor_460_460"></a><a href="#Footnote_460_460" class="fnanchor">[460]</a>
+if she was to be induced to take an active share in the
+war against Spain, that the English and Dutch were actually persuaded to
+put their crews and vessels at the disposal of the French government,
+which then used them with decisive results. The naval power of the
+Huguenots, which had formed so large an element of the fighting strength
+of the Protestants, was broken by the assistance of England and Holland.
+Queen Elizabeth, in the midst of her war with Philip II, would certainly
+never have been brought to this step, and even now it roused the
+bitterest dislike. It was found that the execution of the orders issued
+met with resistance even on board the ships themselves. A light is
+thrown upon the ill-feeling at home, when a member of the Privy Council,
+Lord Pembroke, tells a captain who resisted this mutinous spirit, that
+the news of the insubordination of his crew was the best which he had
+heard for a long time, and that it was welcome even to the King: that he
+must deal leniently with his men, and only see that he remained master
+of the ship.<a name="FNanchor_461_461" id="FNanchor_461_461"></a><a href="#Footnote_461_461" class="fnanchor">[461]</a>
+But what an impression must doubtless have been
+produced on the population of England, which still stood in the closest
+relation to the French Reformed! Sermons were delivered from the pulpits
+against these proceedings of the government.</p>
+
+<p>But if the active alliance of France against Spain and Austria was
+secured by this immense sacrifice, what could have appeared more natural
+than to employ the whole strength of that country for the restoration of
+the Count Palatine, which the French saw to be advantageous to
+themselves, and for the support of German Protestantism? In pursuance of
+the stipulations which had been made the King of Denmark was already in
+the field: his troops had already fought hand to hand at Nienburg in the
+circle of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_556" id="Page_556">[Pg 556]</a></span>
+Lower Saxony with the forces of the League which were
+pressing forward into that country. He was strong in cavalry but weak in
+infantry: the German envoys who were present in England insisted that
+gallant English troops should be sent to his assistance, and that the
+fleet which was ready for service should be ordered to the Weser; for
+that the support which the fleet would give to the King would encourage
+him to advance with good heart. And then, as they added with extravagant
+hopefulness, the King of Sweden, who had already offered his aid, would
+come forward actively, if only he had some security; the Elector of
+Brandenburg, who had just married his sister to the King of Sweden,
+would declare himself; the Prince of Transylvania, who was connected
+with the same family, would force his way into Bohemia: every one would
+withstand the League and compel it to restore the lands occupied by it
+to their former sovereigns, and to the religion hitherto professed in
+them.</p>
+
+<p>But Buckingham had as little sympathy with the German as with the French
+Protestants: his passionate ambition was to make the Spaniards directly
+feel the weight of his hatred. For this purpose he had just concluded an
+offensive and defensive alliance with the United Provinces; even the
+great maritime interests of England were themselves a reason for
+opposing Spain. At all events, in the autumn of 1625 he despatched the
+fleet, not to the Weser, which appeared to him almost unworthy of this
+great expedition, but against the coasts of the Spanish peninsula.
+Orders were given to it to enter the mouth of the Guadalquivir, and to
+alarm Seville, or else to take the town of Cadiz, for which object it
+had on board a considerable number of land troops; or, finally, to lie
+in wait for the Spanish fleet laden with silver, and to bring home the
+cargo as a lawful prize. Buckingham proceeded on the supposition that
+the foundation of the Spanish power and its influence would be
+undermined by the interruption of the Spanish trade with America, and
+that in the next year the Spaniards would be able to effect nothing. He
+did not perceive that this would have no decisive influence on that
+undertaking on which in<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1626.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_557" id="Page_557">[Pg 557]</a></span>
+the first instance everything depended, that of
+the King of Denmark, as meanwhile in Rome, Vienna, and Munich, native
+forces, independent of Spain, had been collected. But while he preferred
+the more distant to the more immediate end, it was his fate to achieve
+neither the one nor the other. In December 1625 the fleet returned
+without having effected anything at sea or on the Spanish coasts. On the
+contrary it had suffered the heaviest losses itself.</p>
+
+<p>The discredit into which Buckingham fell with those whom he had desired
+to win over, and whose wishes were fixed on the struggle with Spain, is
+exhibited in a very extraordinary enterprise which sprung up at this
+time, and which had for its object the formation of what we may almost
+call a joint-stock war company. A wish was felt to form a company for
+making war on Spain, upon the basis, it is true, of a royal charter, but
+under the authority of Parliament, with the intention of sharing the
+booty and the conquests, as well as the costs among the
+members.<a name="FNanchor_462_462" id="FNanchor_462_462"></a><a href="#Footnote_462_462" class="fnanchor">[462]</a></p>
+
+<p>By the late enterprise moreover the means had been wasted which might
+have been used for supporting the German allies of England. Left without
+sufficient subsidies in his quarrel with Parliament, the King was unable
+to pay the arrears due both to the seamen who were returning from Spain,
+and to his troops in Holland. He could not repair his fleet; he could
+hardly defend his coasts: how could he be in a position to make any
+persevering effort for the conduct of the war in Germany? The King of
+Sweden asked for only £15,000 in order to set his forces in motion; but
+at that time this sum could not be raised. The King of Denmark was the
+more thrown on England, as the French also made their services depend on
+what the English would do: but Conway, the Secretary of State, declared
+himself unable to pay the stipulated sum. Could men feel astonished that
+the Danish war was not carried on with the energy which the cause seemed
+to demand?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_558" id="Page_558">[Pg 558]</a></span>
+Christian IV had not troops enough, and could not pay even
+those which he had. The cavalry, which constituted his main strength,
+had on one occasion refused to fight, because they had not received
+their pay. He himself threw the chief blame on the English for the
+defeat which he now sustained at Lutter; and which was the more
+decisive, as meanwhile Mansfeld also, who wished to turn his steps to
+the hereditary dominions of Austria in order to combine with the Prince
+of Transylvania, had been not only defeated, but almost annihilated. The
+armies which were to have defended the Protestant cause disappeared from
+off the field. The forces of the Emperor and of the League now occupied
+North Germany also on both sides of the Elbe.</p>
+
+<p>To Germany the alliance with England had at that time brought no good.
+It may be doubted whether the Elector Palatine would have accepted the
+crown of Bohemia but for the support which he thought to find in
+England. This affair had a great part in bringing on the outbreak of the
+great religious conflict. But James I sought to retrieve the misfortune
+into which the Elector had fallen, not so much by employing his own
+power, as by developing his relations with the Spaniards; and thus he
+had himself given them the opportunity of establishing themselves in the
+Palatinate, and had caused the Catholic reaction to triumph in Upper
+Germany. Without the instigation of England, and the great combination
+of the powers in East and West hostile to the house of Austria, the King
+of Denmark would not have determined to begin war, nor would the circle
+of Lower Saxony have aided him. On this occasion as on others in England
+the interests of its own power outweighed consideration for the allies.
+The policy of the English had formerly been ruled by their friendly
+relations with Spain: it was now ruled by their hostile intentions
+towards that country. All available forces were employed for their
+purpose, and the movement in Germany was left to its fate.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile another consequence of the breach with Spain came to light,
+which King James had always feared. In order not to be forced to fight
+both great powers at once, Spain found it advisable to show a compliance
+hitherto<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_559" id="Page_559">[Pg 559]</a></span>
+unprecedented in the affairs of Italy, in which France had
+interested herself. After this the irritation against the ascendancy of
+the Spaniards evidently abated in France.</p>
+
+<p>For in alliances of great powers it is self-evident that their political
+points of view, if for a moment they coincide, must nevertheless in a
+short time be again opposed to one another. How should one power really
+seek the permanent advantage of another?</p>
+
+<p>At that time also, as on so many occasions, other relations arising out
+of the position of the leading statesmen as members of parties, produced
+an effect on politics. Cardinal Richelieu met with opposition from a
+zealously Catholic party, which gathered round the queen mother, and
+considered the influence of Spain to a certain degree necessary. This
+party seized the first favourable opportunity of setting on foot a
+preliminary treaty of peace, to which Richelieu, however long he
+hesitated, and however much he disliked it, could not help acceding.</p>
+
+<p>Quite in keeping with this understanding between the Catholic powers was
+the partial recoil of Protestantism in England from the advances which
+it had made to the Catholic party. The French who surrounded the Queen
+were so numerous, that a strong feeling of opposition on religious and
+national grounds was awakened in them by their contact with the English
+character. They saw in the English nothing but heretics and apostates;
+the Catholics who had formerly been executed at Tyburn as rebels they
+honoured as martyrs. The Queen herself, upon whom her priests laid all
+kinds of penance corresponding to her dignity, was once induced to take
+part in a procession to this place of execution. It is conceivable how
+deeply wounded and irritated the English must have felt at these odious
+demonstrations. To the King it seemed insufferable that the household of
+his consort should take up a position of open hostility to the
+ecclesiastical laws of the land. Personally also he felt injured and
+affronted. We hear complaints from him that he was robbed of his sleep
+at night by these demonstrations. He quickly and properly resolved to
+rid himself once for all of these refractory people, whatever might be
+the consequence. The Queen's
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_560" id="Page_560">[Pg 560]</a></span>
+court was then refusing to admit into it
+the English ladies whom he had appointed to attend on her. The King
+seized the opportunity: he invited his wife to dine with him, for they
+still had separate households; and after dinner he made her understand
+by degrees that he could no longer put up with this exhibition of
+feeling on the part of her retinue, but must send them all home again,
+priests and laymen, men and women
+alike.<a name="FNanchor_463_463" id="FNanchor_463_463"></a><a href="#Footnote_463_463" class="fnanchor">[463]</a>
+This resolution was
+carried out in spite of all the resistance offered by those whom it
+affected. Only some few ladies and two priests of moderate views were
+left with the Queen; all the rest were shipped off to France. There they
+filled the court and the country with their complaints. Those about the
+Queen-mother assumed an air as if the most sacred agreements had been
+infringed, and any measure of retaliation was thought justifiable.</p>
+
+<p>Marshal Bassompierre indeed set out once more for England in order to
+bring about a reconciliation. Though ill received at first, he
+nevertheless won his way by his splendid appearance and by clever talk
+and moderation. In a preliminary agreement leave was given to the Queen
+to receive back a number of priests and some French
+ladies;<a name="FNanchor_464_464" id="FNanchor_464_464"></a><a href="#Footnote_464_464" class="fnanchor">[464]</a>
+and Buckingham prepared to go to France to remove the obstacles still
+remaining. But meanwhile the feeling of estrangement at the French court
+had become still stronger. The agreement was not approved: and the court
+would not hear of a visit from Buckingham, as it was thought that he
+would be sure to use the opportunity afforded by his presence to stir up
+the Huguenots. Richelieu thought that the dispute with England had been
+provoked by his enemies in order to break up the friendly relations
+which he had established. But nevertheless he too did not wish to see
+Buckingham in France, for he feared that the English minister might side
+outright with his opponents.</p>
+
+<p>Personal considerations of many kinds co-operated in producing this
+result, but it was not due mainly to their influence. The religious
+sympathies and hatreds at work had incalculable
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_561" id="Page_561">[Pg 561]</a></span>
+effects. While the opposition between the two religions again awoke in all its strength,
+and a struggle for life and death was being fought out between them in
+Germany, an alliance could not well be maintained between two courts
+which professed opposite religious views. The current of the general
+tendencies of affairs has a power by which the best considered political
+combinations are swept into the background.</p>
+
+<p>The paramount importance of religious movements not only prevented a
+combination between France and England, but also brought both Catholic
+powers into closer agreement with one another, as soon as their
+immediate differences had been in some measure adjusted. Father Berulle
+had promoted the marriage of a French princess with the King of England
+in the hope of converting him; but now that he became conscious of his
+mistake, he lent his pen to a project for a common attack to be made by
+the Catholic powers upon England. The domestic dissensions in that
+country, which again aroused Catholic sympathies among a part of the
+population, appeared to favour such a project. An agreement on the
+subject was in treaty for some time. It was at last concluded and
+ratified in France in the form in which it was sent back from
+Spain.<a name="FNanchor_465_465" id="FNanchor_465_465"></a><a href="#Footnote_465_465" class="fnanchor">[465]</a></p>
+
+<p>Although it is not clear that people in England had authentic
+information of these negotiations, yet the advances made by the two
+courts to one another, which were visible to every one, could not but
+cause some anxiety in the third. The English were always anxiously
+considering what Philip IV might have in view for the next year; at
+times even in Charles' reign they feared another attack from the Belgian
+coast. What would happen if France lent her aid in such an enterprise?
+It was known at all events that the priests exhorted her to do so. That
+France and Spain should make a joint attack on England appeared to be
+most for the interest of the Catholic
+world.<a name="FNanchor_466_466" id="FNanchor_466_466"></a><a href="#Footnote_466_466" class="fnanchor">[466]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_562" id="Page_562">[Pg 562]</a></span>
+Another ground for anxiety in England was from that resolution to
+revive the French naval power, which Richelieu had already taken in
+consequence of his late experiences. He bought ships of war, or had them
+built, and took foreign sailors into his service. Charles I perceived
+this with the greatest displeasure. He regarded it as a threat against
+England, for he thought that the French could have no other intention
+than that of robbing England of the supremacy that she had exercised
+from time immemorial over the sea which bears her name. He declared that
+he was resolved to prevent matters from going so far.</p>
+
+<p>A great effect was produced by a very definite misunderstanding which
+now arose between England and France, and affected naval interests as
+well as the question of religion.</p>
+
+<p>Of all the French Huguenots, who had been compelled by their last defeat
+to seek peace with the King, the citizens of Rochelle felt the blow most
+deeply. They had at that time been hemmed in on all sides, and were
+especially harassed by a fort erected in their neighbourhood. They had
+been assured that at the proper time they would be relieved of this
+annoyance. They had not an express and unequivocal promise; but the
+English ambassador, who had been invited to mediate, had guaranteed to
+them, after conference with the French ministry, such an interpretation
+of the expressions used as would secure the wished-for
+result.<a name="FNanchor_467_467" id="FNanchor_467_467"></a><a href="#Footnote_467_467" class="fnanchor">[467]</a>
+But just the contrary took place: they were constantly being more closely
+shut in, and more seriously threatened with the loss of that measure of
+independence which they had hitherto enjoyed. They turned to Charles I.
+They would rather have acknowledged him as their sovereign than have
+submitted to such a loss, and he felt the full weight of his obligation
+to them. But, if he desired to grant them assistance, it could only be
+rendered by open war.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sidenote">A.D. 1627.</span>
+When the English resolved to undertake an expedition against the Island
+of Rhé, the prevention of the fall
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_563" id="Page_563">[Pg 563]</a></span>
+of Rochelle was not the only object
+in view. It was rather considered that nothing could be more desirable
+and advantageous than the command of this island in the event of a
+struggle with the two powers. For Biscay could be reached in a voyage of
+one night from thence, and the communication between the Netherlands and
+the harbours on the north-east coast of Spain could at any time be
+interrupted by the possessors of the island, which might be used at the
+same time for keeping up constant communication with the Huguenots, and
+for giving the French power employment at
+home.<a name="FNanchor_468_468" id="FNanchor_468_468"></a><a href="#Footnote_468_468" class="fnanchor">[468]</a>
+The Huguenots had already taken up arms again, and Rochelle displayed the English banner
+on its walls. Charles I intended to use Rhé as a station for his fleet,
+but to cede the general sovereignty over it to Rochelle. A successful
+result here might serve to infuse new life into the Protestant cause.</p>
+
+<p>In order to achieve so great an end the King thought it admissible to
+levy a forced loan, and thus to collect those sums which Parliament had
+promised him by word of mouth, but had not yet formally granted. We
+shall have hereafter to consider the resistance which he encountered in
+this attempt, and the various arbitrary acts to which he resorted for
+its suppression; for they formed one of the turning points of his
+history. At first he actually succeeded so far, that a fleet of more
+than a hundred sail was able to put to sea for the attack of Rhé and the
+support of Rochelle. It was considered in raising this loan that a war
+with France had greater claims upon popular support than any other. In
+the present doubtful state of affairs a decided advantage gained in such
+a war might even now have exercised great influence upon the internal
+state of the kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>At this juncture Buckingham assumed a position of extraordinary
+importance. After the repeated failures of the Protestants, his
+undertaking aroused all their hopes. Directed against both the Catholic
+powers, it must, if successful,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_564" id="Page_564">[Pg 564]</a></span>
+have directly benefited the French
+Protestants, and indirectly the German Protestants also by the effect
+which it would inevitably have produced. But it was besides one
+enterprise more undertaken by the sole power of the monarch: it was
+carried out independently of any Parliamentary grants properly so
+called. It represented the principle of a moderate monarchical
+Protestantism, combined with toleration for the native Catholics, among
+whom Buckingham endeavoured to find support. His was a position of which
+the occupant must either be a great man or perish. Buckingham, who had
+no equal in restless activity, and was by nature not devoid of
+adroitness and ability, nevertheless had not that persevering and
+comprehensive energy which is required for the performance of great
+actions. He had not gone through the school of those experiences in
+which minds ripen: and for the want of this training his native gifts
+were not sufficient to compensate. He was so far fortunate as to gain
+possession of the Island of Rhé; but Fort Martin, which had been erected
+there a short time before, and on which the possession of the island
+depended, defied his attacks, and he was not skilful enough to intercept
+the support which was thrown into the fort in the hour of its greatest
+danger. The defence of the French certainly showed greater perseverance
+than the attack of the English. Buckingham did not know how to awaken
+among his men that fiery devotion which shrinks from no obstacle, and
+which would have been necessary here. And the measures which were
+arranged at home were not so effective as to bring him at the right
+moment the reinforcement he needed. In November 1627 he returned to
+England without having effected his object. He left behind him the
+French Protestants, and Rochelle especially, in the greatest distress.</p>
+
+<p>Charles I had no intention of proving false to the promises which he had
+given them, any more than he wished to allow the King of Denmark to sink
+under his difficulties. But what means did he possess of bestowing help
+either on the former or on the latter?</p>
+
+<p>After the battle of Lutter he had told the Danish ambassador, that he
+would come to the assistance of his uncle, even if he should have to
+pawn his crown. How heavily his position
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_565" id="Page_565">[Pg 565]</a></span>
+weighed on him at that time!
+While he had undertaken the responsibility of contending for the
+greatest interests of the world, he was obliged to confess, and did so
+with tears in his eyes, that at present he hardly had at his disposal
+the means of defraying the necessary expenses of his daily life.</p>
+
+<p>The King of Denmark advised him to call Parliament together again, and
+make the needful concessions, in order to obtain such subsidies as would
+enable him to give vigorous support to his allies. Charles I in the
+first instance took umbrage at this, because it was good advice from an
+uncle and an elder, as if some blame were thereby cast on him: by
+degrees he became convinced of the necessity of this measure.</p>
+
+<p>It was quite evident from the events of the last few years that the King
+would not be able to maintain the position he had assumed, without
+active support from Parliament. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_460_460" id="Footnote_460_460"></a><a href="#FNanchor_460_460"><span class="label">[460]</span></a> Z. Pesaro, April 25, 1625: 'Che la conservatione della
+pace in Francia sara il fondamento del beneficio comune, che li rumori
+civili in quella natione sariano il solo remedio che Spagnoli procurano
+alli loro mali.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_461_461" id="Footnote_461_461"></a><a href="#FNanchor_461_461"><span class="label">[461]</span></a> 'That the King and all the rest were exceedingly glad of
+that relation which he made of the discontent and mutiny of his
+compagnie.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_462_462" id="Footnote_462_462"></a><a href="#FNanchor_462_462"><span class="label">[462]</span></a> M. A. Correro: 'Trattano di formar una compagnia per la
+quale possino con l'autorità del parlamente e privilegi reggi attaccare
+con una flotte il re di Spagna per dividere l'interesse della spesa e
+l'utile delli bottini e delli acquisti nelli compagni che ne averanno
+parte (27 Mayo 1626).'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_463_463" id="Footnote_463_463"></a><a href="#FNanchor_463_463"><span class="label">[463]</span></a> Letter to Joseph Mead: Court and Times of Charles I, i.
+134.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_464_464" id="Footnote_464_464"></a><a href="#FNanchor_464_464"><span class="label">[464]</span></a> According to Ruszdorf, who was well acquainted with
+Bassompierre, the latter represented 'hoc facto regem obligatum nihil
+esse intermissurum, quod ad conservationem fortunae illius queat
+conducere.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_465_465" id="Footnote_465_465"></a><a href="#FNanchor_465_465"><span class="label">[465]</span></a> Siri, Memorie recondite vi. 261.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_466_466" id="Footnote_466_466"></a><a href="#FNanchor_466_466"><span class="label">[466]</span></a> Letter to Joseph Mead, March 16, 1626: 'It still holds
+that both France and Spain make exceeding great preparations both for
+sea and land.&mdash;The priests of the Dunkirkers are said to preach that God
+had delivered us into their hands.' (Court and Times of Charles I, i.
+205).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_467_467" id="Footnote_467_467"></a><a href="#FNanchor_467_467"><span class="label">[467]</span></a> I refer for the fuller explanation of these transactions
+to my History of the Popes and my French History. My meaning is very
+fully recognised in an essay in the Revue Germanique, Nov. 1859.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_468_468" id="Footnote_468_468"></a><a href="#FNanchor_468_468"><span class="label">[468]</span></a> Beaulieu to Pickering. 'It lieth in the way to intercept
+the salt that cometh from Biscaje and serveth almost all France, and
+what so ever cometh out of the river of Bourdeaux: besides it commandeth
+the haven of Rochelle.' (Court and Times of Charles I, i. 257).</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BV_VIII" id="BV_VIII"></a>
+PARLIAMENT OF 1628. PETITION OF RIGHT.</p>
+
+<p>In the heat of controversy about the supplies to be granted and the
+liberties to be confirmed by the King in return, it was once harshly
+said in the Lower House during this Parliament that it was better to be
+brought low by foreign enemies than to be obliged to suffer oppression
+at home. The King answered by saying no less abruptly that it was more
+honourable for the King to be straitened by the enemies of his country,
+than to be set at nought by his own subjects.</p>
+
+<p>So much more importance was attached by both sides to domestic than to
+foreign struggles. But after the last failure both parties had come to
+feel how much the honour of the country and religion itself suffered
+from their dissensions. Among the politicians of the time there was a
+school of learned men, who had studied the old constitution of the
+country, and wished for nothing more than its restoration. They were
+seriously bent on establishing an equilibrium between the royal
+prerogative and the rights of Parliament. Among them were found Edward
+Coke, John Selden, and John Glanvil; but Robert Cotton may be regarded
+as the most distinguished of them all, a man who had studied most
+deeply, and who combined with his studies an insight into the present
+that was unclouded by passion. To Cotton we owe a report presented by
+him to the Privy Council, in which he explains that the government
+should proceed on the old royal road of collecting taxes by grant of
+Parliament, and indeed should adopt no other method; while at the same
+time he expresses the conviction that Parliament would be satisfied, if
+its most pressing anxieties were dissipated. He says that he himself
+would not advise the King to sacrifice the First Minister, for that such
+<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1628.</span>
+a step had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_567" id="Page_567">[Pg 567]</a></span>
+always had ruinous consequences: he thought moreover that
+the old passionate hostility against the Duke need not be feared, if he
+came forward himself as the man who had advised the King to reassemble
+Parliament.<a name="FNanchor_469_469" id="FNanchor_469_469"></a><a href="#Footnote_469_469" class="fnanchor">[469]</a>
+We learn that the King did not determine to summon it,
+until the most prominent men had given him an assurance that Buckingham
+should not be attacked. Moderation in the attitude of Parliament, and
+security for the First Minister formed as it were the condition under
+which the Parliament of 1628 was
+summoned.<a name="FNanchor_470_470" id="FNanchor_470_470"></a><a href="#Footnote_470_470" class="fnanchor">[470]</a></p>
+
+<p>On March 22, five days after the beginning of the session, the
+deliberations of the Lower House were opened by the remark from the
+Speaker, that they must indeed grant subsidies to the King; but that at
+the same time they must maintain the undoubted rights of the country.
+Francis Seymour, who had now again been returned to Parliament, at once
+expressed himself to the same effect. While he acknowledged that every
+one must make sacrifices for king and country, he shewed at the same
+time that it was a sacred duty to cling to their ancestral laws. He
+proceeded to say that these laws had been transgressed, their liberties
+infringed, their own selves personally ill-treated, and their property,
+with which they might have supported the King, exhausted. He proposed
+therefore to secure the rights, laws, and liberties transmitted from
+their ancestors by means of a petition to the
+King.<a name="FNanchor_471_471" id="FNanchor_471_471"></a><a href="#Footnote_471_471" class="fnanchor">[471]</a></p>
+
+<p>Whatever be the tone of opposition which this language betrays, it fell
+far short of that adopted in the former Parliament. Men had come to an
+opinion that certainly no money should be granted unless securities
+could be obtained for their ancient liberties; but at the same time that
+the King<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_568" id="Page_568">[Pg 568]</a></span>
+should not be induced to grasp directly at absolute power, for
+that this would lead at once to a rebellion of uncertain
+issue.<a name="FNanchor_472_472" id="FNanchor_472_472"></a><a href="#Footnote_472_472" class="fnanchor">[472]</a>
+Men were resolved to avoid questions which could rouse old passions. This
+time it was not insisted that the penal laws against the Catholics
+should be made more severe: Parliament waived its claim to alter the
+constitution of the Admiralty, and to appoint treasurers to manage the
+money granted to the King: it showed deference for the King, and said
+nothing of the Duke. But a commission was appointed to take into
+consideration the rights which subjects ought to have over their persons
+and property. Already on April 3 resolutions were proposed to the House,
+by which it was intended that some of the most obnoxious grievances
+which had lately arisen should be made for ever impossible, such as the
+collection of taxes that had not been granted, and restraints imposed on
+personal liberty in consequence of refusal to
+pay.<a name="FNanchor_473_473" id="FNanchor_473_473"></a><a href="#Footnote_473_473" class="fnanchor">[473]</a></p>
+
+<p>Charles I also now took up this question. Through Coke his Secretary of
+State, who was also a member of the House, he issued an invitation to
+them not to allow themselves to be deterred by any anxiety about liberty
+or property from making those grants, on which, as he said, the welfare
+of Christendom depended; 'upon assurance,' Coke proceeds to add, 'that
+we shall enjoy our rights and liberties, with as much freedom and
+security in his time as in any age heretofore under the best of our
+kings; and whether you shall think fit to secure ourselves herein, by
+way of bill or otherwise, so as it be provided for with due respect to
+his honour and the publick good whereof he doubteth not that you will be
+careful, he promiseth and assureth you that he will give way to it.'</p>
+
+<p>This is indeed a very important message. The King approves of an inquiry
+into the violations of old English right and prescription, which had
+taken place in his reign. He consents that a bill to secure their
+observance should be drawn up, and gives hopes beforehand of its
+ratification.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_569" id="Page_569">[Pg 569]</a></span>
+Charles I, like James, had constantly been anxious to
+prevent grants from being made dependent on conditions; but something
+very like this occurs when he backs his invitation to a speedy grant of
+subsidies by a promise to approve of the petition submitted to him for
+certain objects.</p>
+
+<p>On this five subsidies were without delay unanimously granted to the
+King, with the concurrence even of members like Pym, who systematically
+opposed him. It was now only necessary that both sides should agree on
+the enactments for doing away with the abuses which had been pointed
+out.</p>
+
+<p>The principal grievance arose from the conduct of the King, who in his
+embarrassments had imposed a forced loan at the rate fixed on the
+occasion of the last subsidies, and had sent commissioners into the
+counties in order to exact payment, just as if he had been armed with
+the authority of Parliament for this object. Many had submitted: but not
+a few others high and low had refused to pay, not from want of means but
+on principle. The King had thought this behaviour a proof of personal
+disaffection, and had had no hesitation in arresting those who refused:
+he had even taken steps to assert his right to do so as a matter of
+principle. Much notice was attracted at that time by a sermon preached
+by one Sibthorp, in which plenary legislative authority was ascribed to
+the King, and unconditional obedience was demanded for all his orders if
+they did not contradict the divine commands. Archbishop Abbot had
+steadfastly refused to allow the printing of this sermon, which he
+regarded as an attack upon the constitution: eighteen times in
+succession an intimate friend of the King went to him to urge him to
+give leave.<a name="FNanchor_474_474" id="FNanchor_474_474"></a><a href="#Footnote_474_474" class="fnanchor">[474]</a>
+As the Archbishop refused to comply, he received orders
+to leave London, and was struck out of the High Commission: the sermon
+had been printed with the permission of another bishop. So earnestly
+bent was the King at that time on pressing his claim to override the
+necessity of a parliamentary grant in moments of emergency.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_570" id="Page_570">[Pg 570]</a></span>
+He had now however retreated from this position. Abbot had obtained
+permission to resume his seat in the Upper House, and so had Lord
+Bristol. When, in consequence of the above-mentioned declaration in
+Parliament, a project was now decided on for securing the legal position
+of the subject, especially the rights of property and personal freedom,
+which had been infringed by the previous proceedings, the King expressed
+his agreement loudly, explicitly, and repeatedly; in general terms he
+gave up his claim ever to proceed again to a forced loan. No one was
+ever to be arrested again because he would not lend money; and in all
+other cases where arrest was necessary the customary forms were to be
+observed.</p>
+
+<p>At this point however another question arose touching the very essence
+of the supreme power. The Lower House was not yet content that an abuse
+like that which had occurred should be merely removed: it wished to
+destroy it at the root. It was not satisfied with the promise of the
+King that he would never in any case punish by arrest, unless he was
+convinced in his conscience of its necessity. They wished to put an end
+to this discretionary power itself, of which his ministers could avail
+themselves at pleasure. Parliament demanded that henceforth no one
+should be arrested without assignment of the reason and observance of
+the forms of law.</p>
+
+<p>This question led to a discussion of points of constitutional doctrine
+before the House of Lords, between the representatives of the Lower
+House and Sir Robert Heath, the Attorney General, in an argument which
+deserves our whole attention.</p>
+
+<p>The Lower House appealed to that article of Magna Charta, by which the
+arrest of free persons was forbidden except on the judgment of their
+peers, or according to the law of the land: and by the law of the land
+it understood the judicial process and its forms. Sir Robert Heath would
+not admit this interpretation. He thought that the expression in no way
+forbade the King to restrict the liberty of individuals in extraordinary
+cases for reasons of state; and that this restriction could not be
+avoided, when it was desired to trace out some conspiracy or treason. If
+the cause were to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_571" id="Page_571">[Pg 571]</a></span>
+be assigned he thought that it must be the real
+cause, which could be proved before a tribunal; but how often cases
+arose of such a kind that arrest would have to be ordered under some
+other pretext, until the ring-leader could be laid hold of! It was very
+true, he said, that such a power might be seriously abused, but it was
+the same with all the rights of the prerogative: even the right of
+making war and peace, and the right of pardon might be abused, and yet
+no man wished to take these from the crown: it always was, and must
+always be presumed, that the King would not betray the confidence of
+God, who had placed him in his office.</p>
+
+<p>Not without good reason did Edward Coke call this the greatest question
+which had ever been argued in Westminster. It was proved to him that he
+himself as judge had followed the interpretation which he now condemned.
+He answered that he was not pope, and made no pretensions to
+infallibility. He now firmly maintained that the King had no such
+prerogative at all.</p>
+
+<p>We can see how opinion wavered from a speech of Sir Benjamin Rudyard,
+who maintains on the one hand that it is impossible to find laws
+beforehand for every case, but that a circle must be drawn within which
+the royal authority shall prevail; while on the other hand he lays
+emphasis also on the danger arising from the plea of mere reasons of
+state, which he said would only too easily come into conflict with the
+laws and with religion itself. The best arrangement according to him
+would be, if Parliament were held so often that the irregular power
+which could not be broken at once, might by degrees 'moulder away.' A
+copy of this speech with observations by Laud is extant in the archives.
+Laud calls attention to the contradiction which lies in first
+acknowledging the necessity of liberty of movement on the part of the
+government, and then notwithstanding considering it to be the
+destination of Parliament by degrees to absorb its power, as it was at
+present exercised.<a name="FNanchor_475_475" id="FNanchor_475_475"></a><a href="#Footnote_475_475" class="fnanchor">[475]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_572" id="Page_572">[Pg 572]</a></span>
+And certainly it may have been the idea of the moderate members of the
+House of Commons, gradually to break up such a power as that exercised
+by the minister and favourite, by coming to a better understanding with
+the King, and at the same time by strictly limiting his arbitrary
+authority.</p>
+
+<p>The impression however gained ground that even the indispensable
+functions of the supreme authority would be restricted by the enactments
+proposed. The right of arresting persons dangerous and troublesome to
+the government was just then exercised in France to the widest extent;
+Cardinal Richelieu could never have maintained himself but for his quick
+and energetic use of it. In all other states, as well republican as
+monarchical, it was a weapon with which the government thought that it
+could not dispense. Was it to be dropped in England alone? And that too
+at a moment when the opposition of factions was constantly becoming more
+active? In fact the impression spread that Parliament, not content with
+full promises from the King, while it checked abuses, was impairing his
+authority.</p>
+
+<p>In the Upper House, where there was a strong party in favour of the
+King's prerogative, these and similar considerations influenced votes.
+Men were agreed that abuses like those which had occurred must be for
+ever put a stop to. Even the proposals introduced for securing
+individual freedom were not properly speaking rejected: but it was
+desired to limit them by a clause to the effect that the sovereign power
+with which the King was entrusted should remain in his hands
+undiminished for the protection of his people. The Lower House however
+would not accept any such addition: for the provisions of the Petition
+would thus be rendered useless. They foresaw that what those provisions
+forbade would pass as lawful in virtue of the plenitude of the sovereign
+power: yet the expression 'sovereign power' was unknown in the English
+Parliament: that body was familiar only with the prerogative of the
+King, which at the same time was embodied in the laws. The Upper House
+on this declared that it did not think of departing from the Oath by
+which each one of them was pledged to maintain the prerogative of the
+King. Even in the Lower House the members were reminded of this,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_573" id="Page_573">[Pg 573]</a></span>
+and no one raised his voice against it; for who would have been willing to
+confess that he was withstanding the lawful prerogative of the King? The
+only question was as to its extent.</p>
+
+<p>This question now presented itself to the King himself. Was he to accept
+the proposal of the Commons, and to content himself with a general
+reservation of his prerogative? It is very instructive, and forms one of
+the most important steps in his career, that he thought it advisable to
+inform himself first of all what rights in this matter he really
+possessed.</p>
+
+<p>On the 26th of May, just when the heat of the quarrel was most intense,
+he summoned the two Chief Justices, Hyde and Richardson, to Whitehall,
+and submitted to them the question whether or not he had the right of
+ordering the arrest of his subjects without specifying the reason at the
+same time. On this the Judges were assembled by their two chiefs in the
+profoundest secrecy, to pronounce on the question. They decided that it
+certainly was the rule to specify the reasons; but that there might be
+cases in which the secrecy required made it necessary for some time to
+withhold them. A further question was then followed by a decision of the
+same import, that the judges in such a case were not bound to give up
+the prisoner even if a writ of habeas corpus were presented. Charles
+then proceeded to a third question, to which no doubt he attached the
+most importance. If he accepted the petition of the Commons, did he
+surrender for ever the right of ordering imprisonment without assigning
+a cause? The judges assembled again, and on the 31st of May, after
+deliberating together, they gave in their answer, signed with their
+names. Every law, they said, had its own interpretation; and so must
+this petition: and the answer must always depend upon the circumstances
+of the case in question, which could not be determined until the case
+arose; but the King certainly did not give up his right beforehand by
+granting the petition.<a name="FNanchor_476_476" id="FNanchor_476_476"></a><a href="#Footnote_476_476" class="fnanchor">[476]</a></p>
+
+<p>At a later time and in another epoch these questions were finally
+settled in a different way. The Judges of this time decided them in
+favour of the power of the time. If we might
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_574" id="Page_574">[Pg 574]</a></span>
+apply a parallel, though
+certainly one borrowed from a very different form of government, we
+might say that the fettah of men learned in the law, the sentence of the
+mufti, was in favour of the King. In this, as in other respects, a
+difference is found to exist between the constitutions of the East and
+those of the West: such a sentence in the West does not finally decide a
+case; but even here, nevertheless, it always carries great weight.
+Charles I felt that according to the existing state of the law, he did
+not exceed his rights by maintaining the prerogative which he had
+hitherto exercised. The last decision raised him even above the
+apprehension of losing it by acceding to a petition which was opposed to
+it.</p>
+
+<p>He could not however resolve on this step without further consideration.</p>
+
+<p>To accede to the petition, and at the same time to reserve in his own
+favour the declaration made by the Judges, was an act of duplicity,
+which he wished to escape by giving an assurance couched in general
+terms.</p>
+
+<p>On the 2nd of June he came down to the House in full assembly, and had
+his answer read. Its tenor was, that the laws should be observed and the
+statutes put in force, and his subjects freed from oppression; that he
+the King was as anxious for their true rights and liberties as for his
+own prerogative.</p>
+
+<p>But it is easily intelligible that these words satisfied no one. They
+appeared to one party as dark as the sentence of an oracle; to the other
+they appeared useless; for the King, they said, was already pledged to
+all this by his Coronation Oath: such long sittings and so much labour
+would not have been required to effect such a result as this. The answer
+however was not ascribed to the King, whose deliberations remained
+shrouded in the closest secrecy, and who on the contrary was thought to
+agree with the substance of the petition, but to the favourite, who was
+supposed to find such an agreement dangerous for
+himself.<a name="FNanchor_477_477" id="FNanchor_477_477"></a><a href="#Footnote_477_477" class="fnanchor">[477]</a>
+It was remarked that two days before making this declaration the King had been
+at one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_575" id="Page_575">[Pg 575]</a></span>
+the country seats of the Duke, and had held confidential
+conversations with him. It was thought that there, under the influence
+of the Duke, the declaration had been drawn up, which contained nothing
+but words that might easily be explained in another sense, and which did
+not even make any mention of the petition at all. It was fancied that
+Buckingham even wished to hinder the King from coming to a genuine
+understanding with his Parliament, which might be disadvantageous to his
+interests.<a name="FNanchor_478_478" id="FNanchor_478_478"></a><a href="#Footnote_478_478" class="fnanchor">[478]</a>
+His opponents thought that he was at the root of all
+previous misfortunes; and what might they not still expect from him? He
+was credited with wishing to alter the constitution of England, to
+excite a war with Scotland, and to betray Ireland to the Spaniards. In
+spite of all that the King might have originally expected, they
+determined to make a direct attack upon such a minister. Popular
+susceptibility knows no limits in its anxieties or hopes, in its likings
+or hatreds. Even thoughtful and serious men allowed themselves to
+entertain the opinion that the prosperity of England at home and abroad
+was as good as lost: the former was lost if people were content with the
+answer given, the latter if they refused to make the grants demanded, or
+even if they made them but left the administration in those
+untrustworthy hands in which it was at the present time. On one occasion
+these feelings gave rise to an unparalleled scene in Parliament. Those
+bearded and sedate men wept and cursed. They feared for their country,
+and each one feared for himself, if they did not get rid of the man who
+possessed power, while on the other hand it seemed to them impossible to
+do so. Some could not speak for tears: violent exclamations against the
+Duke prevented the continuance of the debate. But not only were
+complaints heard: the expression was also heard, that men had still
+hands and swords, and could get rid of the enemy of King and country by
+his death. They proceeded at last to deliberate on a protestation which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_576" id="Page_576">[Pg 576]</a></span>
+was resolved on after that debate, and they had gone so far as to name
+the Duke, and to declare him a traitor, when the Speaker who had quitted
+the House came in again, and brought a message from the King, by which
+the sitting was adjourned to the following day.</p>
+
+<p>No course seemed to be left for Charles I but to dissolve this
+Parliament immediately as he had dissolved its predecessor. But what
+would then have become of the grant of money, which was every day more
+urgently needed? Like the Petition, it would have fallen to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Before the end of the same day, June 5, a meeting of the Privy Council
+was held, in which it was resolved to calm the agitation by accepting
+the Petition of Right. We do not learn if on that occasion the scruples
+of the King were discussed or not; but as his questions to the judges
+already betrayed his inclination to such a course, so now he actually
+resolved to plunge into the contradiction which he had wished to avoid,
+and accept the Petition while at the same time, in accordance with the
+sentence of the Judges, he would reserve for himself the future exercise
+of the right therein denied.</p>
+
+<p>On June 7 the King appeared in the Upper House, where the Commons also
+were assembled. The Lords were in their robes, and the King sat upon his
+throne while the Petition of Right was read. It was directed against
+some temporary grievances, such as forced billeting and the application
+of martial law in time of peace, but principally against the exaction of
+forced loans, or taxes which had not been granted, and against the
+imprisonments which had been so much talked of. The King, as had been
+desired, uttered the formula of assent used by his Norman ancestors. His
+words were greeted with clapping of hands and acclamations. The King
+added that he had meant just as much by his first declaration; indeed he
+knew well that it was not the intention of Parliament, nor even in its
+power, to limit his prerogative: for that this would be strengthened by
+the liberties of the people, and consisted in defending those
+liberties.<a name="FNanchor_479_479" id="FNanchor_479_479"></a><a href="#Footnote_479_479" class="fnanchor">[479]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_577" id="Page_577">[Pg 577]</a></span>
+The excitement of the House was taken up by the city. The bells were
+rung, and bonfires were kindled; and a rumour obtained credence that the
+Duke of Buckingham himself had fallen, and was expecting his reward on
+the scaffold. Of what an illusion were men the victims! The King clung
+to Buckingham as firmly as ever: in granting the Petition he did not
+mean to surrender a jot of his lawful prerogative. We have seen what he
+thought of his right to make arrests. In resigning his claim to levy
+taxes that had not been granted by Parliament he did not mean to be
+restricted in his claim to tonnage and poundage, for he thought that,
+unless these were collected, the administration of the State could not
+be carried on at all, and in the late controversies his right to them
+had not come under discussion. Some of the higher officials, the
+Recorder and the Solicitor General, confirmed the King in this view: and
+to many of his opponents in Parliament it was pointed out that they had
+previously entertained the same opinion.</p>
+
+<p>The Lower House on its part allowed the bill, by which the grant was
+made, to pass the last stage; but it could not be moved by advice or
+warning to desist from the great Remonstrance, in the composition of
+which the House had been interrupted. In this, mention was made of the
+Arminian opinions which were now making way in England, and which
+appeared to Parliament to involve a tendency in the direction of
+Romanism: but it complained principally of the connivance, which in
+spite of all ordinances was still constantly extended to the recusants,
+so that Catholicism, especially in Ireland, had the fullest scope. And
+the State, it was said, was in just the same plight as religion. The
+government was introducing foreign soldiers, especially German troopers,
+and was meditating the imposition of new taxes in order to pay them. In
+the midst of peace a general was commanding in the country. Trustworthy
+men were being dismissed from their offices; Parliament and its rights
+were contemned: was it intended to 'change the frame both of religion
+and government?'<a name="FNanchor_480_480" id="FNanchor_480_480"></a><a href="#Footnote_480_480" class="fnanchor">[480]</a>
+But the source of all evil was the Duke of
+Buckingham. The remonstrants begged the King to consider
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_578" id="Page_578">[Pg 578]</a></span>
+whether it was advisable for himself and for his kingdom to allow him to continue in
+his high offices, and to keep him among his confidential
+advisers.<a name="FNanchor_481_481" id="FNanchor_481_481"></a><a href="#Footnote_481_481" class="fnanchor">[481]</a></p>
+
+<p>As we gather, the Lower House attached weight to the circumstance that
+it did not raise a complaint, nor even strictly speaking a protest,
+against the continuance of Buckingham's authority, but simply preferred
+a request that the position of affairs should be taken into
+consideration. But the King was greatly offended even at this. He
+replied that he had hitherto always believed that the members of the
+Lower House understood nothing about the affairs of State, and that he
+was now greatly strengthened in his opinion by the purport of this
+representation.<a name="FNanchor_482_482" id="FNanchor_482_482"></a><a href="#Footnote_482_482" class="fnanchor">[482]</a>
+Buckingham prayed the King to cause unsparing
+investigation into the charges raised against him to be made, for that
+such a proceeding would bring his innocence to light. The King offered
+him his hand to kiss, and addressed to him some friendly expressions.
+But the Lower House was incensed afresh at the bad success of its
+representation, and proceeded to adopt an express remonstrance on the
+subject of tonnage and poundage. In order to save himself from again
+receiving such an address, the King declared Parliament to be prorogued
+on June 20.</p>
+
+<p>Although it was assumed just at that time that a genuine understanding
+between the Crown and the Parliament had been brought about in this
+session, yet this assumption is certainly a mistake. At the beginning of
+the session suspicious controversies were intentionally avoided. A basis
+was obtained upon which union between the two parties seamed possible:
+the great Petition of Right was drawn up, on the whole in concert with
+the government. When it was discussed however, a demand was set up
+affecting rights which the King would not forego. He surrendered them in
+his eagerness to obtain the proceeds of the grants made to him, but not
+without secretly reserving his rights in his own favour.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_579" id="Page_579">[Pg 579]</a></span>
+Then other old differences also came to light again in their full strength. An open
+disagreement broke out: in haste and with tempers irritated the two
+parties separated. </p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_469_469" id="Footnote_469_469"></a><a href="#FNanchor_469_469"><span class="label">[469]</span></a> The Danger wherein the Kingdom now standeth and the
+Remedy, written by Sir Robert Cotton. Jan. 1627-8.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_470_470" id="Footnote_470_470"></a><a href="#FNanchor_470_470"><span class="label">[470]</span></a> Aluise Contarini, Feb. 10, 1628: 'La deliberatione di
+convocare il parlamente è nata&mdash;dalle promesse, che hanno fatte molti
+grandi, che non si parlera del duca.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_471_471" id="Footnote_471_471"></a><a href="#FNanchor_471_471"><span class="label">[471]</span></a> 'Those rights, laws, and liberties, which our wise
+ancestors have left us.' So run the words in the draught of the speech
+contained in a memorandum in the St. P. O. under the title, 'Speeches of
+some in the Lower House, March 22, 1628.' In Rushworth and in both
+Parliamentary Histories two reports are given which differ from one
+another.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_472_472" id="Footnote_472_472"></a><a href="#FNanchor_472_472"><span class="label">[472]</span></a> 'Assoluto dominio destruttivo dei parlamenti con azzardo
+di sollevatione.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_473_473" id="Footnote_473_473"></a><a href="#FNanchor_473_473"><span class="label">[473]</span></a> 'To draw the heads of our grievances into a petition,
+which we will humbly, soberly, and speedily address unto His Majesty
+whereby we may be secured.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_474_474" id="Footnote_474_474"></a><a href="#FNanchor_474_474"><span class="label">[474]</span></a> Abbot's Narration, in Rushworth i. 459.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_475_475" id="Footnote_475_475"></a><a href="#FNanchor_475_475"><span class="label">[475]</span></a> 'The end is, to make the other power, which he calls
+irregular moulder away.' (St. P. O.) In Bruce's Calendar, 1628-9, p. 92,
+more particular reference is made to this document.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_476_476" id="Footnote_476_476"></a><a href="#FNanchor_476_476"><span class="label">[476]</span></a> Memorandum of Nicholas Hyde, Chief Justice of the King's
+Bench, in Ellis's Letters, ii. iii. 250.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_477_477" id="Footnote_477_477"></a><a href="#FNanchor_477_477"><span class="label">[477]</span></a> Nethersole writes to the Queen of Bohemia as early as in
+April: 'the duke can neither subdue this parliament, neither by fear nor
+favour,&mdash;is almost out of his senses to find that it gained credit with
+His Majesty.' (St. P. O.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_478_478" id="Footnote_478_478"></a><a href="#FNanchor_478_478"><span class="label">[478]</span></a> Al. Contarini, 17 Giugno: 'Attribuendone la cagione al
+duca per i suoi interessi di voler il re padrone disgionto dai popoli
+unito solo con lui, et per le pratiche di Spagnoli guidati in generale
+da cattolici et in particolare da Gesuiti che praticano quella cosa.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_479_479" id="Footnote_479_479"></a><a href="#FNanchor_479_479"><span class="label">[479]</span></a> Parliamentary History viii. 202.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_480_480" id="Footnote_480_480"></a><a href="#FNanchor_480_480"><span class="label">[480]</span></a> Parliamentary History viii. 227.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_481_481" id="Footnote_481_481"></a><a href="#FNanchor_481_481"><span class="label">[481]</span></a> Ruszdorf ii. 547.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_482_482" id="Footnote_482_482"></a><a href="#FNanchor_482_482"><span class="label">[482]</span></a> Al. Contarini: 'Che sempre suppose ne havessero poca
+cognitione, ma che adesso credeva, che non havessero niente affatto.'</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<p class='centersm'><a name="BV_IX" id="BV_IX"></a>
+ASSASSINATION OF BUCKINGHAM. SESSION OF 1629.</p>
+
+<p>For some years nothing had surprised foreigners who came to England so
+much as the wide severance between the government and the nation. Upon
+the one side they saw the King, the favourite, and his adherents; upon
+the other every one else. The King had lost much of the popularity which
+he had enjoyed when he ascended the throne; but a genuine hatred was
+directed against the arbitrary government of the Duke. Although it had
+been repressed out of regard to the King, it had again broken loose: the
+less practical result it produced, the more it filled all hearts.</p>
+
+<p>Burdened with this hatred, and with the ground shaking under him,
+Buckingham was nevertheless revolving the largest enterprises in his
+brain. He repelled with scorn the charge of still keeping up an
+intercourse with Spain; that was contrary to his obligations to the
+Protestants. He himself, so he said, had concluded the alliances between
+England and Denmark and the States-General; and he wished also to abide
+by them. Without doubt overtures had been made on the part of Spain, and
+had been responded to on the part of England; but their relations had in
+fact been such as had led to no result. On the contrary, negotiations
+with France, which certainly offered some prospect of success, had been
+opened through the mediation of the Venetian ambassadors resident at the
+two courts. The English were ready to waive all other points at issue if
+the other side would resolve to show some indulgence, especially if they
+would conclude some tolerable arrangement with Rochelle. The forces of
+both powers would then undertake the war
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_581" id="Page_581">[Pg 581]</a></span>
+against the Spanish monarchy, and against the advance of the Emperor in Germany. The French army would
+turn its steps to Italy; the English fleet would go to the aid of the
+Danes: it was expected that these attacks would exert an enormous
+influence in all
+directions.<a name="FNanchor_483_483" id="FNanchor_483_483"></a><a href="#Footnote_483_483" class="fnanchor">[483]</a>
+Buckingham was still engrossed with
+designs against Spain, in spite of secret but only pretended overtures
+to that power. He intended to attack the Spanish monarchy at the source
+of its greatness, in the West Indies; and by a combination of forces on
+the Continent to wrest the Palatinate from it, and thereby to destroy
+the position which it had won on the Middle Rhine. A strange ambition,
+although in keeping with the age and with his personal character,
+appears to have been connected with this design. It had entered into his
+head to marry his daughter to the Electoral Prince Palatine, and perhaps
+to give his daughter the appearance of a higher rank by getting himself
+declared independent prince of some West Indian conquest&mdash;Jamaica had
+attracted his ambition<a name="FNanchor_484_484" id="FNanchor_484_484"></a><a href="#Footnote_484_484" class="fnanchor">[484]</a>:&mdash;a
+hope not altogether chimerical; for he
+was still all-powerful with Charles. Foreigners were astonished that he
+undertook the most extensive negotiations before he had given his
+sovereign notice of them. Not unlike James I he cherished the hope that
+the threatening attitude which he took up, even if he did not strike a
+blow, would dispose the French to make concessions and would restore the
+former understanding between them. If this were not the case, he was
+determined to undertake the relief of Rochelle with all his energies.</p>
+
+<p>The condition of the English navy was such that he might reasonably
+promise himself success. We have credible information according to which
+Buckingham had made it half as large again as it had been in the time of
+Elizabeth. He had increased it from 14,000 tons burden to 22,000: he
+had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_582" id="Page_582">[Pg 582]</a></span>
+put the dockyards and magazines at Chatham, Deptford, Woolwich, and
+Portsmouth into good repair; and a number of large vessels had been
+built under his orders. Already in May an English squadron had made an
+attempt to relieve Rochelle: but the commanders on that occasion would
+not undertake the responsibility of exposing the ships entrusted to
+them, to the great danger which threatened them if they made the
+attempt: they were apprehensive of being called to account. Buckingham
+was not fettered by considerations of this kind. He had had engines of
+extraordinary dimensions constructed, which it was expected would rend
+with irresistible power the mole in front of the harbour, by which
+Rochelle was cut off.<a name="FNanchor_485_485" id="FNanchor_485_485"></a><a href="#Footnote_485_485" class="fnanchor">[485]</a>
+And who shall say that success would have been impossible?</p>
+
+<p>Buckingham felt the hatred which men entertained towards him, but
+thought that he should still turn it into admiration. He wished to atone
+for the faults of his youth, and, as he said, to enter on new paths
+traced on the lines of the ancient maxims and ancient policy of England,
+in order to bring back better
+days.<a name="FNanchor_486_486" id="FNanchor_486_486"></a><a href="#Footnote_486_486" class="fnanchor">[486]</a>
+He had to a certain extent made himself the centre of Protestant interests. Every one expected that he
+would proceed without delay to the relief of Rochelle, for which all
+preparations had been made. The destinies of the world seemed to hang
+upon his resolutions. And he had just received better tidings from that
+town: no one had ever seen him fuller of strength and energy. At this
+culminating point of his life he was smitten by a sudden and horrible
+death. As he stepped out of the dressing-room in his lodging at
+Portsmouth, and was crossing the hall, in order to mount his carriage
+and drive to the King, he was murdered by a stroke from a dagger.</p>
+
+<p>The murderer might easily have escaped, for the house was full of men,
+among them many Frenchmen, on whom the first suspicion fell. While all
+were crying out for the villain who had murdered the Duke, the murderer
+said, 'No villain did it,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_583" id="Page_583">[Pg 583]</a></span>
+but an honourable man. I am the man.' Men saw
+before them a lean man with red hair, and dark melancholy features. His
+name was Felton: he had served in the last maritime expeditions, and had
+formerly been passed over when there was a vacancy for promotion. He
+could not endure to be placed below men who had never borne arms, merely
+because they were in the Duke's favour. The strongest impression had
+been produced on him by the
+Remonstrance,<a name="FNanchor_487_487" id="FNanchor_487_487"></a><a href="#Footnote_487_487" class="fnanchor">[487]</a>
+which censured similar transactions, and at the same time represented the Duke as the enemy of
+religion and his country. Felton was one of these men, who from the way
+in which they combine religious and political opinions are capable of
+anything. In this respect he may be compared with the assassins of
+William of Orange, Henry III, and Henry IV; except that he came forward
+in behalf of the opposite side, and in his case there is no mention of
+any participation of a minister of religion. A paper was found on him in
+which he pronounced that man cowardly and base who was not ready to
+sacrifice his life for the cause of his God, his king, and his country.
+In his lodging there was another, on which he had put down some
+principles, which he seemed to have drawn from one or two books, and
+which make his intentions somewhat clearer. It is there said that a man
+has no relations which place him under greater obligations than those
+which he has with his country; that the welfare of the people is the
+highest law, and that 'God himself has enacted this law, that whatsoever
+is for the profit or benefit of the commonwealth should be accounted to
+be lawful.'<a name="FNanchor_488_488" id="FNanchor_488_488"></a><a href="#Footnote_488_488" class="fnanchor">[488]</a>
+He was believed, and rightly, when he affirmed that he
+had no accomplices: the slight put upon him, he said, had inspired him
+with the thought, the Remonstrance had strengthened him in it: 'On my
+soul,' he repeated, 'nothing but the Remonstrance. He thought that he
+might remove the man out of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_584" id="Page_584">[Pg 584]</a></span>
+the way who obstructed the public welfare. And he looked with some feeling of sarcasm at those who testified their
+horror of him when he was led by: 'In your hearts,' he cried out, 'you
+rejoice in my deed.' There were some in fact who really displayed such a
+feeling: the crews, who had once already wished to mutiny, disguised
+their sentiments least; over their beer and pipes they gave the assassin
+a cheer. Others lamented most that an Englishman should have been
+capable of assassination. Felton himself was afterwards convinced that
+his principles were false. He was told that a man had other still nearer
+and deeper obligations to God, and to his own soul, than to his country;
+that no one should do the smallest evil for the sake of the greatest
+good,<a name="FNanchor_489_489" id="FNanchor_489_489"></a><a href="#Footnote_489_489" class="fnanchor">[489]</a>
+much less then a monstrous crime like his in behalf of a
+cause which to his blinded eyes appeared good. He at last thanked his
+instructors for their lesson, and only asked in mercy to be allowed
+before his execution to do penance in sackcloth with ashes on his head,
+and a cord round his neck, in presence of all the world.</p>
+
+<p>In public King Charles never lost his calmness of demeanour for a
+moment. He appeared to accept the event as a dispensation of Heaven; but
+afterwards he shut himself up for two whole days, and gave way to his
+sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>The expedition against Rochelle now put to sea under the command of the
+Earl of Lindsay. But the captains did not properly obey their chief:
+orders which had been planned and issued remained unexecuted: the
+fire-ships, which were intended to break through the defences of the
+enemy, were ill-managed. The intention was then formed of waiting for a
+higher tide, in order to attempt another attack; but meanwhile the very
+last resources of the town were exhausted, and it found itself obliged
+to capitulate. England's position in the world was immeasurably lowered
+when Rochelle was conquered by Richelieu. What further schemes of
+maritime supremacy had Buckingham latterly connected with the
+maintenance of this town! The ideas of Buckingham vanished as completely
+as if they had never been: the<span class="sidenote">A.D. 1629.</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_585" id="Page_585">[Pg 585]</a></span>
+ideas of Richelieu became the foundation
+of a new order in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Krempe also fell, which had hitherto been deemed impregnable, the spot
+which, with Gluckstadt, was still the principal stay of Danish
+independence, and to which Buckingham's attention had been constantly
+directed. It is thought that about 8000 men would have sufficed to
+relieve it, but as they were not forthcoming, the fortress fell into the
+hands of the enemy in November 1628.</p>
+
+<p>And Charles I, instead of placing himself in a position to repair these
+losses of his allies, embarked on a new domestic quarrel with the
+Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>As the customs had not been fixed by the advice of Parliament, and
+tonnage and poundage had not been regularly granted at all, some London
+merchants had refused to satisfy the Custom House. On this the Lords of
+the Treasury laid their property under seizure. Of course the persons
+affected declared this proceeding also illegal, and filled the country
+with their complaints. On this occasion it was not, as almost always
+hitherto, the want of an immediate subsidy, but the necessity of
+removing this constitutional difficulty, which caused Parliament to be
+assembled in January 1629. People might flatter themselves that after
+the death of Buckingham, who had been the object of the principal
+hostility of that body, an agreement would be more easily effected.</p>
+
+<p>The plan drawn up by the Privy Council was in the first instance of a
+conciliatory nature. The right of granting money in general was to be
+acknowledged, even in the case of tonnage and poundage: the levying of
+this tax up to the present time, however, was to be justified, on the
+ground that other kings had collected it before it had been granted. If
+Parliament, after this general acknowledgement of its right, should
+still persist in refusing the present King what former kings had
+enjoyed, he would be exculpated: not the government, but Parliament
+would in that case have to bear the blame of the breach which would
+arise in consequence.<a name="FNanchor_490_490" id="FNanchor_490_490"></a><a href="#Footnote_490_490" class="fnanchor">[490]</a></p>
+
+<p>This was the tenor of the King's speech at the opening of the discussion
+on January 23, 1629. He asked for tonnage
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_586" id="Page_586">[Pg 586]</a></span>
+and poundage, less on the strength of his hereditary right to it, than on the plea of custom and
+necessity. He would always consider it as a gift of his people; but
+after their scruples had been removed by this declaration, he expected
+that an end would be put to all difficulties by a grant such as had been
+made to his ancestors. It was offensive to him that any one contested
+his title to a tax, without which his state could not be kept up. In the
+assembled Privy Council he declared that a temporary grant was
+derogatory to his honour. He said that he would no longer live from hand
+to mouth: he had as little disposition to suffer from want, or to allow
+the privileges of his crown to be wrested from him, as he had had
+thought of infringing the liberties of his
+people.<a name="FNanchor_491_491" id="FNanchor_491_491"></a><a href="#Footnote_491_491" class="fnanchor">[491]</a>
+Secretary Coke, a member of the House, brought in the requisite bill without delay, and
+proposed the first reading.</p>
+
+<p>The assembly, however, consisted of the very men who had thought that
+through the Petition of Right they had set up a fundamental law for
+ever, but had since then become conscious how little they had effected
+by that means.</p>
+
+<p>An unpleasant impression had already been made on them by the printing
+of the Petition of Right without the expression of simple approval, but
+with the restrictive declarations which the King had at first
+made.<a name="FNanchor_492_492" id="FNanchor_492_492"></a><a href="#Footnote_492_492" class="fnanchor">[492]</a>
+But besides this it was seen how little the King intended to be bound to
+the literal meaning of his words, for arrests without definite
+assignment of the reason had again taken place. The Star Chamber, which
+was already regarded as a court of doubtful legality, had imposed harsh
+and arbitrary penalties which awakened loud murmurs. The political
+opinions of one or two clergymen had caused general agitation. A
+preacher named Roger Manwaring gave utterance to extreme Royalist views.
+He defended forced loans, and contested the unconditional right of
+Parliament to grant taxes. From some passages of Scripture he deduced
+the absolute power of the sovereign, so that properly speaking no
+contract at all could, in his opinion,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_587" id="Page_587">[Pg 587]</a></span>
+be made between king and
+people.<a name="FNanchor_493_493" id="FNanchor_493_493"></a><a href="#Footnote_493_493" class="fnanchor">[493]</a>
+Parliament had called him to account for this, and had
+punished him by fine and suspension; but the King remitted the sentence.
+Another clergyman of kindred views, Montague, whom we have already
+mentioned, had been advanced by the King to the bishopric of Chichester,
+though, as deserves to be noticed, not without encountering opposition.
+For at the elections the old forms were still observed. Before the
+commissary of the Archbishop confirmed the election, which had taken
+place at the King's commands, he invited those present, if they knew
+anything in the life and conduct of the bishop-elect which could hinder
+his confirmation, to declare it. What had never been done on any other
+occasion was done then. An objection against Montague was presented in
+writing on the ground that doctrines occurred in his books which were
+irreconcilable with the existing institutions of England. The matter was
+brought before a court of justice, which, however, dismissed the
+objection as proceeding from a man who did not belong to the diocese of
+Chichester. The royal confirmation had then
+followed.<a name="FNanchor_494_494" id="FNanchor_494_494"></a><a href="#Footnote_494_494" class="fnanchor">[494]</a>
+But must it not have been irritating to Parliament that the very men were promoted
+about whom it had complained? Its complaints seemed rather to serve as a
+recommendation.</p>
+
+<p>Besides this a Jesuit institution had been discovered in the immediate
+neighbourhood of London, and had then not been prosecuted with all the
+severity which Parliament thought requisite. People complained that the
+number of Papists was increasing every day; that in the counties, where
+before there had been none, they were now reckoned by thousands. Mainly
+at the instigation of Sir John Eliot, the Lower House issued a
+declaration, that it desired to hold the Articles of the English Church
+in the sense in which they were understood by the writers, whose
+authority was recognised in that Church, and not in the sense of the
+Jesuits and Arminians, which was repudiated.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_588" id="Page_588">[Pg 588]</a></span>
+The question of tonnage and poundage came before the House while it was
+labouring under the irritation kindled by this discussion. What the
+government desired, the establishment of this tax on a legal footing,
+was also the wish of Parliament; but Parliament wished the matter to be
+settled in a way different from that intended by the King. Parliament
+desired to make the right of granting taxes a genuine reality, and
+henceforward to fix the duties in detail. The first reading of the bill
+brought forward by the government was rejected, on the formal ground
+that tonnage and poundage were subsidies, for granting which a
+resolution must be taken before a bill on the subject could be brought
+in.<a name="FNanchor_495_495" id="FNanchor_495_495"></a><a href="#Footnote_495_495" class="fnanchor">[495]</a>
+Parliament espoused the cause of the London merchants, who had
+certainly suffered in support of its claims, and demanded that the
+proceedings of the Treasury should be reversed. For they maintained that
+the collection of tonnage and poundage was as much a breach of the
+fundamental principles of the realm, as the raising of any other tax
+that had not been granted would be. Or could any one, they asked, grant
+what he did not possess? If tonnage and poundage already belonged to the
+King, he did not need to have it granted him. The arrangement proposed
+by the government was rejected altogether: and everything else which was
+inconsistent with the literal meaning of the petition was also declared
+illegal.</p>
+
+<p>The King was incensed at the political, as well as at the religious
+attitude of the Lower House. A treatise in his own handwriting is
+extant, in which he expresses himself on the latter subject. 'You take
+to yourselfs,' he says, 'the interpretation of articles of religion, the
+deciding of which in doctrinal points only appartaines to the clergy and
+convocation.'<a name="FNanchor_496_496" id="FNanchor_496_496"></a><a href="#Footnote_496_496" class="fnanchor">[496]</a>
+He added that His Majesty&mdash;for he loved to speak of
+himself in the third person&mdash;had a short time before announced his
+intention of maintaining the integrity of the religion of the English
+Church, and its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_589" id="Page_589">[Pg 589]</a></span>
+unity, and that after much reflection, in agreement
+with the Privy Council and with the bishops: that as the Commons had the
+same object in view, he was surprised that they were not content with
+this announcement, and that they did not at all events state wherein the
+King's declaration did not content them: for that the King was the
+supreme governor of the English Church after God.</p>
+
+<p>At this very time an order was issued to the Treasury, and to the
+collectors of customs at the ports that tonnage and poundage should be
+henceforth levied, just as it had been in the latter years of James I;
+and that every one who refused payment should be punished.</p>
+
+<p>In this way the King embarked afresh on a course of the most unequivocal
+hostility towards his Parliament. But that body did not intend to give
+way. It would not be deterred from drawing up a fresh remonstrance, in
+which it made use of the strongest expressions to give point to its
+claims. In this it was said, that whoever furthered Popery or
+Arminianism, whoever collected or helped to collect tonnage and poundage
+before it was granted, or who even paid it, the same was an enemy of the
+English realm and of English liberty. This was a strange combination of
+ecclesiastical and financial grievances and pretensions. But the course
+of the transactions had established an intimate relation between them.
+In regard to both the Commons again took up as hostile an attitude
+towards the ministers of that day, as they had formerly taken up towards
+the Duke of Buckingham. The Lord Treasurer Weston was the special object
+of their hatred on both accounts. For it was said that he was a
+rebellious Papist&mdash;nay even a Jesuit:&mdash;did not his nearest kinsmen
+belong to that order?&mdash;and that he was now giving the King pernicious
+advice, hostile to the rights of the country and the dignity of
+Parliament. Proceeding on the principle that the collection of tonnage
+and poundage was a breach of the constitution, preparations were made
+for calling to account the officers engaged in this process. Nor would
+men have been content to stop at the subordinates; they would have
+reached even the highest.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_590" id="Page_590">[Pg 590]</a></span>
+In this session the moderation which had been for some time exhibited in
+the former dropped out of sight: the contempt shown to the Petition of
+Right had called forth a spirit of bitter, violent, and unbounded
+opposition. When the King, in order to prevent the formal passing of the
+Remonstrance, proceeded in the first instance to have the session
+adjourned, a scene of tumult and violence was witnessed, to which the
+annals of former Parliaments offered no parallel.</p>
+
+<p>The Speaker of the House, Sir John Finch, one of those men who had
+passed over from the side of the Commons to that of the King, announced
+to the assembled members after the opening of the sitting on the 2nd of
+March, that the King adjourned the House till the 10th. But this was the
+very hour when Sir John Eliot, who had drawn up the new Remonstrance had
+with his friends intended to carry it through Parliament. The House
+declared it illegal for the Speaker to make himself the mouthpiece of
+the royal will: and when he tried to withdraw, he was held on his chair
+by a couple of strong and resolute members. The Usher of the Black Rod,
+whose business it was to declare the House adjourned, had already
+appeared in the ante-room; but the doors of the hall were shut. In this
+tumult the Remonstrance had to be read and voted on. The Speaker refused
+to have anything to do with it, although it was declared 'to be his duty
+to put it to the vote. Sir John Eliot and Denzil Holles must have
+delivered the sense of the Remonstrance orally, rather than read it
+properly through: but even in this fashion the majority of the House
+made known their assent, and in this way the immediate object was
+attained, as well as the circumstances allowed. On a threat that the
+doors should be broken through, they were now opened, and the members
+left the chamber.<a name="FNanchor_497_497" id="FNanchor_497_497"></a><a href="#Footnote_497_497" class="fnanchor">[497]</a></p>
+
+<p>An extraordinary act of disobedience, considering that it was intended
+to be the means of securing the legal forms of Parliament! It was the
+last step in this stage of the proceedings. It involved an open breach
+between the two authorities.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_591" id="Page_591">[Pg 591]</a></span>
+In later times the responsibility for this act has been thrown on the
+King. Contemporaries of moderate views, and who favoured the Parliament,
+were of opinion however that the responsibility rather lay with those
+fiery and crafty men who had possessed themselves of the control of
+Parliament. For they thought that the King had seriously striven to
+compose the quarrel: that people might well have accepted his first
+declaration, and that the greater part of the members had been inclined
+to do so; but that the seeming zeal of some few for the liberties of the
+country had, unfortunately for England, prevented them from
+yielding.<a name="FNanchor_498_498" id="FNanchor_498_498"></a><a href="#Footnote_498_498" class="fnanchor">[498]</a>
+It is difficult to suppose that the strength and depth of
+the opposition would any longer have permitted an adjustment. It was now
+fully apparent at all events that the King and the Lower House could no
+longer work together.</p>
+
+<p>In the Privy Council the opinion was once more expressed, that
+Parliament should be treated with indulgence. This was the wish of the
+Lord Keeper Coventry: but the Treasurer recommended the strict
+enforcement of the prerogative, and the King sided with this view. Not
+only was the dissolution of Parliament pronounced, but just as Henry
+VIII and Elizabeth had done, Charles I proceeded to punish the members
+who had offended against his dignity in their speeches. He first of all
+decided not to call Parliament together again. He declared that he had
+now abundantly proved that he loved to rule by the help of Parliament;
+that he had been compelled against his wish by the last proceedings to
+desist from the attempt, and that he would not renew it until his people
+had learnt to know him better. He said that he should consider it
+presumption if any time were prescribed to him for reassembling
+Parliament; that Parliament ought to be summoned, held, and dissolved,
+solely at the discretion of the King.</p>
+
+<p>The great advantage of Parliament in this conflict consisted in its
+ability to appeal to legal precedents of past centuries in its favour.
+What had once rendered the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_592" id="Page_592">[Pg 592]</a></span>
+continuance of the ascendancy of Parliament
+impossible, the danger into which it had plunged the common interests of
+the kingdom, was now forgotten. The laws of those times had not been
+repealed, but had only been modified and curtailed in its own favour by
+the sovereign power, which had grown strong since that time. Every
+position, new or unusual at the moment, which Parliament maintained was,
+if not laid down in former ordinances, yet at all events so logically
+inferred from them, that it appeared customary and in accordance with
+primitive law. If on the contrary Charles I maintained the prerogative
+which his father had exercised, and which Queen Elizabeth and the House
+of Tudor in general had possessed, he was placed in the awkward position
+of appearing to act without the countenance of the laws. He now resolved
+to govern, at least for a time, without the aid of Parliament. Many of
+his ancestors had done exactly the same; but since their time attachment
+to parliamentary government had become part of the national feeling. It
+now appeared not only to represent fully the liberties, but also
+especially the most popular religious tendencies of the country.</p>
+
+<p>Whether under these circumstances the King would have succeeded in
+giving effect to his ideas, even if more peaceful times had ensued, was
+from the beginning extremely
+doubtful.<a name="FNanchor_499_499" id="FNanchor_499_499"></a><a href="#Footnote_499_499" class="fnanchor">[499]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">NOTES:
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_483_483" id="Footnote_483_483"></a><a href="#FNanchor_483_483"><span class="label">[483]</span></a> Al. Contarini, Aug. 14, 1628. 'Carleton mi soggionse che
+certamente la flotta si volgerebbe in ajuto del re di Danimarca, quando
+Più non fosse necessaria in Francia.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_484_484" id="Footnote_484_484"></a><a href="#FNanchor_484_484"><span class="label">[484]</span></a> The first intimation of this design occurs in an
+anonymous letter to the King, which probably belongs to the year 1623:
+Cabala 223. In the correspondence of the ambassadors the project is
+assumed as certain.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_485_485" id="Footnote_485_485"></a><a href="#FNanchor_485_485"><span class="label">[485]</span></a> Ruszdorf: 'Magnos apparatus instituit, quibus sperat
+structuram et molem rumpere'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_486_486" id="Footnote_486_486"></a><a href="#FNanchor_486_486"><span class="label">[486]</span></a> From the letter of Dudley Viscount Dorchester, in Bruce's
+Calendar.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_487_487" id="Footnote_487_487"></a><a href="#FNanchor_487_487"><span class="label">[487]</span></a> 'The remonstrance in the last Parliament and that the
+duke was the cause of the public grievances, it came into his mind that
+it would be a good service to God and the Commonwealth to take him
+away.' Relation of the Duke of Buckingham's death. (St. P. O.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_488_488" id="Footnote_488_488"></a><a href="#FNanchor_488_488"><span class="label">[488]</span></a> From the report of Duppa (St. P. O.), which admirably
+supplements that which is given in the State Trials iii. 370.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_489_489" id="Footnote_489_489"></a><a href="#FNanchor_489_489"><span class="label">[489]</span></a> 'That the common good could no way be a pretense to a
+particular mischief.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_490_490" id="Footnote_490_490"></a><a href="#FNanchor_490_490"><span class="label">[490]</span></a> Rushworth i. 654: 'To avow a breach upon just cause
+given, not sought by the King.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_491_491" id="Footnote_491_491"></a><a href="#FNanchor_491_491"><span class="label">[491]</span></a> Fragmentary memoranda of a sitting of the Privy Council
+at the beginning of February 1628-29. (St P. O.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_492_492" id="Footnote_492_492"></a><a href="#FNanchor_492_492"><span class="label">[492]</span></a> Statement of the printer. Parliamentary History viii.
+247.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_493_493" id="Footnote_493_493"></a><a href="#FNanchor_493_493"><span class="label">[493]</span></a> His declaration before the Lords. Parliamentary History
+viii. 208.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_494_494" id="Footnote_494_494"></a><a href="#FNanchor_494_494"><span class="label">[494]</span></a> We learn this from a letter of Nethersole to the queen of
+Bohemia, Jan. 28. (St. P. O.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_495_495" id="Footnote_495_495"></a><a href="#FNanchor_495_495"><span class="label">[495]</span></a> Nethersole to the Queen of Bohemia: 'That what at the
+first propounding seemed a very reasonable motion&mdash;was at last upon this
+reason that the bill is in truth and is intituled a bill of subsidy.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_496_496" id="Footnote_496_496"></a><a href="#FNanchor_496_496"><span class="label">[496]</span></a> Holograph declaration of Charles I. (St. P. O.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_497_497" id="Footnote_497_497"></a><a href="#FNanchor_497_497"><span class="label">[497]</span></a> Information in Star Chamber. Rushworth i. 675.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_498_498" id="Footnote_498_498"></a><a href="#FNanchor_498_498"><span class="label">[498]</span></a> Autobiography of Sir Symond d'Ewes i. 405: 'Being only
+misled by some Machiavellian politics who seemed zealous for the liberty
+of the common wealth.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_499_499" id="Footnote_499_499"></a><a href="#FNanchor_499_499"><span class="label">[499]</span></a> Observation of Contarini, March 16, 1629. 'Quello che
+importa è il parlamento si è conservato nell'intero possesso dei suoi
+privilegi, senza cader un tantino: il re per queste due volte ha ceduto
+sempre qualche cosa.'</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p class='center'>END OF VOL. I.</p>
+
+<div class='tnote'>Transcriber's Note:
+<p>The section header 'The Conquest' in Book I Chapter II
+is missing from the original table of contents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF ENGLAND PRINCIPALLY IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY, VOLUME I (OF 6)***</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of A History of England Principally in the
+Seventeenth Century, Volume I (of 6), by Leopold von Ranke
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: A History of England Principally in the Seventeenth Century, Volume I (of 6)
+
+
+Author: Leopold von Ranke
+
+
+
+Release Date: April 9, 2009 [eBook #28546]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF ENGLAND PRINCIPALLY
+IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY, VOLUME I (OF 6)***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Paul Dring, Frank van Drogen, and the Project Gutenberg
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+A HISTORY OF ENGLAND PRINCIPALLY IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
+
+by
+
+LEOPOLD VON RANKE
+
+VOLUME I
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+Once more I come before the public with a work on the history of a
+nation which is not mine by birth.
+
+It is the ambition of all nations which enjoy a literary culture to
+possess a harmonious and vivid narrative of their own past history. And
+it is of inestimable value to any people to obtain such a narrative,
+which shall comprehend all epochs, be true to fact and, while resting on
+thorough research, yet be attractive to the reader; for only by this aid
+can the nation attain to a perfect self-consciousness, and feeling the
+pulsation of its life throughout the story, become fully acquainted with
+its own origin and growth and character. But we may doubt whether up to
+this time works of such an import and compass have ever been produced,
+and even whether they can be produced. For who could apply critical
+research, such as the progress of study now renders necessary, to the
+mass of materials already collected, without being lost in its immensity?
+Who again could possess the vivid susceptibility requisite for doing
+justice to the several epochs, for appreciating the actions, the modes of
+thought, and the moral standard of each of them, and for understanding
+their relations to universal history? We must be content in this
+department, as well as in others, if we can but approximate to the ideal
+we set up. The best-written histories will be accounted the best.
+
+When then an author undertakes to make the past life of a foreign
+nation the object of a comprehensive literary work, he will not think
+of writing its history as a nation in detail: for a foreigner this
+would be impossible: but, in accordance with the point of view he
+would naturally take, he will direct his eyes to those epochs which
+have had the most effectual influence on the development of mankind:
+only so far as is necessary for the comprehension of these, will he
+introduce anything that precedes or comes after them.
+
+There is an especial charm in following, century after century, the
+history of the English nation, in considering the antagonism of the
+elements out of which it is composed, and its share in the fortunes
+and enterprises of that great community of western nations to which it
+belongs; but it will be readily granted that no other period can be
+compared in general importance with the epoch of those religious and
+political wars which fill the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
+
+In the sixteenth century the part which England took in the work of
+emancipating the world from the rule of the western hierarchy
+decisively influenced not only its own constitution, but also the
+success of the religious revolution throughout Europe. In England the
+monarchy perfectly understood its position in relation to this great
+change; while favouring the movement in its own interest, it
+nevertheless contrived to maintain the old historical state of things
+to a great extent; nowhere have more of the institutions of the Middle
+Ages been retained than in England; nowhere did the spiritual power
+link itself more closely with the temporal. Here less depends on the
+conflict of doctrines, for which Germany is the classic ground: the
+main interest lies in the political transformation, accomplished
+amidst manifold variations of opinions, tendencies, and events, and
+attended at last by a war for the very existence of the nation. For it
+was against England that the sacerdotal reaction directed its main
+attack. To withstand it, the country was forced to ally itself with
+the kindred elements on the Continent: the successful resistance of
+England was in turn of the greatest service to them. The maintenance
+of Protestantism in Western Europe, on the Continent as well as in
+Britain, was effected by the united powers of both. To bring out
+clearly this alternate action, it would not be advisable to lay weight
+on every temporary foreign relation, on every step of the home
+administration, and to search out men's personal motives in them; a
+shorter sketch may be best suited to show the chief characters, as
+well as the main purport of the events in their full light.
+
+But then, through the connexion of England with Scotland, and the
+accession of a new dynasty, a state of things ensued under which the
+continued maintenance of the position taken up in home and foreign
+politics was rendered doubtful. The question arose whether the policy
+of England would not differ from that of Great Britain and be
+compelled to give way to it. The attempt to decide this question, and
+the reciprocal influence of the newly allied countries, brought on
+conflicts at home which, though they in the main arose out of foreign
+relations, yet for a long while threw those relations into the
+background.
+
+If we were required to express in the most general terms the
+distinction between English and French policy in the last two
+centuries, we might say that it consisted in this, that the glory of
+their arms abroad lay nearest to the heart of the French nation, and
+the legal settlement of their home affairs to that of the English. How
+often have the French, in appearance at least, allowed themselves to
+be consoled for the defects of the home administration by a great
+victory or an advantageous peace! And the English, from regard to
+constitutional questions of apparently inferior importance, have not
+seldom turned their eyes away from grievous perils which hung over
+Europe.
+
+The two great constitutional powers in England, the Crown and the
+Parliament, dating back as they did to early times, had often
+previously contended with each other, but had harmoniously combined in
+the religious struggle, and had both gained strength thereby; but
+towards the middle of the seventeenth century we see them first come
+into collision over ecclesiastical regulations, and then engage in a
+war for life and death respecting the constitution of the realm.
+Elements originally separate unite in attacking the monarchy;
+meanwhile the old system breaks up, and energetic efforts are made to
+found a new one on its ruins. But none of them succeed; the
+deeply-felt need of a life regulated by law and able to trust its own
+future is not satisfied; after long storms men seek safety in a return
+to the old and approved historic forms so characteristic of the
+German, and especially of the English, race. But in this there is
+clearly no solution of the original controversies, no reconciliation
+of the conflicting elements: within narrower limits new discords break
+out, which once more threaten a complete overthrow: until, thanks to
+the indifference shown by England to continental events, the most
+formidable dangers arise to threaten the equilibrium of Europe, and
+even menace England itself. These European emergencies coinciding with
+the troubles at home bring about a new change of the old forms in the
+Revolution of 1688, the main result of which is, that the centre of
+gravity of public authority in England shifts decisively to the
+parliamentary side. It was during this same time that France had won
+military and political superiority over all its neighbours on the
+mainland, and in connexion with it had concentrated an almost absolute
+power at home in the hands of the monarchy. England thus reorganised
+now set itself to contest the political superiority of France in a
+long and bloody war, which consequently became a struggle between two
+rival forms of polity; and while the first of these bore sway over the
+rest of Europe, the other attained to complete realisation in its
+island-home, and called forth at a later time manifold imitations on
+the Continent also, when the Continent was torn by civil strife.
+Between these differing tendencies, these opposite poles, the life of
+Europe has ever since vibrated from side to side.
+
+When we contemplate the framework of the earth, those heights which
+testify to the inherent energy of the original and active elements
+attract our special notice; we admire the massive mountains which
+overhang and dominate the lowlands covered with the settlements of
+man. So also in the domain of history we are attracted by epochs at
+which the elemental forces, whose joint action or tempered antagonism
+has produced states and kingdoms, rise in sudden war against each
+other, and amidst the surging sea of troubles upheave into the light
+new formations, which give to subsequent ages their special character.
+Such a historic region, dominating the world, is formed by that epoch
+of English history, to which the studies have been devoted, whose
+results I venture to publish in the present work: its importance is as
+great where it directly touches on the universal interests of
+humanity, as where, on its own special ground, it develops itself
+apart in obedience to its inner impulses. To comprehend this period we
+must approach it as closely as possible: it is everywhere instinct
+with collective as well as individual life. We discern how great
+antagonistic principles sprang almost unavoidably out of earlier
+times, how they came into conflict, wherein the strength of each side
+lay, what caused the alternations of success, and how the final
+decisions were brought about: but at the same time we perceive how
+much, for themselves, for the great interests they represented, and
+for the enemies they subdued, depended on the character, the energy,
+the conduct of individuals. Were the men equal to the emergency, or
+were not circumstances stronger than they? From the conflict of the
+universal with the special it is that the great catastrophes of
+history arise, yet it sometimes happens that the efforts which seem to
+perish with their authors exercise a more lasting influence on the
+progress of events than does the power of the conqueror. In the
+agonising struggles of men's minds appear ideas and designs which pass
+beyond what is feasible in that land and at that time, perhaps even
+beyond what is desirable: these find a place and a future in the
+colonies, the settlement of which is closely connected with the
+struggle at home. We are far from intending to involve ourselves in
+juridical and constitutional controversies, or from regulating the
+distribution of praise and blame by the opinions which have gained the
+day at a later time, or prevail at the moment; still less shall we be
+guided by our own sympathies: our only concern is to become acquainted
+with the great motive powers and their results. And yet how can we
+help recognising manifold coincidences with that conflict of opinions
+and tendencies in which we are involved at the present day? But it is
+no part of our plan to follow these out. Momentary resemblances often
+mislead the politician who seeks a sure foothold in the past, as well
+as the historian who seeks it in the present. The Muse of history has
+the widest intellectual horizon and the full courage of her
+convictions; but in forming them she is thoroughly conscientious, and
+we might say jealously bent on her duty. To introduce the interests of
+the present time into the work of the historian usually ends in
+restricting its free accomplishment.
+
+This epoch has been already often treated of, if not as a whole, yet
+in detached parts, and that by the best English historical writers. A
+native author has this great advantage over foreigners, that he thinks
+in the language in which the persons of the drama spoke, and lets them
+be seen through no strange medium, but simply in their natural form.
+But when, too, this language is employed in rare perfection, as in a
+work of our own time,--I refer not merely to rounded periods and
+euphony of cadence, but to the spirit of the narrative so much in
+harmony with our present culture, and the tone of our minds, and to
+the style which by every happy word excites our vivid sympathy;--when
+we have before us a description of the events in the native language
+with all its attractive traits and broad colouring, a description too
+based on an old familiar acquaintance with the country and its
+condition: it would be folly to pretend to rival such a work in its
+own peculiar sphere. But the results of original study may lead us to
+form a different conception of the events. And it is surely good that,
+in epochs of such great importance for the history of all nations, we
+should possess foreign and independent representations to compare with
+those of home growth; in the latter are expressed sympathies and
+antipathies as inherited by tradition and affected by the antagonism
+of literary differences of opinion. Moreover there will be a
+difference between these foreign representations. Frenchmen, as in one
+famous instance, will hold more to the constitutional point of view,
+and look for instruction or example in political science. The German
+will labour (after investigation into original documents) to
+comprehend each event as a political and religious whole, and at the
+same time to view it in its universal historical relations.
+
+I can in this case, as in others, add something new to what is already
+known, and this to a larger extent as the work goes on.[1]
+
+In no nation has so much documentary matter been collected for its
+later history as in England. The leading families which have taken
+part in public business, and the different parties which wish to
+assert their views in the historical representation of the past as
+well as in the affairs of the present, have done much for this object;
+latterly the government also has set its hand to the work. Yet the
+existing publications are far from sufficient. How incredibly
+deficient our knowledge still is of even the most important
+parliamentary transactions! In the rich collections of the Record
+Office and of the British Museum I have sought and found much that was
+unknown, and which I needed for obtaining an insight into events. The
+labour spent on it is richly compensated by the gain such labour
+brings; over the originals so injured, and so hard to decipher, linger
+the spirits of that long-past age. Especial attention is due to the
+almost complete series of pamphlets of the time, which the Museum
+possesses. As we read them, there are years in which we are present,
+as it were, at the public discussion that went on, at least in the
+capital, from month to month, from week to week, on the weightiest
+questions of government and public life.
+
+If any one has ever attempted to reconstruct for himself a portion of
+the past from materials of this kind,--from original documents, and
+party writings which, prompted by hate or personal friendship, are
+intended for defence or attack, and yet are withal exceedingly
+incomplete,--he will have felt the need of other contemporary notices,
+going into detail but free from such party views. A rich harvest of
+such independent reports has been supplied to me for this, as well as
+for my other works, by the archives of the ancient Republic of Venice.
+The 'Relations,' which the ambassadors of that Republic were wont to
+draw up on their return home, invaluable though they are in reference
+to persons and the state of affairs in general, are not, however,
+sufficient to supply a detailed and consecutive account of events. But
+the Venetian archives possess also a long series of continuous
+Reports, which place us, as it were, in the very midst of the courts,
+the capitals, and the daily course of public business. For the
+sixteenth century they are only preserved in a very fragmentary state
+as regards England; for the seventeenth they lie before us, with gaps
+no doubt here and there, yet in much greater completeness. Even in the
+first volume they have been useful to me for Mary Tudor's reign and
+the end of Elizabeth's; in the later ones, not only for James I's
+times, but also far more for Charles I's government and his quarrel
+with the Parliament. Owing to the geographical distance of Venice from
+England, and her neutral position in the world, her ambassadors were
+able to devote an attention to English affairs which is free from all
+interested motives, and sometimes to observe their general course in
+close communication with the leading men. We could not compose a
+history from the reports they give, but combined with the documentary
+matter these reports form a very welcome supplement to our knowledge.
+
+Ambassadors who have to manage matters of all kinds, great and small,
+at the courts to which they are accredited, fill their letters with
+accounts of affairs which often contain little instruction for
+posterity, and they judge of a man according to the support which he
+gives to their interests. This is the case with the French as well as
+with other ambassadors in England. Nevertheless their correspondence
+becomes gradually of the greatest value for my work. Their importance
+grows with the importance of affairs. The two courts entered into the
+most intimate relations: French politicians ceaselessly endeavoured to
+gain influence over England, and sometimes with success. The
+ambassadors' letters at such times refer to the weightiest matters of
+state, and become invaluable; they rise to the rank of the most
+important and instructive historical monuments. They have been
+hitherto, in great part, unused.
+
+In the Roman and Spanish reports also I found much which deserves to
+be made known to the readers of history. The papers of Holland and the
+Netherlands prove still more productive, as I show in detail at the
+end of the narrative.
+
+A historical work may aim either at putting forward a new view of what
+is already known, or at communicating additional information as to the
+facts. I have endeavoured to combine both these aims.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[1] _Note to the third edition._--In the course of my researches for
+this work the representation of the seventeenth century has occupied a
+larger space than I at first thought I should have been able to give
+it; it forms the chief portion of the book in its present form. I have
+therefore allowed myself the unwonted liberty of altering the title so
+as to make this clear. Still the representation of the sixteenth
+century, which is not now mentioned in the title, has not been
+abridged on this account. The history of the Stuart dynasty and of
+William III make up the central part of the edifice; what is given to
+the earlier, as well as the later times may, if I may be allowed the
+comparison, correspond to its two wings.
+
+
+
+
+TRANSLATORS' PREFACE.
+
+
+'The History of England, principally during the Seventeenth Century,'
+which is here laid before the reader in an English form, is one of the
+most important portions of that cycle of works on which Leopold von
+Ranke has long been engaged. His History of the Popes, his History of
+the Reformation in Germany, his French History, his work on the
+Ottomans and the Spanish Monarchy, his Life of Wallenstein, his volume
+on the Origin of the Thirty Years' War, and other smaller treatises,
+all aim at delineating the international relations of the states of
+Europe. His History of England may well be regarded as the concluding
+portion of this series; for the relations of England, first with
+France, and then with Holland, eventually determined the course of
+European politics.
+
+The book however is more than a history of this period, for Professor
+Ranke, according to his custom, has prefixed to it a luminous and
+interesting sketch of the earlier part of our history, presented, as
+all summaries ought to be, in the form of studies of the most
+important epochs. And at the end of the work are Appendices, which
+supply not only happy examples of historical criticism in the
+discussions on the chief contemporary writers of the period, but also
+a mass of original documents, most of which have never before been
+published. Above all, the critiques on Clarendon and Burnet, and the
+correspondence of William III with Heinsius, will well repay careful
+study; and the Appendices throw light on some of the more important
+details connected with the history of the time, besides shewing the
+student how a great master has found and used his materials.
+
+The present translation was undertaken with the author's sanction, and
+was intended in the first instance for the use of students in Oxford.
+Its publication has been facilitated by a division of labour, the
+eight volumes of the original having been entrusted each to a separate
+hand. The translators are Messrs. C. W. Boase, Exeter College; W. W.
+Jackson, Exeter College; H. B. George, New College; H. F. Pelham,
+Exeter College; M. Creighton, Merton College; A. Watson, Brasenose
+College; G. W. Kitchin, Christchurch; A. Plummer, Trinity College. The
+task of oversight, of reducing inequalities of style, and of
+supervising the Appendices and Index, has been performed by the
+editors, C. W. Boase and G. W. Kitchin. Notwithstanding the
+disadvantages incident to a translation, it is hoped that the work in
+its present shape will be welcomed by a large number of English
+readers, and will help to increase the deserved renown of the author
+in the country to the history of which he has devoted such profound
+and fruitful study.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ BOOK I.
+
+ THE CHIEF CRISES IN THE EARLIER HISTORY OF ENGLAND.
+
+ PAGE
+
+ INTRODUCTION 3
+
+ CHAP. I. The Britons, Romans, and Anglo-Saxons 5
+
+ The Anglo-Saxons and Christianity 10
+
+ II. Transfer of the Anglo-Saxon crown to the Normans
+ and Plantagenets 22
+
+ The Conquest 28
+
+ III. The crown in conflict with Church and Nobles 39
+
+ Henry II and Becket 41
+
+ John Lackland and Magna Charta 47
+
+ IV. Foundation of the Parliamentary Constitution 58
+
+ V. Deposition of Richard II. The House of Lancaster 74
+
+
+ BOOK II.
+
+ ATTEMPTS TO CONSOLIDATE THE KINGDOM INDEPENDENTLY IN ITS TEMPORAL
+ AND SPIRITUAL RELATIONS.
+
+ INTRODUCTION 91
+
+ CHAP. I. Re-establishment of the supreme power 93
+
+ II. Changes in the condition of Europe 104
+
+ Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolsey in their earlier
+ years 109
+
+ III. Origin of the Divorce Question 120
+
+ IV. The Separation of the English Church 134
+
+ V. The opposing tendencies within the Schismatic State 151
+
+ VI. Religious Reform in the English Church 171
+
+ VII. Transfer of the Government to a Catholic Queen 186
+
+ VIII. The Catholic-Spanish Government 199
+
+
+ BOOK III.
+
+ QUEEN ELIZABETH. CLOSE CONNEXION OF ENGLISH AND SCOTTISH AFFAIRS.
+
+ INTRODUCTION 221
+
+ CHAP. I. Elizabeth's accession. Triumph of the
+ Reformation 222
+
+ II. Outlines of the Reformation in Scotland 238
+
+ III. Mary Stuart in Scotland. Relation of the two Queens
+ to each other 254
+
+ IV. Interdependence of the European dissensions in
+ Politics and Religion 280
+
+ V. The fate of Mary Stuart 300
+
+ VI. The Invincible Armada 316
+
+ VII. The later years of Queen Elizabeth 330
+
+
+ BOOK IV.
+
+ FOUNDATION OF THE KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN. FIRST DISTURBANCES
+ UNDER THE STUARTS.
+
+ INTRODUCTION 359
+
+ CHAP. I. James VI of Scotland: his accession to the
+ throne of England 361
+
+ Origin of fresh dissensions in the Church 361
+
+ Alliance with England 364
+
+ Renewal of the Episcopal Constitution in Scotland 368
+
+ Preparations for the Succession to the English
+ Throne 375
+
+ Accession to the Throne 381
+
+ II. First measures of the new reign 386
+
+ III. The Gunpowder Plot and its consequences 403
+
+ IV. Foreign policy of the next ten years 418
+
+ V. Parliaments of 1610 and 1614 436
+
+ VI. Survey of the literature of the epoch 450
+
+
+ BOOK V.
+
+ DISPUTES WITH PARLIAMENT DURING THE LATER YEARS OF THE REIGN OF
+ JAMES I AND THE EARLIER YEARS OF THE REIGN OF CHARLES I.
+
+ INTRODUCTION 467
+
+ CHAP. I. James I and his administration of domestic
+ government 469
+
+ II. Complications arising out of the affairs of the
+ Palatinate 484
+
+ III. Parliament of the year 1621 497
+
+ IV. Negotiations for the marriage of the Prince of
+ Wales with a Spanish Infanta 509
+
+ V. The Parliament of 1624. Alliance with France 522
+
+ VI. Beginning of the reign of Charles I, and his First
+ and Second Parliament 537
+
+ VII. The course of foreign policy from 1625 to 1627 554
+
+ VIII. Parliament of 1628. Petition of Right 566
+
+ IX. Assassination of Buckingham. Session of 1629 580
+
+
+
+
+FIRST BOOK.
+
+THE CHIEF CRISES IN THE EARLIER HISTORY OF ENGLAND.
+
+
+As we turn over the pages of universal history, and follow the
+shifting course of events, we perceive almost at the first glance one
+comprehensive process of change going on, which, more than any other,
+governs the external fortunes of the world. Through long periods of
+time the historic life of the human race was active in Western Asia
+and in the lands bordering on the Mediterranean which look towards the
+East: there it laid the foundations of its higher culture. We may
+rightly regard as the greatest event that meets us in the whole course
+of authentic history, the fact that the seats of the predominant power
+and culture have been transplanted to the Western lands and the shores
+of the Atlantic Ocean. Not merely the abodes of the ancient civilised
+nations, but even the capitals which were the medium of communication
+between East and West, have fallen into barbarism; even the great
+metropolis, from which first political, and then spiritual, dominion
+extended itself in both directions over widespread territories, has
+not maintained its rank. It was due to this tendency of things,
+combined with a certain geographical cause, that neither could the
+medieval Empire attain its full development, nor the Papacy continue
+to subsist with unimpaired authority. From age to age the political
+and intellectual life of the world transferred itself ever more and
+more to the nations dwelling further West, especially since a new
+hemisphere was opened up to their impulses of activity and extension.
+So it was that the chief interests of the Pyrenean peninsula drew
+towards its ocean coasts; that there grew up on either side of the
+Channel which separates the Continent from Britain, the two great
+capitals in which modern activity is chiefly concentrated; that
+Northern Germany, together with the races which touch on the North Sea
+and the Baltic, developed a life and a system of their own; it is in
+these regions latterly that the universal spirit of the human race
+chiefly works out its task, and displays its activity in moulding
+states, creating ideas, and subjugating nature.
+
+Yet this transmission, this transplanting, is not the work of a blind
+destiny. While civilisation in the East succumbed and died out before
+the advance of races incapable of culture, it was welcomed in the West
+by races possessing the requisite capacity, which by their inborn
+force gave it new forms and indestructible bases for its outward
+existence. Nor have the nations and kingdoms arisen each from its
+mother earth, as it were in obedience to some inward impulse of
+inevitable necessity, but amid constant assimilation and rejection,
+ever repeated wars to secure their future, and a ceaseless struggle
+with opposing elements that threatened their ruin.
+
+The object of universal history is to place before our eyes the
+leading changes, and the conflicts of nations, together with their
+causes and results. Our purpose is to depict the history of one of the
+chief of the Western nations, the English, and that too in an age
+which decisively modified both its inner constitution and its outward
+position in the world, but it cannot be understood unless we first
+pourtray, with a few quick touches, the historical events under the
+influence of which it became civilised and great.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE BRITONS, ROMANS, AND ANGLO-SAXONS.
+
+
+The history of Western Europe in general opens with the struggle
+between Kelts, Romans, and Germans, which determined out of what
+elements modern nations should be formed.
+
+Just as it is supposed that Albion in early times was connected with
+the Continent, and only separated from it by the raging sea-flood
+which buried the intermediate lands in the abyss, so in ethnographic
+relations it would seem as if the aboriginal Keltic tribes of the
+island had been only separated by some accident from those which
+occupied Gaul and the Netherlands. The Channel is no national
+boundary. We find Belgians in Britain, Britons in Eastern Gaul, and
+very many names of peoples common to both coasts; there were tribes
+which, though separated by the sea, yet acknowledged the same prince.
+Without being able to prove how far natives of the island took part in
+the expeditions of conquest, which pouring forth from Gaul inundated
+the countries on the Danube and Italy, Greece and Western Asia, we yet
+can trace the affinity of names and tribes as far as these expeditions
+extend. This island was the home of the religion that gave a certain
+unity to the populations, which, though closely akin, nevertheless
+contended with each other in ceaseless discord. It was that Druidic
+discipline which combined a priestly constitution with civil
+privileges, and with a very peculiar doctrine of a political and even
+moral purport. We might be tempted to suppose that the atrocity of
+human sacrifice was first introduced among them by the Punic race. For
+they were from primeval times connected with the Carthaginians and
+Phoenicians, who were the first to traverse the outer sea, and sought
+in the island a metal which was very valuable for the wants of the
+ancient world. Distant clans might retain in the mountains their
+original wildness, but the southern coasts ranked in the earliest
+times as rich and civilised. They stood within the circle of the
+relations that had been created by the expeditions of the Keltic
+tribes, by the mixture of peoples thence arising, by the war and
+commerce of the earliest age.
+
+In the great war between Rome and Carthage, which decided the destiny
+of the ancient world, the Keltic tribes took part as allies of the
+Punic race. If Carthage had conquered, they would have maintained in
+most, if not all, the lands they had occupied, and especially in their
+own homes, their old manners and customs, and their religion in its
+existing form. It was not merely the supremacy of the one city or the
+other, but the future of Western Europe that was at stake when
+Hannibal attacked the Romans in Italy. Rome, which had already grown
+strong in warring against the Gauls, won the victory over the
+Carthaginians. Thenceforth one after another of the Keltic nations
+succumbed to the superiority of the Roman arms, which at last invaded
+Transalpine Gaul, and struck its military power to the ground.
+
+From this point the reaction against the Keltic enterprises
+necessarily extended itself also to Britain.
+
+The great general who conquered Gaul did not feel sure of being able
+to accomplish his task unless he also obtained influence over the
+British tribes, from which those of the Continent constantly received
+help and encouragement, unless he established among them the authority
+of the Roman name.
+
+It was an important moment in the world's history, well worthy of
+remembrance, when Caesar first trod the soil of Albion. Already
+repulsed from the steep chalk cliffs of the island, he found the flat
+shore on which he hoped to disembark occupied by the enemy, some in
+their war-chariots, others on horseback and on foot; his ships could
+not reach the shore; the soldiers hesitated, encumbered with their
+armour as they were, to throw themselves into a sea with which they
+were not familiar, in presence of an enemy acquainted with the
+ground, active, brave, and superior in numbers; the general's order
+had no effect on them; when however an eagle-bearer, calling on the
+gods of Rome, threw himself into the flood, the men would have thought
+themselves traitors had they allowed the war-standard, to which an
+almost divine worship was paid, to fall into the hands of the enemy;
+fired by the danger that threatened their honour, and by the religion
+of arms, from one ship after another they followed him to the fight;
+in the hand-to-hand combat in the water which ensued they gained the
+superiority, supported most skilfully by their general wherever it was
+necessary; the moment they reached the land, the victory was won.[2]
+
+We cannot reckon it a slight matter, that Caesar, though not at the
+first, yet at the second and better prepared expedition, succeeded in
+carrying away with him hostages from the chief tribes. For this very
+form was the one customary in that century and among those tribes, by
+which he bound them and their princes to himself.
+
+It was the first step towards the Roman supremacy. But Gaul and West
+Germany had first to be subdued, and the Empire securely concentrated
+in one hand, before--a century later--the conquest of the island could
+be really attempted.
+
+Even then the Britons still fought without helmet or shield, as did
+the Gauls of old before Rome. In Britain, just as on the Lombard
+plains, the war-chariot was their best arm; their defective mode of
+defence necessarily yielded to the organised tactics of the legion.
+How easily did the Romans, pushing forward under cover of their
+mantelets, clear away the rude entrenchments by which the Britons used
+formerly to secure themselves against attack. The Druids on Mona
+trusted in their gods, whose will they thought to ascertain from the
+quivering fibres of human sacrifices; and for a moment the sight of
+the crowd of fanatics collected around them checked the attack, but
+only for a moment: as soon as they came to blows they were instantly
+scattered, and their holy places perished with them. For this is the
+greatest result of the Roman wars, that they destroyed the rites which
+contradicted the idea of Humanity. Yet once more an injured
+princess--Boadicea--united all the sympathies which the old
+constitution and religion could awaken. Dio has depicted her,
+doubtless according to the reports which reached Rome. A tall form,
+with the national decoration of the golden necklace and the chequered
+mantle, over which her rich yellow hair flowed down below her waist.
+She called on her peoples to defend themselves at any risk, since what
+could befall those to whom each root gave nourishment, each tree
+supplied shelter: and on her gods, not to let the land pass into the
+possession of that insatiable, unjust foe of foreign race. So truly
+does she represent the innate characteristics of the British race,
+when oppressed and engaged in a desperate defence. She is earnest,
+rugged, and terrible; the men who gathered round her were reckoned by
+hundreds of thousands. But the Britons had not yet learnt the art of
+war. A single onslaught of the Romans sufficed to scatter their
+disorderly masses with a fearful butchery. It was the last day of the
+old British independence. Boadicea would not, any more than Cleopatra,
+adorn a Roman triumph; she fell by her own hand.
+
+Within a few dozen years the Roman eagles were masters of Britain as
+far as the Highlands: the Keltic clan-life and the religion of the
+Druids withdrew into the Caledonian mountains, and the large islands
+off that coast; in the conquered territory the religion of the arms
+that had won the victory, and the might of the Great Empire, were
+supreme. The work which was begun by superiority in war was completed
+by pre-eminence in civilisation. It seemed an advantage and an
+improvement to the sons of the British princes, to adopt the Roman
+language, and knowledge, and mode of life; they delighted in the
+luxury of colonnades, baths, feasts, and city life. Men like Agricola
+used these modes of Romanising Britain by preference. Just as the
+Britons exchanged their rude shipbuilding and their leathern sails for
+the discoveries of a more advanced art of navigation, so they learnt
+to carry on their agriculture in Roman fashion; in later times
+Britain was considered as the granary of the legions in Germany. Most
+of the cities in the land betray by their very names their Roman
+origin; London, though it existed earlier, owes its importance to this
+connexion. It was the emporium destined as it were by nature for the
+peaceful commerce that now arose between the Western provinces of the
+Empire. Once in the third century an attempt was made to make the
+island independent, but it failed the moment the marts on the opposite
+coast fell into the hands of the Emperor who was universally
+recognised. Britain seemed an integral part of the Roman Empire. It
+was from York that Constantine marched forth to unite its Eastern and
+Western halves once more under one government.
+
+But soon after him an epoch began in which the third great
+nationality, at first thought to be part of the Keltic race, then
+driven back or taken into service by the Romans, but always
+maintaining its peculiar original independence--the German, rose to
+supremacy in the West. In the fifth century it had become everywhere
+master in the militarily-organised Roman frontier districts:
+encouraged by the embarrassments of the authorities it advanced into
+the peaceful provinces.
+
+It is of importance to remark what the fate of Britain was in these
+struggles.
+
+From the Romanised territory an Augustus, called Constantine, set up
+by the revolted legions, invaded Gaul, not merely to check the inroads
+of the barbarians, but at the same time to possess himself of the
+Empire. He at one time held a great position, when the legions of Gaul
+and Aquitaine also took his side, and Spain saluted him Emperor. But
+the authority of Honorius the generally recognised Emperor could not
+be so easily set aside: discontented followers of the new Augustus
+again went over to the old one: before them and the barbarians
+combined Constantine fell, and soon after paid for his attempt with
+his life.
+
+The result, then, was that Honorius restored his authority to a
+certain extent everywhere on the Continent, but not in Britain. To the
+towns which had taken up arms while Constantine was there he gave the
+right of self-defence--he could do nothing for them. The Roman Empire
+was not exactly overthrown in Britain--it ceased to be.[3]
+
+At this time, when the connexion between Rome and Roman Britain was
+broken off, the Germans possessed themselves of the latter country.
+
+
+_The Anglo-Saxons and Christianity._
+
+Germans had been long ago settled in this as in so many other
+provinces of the Western and Eastern Empires. Antoninus had brought
+over German tribes from the Danube, Probus others from the Rhineland.
+In the legions we find German cohorts, and very many others joined
+them as free allies. In the civil wars between the Emperors we hear of
+one side relying on the Franks, the other on the Alemanni in their
+service; Constantine the Great is called to be Caesar by help of the
+chiefs of the Alemanni. But besides this, German seafarers, who
+appeared under the name of Saxons, after they had learnt shipbuilding
+and navigation from the Romans, settled on the opposite coasts of
+Britain and Gaul, and gave their name to both. Not then for the first
+time, nor at the invitation of the Britons, as the Saga declares,[4]
+did the descendants of Wodan make their first trial of the sea in
+light vessels. Alternating between piracy and alliance--now with a
+usurper and now with the lawful Emperor, between independence and
+subjection, German seafarers had long ago filled all seas and coasts
+with the terror of their name. In the North too they are mentioned
+together with Scots and Attacotti. When now the Roman rule over the
+island and the surrounding seas came to an end, to whom could it pass?
+To the peaceful Provincials, if they could indeed gird on the sword,
+or to the old companions in arms of the Romans? There is no doubt
+that the same general impulse which urged on the German peoples, in
+the great revolution of affairs, into the Roman provinces, led the
+enterprising inhabitants of the German and Northern coasts, Frisians,
+Angles, and Jutes, as well as Saxons, into Britain. A fearful war
+broke out, in which it may be true to say the ruined towns became the
+sepulchres of their inhabitants, but no man found the quiet time
+necessary for depicting its details. After it had filled a century and
+a half with its horrors, and men again lifted up their eyes, they
+found the island divided between two great nationalities, which had
+separated themselves as opposing forces. The natives had as good as
+abandoned the civilisation they had learnt from Rome, and leant on
+their kinsfolk in North Gaul, and the Scots in Ireland and the
+Highlands; they occupied the west of the island. The Germans were
+settled in the east, in the greatest part of the south, and in the
+north, in most of the old Roman settlements,--but they were far from
+forming a united body. Not seven or eight merely, but a large number
+of little tribal kingdoms, occupied or fought for the ground.
+
+If we wish to point out in general the distinction between the
+Anglo-Saxon and other German settlements, it lies in this, that they
+rested neither on the Emperor's authorisation whether direct or
+indirect, nor on any agreement with the natives of the land. In Gaul
+Chlodwig assumed and carried on the authority of the Roman Empire;--in
+Britain it went wholly to the ground. Hence it was that here the
+German ideas could develop in their full purity, more so than in
+Germany itself, over which the Frankish monarchy, which had also
+adopted Roman tendencies, had gained influence.
+
+Just as the natives who would not submit were driven out of the German
+settlements, so within their boundaries the germs of Christianity,
+which had already spread in the island, were as good as annihilated.
+Among the victorious Germans the Northern heathenism existed in full
+strength. In many names of places, at the water-springs, the
+watersheds, in the designations of the days of the week, the names of
+the gods of Germany and the North appear; the kings trace their
+descent directly from them as their immediate ancestors; the Sagas and
+poems about them symbolise those battles with the elements, the
+storm, the sea, and the powers of nature, which are peculiarly
+characteristic of the Northern mythology. With this, however, arose
+the question, so important for the history of the world, whether the
+great territory already won for the ideas of the universal culture and
+religion of mankind should be again lost.
+
+Towards the end of the 6th century the epoch began in which, as the
+German invaders of Gaul had already done, so now those of Spain and
+Italy, whether Arians or heathens, came over to the Catholic faith of
+the Provincials. This took place under the mediation of the chief
+Pontiff, who had raised the city, from which the Empire took its name,
+to be the metropolis of the Faith. Lombards and Visigoths became as
+good Catholics as the Franks already were. The relationship of the
+royal families, which held all Germans in close connexion, and the
+zeal of Rome, which could not possibly suffer the loss of a province
+that it had once possessed, now combined to call forth a similar
+movement among the Anglo-Saxons, yet one which worked itself out in a
+very different way. Since among the natives a peculiar form of
+church-life, not unconnected with the Druidic discipline, had arisen,
+with which Rome would hold no communion, and which rejected all
+demands of submission, the spiritual enmity of the missionary was
+united to the national enmity of the conqueror. When a king still
+heathen, while attacking the Britons, directed his weapons against the
+monks of Bangor, who (collected on a height) were offering up prayers
+against him, and massacred them to the number of twelve hundred, the
+followers of the Roman Mission saw in this a punishment decreed by God
+for apostasy, and the fulfilment of the prophecies of their
+apostle.[5] On the other hand British Christian kings also made common
+cause with the heathen Angles, and wasted with fire and sword the
+provinces that had been converted by Rome. Had not in the vicissitudes
+of internal war the native church organisation of the North won
+influence over the Anglo-Saxons, heathenism would never have been
+conquered; it would have always found support among the Britons.
+
+When this however had once taken place, the whole Anglo-Saxon name
+attached itself to the Roman ritual. Among the motives for this change
+those which corresponded to the naive materialistic superstition of
+the time may have been the most influential, yet there were other
+motives also which touched the very essence of the matter. Men wished
+to belong to the great Church Communion which then in still unbroken
+freedom comprehended the most distant nations.[6] They preferred the
+bishops whom the kings appointed (with the authorisation of the Roman
+See), to those over whom the abbot of the great monastery on the
+island of Iona exercised a kind of supremacy. Here there was no
+question of any agreement between the German king and the bishops of
+the land, as under the Merovingians in Gaul; they even avoided
+restoring the bishops' sees which had flourished in the old Roman
+times in Britain. The primitive and independent element manifests
+itself in the decision of the princes and their great men. In
+Northumberland, Christianity was introduced by a formal resolution of
+the King and his Witan: a heathen high priest girt himself with the
+sword, and even with his own hand threw down his idols. The
+Anglo-Saxon tribes in fact passed over from the popular religion and
+mythology of the North and of Germany, which would have kept them in
+barbarism, to the communion of the universal religion, to which
+belonged the civilisation of the world. Never did a race show itself
+more susceptible of such an influence: it presents the most remarkable
+example of how the old German ideas, which had now taken living root
+in this soil, and the Roman ecclesiastical culture, which was
+vigorously embraced, met and became intertwined. The first German who
+made the universal learning, derived from antiquity, his own, was an
+Anglo-Saxon, the Venerable Beda; the first German dialect in which men
+wrote history and drew up laws, was likewise the Anglo-Saxon. Despite
+all their reverence for the threshold of the Apostles they admitted
+foreign priests no longer than was indispensable for the foundation of
+the new church: in the gradual progress of the conversion they were no
+longer needed, we soon find Anglo-Saxon names everywhere in the
+church: the archbishops and leading bishops are as closely related to
+the royal families, as the heathen high priests had been before.
+
+It was exactly through the co-operation of both principles, originally
+so foreign to one another, that the Anglo-Saxon nature took firm and
+lasting form.
+
+The Kelts had formerly lived under a clan system which, extending over
+vast districts, yet displayed in each spot characteristic weaknesses
+which the hostility of every neighbour rendered fatal. Then the Romans
+had introduced a military administrative constitution, which displaced
+this tribal system, while it also subjected Britain to the universal
+Empire, of which it formed only an unimportant province. A
+characteristic form of life was first built up in Britain by the
+Anglo-Saxons on the ruins of the Roman rule. The union into which they
+entered with the civilised world was the freely chosen one of the
+religion of the human race; they had no other connexion to control
+them. Their whole energies being concentrated on the island, they gave
+it for the first time, though continually at war with each other, an
+independent position.
+
+Their constitution combines the ideas of the army and the tribe: it is
+the constitution of armies of colonists bringing with them domestic
+institutions which had been theirs from time immemorial. A society of
+freemen of the same stock, who divided the soil among themselves in
+such a manner that the number of the hides corresponded to that of the
+families (for among no people was there a stronger conception of
+separate ownership), they composed the armed array of the country, and
+by their union maintained that peace at home which again secured each
+man's life and property. At their head stands a royal family, of the
+highest nobility, which traces its origin to the gods, and has by far
+the largest possessions; from it, by birth and by election combined,
+proceeds the King; who then, sceptre in hand, presides in the court
+of justice, and in the field has the banner carried before him; he is
+the Lord, to whom men owe fidelity; the Guardian, to whom the public
+roads and navigable rivers belong, who disposes of the undivided land.
+Yet he does not stand originally so high above other men that his
+murder cannot be expiated by a wergeld, of which one share falls to
+his family--not a larger one than for any other of its members,--and
+the other to the collective community, since the prince belongs to the
+former by birth, to the latter by his office. Between the simple
+freeman and the prince appear the eorls, ealdormen, and thanes, in
+some instances raised above the mass by noble birth or by larger
+possessions, natural chiefs of districts and hundreds, in others
+promoted by service in the King's court and in the field, sometimes
+specially bound to him by personal allegiance: they are the Witan who
+have elected him out of his family (in a few instances they depose
+him); they concur in giving laws, they take part in making peace. Now
+the bishops take place by their side. They appear with the ealdormen
+in the judicial meetings of the counties: if the Gerefa neglects his
+duty, it is for them to step in; yet they have also their own
+spiritual jurisdiction. It is a spiritual and temporal organisation of
+small extent, yet of a certain self-sufficing completeness. Many of
+the present shires correspond to the old kingdoms, and bear their
+names to this day. The bishops' sees often coincide with the seats of
+royalty; for the kings wished each to have a bishop to himself in his
+little territory, since they had to endow the bishopric. How many
+regulations still in force date from these times!
+
+The Anglo-Saxons always had an immediate and near relation to the
+kingdom of the Franks.
+
+It was with the daughter of a Frankish prince that the first impulse
+towards conversion came into a Saxon royal house. By the Anglo-Saxons
+again the conversion of inner Germany was carried out, in opposition
+to the same Scoto-Irish element which they withstood in Britain. Carl
+the Great thought it expedient to inform the Mercian King Offa of the
+progress of Christianity among the Saxons in Germany: he looked on him
+as his natural ally. Both kingdoms had moreover a common interest as
+against the free British populations on their western marches, who
+were allied with each other across the sea: decisive campaigns of Carl
+the Great and King Egbert of Wessex coincide in point of time, and may
+have supported each other.
+
+Similarly, we may suppose that Egbert, who lived a number of years as
+an exile at Carl's court, and could not have remained uninfluenced by
+his mode of government and improved military tactics, was then also
+incited and enabled, after his return, to subdue the little kingdoms
+and unite them with Wessex: by the side of the 'Francia' of the
+continent he created in the island a united 'Anglia.' But still there
+subsisted a yet greater difference. Sprung from the stock of Cerdic,
+Egbert belonged to the popular royalty which we find throughout at the
+head of the invading Germans; he is, so far, more like the
+Merovingians whom Carl's predecessors overthrew, than like Carl
+himself; and he was almost entirely destitute of that strong
+groundwork of military institutions on which the Carolingians
+supported themselves. His rise depended much more on the fact that the
+old families in Mercia, Northumbria, and Kent had disappeared, and the
+succession in general had become doubtful; after Egbert had conquered
+the claimants to the throne in a great and bloody battle, he was
+recognised by the Witans of the several kingdoms as their common
+prince, and his family as that which in fact it now was,--the leading
+one of all. After the example of Pipin's family, whose alliance with
+the Papacy was the most important historical event of the epoch and
+founded Western Christendom, the descendants of Cerdic also got
+themselves anointed by the popes--for the religious movement still had
+the predominance over every other. The amalgamation of the tribes and
+kingdoms found its expression in the Church, through the prestige and
+rank of the Archbishop of Canterbury, almost earlier than it did in
+the State; the unity of the Church broke down the antipathies of the
+tribes, and prepared the way for that of the kingdoms. In the midst of
+this work of construction, so incomplete as yet, but so full of hope,
+of these birthpangs of a new life, the very existence of the country
+was threatened by the rise of a new Great Power. For so may we well
+designate the influence which the Scandinavian North exercised by land
+over Eastern Europe, and at the same time over all the Western coasts
+by sea.
+
+Only a part of the German peoples had been influenced by the idea of
+the Empire or the Church; the inborn heathenism of the rest, irritated
+by the losses it had sustained and the dangers that continually
+threatened it, roused itself for the most formidable onslaught that
+the civilised world has ever had to withstand from the heroic and
+barbarous children of Nature.
+
+The mischief they wrought in Britain, from the middle of the ninth
+century onwards, is indescribable.
+
+The Scoto-Irish schools, then in their most flourishing state (they
+trained John Scotus Erigena, of all the scholars of that time the man
+who had the widest intellectual range), fell before the Danish, not
+the Anglo-Saxon assaults; an element of intellectual activity which
+might have been of the greatest importance was thus lost to the
+Western world. But the Northmen persecuted the Romano-English forms as
+bitterly as they did the Irish. In the places where those Anglo-Saxon
+scholars had been trained, who then enlightened the West, the Northmen
+planted the banner which announced utter destruction; with twofold
+rapacity they threw themselves on the more remote abbeys which seemed
+to derive protection from their inaccessibility, and to guarantee it
+by their dignity; in searching for the treasures which they believed
+had been placed in them for security, they destroyed the monuments and
+means of instruction which were really there; in Medeshamstede, where
+there was a rich library, the flames raged for fourteen days. The
+half-formed union of the various districts into one kingdom seems to
+have crippled rather than strengthened the power of local resistance:
+the Danes became masters of Kent and of East-Anglia, of
+Northumberland, and even of Mercia; at last Wessex too, after already
+suffering many losses, was invaded; from both sides at the same
+moment, from the inland and from the coast, the deluge of
+robber-hordes poured over its whole extent.
+
+Things had come to such a point that the Anglo-Saxon community seemed
+inevitably devoted to the same ruin which had overtaken first the
+Britons and then the Romans, they seemed doomed to make way for
+another reconstruction. Britain would have become an outpost of the
+restored heathenism, which could then have been with difficulty
+repulsed from the Eastern and Western Frankish empires, afflicted as
+they were by similar attacks, and governed by the discordant and weak
+princes who then ruled them. At this moment of peril King Alfred
+appeared. It was not merely for his own interests, nor merely for
+those of England, but for those of the world, that he fought. He is
+rightly called 'the Great;' a title fairly due only to those who have
+maintained great universal interests, and not merely those of their
+own country.
+
+The distress of the moment, and the deliverance from it, have been
+kept in imperishable remembrance by popular sagas and church legends.
+It is well worth the trouble to trace out in the authenticated
+traditions, brief as they are, the causes that decided the event. We
+may state them as follows:--Since the attacks of the Vikings were
+especially ruinous, from their occupation of the strong places whence
+they could command and plunder the open country, one step in the work
+of liberation was taken when Alfred, for the first time, wrested from
+them a stronghold which they had seized, deep in the west. Then he,
+too, occupied strong positions, and knew how to defend them. With the
+bravest and most devoted of his nobles, and of the population that had
+not yet submitted, he established a hill-fortress on a height rising
+like an island out of the standing waters and marshlands in the still
+only slightly cultivated land of Somersetshire; this not only served
+him as an asylum, but also as a central point from which he too ranged
+through the land far and wide, like the enemy, except that his object
+was to guard it, and make it ring once more with the already forgotten
+name of the King. Around his banners gathered, with reviving courage,
+the population of the neighbouring districts also: the Saxons could
+again appear in the open field; from their advancing shield-wall the
+disorderly onsets of the Vikings recoiled, the victory was theirs.
+Hereupon, moreover, as if the decision between the two religions
+depended on the result of the war, the leader of the heathens came
+over to Christianity, and took an Anglo-Saxon name. The Danes attached
+themselves to the principles and the powers which they had come forth
+to destroy.
+
+King Alfred is a marvellous phenomenon: suffering from a disease which
+sometimes broke out with violence, and which he never ceased to feel
+for a single day of his life, he not merely withstood the extreme of
+peril at that moment so big with ruin, but also founded a system of
+resistance throughout the kingdom, in which his arms so worked
+together by sea and land that each new band of Vikings betook
+themselves again to their ships, and those that had already penetrated
+into the country, gave way step by step. We remark with interest how,
+under Alfred and his children, his son who succeeded him, and his
+manlike daughter, the protecting fortresses advance from place to
+place, and provide free space for the Anglo-Saxon community. The
+culture already existing, the whole future of which had been saved by
+Alfred, attained in him its fullest development. How many years had
+passed since the hour when an illuminated initial letter gave him his
+first taste for a book, before he could master even the elementary
+branches of knowledge! then he devoted his whole efforts to instil new
+life into the studies that had almost perished, and to give them a
+national character. He not merely translated a number of the later
+authors of antiquity, whose works had contributed most to the
+transmission of scientific culture; in the episodes which he
+interweaves in them he shows a desire for knowledge that reaches far
+beyond them; but especially we find in them a reflective and
+thoughtful mind, solid sense at peace with itself, a fresh way of
+viewing the world, a lively power of observation. This King introduced
+the German mind with its learning and reflection into the literature
+of the world; he stands at the head of the prose-writers and
+historians in a German tongue--the people's King of the most primeval
+kind, who is also the teacher of his people. We know his laws, in
+which extracts from the books of Moses are combined with restored
+legal usages of German origin; in him the traditions of antiquity are
+interpenetrated by the original tendencies of the German mind. We
+completely weaken the impression made on us by this great figure, so
+important in his first limited and arduous efforts, by comparing him
+with the brilliant names of antiquity. Each man is what he is in his
+own place.
+
+Though the Anglo-Saxon monarchy wanted that element of authority which
+the kings of other German tribes drew from the Roman government by
+transmission or succession, yet it had strengthened itself, like the
+others, by union with the Church. Alfred, too, was at Rome in his
+boyhood: it stood him in good stead that he had been anointed, and, as
+men said, adopted by a Roman pope. In the reconquest of the land,
+Church ideas had played an important part. It was impossible to drive
+out the invading foes, they could only be held in check; never would
+they have submitted to the Anglo-Saxon commonwealth had they not at
+the same time been converted to Christianity. Nothing, moreover,
+contributed more to this than the effort, which was then the order of
+the day in the Christian world, to base the organisation of the Church
+on monasticism: from Italy this tendency spread to Germany, from South
+France to North, from thence to England, where it produced its
+greatest effect. Now the power of conversion is inherent only in
+sharply-defined doctrines; and it was precisely this tendency that
+penetrated the Northern natures: the sons of the Vikings became the
+champions of monachism; to the fury with which the fathers had
+destroyed the monasteries succeeded in the sons a zeal to restore
+them. And in what good stead this stood the Anglo-Saxon kings! The
+kingly power obtained, through the splendour which the union with
+religion bestowed on its victorious arms, a reverential recognition by
+the old native population as well as by the invaders.
+
+Alfred's grandson had regained Northumbria by a somewhat doubtful
+title, and had then maintained his right in a great battle, renowned
+in song; his great-grandson, Edgar, in one of his charters thanks the
+grace of God which had permitted him to extend his rule further than
+his predecessors, over the islands and seas as far as Norway, and over
+a great part of Ireland. We are not to look on it as a mere piece of
+vanity, when he seeks after new titles for his power, when he calls
+himself Basileus and Imperator; the former is the title of the
+Eastern, the latter of the Western emperors; he will not yield the
+precedence to either the one or the other, though the latter are so
+closely related to him by blood. We cannot express the feeling of a
+supreme power, independent of men, derived from the grace of God, the
+King of kings, more strongly than it was expressed by Edgar under
+Dunstan's influence; the ruling motives of life in Church and State
+make it conceivable that a monkish hierarch, such as Dunstan, shared,
+as it were, the King's power, and shaped the course of the authority
+of the state.
+
+It was still the ancestral Anglo-Saxon crown which glittered on
+Edgar's head, but, if we may so say, its splendour had at the same
+time received a monkish and hierarchic colouring.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[2] The words of some MSS. in Caesar's Commentaries, iv. 25,
+'deserite, milites, si vultis, aquilam, atque hostibus prodite,' might
+well be taken for the genuine words, originally noted down in his
+Ephemerides (journal).
+
+[3] Brettanian mentoi hoi Romaioi anasosasthai ouketi eschon, all'
+ousa hupo tyrannois ap' autou emene. Procop. de bello Vand. I. No. 2.
+p. 318 ed. Bonn. Compare Zosimus, vi. 4. on, we may assume, the better
+authority of Olympiodorus.
+
+[4] The simplest form of the Saga occurs in Gildas, with very few
+historical ingredients. Nennius enlarges it with Anglo-Saxon
+traditions. Beda has combined both with some notices from the real
+history. Since the departure of the Romans was rightly fixed about
+409, and Gildas said the Britons had rest for forty years, Beda
+settled that the Saxons arrived in 449.
+
+[5] Beda, Hist. Eccl. ii. 2. Some have wished to consider the remark,
+that Augustine had been then long dead, as a later interpretation, 'ad
+tollendam labem caedis Bangorensis;' this, however, is against the
+spirit of that age.
+
+[6] 'Omnem orbem, quocunque ecclesia Christi diffusa est per diversas
+nationes et linguas uno temporis ordine.' Beda, Hist. Eccl. iii. 14.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+TRANSFER OF THE ANGLO-SAXON CROWN TO THE NORMANS AND PLANTAGENETS.
+
+
+In the families of German national kings we not unfrequently find
+among the women a hideous mixture of ambition, revenge, and
+bloodthirstiness, which brings kings and kingdoms to ruin. In England
+it appears, despite of Christianity and monastic discipline, in its
+most atrocious form after the death of Edgar. His eldest son, for some
+years his successor, was treacherously murdered by his stepmother (who
+wished to advance her own son to the throne), at a visit which he paid
+her as he returned from hunting. It was that Edward whose innocence
+and leaning towards the Church have gained him the name of Martyr. The
+son of the murderess did ascend the throne, but the guilt of blood
+seemed to cleave to the crown; he met with the obedience of his
+father's times no more. The Anglo-Saxon magnates seized the occasion
+which this crime, or the subsequent vacillation of the government
+between violence and weakness, offered them, to aim at an independent
+position, and to indulge in a personal policy, each man for himself.
+
+At this very moment the Danes renewed their invasions.
+
+Little did Edgar and those around him understand their position, when
+they attributed the peace they enjoyed to their own military power, in
+the splendid and extensive display of which they took delight. In
+reality it was the state of the world at large that brought this peace
+about. First of all, it was due to the settlement of the Normans in
+North Gaul, under the condition that they should be of one religion
+and one realm, and should fulfil the natural duty of keeping off
+fresh incursions: the current of Northern invasion thus lost its aim
+and direction. But it was of still more decisive effect at the first
+that the energetic family which arose in North Germany, and even
+assumed the imperial authority, not content with warding off the
+Danes, sought them out in their own country instead, and carried the
+war against heathenism into the North. The Saxons beyond the sea were
+indebted for the peace which they enjoyed chiefly to the great and
+splendid deeds of arms of their kindred on the mainland. How much all
+depended on this became very clear when Otto II, in the full glow of
+great enterprises, met with an unlooked for and early death. Within
+the empire two able women and their advisers succeeded in maintaining
+peace; but in Denmark, as in other neighbouring countries, the hostile
+elements got the upper hand. The Danish king's son, Sven Otto,
+abandoned the religion which he regarded as a yoke laid on him by the
+German conquerors; he could not destroy the order of things
+established in Denmark, but he revived the old sea-king's life, and
+threw himself with the old superiority of the Viking arms on the
+English coasts.
+
+Ethelred on this attack fell into the greatest distress, mainly
+because he was not sure of his great nobles. How often did the
+commanders of the fleet desert it at the moment of action, and the
+leaders of the inland levies go over to the enemy! Ethelred sought for
+safety by an alliance with the Duchy of Normandy, then daily rising to
+greater power. Thus supported, he proceeded to unjustifiable outrages
+against his domestic as well as his foreign foes. The great nobles
+whom he suspected were mercilessly killed or exiled, and their
+children blinded. The Danes who remained in the land he caused to be
+murdered all on one day.
+
+The consequences of this deed necessarily recoiled upon himself. When
+Sven some years after again landed with redoubled enmity, which was to
+a certain extent justified, he experienced no effectual resistance
+whatever; Ethelred had to fly before him and quit the island. But now
+that Sven too, who had been already saluted by many as King, died in
+the first enjoyment of his victory, a question arose which extended
+far beyond the personal relations and embarrassments of the moment.
+
+The influence always exercised by the Witans of the Anglo-Saxon
+kingdoms in determining the succession to the throne remained much the
+same when they were all fused into a single kingdom; even among the
+descendants of Alfred, the great men designated the sovereign. In the
+disturbed state of things in which they now found themselves, the
+lawful King having fled, and the other, who had put himself into
+actual possession of the supreme authority, being dead, they framed
+the largest conception of their right. They formally made conditions
+with Ethelred for his return, and he consented to their demands
+through his son.[7] Since he, however, did not fulfil his promise--for
+how could he have altered his nature?--they held themselves released
+from their engagement to maintain this family on the throne. Sven's
+son, Canute, had taken his father's place among the Danes; he had been
+long ago baptised, he was of a character which commanded confidence,
+and possessed at the time overwhelming power. After Ethelred's death
+the lay and spiritual chiefs of England decided to abandon the house
+of Cerdic for ever, and to recognise Canute as their King. How many
+jarls and thanes of Danish origin do we find around the kings under
+all the last governments. Edgar was especially blamed for the very
+reason that he took them under his protection. But they had been
+subjected only by war; no hereditary sentiment of natural loyalty
+attached them to the West Saxon royal house. The ecclesiastical
+aristocracy was besides determined by religious considerations; to
+them these disasters and crimes seemed sufficient proof of the truth
+of those prophecies of coming woe which Dunstan was believed to have
+uttered. They repaired to Canute at Southampton, and concluded a peace
+with him, the conditions of which were that they would abandon the
+descendants of Ethelred for ever, and recognise Canute as their King;
+he, on the other hand, promised to fulfil the duties of a King truly,
+in both spiritual and temporal relations.[8] Yet once more, Ethelred's
+eldest son, Edmund Ironsides, who was himself half a Dane by birth,
+roused himself to a vigorous resistance: London and a part of the
+nobility took his side; he gained through force of arms a settlement
+by which, though indeed he lost the best part of the land and the
+capital itself, he maintained the crown; he died however, soon after,
+and then the whole country recognised Canute as King. The last scion
+of the royal house in the land was banished, and all the claims of the
+family to the crown again declared void. The Anglo-Saxon magnates
+undertook to make a money payment to the Danish host; in return they
+received the pledge from the King's hand, and the oath by his soul
+taken by his chiefs.[9] It was a treaty between the Anglo-Saxon and
+the Danish chiefs, by which the former received the King of the latter
+as also their own.
+
+This extremely important event links the centuries together, and
+determines the future fortunes of England. The kingly house, whose
+right and pre-eminence was connected with the earliest settlements,
+which had completed the union of the realm and delivered it from the
+worst distress, was at a moment of moral deterioration and disaster
+excluded by the spiritual and temporal chiefs, of Anglo-Saxon and
+Danish origin. They had first tried to limit it, to bind it by its own
+promise; when this led to nothing, they annihilated its right by a
+formal resolution of the realm, and procured peace by raising to the
+throne another sovereign who had no right by birth. Canute did not owe
+the crown to conquest, though his greater power contributed to the
+result, but to election, which now appeared as the superior right:
+hitherto the Witan had always exercised it within the limits of the
+royal family; this time they disregarded that family altogether.
+
+Canute decreed or allowed some bloody acts of violence, in order to
+strengthen the power that had fallen to his lot; but afterwards he
+administered it with a noble spirit answering to his position. He
+became the leading sovereign of the North: men reckoned five or six
+kingdoms as subject to him. England was the chief of them all, even
+for him; it was in possession of the culture and religion which he
+wished should prevail in the rest: the missionaries of the North went
+forth from Canterbury. England itself, however, gained a higher
+position in the world by its union with a power which ruled as far as
+Norway and North America, and carried on commerce with the East by the
+Baltic. In Gothland the great emporium of the West, Arabic as well as
+Anglo-Danish coins are found; the former were carried from the North
+as far as England. Canute favoured the Anglo-Saxon mode of life; he
+liked to be designated the 'successor of Edgar;' he confirmed his
+legislation; and it was his intention, at least, to rule according to
+the laws: as he even submitted himself to the military regulations of
+the Huskarls, so he commanded right and law to be administered in
+civil matters without respect to his own person.
+
+But a union of such different kingdoms could only be a transitory
+phenomenon. Canute himself thought of leaving England again
+independent under one of his sons.
+
+With this object he had married Ethelred's widow Emma. For, according
+to Anglo-Saxon ideas, the Queen was not merely the King's wife, but
+also sovereign of the land, in her own right. It was settled that the
+children of this marriage should succeed him in England. Probably
+Canute did not wish the inheritance of the crown in his house to
+depend merely on the goodwill of the Witan.
+
+After Canute's death we can observe a wavering between the principles
+of election and birthright. The magnates again elected, but limited
+their choice to the King's house. After the extinction of the
+Danish-Norman family, they came back to the English-Norman one; they
+called the son of Ethelred and Emma, Edward the Confessor, to the
+throne of his fathers, though, it is true, without leaving him much
+power. This lay rather in the hands of the Earls Godwin of Kent and
+Leofric of Mercia; especially in the former, whose wife was related
+to Canute, did the Anglo-Saxon spirit of independence energetically
+manifest itself. He was once banished, but returned and recovered all
+his offices. When however, Edward too died without issue, the dynastic
+question once more came before the English magnates. It might have
+seemed most consistent to recall the Aetheling Edgar a member of the
+house of Cerdic from exile, and to carry on the previous form of
+government under his name. But the thoughts of the English chiefs no
+longer turned in that direction. Not very long before a king from the
+ranks of the native nobility had ascended the throne of the
+Carolingians in the West Frank empire; in the East Frank, or German
+empire, men had seen first the mightiest duke, then one of the most
+distinguished counts, attain the imperial dignity. Why should it not
+be possible for something similar to happen in England also? The very
+day on which Edward the Confessor died, Godwin's son, Harold, was
+elected by the magnates of the kingdom, and crowned without delay[10]
+(Jan. 5, 1066). The event now happened which was only implied in what
+occurred at Canute's accession: the house of Cerdic was abandoned, and
+the further step taken of raising another native family to its throne.
+
+It was not this time a pressing necessity that brought it about; but
+we cannot deny that, if carried through, it opened out an immeasurable
+prospect.
+
+For such would have been the case, if the attempt to found a Germanic
+Anglo-Saxon kingdom under Harold, and maintain it free from any
+preponderating foreign influence had been successful. By recalling
+Edgar the influence of Normandy, against which the antipathies of the
+nation had been awakened under the last government, would have been
+renewed. But just as little were those claims to be recognised which
+the Northern kings put forward for the re-establishment of their
+supremacy. Even as regards the Papacy, the government began to adopt
+an independent line of conduct.
+
+The question now was, whether the Anglo-Saxon nation would be
+unanimous and strong enough to maintain such a haughty position on all
+sides.
+
+The first attack came from the North; it was all the more dangerous,
+from the fact that an ambitious brother of the new King supported it:
+only by an extreme effort were these enemies repelled. But, at the
+same moment, an attack was threatened from another enemy of infinitely
+greater importance--Duke William of Normandy. It was not only this
+sovereign, and his land, but a new phase of development in the history
+of the world, with which England now entered into conflict.
+
+
+_The Conquest._
+
+Out of the antagonism of nationalities, of the Empire and the Church,
+of the overlord and the great chiefs, in the midst of invasions of
+foreign peoples and armies, the local resistance to them and their
+occupations of territory, a new world had, as it were, been forming
+itself in Southern Europe, and especially in Gaul. Still more
+decidedly than in England had the invading Vikings in France attached
+themselves to the national element, even in the second generation they
+had given up their language; they discovered at the same time a form
+which reconciled the membership in the kingdom, and the recognition of
+the common faith, with provincial freedom. In France no native power
+successfully opposed and checked the advancing Normans, such as that
+which the Danes had encountered in England. On the contrary they
+exercised the greatest influence over the foundation of a new dynasty.
+A system developed itself over the whole realm, in which, both in the
+provincial authorities and in the lower degrees of rank, the
+possession of land and share in public office, feudalism and freedom,
+interpenetrated each other, and made a common-weal which yet
+harmonised with all the inclinations that lend charm and colouring to
+individual life. The old migratory impulse and spirit of warlike
+enterprise set before itself religious aims also, which lent it a
+higher sanction; war for the Church, and conquest (which meant for
+each man a personal occupation of land) were combined in one. Starting
+from Normandy, where great warlike families were formed that found no
+occupation at home (for these young populations are wont to multiply
+quickest), North French love of war and habits of war transplanted
+themselves to Spain and to Italy. How must it have elevated their
+spirit of enterprise when in the latter country the Papacy, which had
+just thrown off the supremacy of the emperor, and entered on a new
+stage in the development of its power, made common cause with their
+arms, and a practised Norman warrior, Robert Guiscard, appeared as
+Duke of Apulia and Calabria 'by grace of God and of S. Peter and,
+under his protection, of Sicily also in time to come'![11] The Pope
+gave him lands in fief, which had hitherto belonged to the Greek
+Empire, and which the Germans had been unable to conquer; he promised,
+in return, to defend the prerogatives of S. Peter. Between the
+hierarchy which was striving to perfect its supremacy, and the warlike
+chivalry of the 11th century, an alliance was formed like that once
+concluded with the leaders of the Frankish host. The ideas were
+already stirring from which proceeded the Crusades, the foundation of
+the Spanish kingdoms, and the creation of the Latin Empire at
+Constantinople. In the princely fiefs of the French Crown, and above
+all in Normandy, they seized on men's minds. Chivalrous life and
+hierarchic institutions, dialectic and poetry, continual war at home
+and ceaseless aspirations abroad, were here fused into a living whole.
+
+In the Germanic countries also this close alliance of hierarchy and
+chivalry now sought to win influence, but here it met with a strenuous
+resistance. In England, Edward the Confessor had tried to prepare the
+way for it: Godwin and his house opposed it. And when the former named
+the Norman Robert Archbishop of Canterbury, and the latter drove him
+out, the English quarrels became connected with those of Rome;
+Stigand, the archbishop put in by Godwin, received his pallium from
+Pope Benedict X, who had been elected in the old tumultuous manner
+once more by the neighbouring Roman barons, but had to succumb to
+Hildebrand's zeal for a regular election by the cardinals, on which
+the emancipation of the Papacy depended. It seemed, then, intolerable
+at Rome that there should be a primate of the English Church,
+connected by his Church position with a phase of the supreme
+priesthood now condemned and abolished: it is very intelligible that
+this priesthood in its present form took up a hostile position towards
+the England of that time. In this, moreover, it found an ally ready to
+act in Duke William of Normandy, who wished to be regarded as the born
+champion of the Anglo-Saxon dynasty, and as the natural successor to
+its rights. Once already his father had collected a fleet to restore
+the exiled Aethelings, and was only kept back from an invasion by
+unfavourable weather. There had often since been rumours, that Edward
+had destined Duke William to be his successor; men asserted that
+Harold had previously recognised this right, and that in return
+William's daughter, and a part of the land as an independent
+possession, had been promised him.[12] In his own position William had
+cleared the ground for himself with a strong hand. He had beaten his
+feudal lord in the open field, and thus not only recovered a frontier
+fortress lost during his minority, but also strengthened the
+independence of the duchy. At the same time William had vanquished his
+rebellious vassals in arms, banished them, deprived them of their
+possessions, and got rid, with the Pope's consent, of an archbishop
+who was allied with them. Death freed him from another mighty
+opponent, the Duke of Brittany, who threatened him with a great
+maritime expedition. It throws a certain light on his policy, to see
+how he made himself master of the county of Maine in 1062. On the
+ground that Count Heribert, whom he had supported in his quarrel with
+Anjou, had become his vassal and made him his heir,[13] he overran
+Maine, and put his adherents in possession of the fortresses which
+commanded the land. However we may decide as to the details told us
+about his relations to Edward and Harold, it seems undeniable that
+William had received provisional promises from both--for Harold loved
+to side with Edward. He was not the man to put up with their being
+broken. The system, however, which through Harold's accession gained
+the upper hand in England, was in itself hostile to the Norman one:
+and that a king of England like the present might some day become
+dangerous to the duke, amidst all the other hostilities which
+threatened him, is clear. To these motives was now added the
+approbation of the Roman See. The Pope's chief Council deliberated on
+the enterprise, above all did the archdeacon of the Church,
+Hildebrand, declare himself in its favour. He was reproached--then or
+at a later time--with being the author of bloodshed; he declared that
+his conscience acquitted him, since he knew well, that the higher
+William mounted, the more useful he would be to the Church.[14]
+Alexander II now sent the duke the banner of the Church. As a few
+years before Robert Guiscard had become duke, so now a Norman duke was
+to become king, in the service of the Church. The Normans were still
+divided in their views as to the enterprise, but when this news
+arrived, all opposition ceased, for in the service of S. Peter and the
+Church men believed themselves secure of success; then lay and
+spiritual vassals emulously armed ships and men; in the harbour of S.
+Valery, which belonged to one of those who had been last gained over,
+the Count of Ponthieu, the fleet and the troops gathered together.[15]
+The Count of Flanders, the duke's father-in-law, secretly favoured the
+enterprise; another of his nearest relations, Count Odo of Champagne,
+brought up his troops in person; Count Eustace of Boulogne armed, to
+avenge on Godwin's house an affront he had once suffered at Dover; a
+number of leading Breton counts and lords attached themselves to
+William in opposition to their duke, who cherished wholly different
+projects. To the lords and knights of North France were joined many of
+lower rank, whose names show that they came from Gascony, Burgundy,
+the duchy of France, or the neighbouring districts belonging to the
+German Empire. Of their own free will they ranged themselves round
+William, to vindicate the right which he claimed to the English crown,
+but each man naturally entertained brilliant hopes also for himself.
+William is depicted as a man of vast bodily strength, which none could
+surpass or weary out, with a strong hardy frame, a cool head, an
+expression in his features which exactly intimated the violence with
+which he followed up his enemies, destroyed their states, and burnt
+their houses. Yet all was not passionate desire in him. He honoured
+his mother, he was true to his wife. Never did he undertake a quarrel
+without giving fair notice, and certainly never without having well
+prepared for it beforehand. He knew how to keep up a warlike spirit in
+his vassals: there were seen with him only splendid men and able
+leaders; he kept strict discipline. So also he had seized the moment
+for his enterprise, at which the political relations of Europe were
+favourable to him. The two great realms, which might otherwise have
+well interposed, the East Frank (or the Roman-German) as well as the
+West Frank, were under kings not yet of age: the guardianship of the
+latter lay with the Count of Flanders, who thought he did enough in
+not standing openly by his son-in-law, of the former with great
+bishops devoted heart and soul to the hierarchic system.[16] Harold,
+on the other hand, had no friend or ally, in North or East, in South
+or in West. To encounter the combined efforts of a great European
+coalition he had only himself and his Anglo-Saxons to rely on. Harold
+is depicted as coming forth perfect from the hands of nature, without
+blemish from head to foot, personally brave before the enemy, gentle
+among his own people, and endowed with natural eloquence. His enemy's
+passion for, and knowledge of, war were not in him; the taste of the
+Anglo-Saxons was directed more to peaceful enjoyments than to
+ceaseless wars. At this moment too they were weakened by great losses
+in the last bloody war; many of the most trustworthy and bravest had
+fallen, others wavered in their fidelity; Harold had not been able to
+put even the coasts in a state of defence; William landed without
+resistance, to demand his crown from him. When reminded of his promise
+Harold was believed to have answered in the very spirit of Anglo-Saxon
+independence, that he had no right to make any such promise without
+the consent of the Anglo-Saxon chiefs and people. And not to meet the
+invading foe instantly at the sword's point would have seemed to him
+disgraceful cowardice. And so William and Harold, the North French
+knights and the national war-array of the Anglo-Saxons, encountered at
+Hastings. Harold fell at the very beginning of the fight. The Normans,
+according to their wont, knew how to separate their enemies by a
+pretended flight, and then by a sudden return to surround and destroy
+them in isolated bodies. It was the iron-clad, yet rapidly moving
+cavalry, which decided the battle.[17]
+
+William expected, now that his rival had fallen, to be recognised by
+the Anglo-Saxons as their King. Instead of this the chiefs and the
+capital raised Edgar the Aetheling, grandson of Edmund Ironsides, to
+the throne: as though William would retire before a scion of the old
+West-Saxon house, of which he professed to be the champion. He held
+firmly to the transfer made to him by the last king without regard to
+any third person, ratified as it was by the Roman See, and marched on
+the capital.
+
+Edgar was a boy, and the magnates were at variance as to who should
+have the authority to exercise guardianship over him. When William
+appeared before the city, and threatened the walls with his
+siege-machines, it too lost courage. The embassy which it sent him was
+amazed at the grandeur and splendour of his appearance, was convinced
+as to the right which King Edward had transferred to him,[18] and
+penetrated by the danger which a resistance, in itself hopeless, would
+bring on the city. Aldermen and people abandoned Edgar, and recognised
+William as King. There is an old story, that the county of Kent, on
+capitulating, made good conditions for itself. To the nobles also, who
+submitted by degrees, similar terms may have been accorded, but their
+position was almost entirely altered. We need notice only this one
+point. Their chief right, which they exercised to a perhaps
+unauthorised extent, was that of electing the King; they had now
+elected twice, but the first election was annulled by defeat in the
+open field, the second by increasing superiority in arms; they had to
+recognise the Conqueror, who claimed by inheritance, as their King,
+whether they would or no. There is something almost symbolic of the
+resulting state of things in the story of William's coronation, which
+was now celebrated by the tomb of Edward the Confessor at Westminster.
+For the first time the voices of the Anglo-Saxons and the Normans were
+united to greet him as King, but the discordant outcry of the two
+languages seemed a sign of conflict to the troops gathered outside,
+and made the warlike fury, so hardly kept under control, boil up again
+in them; they set the houses of London on fire. Whilst all hurried
+from the church, the ceremony it is said was completed by shuddering
+priests in the light of the flames: the new King himself, who at other
+times did not know what fear was, trembled.[19]
+
+By this coronation-acclaim, two constituent elements of the world,
+which had been fundamentally at conflict with each other, became
+indissolubly united.
+
+That against which the Anglo-Saxons had set themselves to guard with
+all their strength during the last period, the inroad of the
+Norman-French element into their Church and their State, was now
+accomplished in fullest measure. William's maxim was, that all who had
+taken arms against him and his right had forfeited their property;
+those who escaped, and the heirs of those who had fallen, were
+deprived alike. In a short time we find William's leading comrades in
+the war, as earls of Hereford, Buckingham, Shrewsbury, Cornwall; his
+valiant brothers were endowed with hundreds of fiefs; and when the
+insurrection which quickly broke out led to new outlawries and new
+confiscations, all the counties were filled with French knights. From
+Caen came over the blocks of freestone to build castles and towers, by
+which they hoped to bridle the towns and the country. It is an
+exaggeration to assume a complete transfer of property from the one
+people to the other; among the tenants in chief about half the names
+are still Anglo-Saxon. At first, those who from any even accidental
+cause had not actually met William in arms were left in possession of
+their lands, though without hereditary right: later, after they had
+conducted themselves quietly for some time, this too was given back to
+them. In the next century it excited surprise that so many great
+properties should have remained in the hands of the Anglo-Saxons.[20]
+It would have been altogether against William's plan, to treat the
+Anglo-Saxons as having no rights. He wished to appear as the rightful
+successor of the Anglo-Saxon kings: by their laws he would abide, only
+adding the legal usages of the Normans to those of the Danes,
+Mercians, and West Saxons; and it was not merely through his will, but
+also by its higher form, and connexion with the ideas of the century,
+that the Norman law gained the upper hand. But however much we may
+deduct from the usual exaggerations, this fact remains, that the
+change of ownership which took place, like the change in the
+constitution and the general state of things, was of enormous extent:
+the military and judicial power passed entirely into the hands of the
+victors in the war. And in the Church alterations no less
+thoroughgoing ensued. Under the authority of Papal legates, the great
+office-holders of the English Church, who had been opposed to the
+newly arisen hierarchic system, were mercilessly deprived of their
+places. The King was afterwards personally on tolerably good terms
+with Stigand, the Archbishop of Canterbury, but was not inclined on
+his account to oppose the Church. The archbishopric, and with it the
+primacy of England, passed to the man in whom the union of the Church
+authority and orthodoxy of that which we may call the especially
+hierarchic century was most vividly represented, the man who had been
+the chief agent in establishing the dogma of Transubstantiation, the
+great teacher of Bec, Lanfranc. In most of the bishoprics and abbeys
+we find Normans of kindred tendency. It was precisely in the
+enterprise against England that the hierarchy concluded its compact
+with the hereditary feudal state, which was all the more lasting in
+that they were both still in process of formation.
+
+In this way was England attached by the strongest ties to the
+Continent, and to the new system of life and ecclesiastico-political
+constitution which had then gained the upper hand in Latin Europe.
+Under the next three successors of the Conqueror, none of whom enjoyed
+a completely legal recognition, it sometimes appeared as though
+England would again tear herself away from Normandy: such variances
+were not without influence on home affairs: in the general relations
+of the country they wrought no change at all. On the contrary, these
+were developed on a still larger scale, owing to the complicated
+family connexions which so peculiarly characterise that epoch. From
+the county of Anjou which, like the dominion of the Capets, had been
+formed in the struggle against the invasion of the Normans, a
+sovereign arose who had the right to rule the Norman conquests, the
+son of the Conqueror's granddaughter, Henry Plantagenet. He had
+become, though not without appeal to the sword, which his father
+wielded powerfully on his behalf, master of Normandy, and had then
+married Eleanor of Poitou, who brought him a great part of South
+France: he then succeeded more by fair means than by force in
+establishing his right to the throne of England. Henry was the first
+to establish in France the power of the great vassals, by which the
+crown was long in danger of being overthrown. The Kings of Castille
+and Navarre submitted to his arbitration. And under a sovereign whose
+grandfather had been King of Jerusalem, and one of the mightiest
+rulers of that Western kingdom established in the East, the
+tendencies, which had led so far, could not fail to extend themselves
+to the utmost in all their spheres of action? The hierarchic and
+chivalrous spirit of Continental Europe, which under the Normans had
+seized on England, was much strengthened by the accession of the
+Plantagenets. It thus came to pass that after the disastrous loss of
+Jerusalem, the knights of Anjou and of Guienne, from Brittany (for
+Henry had added this province also to his family possessions) and from
+Normandy, gathered together in London, and took the Cross in company
+with the English. England formed a part of the Plantagenet Empire--if
+we may apply this word to so anomalous a state--and contributed to its
+extension, even though no interest of its own was involved. But
+towards such a result the relations which this alliance established
+between England and Southern Europe had long tended. Not seldom was
+the military power of the provinces over the sea employed for
+enterprises that aimed at the direct advantage of England itself.
+Whether and when the German element without this influence would have
+become master of the British group of islands none could say. The
+English dominion over Ireland in particular is derived from Henry II,
+and his alliance at that time with the Papacy; he crossed thither
+under the Pope's authorisation: at the Pope's word the native kings
+did homage to him as their lord.[21] And the foreign-born Plantagenets
+struck living root in England itself. As Henry II's mother was the
+daughter of a princess descended from the West-Saxon house, he was
+hailed by the natives as their lawfully-descended King; in accordance
+with Edward the Confessor's prophecy, that from the severed bough
+should spring up a new tree: they traced his descent without scruple
+back to Wodan. This King, moreover, has impressed his mark deeply on
+English life; to this day justice is administered in England under
+forms established by him.
+
+The will of destiny cannot be gainsaid. Just as Germany without its
+connexion with Italy, so England without its connexion with France,
+would never have been what it is. More than all, the great
+commonwealth of the western nations, whose life pervades and
+determines the history of each separate state, would never have come
+into existence. But on this ground first, amidst continual warfare,
+was gradually accomplished the formation of the nationalities.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[7] Se in omnibus eorum voluntati consensurum, consiliis acquieturum.
+
+[8] Florentius Wigorniensis: 'Post cujus (Aethelredi) mortem episcopi
+abbates duces et quique nobiliores Angliae, in unum congregati pari
+consensu in dominum et regem Canutum sibi elegere--ille juravit, quod
+et secundum deum et secundum seculum fidelis eis esse vellet dominus.'
+The oath which Ethelred had taken was, however, only 'secundum deum.'
+
+[9] Florentius, 593: 'Accepto pignore de manu sua nuda cum juramentis
+a principibus Danorum, fratres et filios Eadmundi omnino despexerunt
+eosque esse reges negaverunt.'
+
+[10] In Ingulphus (Savile Script. 511) it is said expressly: per
+Archiepiscopum Eboracae, Aedredum (Aldredum). But it is surprising
+that the Bayeux Tapestry expressly names Stigand (Lancelot:
+Description de Tapisserie de Bayeux, in Thierry, I). Yet Harold could
+not possibly have meant, by passing over the Archbishop of Canterbury,
+to declare him to be incompetent, since he had been appointed by his
+party.
+
+[11] Juramentum fidelitatis Roberti Guiscardi: 1059 in Baronius,
+Annales Eccles. ix. 350.
+
+[12] The simplest statement occurs in the Carmen de bello Hastingensi,
+p. 352, according to which Edward promised the succession, and sent
+ring and sword to the duke by Harold; but as early as in William of
+Jumieges we have the tale of Harold's captivity in Ponthieu, and the
+promise made him, and the chief outlines of what in Guilielmus
+Pictaviensis, and Ordericus Vitalis, lies before us with further
+embellishments, and to which the Bayeux Tapestry (itself, too, a kind
+of historical memorial of the time) adds some further traits.
+
+[13] Guilielmus Pictaviensis, Gesta Wilhelmi ducis, in Duchesne 189,
+already relates this in reference to the English affair.
+
+[14] Gregorii Registrum, vii. 23; Mansi, xx. 306.
+
+[15] William of Jumieges, Hist. vii. 34. 'Ingentem exercitum ex
+Normannis et Flandrensibus ac Francis ac Britonibus aggregavit.'
+
+[16] Guilielmus Pictaviensis 197 assures us that help was promised
+from Germany in the name of Henry IV.
+
+[17] William of Malmesbury, Gesta Regum, III. Sec. 245. 'Magis
+temeritate et furore praecipitati quam scientia militari Wilhelmo
+congressi.'
+
+[18] 'Contulit Eguardus quod rex donum sibi regni Monstrat et adfirmat
+vosque probasse refert.' So Guido (Carmen de bello Hastingensi, 737)
+makes Ansgard on his return speak to the citizens.
+
+[19] Ordericus Vitalis 503. In Guido the ceremony is described with
+the greatest calmness, as though it passed undisturbed; but the
+conclusion of his work seems wanting.
+
+[20] Dialogus de Scaccario, i. 10. 'Miror singularis excellentiae
+principem, in subactam et sibi suspectam Anglorum gentem hac usum
+misericordia, ut non solum colonos indempnes servaret, verum ipsis
+regni majoribus feudos suos et amplas possessiones relinqueret.' In
+Madox, History of the Exchequer, ii. 391. In Domesday Book the memory
+of Edward the Confessor is always treated with the greatest respect.
+Ellis, Introduction to Domesday Book, i. 303.
+
+[21] 'Ut illius terrae populus te sicut dominum veneretur.' Breve of
+Hadrian IV.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE CROWN IN CONFLICT WITH CHURCH AND NOBLES.
+
+
+Highly as we may estimate the due appreciation and expression of those
+objective ideas, which are bound up with the culture of the human
+race, still the spiritual life of man is built up not so much on a
+devout and docile receptivity of these ideas as on their free and
+subjective recognition, which modifies while it accepts, and
+necessarily passes through a phase of conflict and opposition.
+
+In England the authority both of Church and State now came forward
+with far more strength than before. The royal power was a continuation
+of the sovereignty inherited from Anglo-Saxon times, but, leaning on
+its continental resources, and supported by those who had taken part
+in the Conquest, it developed itself much more durably. The clergy of
+the land were far more closely and systematically bound to the Papacy;
+thus it had become more learned and more active. The one sword helped
+the other; just at this very time, the King and the Archbishop of
+Canterbury were depicted as the two strong steers that drew the plough
+of England.
+
+But yet, below all this there existed a powerful element of
+opposition. After the new order of things had existed more than eighty
+years, among a portion of the Anglo-Saxon population the design was
+started of putting a violent end to it, of destroying at one blow all
+those foreigners who seemed its representatives, just as the Danes had
+all been murdered on one day.
+
+It was an evil thought, and all the more atrocious because manifold
+ties had been already gradually formed between the two populations.
+How could they ever become fused into one nation if the one was always
+plotting the destruction of the other?
+
+It was not merely by alliances of blood and family, but even still
+more by great common political and ecclesiastical interests that the
+English nationality, which contains both elements, was founded. And,
+in truth, the leading impulse towards it was that the conquerors, no
+less than the conquered, felt themselves oppressed by the yoke which
+the two supreme authorities laid on them, and hence both combined to
+oppose them. But centuries elapsed before this could be effected. The
+first occasion for it was given when the two authorities quarrelled
+with each other, and alternately called on the population to give its
+voluntary aid.
+
+For, as the authorities which represent the objective ideas are of
+different origin, they have never in our Western Europe remained more
+than a short time in complete harmony with each other. Each retains
+its natural claim to be supreme, and not to endure the supremacy of
+the other. The one has always more before its eyes the unity of the
+whole, the other the needs and rights of the several kingdoms and
+states. Amidst their antagonism European life has moulded itself and
+made progress.
+
+Close as their union was at the time of the Conquest of England, yet
+even then their quarrel broke out. Though the Conqueror pledged
+himself again to pay a tribute which the Anglo-Saxon kings had
+formerly charged themselves with, and which had been long unpaid, yet
+this was not sufficient for the Roman See: Gregory VII demanded to be
+recognised as feudal lord of England. But this was not what William
+understood, when he had allowed the papal banner to wave over the
+fleet that brought him to England. It was not from the Pope's
+authorisation that he derived his claim to the English crown, as if
+this had been merely transferred to him by the Papal See, but from the
+Anglo-Saxon kings, as whose heir and legal successor he wished to be
+regarded. He answered the Pope that he could enter into no other
+relation to him than that in which his predecessors in England had
+stood to previous popes.
+
+For the first time the popes had to give up altogether the attempt to
+make kings their feudal dependents; they attempted, however, an
+almost deeper encroachment into the very heart of the royal power,
+when they then formed the plan of severing the spiritual body
+corporate, which already possessed the most extensive temporal
+privileges, from their feudal obligation to the sovereigns. The
+English kings opposed them in this also with resolution and success.
+Under the influence of the father of scholasticism, Anselm of
+Canterbury, Primate of England, a satisfactory agreement was arranged
+long before the Concordat was obtained in Germany. In general there
+was little to fear, as long as the Archbishop of Canterbury had a good
+understanding with the Crown; and this was the case in the first half
+of the 12th century, if not on all points, yet, at least on all
+leading questions. Far-reaching differences did not appear until the
+higher ecclesiastics embraced the party of the Papacy, which happened
+in England through Thomas Becket.
+
+
+_Henry II and Becket._
+
+It was precisely from him that this would have been least expected. He
+had been the King's Chancellor, or if we may avail ourselves of a
+somewhat remote equivalent expression, his most trusted cabinet
+minister, and had as such, in both home and foreign affairs, rendered
+the most valuable services. The introduction of scutage is attributed
+to him, and he certainly had a large share in the acquisition of
+Brittany. It was through the direct influence of the King that he was
+elected archbishop.[22] But from that hour he seemed to have become
+another man. As he had hitherto rivalled the courtiers in splendour,
+pleasure, and pomp, so would he now by strictness of life equal the
+sanctity of the saints; as hitherto to the King, so did he now attach
+himself to the interests of the Church. It might, so we may suppose,
+be some satisfaction to his self-esteem, that he could now confront
+his stern and mighty sovereign as Archbishop 'also by the grace of
+God,' for so he designates himself in his letter to the King; or he
+might feel himself bound to recover the possessions of his Church,
+which had been wrested from it by the Crown or the high nobility. But,
+as spiritually-minded men are moved more by universal ideas than by
+special interests, so for Becket the determining impulse without doubt
+lay above all in the sympathy which he devoted to the hierarchic
+movement in general.
+
+Those were the times in which the attempt of the Emperor Frederic I to
+call a council, and in it to decide on a contested papal election, had
+created general excitement among the peoples and churches of Southern
+Europe, which would only consent to be led by a pope independent of
+the empire. Driven from Italy, Alexander III, the Pope rejected by the
+Emperor, found a cordial reception in France; and here he now
+collected on his side a papal council in opposition to the imperial
+one, in which the cardinals, whose election the Emperor was trying to
+annul, and the bishops of Spain and South Italy, and those of the
+collective Gaulish dioceses (more than a hundred in number), and the
+English bishops also, gathered around him, and laid the Pope elected
+by the Emperor under the anathema. It was inevitable that the idea of
+the Church, as independent of the temporal power, should here find its
+strongest expression. Some canons were passed which prohibited the
+usurpation of ecclesiastical property by the laity, and made it a
+crime in the bishops to allow it.[23]
+
+Thomas Becket was welcomed in this council with a seductive kindness;
+but besides this, what is harder than to set oneself against the
+common feeling of one's own order, when moderation already appears to
+be apostasy? He returned to England filled with the ideas of
+hierarchic independence; in preparing to carry it through, he
+necessarily brought on the conflict which had hitherto been avoided.
+
+The Plantagenet King, whose whole heart was in the work of securing
+the obedience of the manifold provinces that had fallen to his lot;
+who hastened ceaselessly from one to the other (when people thought
+him far away in South France, he had already recrossed the sea to
+England), ever occupied in extending his inherited power by
+institutions of a legal and administrative nature, was not inclined to
+give way to the Church in this attempt. He would neither make the
+election of the higher clergy free, nor allow their excommunication to
+be valid without State control; he not only maintained the right of
+the lay courts to try ecclesiastics for heinous offences, which else
+often remained unpunished; but, even in the sphere of spiritual
+jurisdiction, he claimed to hear appeals in the last instance without
+regard to the Pope. In all this the lay and spiritual nobility agreed
+with him; in a Council at Clarendon they framed 'constitutions,' in
+which they declared these rules to be the law of the realm, as it had
+always been observed, and ought to be observed henceforth.[24]
+
+Becket did not possess the inflexible obstinacy which distinguishes
+most of the champions of the hierarchy. As the accordant voice of
+Europe moved him to take up the hierarchic principles, so now the
+accordant voice of his country's rulers made an impression on him: he
+listened to the ecclesiastics who entreated him not to draw the King's
+displeasure on them, and to the laymen, who prayed him not to bring on
+them the necessity of executing it on the ecclesiastics: he virtually
+accepted the Constitutions of Clarendon. But then again he could not
+prevail on himself to observe them. Only when his vacillation
+endangered him personally, so that he could expect nothing else to
+follow but a condemnation by a new assembly of the royal court, did he
+come to a decision. Then he took the hierarchic side resolutely; in
+contradiction to the Constitutions, he appealed to the Pope. It is a
+remarkable day in English history, that 14th October 1164, on which
+Thomas Becket, after reading mass, appeared before the court without
+his archiepiscopal dress, but cross in hand. He forbade the earl, who
+wished to announce the judgment to him, to speak, since no layman had
+power to sit in judgment on his spiritual father;[25] he again put
+himself under the protection of God and the Roman Church, and then
+passed from the court, no man venturing to lay hands on him, still
+armed with his cross, to a church close by, from whence he escaped to
+the Continent. By this he brought into England the war of the two
+powers, which had already burst into flame in Italy and Germany. The
+archbishop and primate rejected the supreme judicial authority of the
+Curia Regis; only in the chief pontiff at Rome did he recognise his
+rightful judge: by undertaking to bring into full view the complete
+independence of the spiritual principle on this ground also, he broke
+down that unity of authority, which had, been hitherto maintained in
+the English realm, and entered into open war with his King.
+
+Henry II was, like most of the sovereigns of that age, above all
+things a warrior; you could see by his stride that he spent his days
+on horseback; and he was an indefatigable hunter. But yet he found
+time besides for study; he took pleasure in solving, in the company of
+scholars, the difficulties of the theologico-philosophical problems
+which then largely occupied men's minds; there is no doubt that he
+also fully understood these politico-ecclesiastical questions. He was
+by no means a good husband, rather the contrary, but, in other things,
+he could control himself; he was moderate in eating and drinking.
+Success did not make him overweening, but all the more prudent:[26]
+ill-success found him resolute; yet it was remarked that he was more
+severe in success, milder in adversity. If contradicted, he showed all
+the excitability of the Southern French nature; he passed from
+promises to threats, from flatteries to outbursts of wrath, until he
+met with compliance. His administration at home witnesses to a noble
+conception of his mission and to a practical understanding; from his
+lion-like visage shone forth a pair of quiet eyes, but how suddenly
+did they flame up with wild fire, if the passion was roused that
+slumbered in the depths of his soul! It was the passion of unlimited
+power; an ambition for which, as he once said, the world appeared to
+be too small. He never forgave an opponent; he never reconciled
+himself with an enemy or took him again into favour.
+
+He would of himself have been much inclined to abandon Alexander III,
+and attach himself to the Pope set up by the Emperor: his ambassadors
+took part in a German diet at which the most extreme steps were
+approved of. But Henry was not sufficiently master of his clergy nor,
+above all, of his people for this; the solemn curse of Thomas Becket
+wrought on men from far away. Was there really any foundation for what
+men then said, that the King thought it better that his foe should be
+in the country rather than out of it? An apparent reconciliation was
+brought about, which, however, left the main questions undecided, each
+side only consenting generally to a peace with the other. Becket did
+not allow himself to be hindered by it, on his return to England, from
+excommunicating leading ecclesiastics who had supported the King's
+party. But at this Henry's deep-seated wrath awoke. Beset by the
+exiles with cries for protection, he let the complaint escape him in
+the presence of his knights, that among so many to whom he had shown
+favour there was not one who had courage enough to avenge the insults
+offered to him.[27] As opposed to the Church sympathies which through
+the clergy wrought on all people, the temporal state was mainly kept
+together by the reciprocal relations of the feudal lord and sovereign
+to his vassals and knights, and of them to him: to spiritual reverence
+was opposed personal devotion. But these feelings, too, as they have
+their justification, so they have their moral limitations; they are as
+capable of exaggeration and excess as all others. Enflamed by the
+King's words which seemed to touch the honour of knighthood, four of
+his knights hastened to Canterbury, and sought out the man, who dared
+to bid the King defiance in his own kingdom; as Becket refused to
+recall the excommunication, they murdered him horribly in the
+cathedral. When required to obey the King, Becket was wont to reserve
+the rights of the Church and the priesthood; for this reservation he
+died.
+
+Henry II by calling forth, intentionally or not, this brutal act of
+violence in the ecclesiastical strife, drew on himself the catastrophe
+of his life.
+
+By Becket's murder the ideas of Church independence gained what was
+yet wanting to them, a martyr: his death was more advantageous to them
+than his life could ever have been. The belief that the victim wrought
+miracles, which were ascribed to him in increasing measure, at first
+slight, then more and more surprising ones, viz. cures of incurable
+diseases,--who does not know the resistless nature of this illusion,
+bound up as it is with the nearest needs of man in every form?--made
+him the idol of England. Henry II had to live to see the man who had
+refused him the old accustomed obedience, reverenced among his people
+with almost divine honours as one of the greatest saints that had ever
+lived. The great Hohenstaufen in the unsuccessful struggle with the
+Papacy was at last brought to declare that all he had hitherto done
+rested on an error; and in like manner, but one far more humiliating
+and painful, Henry II had to do penance, and receive the discipline of
+the scourge, at the tomb of the man who had been murdered by his loyal
+subjects. On a hasty glance it seems as though his Constitutions were
+established, but a more accurate inquiry shows that the articles which
+displeased the Pope were left out. The hierarchic ideas gained the day
+in England also.
+
+It was precisely the Church quarrel that fed the discords which broke
+out in the King's own house. His eldest son found a pretence for his
+revolt, and essentially promoted it, by alleging that the murderers of
+the glorious martyr were unpunished; he on his side promised the
+clergy to make good all existing injuries, since what belonged to the
+Church should not serve man's ostentation. The example of the elder
+wrought on the younger sons too, who, to withstand their father,
+recognised the supremacy of the King of France. Henry's last years
+were filled with depression, and even with despair; when dying he was
+believed to have bequeathed his curse to his children. In the
+cloisters his death was ascribed to the intercession and merits of S.
+Thomas.
+
+For with the acceptance of the hierarchic ideas the prestige of their
+martyr grew day by day. In the crusade of 1189 men saw him appear in
+dreams, and declare that he was appointed to protect the fleet, to
+calm the storms.
+
+It was under these auspices that the chivalry of the Plantagenet realm
+took part in the Third Crusade: King Richard (in whom the ideas of
+Church and Chivalry attained their highest splendour) at their head
+gave back to the already lost kingdom of Jerusalem, in despite of a
+very powerful foe, a certain amount of stability: as he served the
+hierarchic views with all his power, there was no question under him
+as to any dispute between Church and State. But this power itself
+could not be increased owing to his absence. Whilst he fought for the
+Church far away, elements of resistance were stirring in his realm
+which had been there long ago, and soon after his death came to the
+most violent outbreak.
+
+
+_John Lackland and Magna Charta._
+
+Despite all the community of interests between the sovereigns of the
+Conquest and their vassals, grounds of hostility between them had
+never been altogether wanting. The Conqueror's sons had to make
+concessions to the great lords, because their succession was not
+secure; they needed a voluntary recognition, the price of which
+consisted in a relaxation of the harsh laws with which the monarchy
+had at first fettered every department of life. But when the great
+nobles had managed, or decided, contests for the throne, Were they
+likely to feel bound unconditionally to obey the man whom they had
+raised? Besides Henry II in his ecclesiastical quarrel needed the
+consent of his vassals; his court-Assemblies were no longer confined
+to proclamations of ordinances from the one side only; consultations
+were held, leading to decisions that concerned them all.
+
+But what is now surprising is the fact, that even the associates in
+the Conquest, and much more their descendants, claimed the rights
+which the Anglo-Saxon magnates had once possessed. They, too, appealed
+incessantly to the _Laga_, the laws of Edward the Confessor, by which
+was meant the collection of old legal customs, the observation of
+which had been promised from the first. Following the precedent of
+their kings, the families that had risen through the Conquest regarded
+themselves as the heirs of the fallen Anglo-Saxon chiefs, into whose
+place they had stepped. The rights of the old Witan and of the vassals
+of the new feudal state became fused together.
+
+We must now lay greater weight than is commonly done on the incidents
+that occurred during King Richard's absence. He had entrusted the
+administration of the realm to a man of low origin, William, bishop of
+Ely, who carried it on with great energy, and not without the pomp and
+splendour, which grace authority, but arouse jealousy. Hence lay and
+spiritual chiefs combined against him: with Earl John, the brother of
+the absent King, at their head, they banished the hated bishop by the
+strong hand, and of their own authority set another in his place. The
+city of London, which had been already allowed the election of its own
+magistrates by Henry II, had then formed a so-called _Communia_ after
+the pattern of the Flemish and North French towns; bishops, earls, and
+barons, swore to support the city in it.[28]
+
+These first attempts at an opposition by the estates obtained fresh
+weight when on Richard's death a contest again arose about the
+succession. Earl John claimed it for himself, but Arthur, an elder
+brother's son, seemed to have a better right, and had been moreover
+recognised at once in the South French provinces. The English nobles
+fortified their castles, and for some time assumed an almost
+threatening position; they only acknowledged John on the assurance
+that each and all should have their rights.[29] John's possession of
+the crown was therefore derived not merely from right of inheritance,
+but also from their election.
+
+A strong territorial confederacy had thus gradually grown up,
+confronting the royal power with a claim to independent rights; events
+now happened that roused it into full life.
+
+King John incurred the suspicion of having murdered Arthur, who had
+fallen into his hands, to rid himself of his claims; he was accused of
+it by the peers of France, and pronounced guilty; on which the
+Plantagenet provinces which were fiefs of the French crown went over
+to the King of France at the first attack. The English nobility would
+at least not fight for a sovereign on whom such a heinous suspicion
+lay: on another pretence it abandoned him.
+
+But then broke out a new quarrel with the Church. The most powerful
+pontiff that ever sat in the Roman See, Innocent III, thought good to
+decide a disputed election at Canterbury by passing over both
+candidates, including the King's, and caused the election of, or
+rather himself named, one of his friends from the great school at
+Paris, Stephen Langton. As King John did not acknowledge him, Innocent
+laid England under an Interdict.
+
+Alike careless and cruel, naturally hasty and untrustworthy, of
+doubtful birthright, and now rejected by the Church, John must have
+rather expected resistance than support from the great men of the
+realm. He tried to assure himself of those he suspected by taking
+hostages from their families; he confiscated the property of the
+ecclesiastics who complied with the Pope's orders, and took it under
+his own management; he employed every means which the still unlimited
+extent of the supreme authority allowed, to obtain money and men;
+powerfully and successfully he used the sword. But in the long run he
+could not maintain himself by these means. When a revolt broke out in
+Wales at the open instigation of the Pope, and the King's vassals were
+summoned to put it down, even among them a general discontent was
+perceptible; John had reason to dread that if he came near the enemy
+with such an army he might be delivered into their hands or killed: he
+did not venture to carry out the campaign. And meanwhile he saw
+himself threatened from abroad also. King Philip Augustus of France
+armed, to attack his old opponent at home (whom he had already driven
+from in those provinces over which he himself was feudal sovereign),
+and to carry out the Pope's excommunication against him. He boasted,
+probably with good grounds, of having the English barons' letters and
+seals, promising that they would join him. He would have restored all
+the fugitives and exiles; the Church element would have raised itself
+all the more strongly, in proportion to its previous depression; a
+general revolt would have accompanied his attack, the English
+government according to all appearance would have been lost.
+
+King John knew this well: to avoid immediate ruin he seized on a means
+of escape which was completely unexpected, but quite decisive--he gave
+over his kingdom in vassalage to the Pope.
+
+What William I had so expressly rejected was now accepted in a moment
+of extreme pressure, from which such a step was the only means of
+escape. The moment the Pope was recognised as feudal lord of England,
+not only must his hostility cease, but he would be bound to take the
+realm under his protection. He now forbade the King of France, whom he
+had before urged on to its conquest, to carry out the invasion, which
+was already prepared.
+
+It appears as if the barons had originally agreed with the King's
+proceeding, although they did not entirely approve its form. They
+maintained that they had risen up for the Church's rights,[30] and saw
+in the Pope a natural ally. They thought to gain their own purpose all
+the more surely now that Stephen Langton received the see of
+Canterbury, a man who, while he represented the Papal authority, at the
+same time zealously made their interests his own. At the very moment
+when the archbishop absolved the King from the excommunication, he made
+him swear that he would restore the good laws, especially those of King
+Edward, and would do all according to the legal decisions of his
+courts. It may be regarded as the first time that a Norman-Plantagenet
+king's administration was acted on by an obligatory engagement, when
+King John, on the point of taking the field against some barons whom he
+regarded as rebels, was hindered by the archbishop who reminded him
+that he would thus be breaking his last oath, which bound him to take
+judicial proceedings. The tradition that a forgotten charter of Henry I
+was produced by the archbishop (who was certainly, as his writings
+show, a scholar of research), and recognised as a legal document which
+gave them a firm footing, may admit of some doubt; there is no doubt
+that it was Stephen Langton who gathered around him the great nobles
+and bound them by a mutual engagement, to defend, even at the risk of
+life, the old liberties and rights which they derived from Anglo-Saxon
+times.
+
+It was, in fact, of considerable importance that the primate, on whose
+co-operation with the King the Norman state originally rested, united
+himself in this matter as closely as possible with the nobles; among
+all alike, without regard to their origin, whether from France or from
+England, had arisen the wish to limit the crown, as it had been
+limited in the Anglo-Saxon period.
+
+Here, however, they had to discover that the Pope was minded to
+protect the King, his vassal, not only against attacks from abroad,
+but also against movements at home. The engagements which the barons
+had formed, when he released them from their oath of fidelity to the
+King, he now declared to be invalid and void. The legate in England
+reported unfavourably on their proceedings, and it was seen that he
+was intimately allied with the King. The war was still raging on the
+continent, and the King had been again defeated, at Bouvines, July 27,
+1214; he had returned disheartened, but not without bodies of
+mercenaries, both horse and foot, which excited anxiety in the allied
+nobles. This feeling was strengthened by the fact that, after the
+death of a chancellor connected with them by family, and on good terms
+with them, he raised a foreigner, Peter des Roches, to that dignity,
+and it was believed that this foreigner would lend a hand to any
+attempt at restoring the previous state of things. Acts of violence of
+the old sort, and the King's lusts, which brought dishonour into their
+families, added to their indignation. In short, the barons, far from
+breaking up their alliance, confirmed it with new oaths. While they
+pressed the King to accept the demands which they laid before him,
+they sent one of the chief of their number, Eustace de Vescy, to Rome,
+to win the Pope to their cause, by reminding him of the gratitude due
+to them for their services in the cause of the Church. As lord of
+England, for they did not hesitate to designate him as such, he might
+admonish King John, and, if necessary, force him to restore unimpaired
+the old rights guaranteed them by the charters of earlier Kings.[31]
+
+But not so did Innocent understand his right of supreme lordship in
+England; he did not side with those who had helped to win the victory
+for him over the King, but with the King himself, to whose sudden
+decision he owed its fruits--the acknowledgment of his feudal
+superiority. He blamed the archbishop for concealing the movements of
+the barons from him, and for having, perhaps, even encouraged them,
+though knowing their pernicious nature: with what view was he stirring
+questions of which no mention had been made either under the King's
+father or brother? He censured the barons for refusing the scutage,
+which had been paid from old times, and for their threat of proceeding
+sword in hand. He repeated his command to them to break up their
+confederacy, under threat of excommunication.
+
+As one step lower the primate and nobles, so in the highest sphere
+Innocent and John were in alliance. The Papacy, then in possession of
+supremacy over the world, made common cause with royalty. Would not
+the nobles, some from reverence for the supreme Pontiff's authority,
+others from a sense of religious obligation, yield to this alliance?
+Such was not their intention.[32]
+
+The King proffered the barons an arbitration, the umpire to be the
+Pope, or else an absolute reference of the whole matter to him, who
+then by his apostolic power could settle what was right and lawful.
+They could not possibly accept either the one or the other, after the
+known declarations of the Pope. As they persevered in their hostile
+attitude, the King called on the archbishop to carry out the
+instructions of a Papal brief, and pronounce the barons
+excommunicated. Stephen Langton answered that he knew better what was
+the true intention of the holy father. The Pope's name this time
+remained quite powerless. Rather it was preached in London that the
+highest spiritual power should not encroach on temporal affairs;
+Peter, in the significant phrase of the time, could not be Constantine
+as well.[33] Only among the lower citizens was there a party
+favourable to the King, but they were put down at a blow by the great
+barons and the rich citizens. The capital threw its whole weight on
+the side of the barons. They rose in arms and formally renounced their
+allegiance to the King; they proclaimed war against him under the name
+of 'the army of God.' Thus confronted by the whole kingdom, in which
+there appeared to be only one opinion, the King had no means of
+resistance remaining, no choice left.
+
+He came down--15th June, 1215--from Windsor to the meadow at
+Runnymede, where the barons lay encamped, and signed the articles laid
+before him, happy enough in getting some of them softened. The Great
+Charter came into being, truly the 'Magna Charta,' which throws not
+merely all earlier, but also the later charters into the shade.
+
+It is a document which, more than any other, links together the
+different epochs of English history. With a renewal of the earliest
+maxims of German personal freedom it combines a settlement of the
+rights of the feudal Estates: on this twofold basis has the proud
+edifice of the English constitution been erected. Before all things
+the lay nobles sought to secure themselves against the misuse of the
+King's authority in his feudal capacity, and as bound up with the
+supreme jurisdiction; but the rights of the Church and of the towns
+were also guaranteed. It was especially by forced collections of
+extraordinary aids that King John had harassed his Estates: since they
+could no longer put up with this, and yet the crown could not dispense
+with extraordinary resources, a solution was found by requiring that
+such aids should not be levied except with the consent of the Great
+Council, which consisted of the lords spiritual and temporal. They
+tried to set limits to the arbitrary imprisonments that had been
+hitherto the order of the day, by definite reference to the law of the
+land and the verdict of sworn men. But these are just the weightiest
+points on which personal freedom and security of property rest; and
+how to combine them with a strong government forms the leading problem
+for all national constitutions.
+
+Two other points in this document deserve notice. In other countries
+also at this epoch emperors and kings made very comprehensive
+concessions to the several Estates: the distinctive point in the case
+of England is, that they were not made to each Estate separately, but
+to all at the same time. While elsewhere each Estate was caring for
+itself, here a common interest of all grew up, which bound them
+together for ever. Further, the Charter was introduced in conscious
+opposition to the supreme spiritual power also; the principles which
+lay at the very root of popular freedom breathed an anti-Romish
+spirit.
+
+Yet it was far from possible to regard them as being fully
+established. There were also conditions contained in the Charter, by
+which the legal and indispensable powers of the King's government were
+impaired: the barons even formed a controlling power as against the
+King. It could not be expected that King John, or any of his
+successors, would let this pass quietly. And besides, was not the Pope
+able to do away with the obligation of which he disapproved? We still
+possess the first draft of the Charter, which presents considerable
+variations from the document in its final form, among others the
+following. According to the draft the King was to give an assurance
+that he would never obtain from the Pope a revocation of the
+arrangements agreed on; the archbishop, the bishops, and the Papal
+plenipotentiary, Master Pandulph, were to guarantee this assurance. We
+see to what quarter the anxieties of the nobles pointed, how they
+wished above all to obtain security against the influences of the
+Papal See. Yet this they were not able to obtain. There was no mention
+in the document either of the bishops or of Master Pandulph; the King
+promised in general, not to obtain such a revocation from any one;
+they avoided naming the Pope.[34]
+
+In reality it made no difference, whatever might be promised or done
+in this respect. Innocent III was not the man to accept quietly what
+had taken place against his declared will, or to yield to accomplished
+facts. On the authority of the words 'I have set thee over the nations
+and over the kingdoms,' which seemed to him a sufficient basis for his
+Paramount Right, he gave sentence rejecting the whole contents of the
+Charter; he suspended Stephen Langton, excommunicated the barons and
+the citizens of London, as the true authors of this perverse act, and
+forbade the King under pain of excommunication to observe the Charter
+which he had put forth.
+
+And even without this King John had already armed, to annul by force
+of arms all that he had promised. A war broke out which took a turn
+especially dangerous to the kingdom, because the barons called the
+heir of France to the English throne and did him homage. So little
+were the feelings of nationality yet developed, that the barons fought
+out the war against their King, supported by the presence and military
+Power of a foreign prince. For the interests of the English crown it
+was perhaps an advantage that King John died in the midst of the
+troubles, and his rights passed to his son Henry, a child to whom his
+father's iniquity could not be imputed.[35] In his name a royalist
+party was formed by the joint action of Pembroke, the Marshal of the
+kingdom and the Papal Legate, which at last won such advantages in the
+field, that the French prince was induced to surrender his claim,
+which he himself hardly held to be a good one--the English were
+designated as traitors by his retinue,--and give back to the barons
+the homage they had pledged him. But he did so only on the condition
+that not merely their possessions, but also the lawful customs and
+liberties of the realm should be secured to them.[36] At a meeting
+between Henry III and the French prince at Merton in Surrey, it was
+agreed to give Magna Charta a form, in which it was deemed compatible
+with the monarchy. In this shape the article on personal freedom
+occurs; on the other hand everything is left out that could imply a
+power of control to be exercised against the King; the need of a grant
+before levying scutage is also no longer mentioned. The barons
+abandoned for the time their chief claims.
+
+It is, properly speaking, this charter which was renewed in the ninth
+year of Henry III as Magna Charta, and was afterwards repeatedly
+confirmed. As we see, it did not include the right of approving taxes
+by a vote.
+
+Whether men's union in a State in general depends on an original
+contract, is a question for political theorists, and to them we leave
+its solution. On the other hand, however, it might well be maintained
+that the English constitution, as it gradually shaped itself, assumed
+the character of a contract. So much is already involved in the first
+promises which William the Conqueror made at his entry into London and
+in his agreement with the partisans of Harold. The same is true of the
+assurances given by his sons, especially the second one: they were the
+price of a very definite equivalent. More than any that had gone
+before however does Magna Charta bear this character. The barons put
+forward their demands: King John negociates about them, and at last
+sees himself forced to accept them. It is true that he soon takes
+arms to free himself from the obligation he has undertaken. It comes
+to a struggle, in which, however, neither side decidedly gains the
+upper hand, and they agree to a compromise. It is true the barons did
+not expressly stipulate for the new charter when they submitted to
+John's son (for with John himself they could certainly have never been
+reconciled), but yet it is undeniable that without it their submission
+would never have taken place, nor would peace have been concluded.
+
+As, however, is generally the case, the agreement had in it the germs
+of a further quarrel. The one side did not forget what it had lost,
+the other what it had aimed at and failed to attain. Magna Charta does
+not contain a final settlement, by which the sovereign's claims to
+obedience were reconciled with the security of the vassals; it is less
+a contract that has attained to full validity, than the outline of a
+contract, to fill up which would yet require the struggles of
+centuries.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[22] He says himself later, 'terror publicae potestatis me intrusit,'
+in Gervasius, 497.
+
+[23] Canones Concilii Turonensis, Article III, 'ut laici ecclesiastica
+non usurpent;' and Article I of those previously omitted in Mansi,
+XXI. 1178 seq.
+
+[24] Concilium Clarendoniae, 8 Cal. Febr. MCLXIV, Article VIII, de
+appellationibus. 'Si archiepiscopus defuerit in justitia exhibenda, ad
+dominum regem perveniendum est postremo; ita quod non debeat ultra
+procedi absque assensu domini regis.' Wilkins, i. 435.
+
+[25] Rogeri de Hoveden Annales ed. Savile, 283. 6. 'Prohibeo vobis ex
+parte omnipotentis dei et sub anathemate, ne faciatis hodie de me
+judicium, quia appellavi ad praesentiam domini papae.' None, however,
+of the accounts we have can be looked on as quite accurate.
+
+[26] 'Ambigua fata formidans.' Knyghton de eventibus Angliae, 2391.
+
+[27] Gervasius 1414 'se ignobiles et ignavos homines nutrivisse,
+quorum nec unus tot sibi illatas injurias voluerit vindicare.'
+
+[28] 'Episcopi comites et barones regni--juraverunt quod ipsi eam
+communiam et dignitatem civitatis Londinensis custodirent.'
+
+[29] Hoveden, p. 450, 'quod redderet unicuique illorum ius suum, si
+ipsi illi fidem servaverint et pacem.'
+
+[30] 'Quod ipsi audacter pro libertate ecclesiae ad mandatum suum se
+opposuerint,--honores quos ei (Papae) et romanae ecclesiae
+exhibuistis, id per eos coactus fecistis.'--Mauclerc, literae ad
+legem, in Rymer, Foedera, i.
+
+[31] Mauclerc, literae de negotio Baronum, in Rymer, Foedera, i. 185:
+'Magnates Angliae--instanter domino Papae supplicant, quod cum ipse
+sit dominus Angliae vos--compellat, antiquas libertates suas--eis
+illaesas conservare.'
+
+[32] Literae Johannis regis, quibus quae sit baronum contumacia
+narrat. Apud Odiham, 29 die Maii.
+
+[33] In Matthew Paris: 'Quod non pertinet ad papam ordinatio rerum
+laicarum.'
+
+[34] Articuli magnae cartae libertatum, Sec. 49. Magna carta regis
+Johannis. In Blackstone, the Great Charter, 9, 23.
+
+[35] Matthew Paris. 'Nobiles universi et castellani ei multo facilius
+adhaeserunt, quia propria patris iniquitas filio non debuit imputari.'
+
+[36] Forma pacis inter Henricum et Ludovicum, in Rymer, i. 221.
+'Coadiutores sui habeant terras suas--et rectas consuetudines et
+libertates regni Angliae.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+FOUNDATION OF THE PARLIAMENTARY CONSTITUTION.
+
+
+There is a very accurate correspondence in this epoch also between the
+general history of the Western world and events in England: these last
+form but a part of the great victory of the hierarchy and its advance
+in power, which marks the first half of the 13th century. By combining
+with the vassals the Popes had overcome the monarchy, and had then in
+turn overcome the vassals by combining with the monarchy and its
+endangered rights. It must not be regarded as a mere title, an empty
+word, if the Pope was acknowledged to be feudal Lord of England: his
+legates, Gualo, Pandulph, Otho, and with them some native prelates,
+devoted to him (above all that Peter des Roches, who, by his conduct
+when Bishop of Winchester, through the mistrust awakened, incurred
+almost the chief responsibility of the earlier troubles), spoke the
+decisive word in the affairs of the kingdom and crushed their
+opponents. It was reported that Innocent IV was heard to say, 'Is not
+the King of England my vassal, my servant? At my nod he will imprison
+and punish.'[37] Under this influence the best benefices in the
+kingdom were given away without regard to the freedom of election or
+the rights of patrons, and in fact mostly to foreigners. The Pope's
+exchequer drew its richest revenues from England; there was no end to
+the exactions of its subordinate agents, Master Martin, Master Marin,
+Peter Rubeo, and all the rest of them. Even the King surrounded
+himself with foreigners. To his own relations and to the relations of
+his Provencal wife fell the most profitable places, and the advantages
+arising from his paramount feudal rights; they too exercised much
+influence on public affairs, and that in the interests of the Papal
+power, with which they were allied. Riotous movements occasionally
+took place against this system, but they were suppressed: men suffered
+in silence as long as it was only the exercise of rights once
+acknowledged. But now it happened that the Popes in their war with the
+last of the Hohenstaufen, whom they had resolved to destroy, proposed
+to employ the resources of England and in a very different manner than
+before. They awoke Henry III's dynastic ambition by promoting the
+elevation of his brother to be King of the Romans, and destining his
+younger son Edmund for the crown of Naples and Sicily. King Henry
+pledged himself in return to the heaviest money-payments. It began to
+appear as if England were no longer a free kingdom, using its
+resources for its own objects: the land and all its riches was at the
+service of the Pope at Rome; the King was little more than a tool of
+the hierarchy.
+
+It was at this crisis that the Parliaments of England, if they did not
+actually begin, yet first attained to a definite form and efficiency.
+
+The opposition of the country to the ecclesiastico-temporal government
+became most conspicuous in the year 1257, when Henry, happy beyond
+measure in his son's being raised to royal rank by the Apostolic See,
+presented his son to the Great Council of the nation, already wearing
+the national costume of Naples, and named the sum, to the payment of
+which he had pledged himself in return. The Estates at once refused
+their consent to his accepting the crown, which they considered could
+not be maintained owing to the untrustworthiness of the Italians, and
+of the Romish See itself, and the distance of the country; the
+money-pledge excited loud displeasure. Since they were required to
+redeem it, they reasonably enough gave it to be understood that they
+ought to have been consulted first. It was precisely the alliance of
+the Pope and the King that they had long felt most bitterly; they said
+truly, England would by such a joint action be as it were ground to
+dust between two millstones. As, however, despite all remonstrances,
+the demands were persevered with,--for the King had taken on himself
+the debts incurred by Pope Alexander IV in the Neapolitan war, and the
+Pope had already referred to England the bankers entrusted with the
+payments,--a storm of opposition broke out, which led to what was
+equivalent to an overthrow of the government. The King had to consent
+to the appointment of a committee for reforming the realm, to be named
+in equal proportions by himself and by the barons; from this, however,
+was selected a council of fifteen members, in which the King's
+opponents had a decisive majority. They put forth Statutes, at Oxford,
+which virtually stripped the King of his power; he had to swear to
+them with a lighted taper in his hand. The Pope without hesitation at
+once condemned these ordinances; King Louis IX of France also, who was
+called in as arbiter, decided against them: and some moderate men drew
+back from them: but among the rest the zeal with which they held to
+them was thus only inflamed to greater violence. They had the King in
+their power, and felt themselves strong enough to impose their will on
+him as law.
+
+Without doubt they had the opinion of the country on their side. For
+the first time since the Conquest the insular spirit of England, which
+was now shared even by the conquerors themselves, manifested itself in
+a natural opposition to all foreign influence. The King's
+half-brothers with their numerous dependents were driven out without
+mercy, their castles occupied, their places given to the foremost
+Englishmen. The Papal legate Guido, one of the most distinguished
+members of the Curia, who himself became Pope at a later time, was
+forbidden to enter England. Most foreigners, it mattered not of what
+station or nationality, were forced to quit the realm: it went hard
+with those who could not speak English. The leader of the barons,
+Simon de Montfort, was solemnly declared Protector of the kingdom and
+people; he had in particular the lower clergy, the natural leaders of
+the masses, on his side. When he was put under the ban of the Church
+his followers retorted by assuming the badge of the cross, since his
+cause appeared to them just and holy.[38]
+
+At this very juncture it was that the attempt was made to form a
+Parliamentary Assembly corresponding to the meaning of that word.
+
+The Statutes or Provisions of Oxford contain the first attempt to
+effect this, by enacting that thrice every year the newly formed royal
+Council should meet together with twelve men elected by the Commonalty
+of England, and consult on the affairs of the kingdom.[39] There is no
+doubt that these twelve belonged to the nobles and were to represent
+them: the decisive point lies in the fact that it was not a number of
+nobles summoned by the King, but a committee of the Estates chosen by
+themselves that was placed by the side of the Council. The Council and
+the twelve persons elected formed for some years an association that
+united the executive and legislative powers.
+
+But this continued only as long as the King acquiesced in it. When he
+had the courage to resist, it is true that in the first encounter
+which ensued, he was himself taken prisoner: but his partisans were
+not crushed by this; and soon after his wife, who had collected about
+her a considerable body of mercenaries, in concert with the Pope and
+the King of France, thought herself strong enough to invade England.
+Simon felt that he needed a greater, in other words, a broader, basis
+of support. And the design he then conceived has secured him an
+imperishable memory. He summoned first of all representatives of the
+knights of the shires, and directly afterwards representatives of the
+towns and the Cinque Ports, to form a Parliament in conjunction with
+the nobles of the realm. This was not an altogether new thing in the
+European world; we know that in the Cortes of Aragon, as early as the
+12th century, by the side of the high nobility and the ecclesiastics
+there appeared also the Hidalgos and the deputies of the Commons; and
+Simon de Montfort might well be aware of this, since his father had
+been in so many ways connected with Aragon. In England itself under
+King John men had come very near it without however carrying it
+through: not till afterwards did the innovation appear a real
+necessity. In opposition to the one-sided power exercised by the
+foreigners, nothing was so much insisted on in daily talk and in the
+popular ballads as the propriety of calling the natives of the land to
+counsel, since to them its laws were best known. This justifiable wish
+met with adequate satisfaction now that the Commons were summoned; the
+public feeling against the foreigners, on which Simon de Montfort
+necessarily relied, thus found expression. The assembly which he
+called together doubtless sympathised with his party views. As he
+invited only those nobles to it who remained true to him (they were
+not more than twenty-three in number), so he appears to have summoned
+those only of the towns which adhered to him unconditionally. But the
+arrangement involved more than was contemplated from his point of
+view.
+
+Amid the storms he had called forth Simon de Montfort perished: the
+King was freed, the royal authority re-established. A new Papal legate
+entered London in the full splendour of his office, Cardinal Ottoboni;
+Guido having meanwhile himself obtained the tiara, and using every
+means to subdue the unbending spirits, from which danger even to the
+Church was dreaded.[40] Yet the old state of things was not restored:
+neither the rule of foreigners, nor the absolute dependence on the
+Papal policy. The later government of Henry III has a different
+character from the earlier: the legate himself confirmed Magna Charta
+in the shape finally accepted. It is not merely at the great national
+festivals that we find representatives of the towns present, whom the
+King has summoned; it is beyond a doubt that one of the most important
+statutes of the time was passed with their consent.[41] Yet
+regulations for the summons of representatives from the towns were as
+little fixed by law as those for voting the taxes. It would by no
+means harmonise with the constitution of Romano-German states, that
+organic institutions should come into full force in mere antagonism to
+the highest authority. They must coincide with the interests of that
+authority, as was the case in England under Henry's warlike son Edward
+I.
+
+Without doubt Edward, who once more revived in the East the reputation
+of the Plantagenet Kings for personal valour, would have preferred to
+fight there for the interests of Christendom, he even speaks of it in
+his will; or else he would have wished to recover from the French
+crown the lands which his father had inherited, and which had passed
+into French possession; but neither the one nor the other was
+possible; another object was assigned to his energy and his ambition,
+one more befitting an English king: he undertook to unite the whole
+island under his sceptre.
+
+In Wales, the conquest of which had been so often attempted and so
+often failed, there lived at this time Prince Llewellyn, whose
+personal beauty, cunning, and high spirit fitted him to be a brilliant
+representative of the old British nationality. The bards, reviving the
+old prophecies, promised him the ancient crown of Brutus; but when he
+ventured out of the mountains, he was overpowered and fell in a
+hand-to-hand conflict. The English crown was not to fall to his lot,
+but Edward transferred the title of Prince of Wales to his own son.
+The great cross of the Welsh, the crown of Arthur, fell into his
+hands: he no longer tolerated the bards: their age passed away with
+the Crusades.
+
+From Wales Edward turned his arms against Scotland. There Columban had
+in former days anointed as king a Scottish prince, who was also of
+Keltic descent; how the German element nevertheless got the upper hand
+not merely in the greatest part of the country, but also in the ruling
+family, is the great problem of early Scottish history: a thoroughly
+Germanic monarchy had arisen, but one which after it had once given a
+home to the Anglo-Saxons who fled before the Normans, thought its
+honour concerned in repelling all English influences. A disputed
+succession gave Edward I an opportunity of reviving the claims of his
+predecessors to the overlordship of Scotland: he gave the Scotch a
+king, whom the Scotch rejected simply because he was the English
+King's nominee. The war, which sometimes seemed ended--there were
+times at which Edward could regard himself as the Lord of all
+Albion,--ever blazed out again; above all, the support the Scotch
+received from the King of France brought about complications which
+filled all Western Europe with trouble and war; but it was in the home
+politics of England that their effect was destined to be greatest.
+
+Compelled to make incessant efforts, which exhausted the resources of
+the crown, Edward appealed to the voluntary assistance of his
+subjects. He laid down to them the principle, that their common perils
+should be met with their united strength, that what concerns all must
+also be borne by all. In the war against Wales he had gathered
+together the representatives of the counties and the towns, to hear
+his demands and to act accordingly; chiefly to vote him subsidies.
+After the victory he had called an assembly of nobles, knights, and
+towns, to take counsel with them about the treatment of the captives
+and the country. Similarly he drew together the representatives of the
+towns in order to decide the affairs of Scotland. With especial
+emphasis did he call for their united help against Philip the Fair of
+France, who thought to destroy the English tongue from off the earth:
+knights and towns were pledged to help in carrying out the resolutions
+thus adopted by common consent.
+
+In spite of all this appealing to free participation in public
+matters, Edward I did not refrain from the arbitrary imposition of
+taxes, and those the most oppressive: the eighth, even the fifth part
+of men's income. For the campaign in Flanders he summoned the
+under-tenants as well as the tenants in chief. We find instances of
+arbitrary seizure of whatever was necessary for the war.
+
+King Edward excused this by his maxim that the interests of the land
+must be defended with the resources of the land,[42] but we can
+conceive how, on the boundary line between two different systems,
+acts of violence, which combined the arbitrariness of the one with the
+principles of the other, caused a general agitation. In the year 1297
+the spiritual lords under their archbishop, as well as the temporal
+ones (who denied the obligation to serve beyond the sea) under the
+Constable and Marshal, set themselves energetically to oppose the
+King. The people, which had the most to suffer from the arbitrary
+exactions, took their side with cordial approval. They set forth all
+the grievances of the country, and insisted on their immediate and
+final redress.
+
+To avoid the pressure, the King had already quitted England, to carry
+on his campaign in Flanders: the demand was laid before the
+Councillors whom he had left behind as assessors to his son, who was
+named Regent. They however were in great perplexity, partly from the
+trouble of this agitation itself, but mainly from the revolt in
+Scotland which had broken out in a formidable manner. William Walays,
+like one of those Heyduck chiefs who rise in Turkey against the
+established order of things, the right of which they do not recognise,
+had come down from the hill country, at the head of the fugitives and
+exiles, a robber-patriot, of gigantic bodily strength and innate
+talent for war. His successes soon increased his band to the size of
+an army; he beat the English in a pitched battle, and then swept over
+the borders into the English territory. If the royal commissioners
+would oppose a strong resistance to this inroad, they must needs
+ratify a provisional concession of the demands brought forward. The
+King, who had meanwhile reached Flanders, which the French had entered
+from two sides, could not possibly yield to the Scottish
+movement--whether he wished to carry on the war or make a truce:
+nothing therefore remained to him but to confirm the concessions made
+by his councillors.
+
+It is not absolutely certain how far these had gone; one word of
+discussion may be allowed on the matter.
+
+The historians of the time have maintained that the right of voting
+the taxes was granted to the Estates, and in fact conjointly to the
+nobles whether spiritual or temporal, and the representatives of the
+counties and towns: the copy of a statute is extant, in which this is
+very expressly stated.[43] But since the statute does not exist in an
+authentic shape, and is not to be found in the Rolls of the Realm, we
+cannot safely base any conclusion on it. As to the date too at which
+it may have been passed, our statements waver between the
+twenty-eighth and the thirty-fourth year of Edward. On the other hand
+we find in the collection of charters an undoubted charter of
+confirmation given at Ghent and dated 5 November 1297, in which not
+merely are the Great Charter of Henry III and the Forest Charter
+confirmed, but also some new arrangements of much importance
+guaranteed, and confirmed by ecclesiastico-judicial regulations.[44]
+According to it the grants of taxes and contributions which had been
+hitherto made to the King for his wars were not to be regarded as
+binding for the future. He reserves only the old customary taxes: to
+the higher clergy, the nobility, and the commons of the land the
+assurance is given, that under no circumstances, however pressing,
+should any tax or contribution or requisition--not even the export
+duty on wool--be levied except by their common consent and for the
+interests of all.[45] In the Latin text all sounds more open and less
+reserved: but even the words of the authentic document include a very
+essential limitation of the prerogative of the crown, which hitherto
+had alone exercised the right of estimating what the state needed and
+of fixing the payments by this standard. The King was averse at heart
+to the limitation even in this form. When he came back from Flanders
+after concluding a truce with France, and army and people were met
+together at York, to carry out a great campaign against Scotland, he
+was pressed to confirm on English soil the concessions which he had
+granted on foreign ground.[46] He held it advisable that the campaign
+should be first carried through; four of his confidential friends
+swore in his stead (since an oath in person was thought unbecoming to
+the King), that, the campaign ended, the confirmation should not be
+wanting. The enterprise was most successful, it led to a great victory
+over the Scots, and it was the leaders of the English aristocracy who
+did the best service there; nevertheless, when they met together next
+Lent (1299) in London, the King strove to avoid an absolute promise:
+he wished to expressly reserve the undefined 'rights of the crown.'
+But this delay aroused a general storm: and as he was quite convinced
+that he could not, under this condition, reckon on further support in
+the war which still continued, he at last submitted to what was
+unavoidable, and allowed his clause to drop.[47]
+
+I do not know whether I am mistaken in ascribing to these concessions
+a different character from that of the earlier ones. It was not a
+sovereign defeated and reduced to the deepest humiliation who made
+them, nor did the barons obtain articles which aimed at securing their
+own direct supremacy: the concessions were the result of the war,
+which could not be carried on with the existing means. When Edward I
+laid stress on the necessity of greater common efforts, the
+counter-demand which was made on him, and to which he yielded, merely
+implied that a common resolution should be previously come to. His
+concessions included a return for service already done, and a
+condition for future service. It did not abase the royal authority; it
+brought into clear view the unity of interests between the crown and
+the nation.
+
+Another great crisis united them for the second time. As Edward led
+the forces of England year by year across the Tweed, to compel the
+Scots to acknowledge his overlordship by the edge of the sword, the
+Pope who assumed himself to be the Suzerain of the kingdoms of the
+world, Boniface VIII, met him with the assertion that Scotland
+belonged to the Church of Rome, the King therefore was violating the
+rights of that Church by his invasions. To confront the Pope, King
+Edward thought it best, as did Philip the Fair of France about the
+same time, to call in his Estates to his aid, since without them no
+answer to the claim was possible. The Estates then in a long letter
+not merely maintain the right of the English crown, but also reject
+the Pope's claim to decide respecting it as arbiter, as incompatible
+with the royal dignity: even if the King wished it, yet they would
+never lend a hand to anything so unseemly and so unheard of.[48] The
+King, without regard to the Pope, continued his campaigns against
+Scotland with unabated energy.
+
+It marks the character of Edward I that he nevertheless did not break
+with the Papacy on this account; so too he still raised taxes that had
+not been voted, and held Parliaments in the old form: when
+representatives of the counties and towns were summoned it is not
+always clear whether they were elected or named.[49] Edward I could
+not free himself from the habits of arbitrary rule and the old ideas
+connected with them. But with all this it is still undeniable that
+under him the monarchy took a far more national position than before;
+it no longer stood in a hostile attitude as against the community of
+the land, but belonged to it.
+
+And his successors soon saw themselves forced to complete still
+further the foundations of a new state of things, which had been thus
+laid.
+
+Under Edward II the old ambition of the barons to take a preponderant
+part in the government reappeared once more with the greatest
+violence. The occasion was afforded by the weakness of this sovereign,
+who allowed his favourite, the Gascon Gaveston, a disastrous influence
+on affairs. Discontented with this, the King's nearest cousin, Thomas
+of Lancaster, placed himself at the head of the great nobles, as
+indeed he was believed to have sworn to his father in law (whose rich
+possessions passed to him, and who feared a return of the foreign
+influences), that he would adhere to the interest of the barons, which
+was also that of the country. In the fourth year of his government
+Edward was obliged to accept all the regulations made by a Committee
+of the Nobles called the 'Ordainers.'
+
+Without advice of the nobles he was forbidden either to begin a war,
+or to fill up high offices of State, or even to leave the country: the
+officers of the crown were to be responsible to them. Gaveston had to
+pay for his short possession of influence by death without mercy.
+
+It was long before the King found men who had the courage to defend
+the lawful authority of the crown. At last the two Hugh Despencers
+undertook it: under their leadership the barons were defeated, and
+Thomas of Lancaster in his turn paid for his enterprises with his
+life. For in England, if anywhere, the assumption of power led
+inevitably to the scaffold.
+
+It is hardly needful to say that the regulations of the Ordainers were
+now revoked. But must not some means be also thought of, to prevent
+similar acts of violence for the future? It was deemed necessary to
+declare even the form, under cover of which they had been ratified,
+invalid for all time. And so an enactment was now made, in which the
+first definite idea of the Parliamentary Monarchy becomes visible. It
+was declared that never for the future should any ordinance affecting
+the King's power and proceeding from his subjects be valid, but only
+that should be law which was discussed, agreed on, and enacted in
+Parliament by the King with the consent of the prelates, the earls and
+barons, and the commonalty of the realm.[50] For it was above all
+things necessary to withdraw the legislative authority for ever from
+the turbulent grandees. The monarchy opposed to them its alliance with
+the commonalty of the realm, as it was expressed by the
+representatives of the knights and the commons. Among the founders of
+the English constitution these Hugh Despencers, through whom the
+legislative power was first transferred to the united body of King
+Lords and Commons, take a very important position.
+
+This thought was however rather one left for the future to carry out,
+than one which swayed or contented the English world at the time.
+Edward II fell before a new attack of the revolted barons, with whom
+even his wife was allied: he had to think it a piece of good fortune
+that, on the ground of his own abdication, his son was acknowledged as
+his successor. The latter however could only obtain real possession of
+the royal power by overthrowing the faction to which his father had
+succumbed. While he restored the memory of the two Despencers, who had
+been condemned and executed by the barons, he also decided to carry on
+a Parliamentary government; it is the first that existed in England.
+
+For the general course of the development it is significant that the
+rights of Parliament in relation to the voting of taxes, and now also
+to legislation as a whole, were acknowledged before an appropriate
+form was found for its consultations. In the first years of Edward III
+its four constituent parts, prelates, barons, knights, and town
+deputies, held their debates in four different assemblies; but
+gradually the two first were fused into an Upper, the two last into a
+Second House, without any definite law being laid down to that effect:
+the nature of things led to the custom, the custom in course of time
+became law.
+
+That which had been already preparing under the first Edward came
+under the third for the first time into complete operation, viz. the
+participation of the Estates in the management of foreign affairs and
+of war.
+
+In the year 1333 the Parliament advised the King to break the peace
+with Scotland, which the barons had concluded of their own authority
+according to their own views, not to put up with any more outrages,
+and not merely to take back the lost border-fortress of Berwick, but
+to force the Scots to acknowledge the supremacy of England.
+
+In the year 1337 and afterwards the Parliament more than once approved
+the King's plan of asserting the claim he had through his mother on
+the French throne by force of arms and through alliances with foreign
+princes,[51] and promised to support him in it with their lives and
+properties; it was all the more ready for this, as France had been
+repeatedly threatening England with a new Conquest. In the year 1344
+the Peers, each in his own name, called on the King to cross the sea
+and not let himself be hindered by any one, not even by the Pope, from
+appealing to the judgment of God by battle. The clergy imposed on
+themselves a three-years' tenth, the counties a fifteenth, the towns
+two tenths; the great nobles followed him in person with their squires
+and horsemen, without even alluding to their old remonstrances. So
+that splendid army made its appearance in France, in which the weapons
+of the yeomen vied with those of the knights, and which, thanks
+chiefly to the former, won the victory of Cressy. Whilst the King made
+conquests over the French, his heroic Queen repelled the Scotch. In
+these wars the now united nation, which put forth all its strength,
+came for the first time to the feeling of its power, to a position of
+its own in the world and to the consciousness of it. The King of
+Scotland at that time, and the King of France some years later, became
+prisoners in England.
+
+A period followed in which England seemed to have obtained the
+supremacy in Western Europe. The Scots purchased their King's freedom
+by a truce which bound them to long and heavy payments, for which
+hostages were given as a security. A peace was made with the French by
+which Guienne, Gascony, Poitou, and such important towns as Rochelle
+and Calais were surrendered to the English. The Prince of Wales, who
+took up his residence at Bordeaux, mixed in the Spanish quarrels with
+the view of uniting Biscay to his territories in South France. As the
+result of these circumstances and of the well-calculated encouragement
+of Edward III, we find that English commerce prospered immensely and,
+in emulous alliance with that of Flanders, began to form another great
+centre for the general commerce of the world. It was still chiefly in
+the hands of foreigners, but the English made great profits by it.
+Their riches gained them almost as much prestige in the world as their
+bravery.[52] The more money-resources the towns possessed, and the
+more they could and did support the King, the greater became their
+influence on the affairs of the realm. No language could be more
+humble than that of these 'poor and simple Commons,' when they address
+themselves to 'their glorious and thrice gracious King and lord.'[53]
+But for all that their representations are exceedingly comprehensive
+and pressing; their grants are not to take effect, unless their
+grievances are redressed; they never leave out of sight the interests
+of their staple; they assail the exactions of the officials or the
+clergy with great zeal. The regard paid to them gives the whole
+government a popular character.
+
+On an attempt of the King to exercise the legislative power in his
+great council, they remonstrated; they had no objection to the
+ordinances themselves, but insisted that valid statutes could only
+proceed from the lawfully assembled Parliament.
+
+Now too the relations to the Papal See came again into consideration.
+Seated at Avignon under the influence of the French crown, the Popes
+were natural opponents of Edward III's claims and enterprises; they
+sometimes thought of directing the censures of the Church against him.
+On the other hand, the complaints in England against the encroachments
+and pecuniary demands of the Curia were louder than ever, without
+however coming to a rupture on these points. But at last Urban V
+renewed the old claim to the vassalage of England; he demanded the
+feudal tribute first paid by King John, and threatened King and
+kingdom, in case they were not willing to pay it, with judicial
+proceedings.[54] We know the earlier kings had seen in the connexion
+with Rome a last resource against the demands of the Estates: on the
+King's side it required some resolution to renounce it. But the very
+nature of the Parliamentary government, as Edward III had settled it,
+involved a disregard of these considerations for the future. It was
+before the Parliament itself that he laid the Papal demands for their
+consent and counsel. The Estates consulted separately: first the
+spiritual and lay lords framed their resolution, then the town
+deputies assented to it. The answer they gave the Pope was that King
+John's submission was destitute of all validity, since it was against
+his coronation-oath, and was made without the consent of the Estates;
+should the Pope try to enforce satisfaction of his demand by legal
+process or in any other manner, they would all--dukes earls barons and
+commons--oppose him with their united force.[55] The clergy only
+assented to the declaration of invalidity; to threaten the holy father
+with their resistance, they considered unbecoming. But the declaration
+of the lay Estates was in itself sufficient for the purpose: the claim
+was never afterwards raised again.
+
+The Estates had often been obliged to contend against the King and the
+Roman See at the same time; now the King was allied with them against
+the Papacy. Now that the Parliamentary constitution was established in
+its first stage, it is clear how much the union of the Crown and the
+Estates in opposition to external influence had contributed to it. It
+was destined however shortly to undergo yet other tests.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[37] Matthew Paris, Historia Major ann. 1253, p. 750.
+
+[38] In Henr. Knyghton, 2445. According to Matthew Paris they swore,
+not to let themselves be held back by anything--'quin regnum, in quo
+sunt nati homines geniales et eorum progenitores, ab ingenerosis et
+alienigenis emundarent.'
+
+[39] 'Les XXIV ont ordene, ke treis parlemens seient par an,--a ces
+treis parlemens vendrunt les cunseillers le rei eslus,--ke le commun
+eslise 12 prodes hommes ke vendrunt as parlemens--pur treter de
+besoigne le rei et del reaume.' On the explanation of this passage,
+the 'Report on the dignity of a peer' 102 contains matter wellweighed
+on all sides.
+
+[40] Letter of Clement IV to Louis IX, in Rainaldus, 1265, p. 167.
+'Quid putas--per talia machinamenta quaeri? Nisi ut de regno illo
+regium nomen aboleatur omnino: nisi ut Christianus populus a devotione
+matris ecclesiae et observantia fidei orthodoxae avertatur.'
+
+[41] 'Convocatis discretioribus regni tam ex majoribus quam
+minoribus.' Statute of Marleberge, 1267.
+
+[42] 'Nostrae voluntatis fuit ut de bonis terrae ipsa terra
+conservaretur.' In Knyghton, ii, 2501.
+
+[43] Statutum de tallagio non concedendo, or Nova additio cartarum; in
+Hemingburgh, articuli inserti in magna charta.
+
+[44] 'Carta confirmationis regis Edwardi I,' in the collection of
+charters prefixed to the collection of the Statutes in the 'Statutes
+of the Realm,' p. 37.
+
+[45] 'Avuns graunte--as Arceevesques etc. e as Countes--e a toute la
+communaute de la terre que mes pur nule busoigne tieu manere des aydes
+mises ne prises de nre Roiaume ne prendrums fors ke par commun assent
+de tout le Roiaume e a commun profist de meismes le Roiaume, sauve les
+auncienes aydes e prises due e acoustumees.' The Articulus insertus in
+Magna Charta, according to the other statements, runs, 'nullum
+Tallagium vel auxilium imponatur seu levetur sine voluntate atque
+assensu communi Archiepiscoporum Episcoporum et aliorum liberorum
+hominum in regno nostro.'
+
+[46] Hemingburgh: eo quod confirmaverat eas in terra aliena.
+
+[47] Matthew of Westminster, 433. 'Procrastinatis quampluribus diebus
+demum videns rex quod non desisterent ab inceptis nec adquiescerent
+sibi in necessitatibus suis, respondit se esse paratum concedere et
+ratificare petita.'
+
+[48] At Lincoln, 21 Feb. 1301. In Rymer, Rainaldus, Spondanus.
+
+[49] Report 183; Hallam, Additional Notes 332.
+
+[50] Revocatio novarum ordinationum, 1323, 29 May, Statutes of the
+Realm I. 189, 'les choses, qui serount a establir--soient tretees
+accordees et establies en parlaments par notre Sr. le Roi et par
+lassent des Prelats Countes et Barouns et la communalte du roialme.'
+
+[51] Speech of W. Shareshall 1351, Parliamentary History (1762) i.
+295.
+
+[52] We know the letter of the Duke of Guelders, in which he praised
+equally 'lanae commoda,--divitias in comparatione ad alios reges
+centuplas,' and the 'probitas militaris, arcuum asperitas,' in Twysden
+ii. 2739.
+
+[53] Report 324.
+
+[54] 'Est en volunte de faire proces devers le roy et son roialme pur
+le dit service et cens recoverir.'
+
+[55] 'Qu'ils resisteront et contre esteront ove toute leur puissance.'
+Edw Coke first published the document, Institutes iv. 13. In Urban V's
+letter to Edward in Rainaldus 1365, 13, the demand is not so clearly
+expressed, but mention is made in it of the Nuncio's overtures; it is
+to these that the resolution of the Parliament referred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+DEPOSITION OF RICHARD II. THE HOUSE OF LANCASTER.
+
+
+England did not long maintain herself in the dominant position she then
+occupied; the plan of extending her rule into Spain proved ruinous to
+the Prince of Wales. Not merely was his protege overpowered by the
+French 'Free Companies,' which had gathered round his opponent: a
+Castilian war-fleet succeeded in destroying the English one in sight of
+the harbour of Rochelle. On this, their natural inclination towards the
+King of France awoke in the nobles and towns of South France; without
+great battles, merely by the revolt of vassals tired of his rule,
+Edward III again lost all the territories conquered with such great
+glory, except a few coast towns. Then a gloom settled down around the
+aged conqueror. He saw his eldest son, who, though obliged to quit
+France, in England enjoyed the fullest confidence and had every
+prospect of a great future, sicken away and die. And he too
+experienced, what befalls so many others, that misfortune abroad raised
+him up opponents at home. In the increasing weakness of old age, which
+gave rise to many well-grounded grievances, he could not maintain the
+independence of the royal power, with the re-establishment of which he
+had begun his reign. He was forced to receive into his Council men whom
+he did not like. He was still able to effect thus much, that the
+succession to the kingdom came to the son of the Prince of Wales,
+Richard II. But would he, a boy of eleven, be able to take the helm of
+the proud ship? Men saw factions arise that grouped themselves round
+the King's uncles, who were not fully disposed to defend his authority.
+
+The great question for English history now was, whether the
+Parliamentary constitution, whilst it limited the King's prerogative,
+would also give him security. For the Commons had been at last
+admitted into the King's Council chiefly in order that they might
+withstand the violence of the factions. The situation however was not
+without its complications, for with the political movement one of yet
+wider aim was connected.
+
+When the kingdom was at the very height of its power there arose in a
+college at Oxford the man who began that contest against the Papal
+supremacy which has never since ceased. John Wiclif attached himself
+first of all to the political movements of his time. One of his
+earliest writings was directed against the feudal supremacy of the
+Popes over England. He supported the Parliament's complaints of Romish
+Provisions and exactions of money, with great learning and at great
+length. Had his activity confined itself to these subjects, he would
+be hardly more remembered than perhaps Marsilius of Padua. What gave
+him quite a special significance was the fact that he brought into
+clear view the contradiction between the ruling form of the Church and
+the original documents of the Faith. From the claim of the Popes to be
+Christ's representatives, he drew the conclusion that they ought also
+to observe the Gospel which comes from the God-Man, follow His
+example, and give up their worldly power.[56] The leading Church
+dogma, that most closely connected with the hierarchic system, the
+dogma of Transubstantiation, he attacked as being one which equally
+contradicted Scripture and Reason. He urges his proofs with the
+acuteness of a skilful Schoolman, but throughout he shows a deep inner
+religious feeling. We may distinguish in him two separate tendencies.
+His appeal to Scripture, his attempt to make it accessible to the
+people, his treatment of dogmatic and religious questions which he
+will allow to be decided only by Revelation,--all this makes him an
+evangelic man, one of the chief forerunners of the German Reformation.
+But, as he himself felt, his strength lay rather in destruction than
+in construction. In asserting the doctrine that the title to office
+depends for its validity on personal worth, that even the rule of
+temporal lords rests on the favour in which they stand with God, and
+in raising subjects to be the judges over their oppressive masters, he
+entered on a path like that which the Taborites and the leaders of the
+peasants in Germany afterwards took.[57]
+
+And these were precisely the doctrines for which his scholars, who
+traversed the land to make them known, found a well prepared soil in
+the people of England. How could the rise of popular elements fail to
+call forth a kindred effort also among the lower classes? The belief
+arose that Nature intended all men to be equal. The country people
+spoke of their primitive rights, traces of which were found in the
+memorials of the Conqueror's times, and which had then been taken from
+them. When now, instead of seeing these respected, they were subjected
+to new impositions, and this with harshness and insolence, they rose
+in open revolt. So overpowering was the attack which they directed
+against the capital and the King's palace, that Richard II found
+himself forced to grant them a charter which secured them personal
+freedom. Had they contented themselves with this, they might have done
+best for themselves and perhaps for the crown, but when they demanded
+yet further and more extreme concessions, they roused against
+themselves the whole power of the organised State, for which they were
+as yet no match. The Mayor of London himself struck down with his
+dagger the leader of the bands, Wat Tyler, because he seemed to
+threaten the King; the Bishop of Norwich was not hindered by his
+spiritual character from levelling his lance against the
+insurgents;[58] after which he accompanied the leaders, who were taken
+and condemned to death, to the scaffold, with words of comfort; in
+other places the lay nobles did their best. When therefore in the next
+Parliament the King brought forward the proposal to declare the serfs
+free by a united resolution,--for the previous charter that had been
+wrung from him was considered invalid,--both Lords and Commons
+rejected it, as tending to disinherit them and prove pernicious to the
+kingdom.
+
+It is not to be supposed that a movement like this, which the lower
+class of citizens in the towns had joined, just as in the German
+peasant war, and which was mainly directed against the landed gentry,
+could be stifled by one defeat: it continued to ferment
+uninterruptedly in men's hearts.
+
+Still less did the condemnation passed by Convocation on the
+deviations from the teaching of the Church effect their suppression.
+On the basis of Wiclif's doctrines grew up the sect of the Lollards,
+which condemned the worship of images, pilgrimages, and other external
+church ceremonies, designated the union of judicial authority with
+spiritual office as unnatural--'hermaphroditism'--rejected
+excommunication with abhorrence, and made secret and systematic war
+against the whole Church establishment.
+
+But further besides these feuds there was one within the State system
+itself which now became most conspicuous.
+
+In the midst of the general ferment how necessary had a strong and
+resolute hand become! But Richard's government had shown itself
+somewhat weak; by many it was suspected of having meant to turn the
+disturbances to its own advantage. The commons, who mainly represented
+the lower gentry and the upper citizens, abandoned him, and attached
+themselves to the nobles, just as these revived their old jealousy
+against the crown. For the almost inevitable result of success in
+suppressing a popular agitation is to heighten the self-confidence of
+an aristocracy. Impatient at being excluded from all share in the
+government, and strengthened in his ambition by the military disasters
+of the last years, the youngest of Richard's uncles, Thomas of
+Gloucester, put himself at the head of the grandees, whose plans the
+commons, instead of opposing, now on the contrary adopted as their
+own. The great questions arose, which have so often since then
+convulsed the European world, as to the relation of a Parliamentary
+assembly to the Monarchy, and their respective rights.
+
+The first demand of the English Parliament was that the ministers of
+State should be named by it, or at least should be responsible to it.
+Much as this demand itself implies, yet even more extensive views were
+behind. The Peers told the King plainly that if he would not rule
+according to the common law and with their advice, it was competent
+for them to depose him, with consent of the people, and to raise
+another of the royal house to the throne;[59] they threatened him
+openly with the fate of Edward II.
+
+Richard could do nothing but submit. Eleven lords were appointed to
+restore order in the country; Richard had to swear to carry out all
+they should ordain (November 1386). There remained but one way by
+which to oppose this open violence: the King collected the chief
+judges at Nottingham, and laid the question before them, whether the
+Commission now forced upon him did not contravene the royal power and
+his prerogative. The judges were far from so interpreting the
+Constitution of England as to allow that the King is unconditionally
+bound by the commands of Parliament. They affirmed under their hand
+and seal that the appointment of that Commission against the King's
+will contravened his legal prerogative; those by whom he had been
+forced to accept it, and who had revived the recollection of the
+statute against Edward II, they declared to be guilty of high treason.
+But Parliament itself saw in this sentence not a judgment but an
+intolerable outrage. At its next sitting it summoned the judges before
+its tribunal, and in its turn declared them to be themselves guilty of
+high treason. Chief Justice Tresilian died a shameful death at Tyburn.
+The King lived to find yet harsher laws laid upon him: his uncle
+Gloucester was more powerful than he was himself.
+
+He was not however disposed to bear this yoke for ever. He first freed
+himself from the war with France, which tied his hands; by his
+marriage with Charles VI's young daughter he sought to win that king
+over as an ally on his own side; at home too he gained himself
+friends; when all was prepared, he struck a sudden blow (July 1397),
+which no one would have expected from him. He removed his leading
+opponents (above all his uncle Gloucester, and Arundel Archbishop of
+Canterbury), banished them or threw them into prison: then he
+succeeded in getting together a Parliament in which his partisans had
+the upper hand. It moreover completely adopted the ideas of the judges
+as to the Constitution; it revoked the statutes which had been forced
+on the King,[60] and gave effect to the sentence of Nottingham. By
+making the King a very considerable grant for his lifetime, it freed
+him from the necessity of summoning it anew; he rose at once to a high
+pitch of self-confidence: he was believed to have said that the laws
+of England consisted in his word of mouth.
+
+In England, just as in France at the same epoch, political opinions
+and parties ebbed and flowed in ceaseless antagonism. Richard's
+success was only momentary. He too, like so many of his ancestors, had
+incurred a grievous suspicion; the crime laid to his charge was that
+his uncle, who died in prison, had been murdered there by his command.
+Besides his absolute rule was not free from arbitrary acts of many
+kinds; among the great nobles each trembled for his own safety; the
+clergy, never on good terms with Richard, were impatient at being
+deprived of their Primate, who was to them 'the tower in the
+protecting bulwark of the Church.' In the capital too men were against
+a rule which seemed to put an end to popular influence; it needed only
+the return of an exile, the young Henry of Lancaster (whom the King
+would not allow to take possession of his inheritance by deputy, and
+who in conformity with the feeling of the time broke his ban to do
+himself right); all men then deserted the King; the nobles could now
+think of carrying out the threat which they had once hurled against
+him.
+
+Richard was compelled to call a Parliament, and at the moment it met
+to pronounce his own abdication. The Parliament was not contented with
+accepting this; it wished to put an end to all doubt for the future,
+and to establish its own right for ever.
+
+A long list of articles was drawn up, from which it was concluded that
+the King had broken his coronation oath and forfeited his crown; the
+assembled Estates, when severally and conjointly consulted, held them
+sufficient to justify them in proceeding to the King's deposition.
+They named Proctors, two for the clergy, two for the high
+nobility--one for the earls and dukes, the other for the barons and
+bannerets, two for the knights and commons--one for the Northern, the
+other for the Southern counties. They sat as a court of justice before
+the vacant throne, with the Chief Justice in their midst: then the
+first spiritual commissioner, the Bishop of S. Asaph, rose, and in the
+place and name and under the authority of the Estates of the realm
+announced the sentence of deposition against the late King, and
+forbade all men to receive any further commands from him. Some
+opposition was raised; it is said that the Bishop of Carlisle very
+expressly denied the right of subjects to sit in judgment on their
+hereditary sovereign;[61] but how could this have had any effect
+against the Parliament's claim which had been formulated so long?
+
+As the crown was now regarded as vacant, Henry of Lancaster arose,--in
+the name of God, as he said, whilst he made the sign of the cross on
+his forehead and breast,--to claim it for himself, in virtue of his
+birth and the right which accrued to him through God and the help of
+his friends. It was not properly speaking an election that now took
+place: the spiritual and lay lords, as well as the other members of
+the Parliament, were asked what their opinion of his claim was: the
+answer of all was that the Duke should be their King. When, conducted
+by the two archbishops, he ascended the vacant throne, he was greeted
+with the joyous acclaim of those assembled. The Archbishop of
+Canterbury made a speech full of unction, the drift of which was, that
+henceforth it would not be a child, such as the late sovereign had
+been, self-willed and void of understanding, but a Man that would rule
+over them, in the full maturity of his understanding, and resolved to
+do not so much his own will as the will of God.[62]
+
+Thus did the spiritual and lay nobility, in and with the Parliament,
+make good their claim to dispose of the crown. They went to work
+against Richard II with less reserve than against Edward II. In the
+latter case the Queen had taken part in the movement; they had set the
+son in his father's stead. But this time they did not wait for the
+actual consummation of the King's marriage; they raised a prince to
+the throne who had openly opposed him in the field, and was not even
+the next in succession. For there were still the descendants of an
+elder brother left, who according to English usage had a prior right.
+The Parliament held itself competent to settle on its own authority
+even the succession to the crown. It enacted that it should belong to
+the King's eldest son, and after him to his male issue, and on their
+failure to his brothers and their issue. The proposal formally to
+exclude succession in the female line did not pass; but for a long
+while to come the actual practice had that effect.
+
+Besides the motives involved in the extension of the Power of the
+Estates in and for itself there was yet another reason for such a
+proceeding. And this arose out of the growth, and increasing urgency,
+of the religious divisions. The Lollards preached, and taught in
+schools, according to their views: in the year 1396 in a petition to
+Parliament they traced all the moral evils and defects of the world to
+the fact that the clergy were endowed with worldly goods, and showed
+the advantage which would arise from the application of these to the
+service of the state and the prosecution of war.[63] They seem to have
+flattered themselves that by this they would win over the lay lords,
+but they were completely mistaken. For these remarked on the contrary
+that their own property had no better legal foundation than that of
+the clergy,[64] and only attached themselves to the rights of the
+Church all the more zealously.
+
+That which would have been impossible under Richard II's vacillating
+government, the first Lancaster now undertook: in full agreement with
+the Estates he a few days after his accession announced to Convocation
+that he purposed to destroy heretics and heresies to the best of his
+power.[65] In the next Parliament a statute was drawn up in which
+relapsed heretics were condemned to the flames. And still more
+remarkable than this mode of punishment, which was that of the
+Church-law, is the regulation of the procedure in this statute. In
+former times the sentence had been pronounced by the archbishop and
+the collective clergy of the province, and the King's consent had to
+be asked before it was executed. The decision was now committed to the
+bishop and his commissary, and the sheriff was instructed to inflict
+the punishment without further appeal, and to commit the guilty to the
+fire on the high grounds in the country, that terror might strike all
+the bystanders. It is clear how much the power of the bishops was thus
+extended. Soon after, on the proposal of the lay lords, at whose head
+the Prince of Wales is named, a further statute passed, in which to
+spread the rumour that King Richard was yet alive, and to teach that
+the prelates ought to be deprived of their worldly goods, are treated
+as offences of equal magnitude and threatened with a similar
+punishment; the object being alike in both,--to raise a tumult. And in
+fact, when Henry V himself had ascended the throne, an outbreak did
+occur, in which these causes co-operated. The Lollards were
+strengthened in their resistance to the government of the house of
+Lancaster by the rumour that their rightful King was yet alive. Henry
+V was obliged to crush them in open battle, and then force them to
+remain quiet by a new statute, which enacted the confiscation of their
+goods as well.[66] His alliance and friendship with the Emperor
+Sigismund was based on the fact, that he regarded the Hussites as only
+the successors of the Lollards.
+
+This orthodox tendency was now moreover combined with a strict
+Parliamentary government. Under the Lancasters there is no complaint
+as to illegal taxes; they allowed the moneys voted by the Parliament
+to be paid over to treasurers named by itself and accountable to it;
+that which earlier Kings had always rejected as an affront, the claim
+of Parliament to exercise a sort of supervision over the King's
+household, the Lancasters admitted; the royal officers were bound by
+oath to observe the statutes and the common law; the prerogative,
+hitherto exercised by the Kings, of softening the severity of the
+statutes by proclamations contravening their purpose was expressly
+abolished.
+
+The Lancasters owed their rise to their alliance with the clergy and
+the Parliament: a fact which determined the character and manner of
+their government. The most manifold results might be expected, even
+beyond the borders of England, from their having by this very alliance
+won for themselves a great European position.
+
+Nowhere was greater interest taken in Richard's fate than at the
+French court. Louis Duke of Orleans, whose voice was generally
+decisive there, once challenged the first Lancaster to a duel, and
+when he refused it pressed him hard with war. That Owen Glendower
+could once more maintain himself as Prince in Wales was entirely due
+to his French auxiliaries. That we find Henry IV more secure of his
+throne in his later years than in his earlier is a phenomenon the
+explanation of which we seek in vain in English affairs alone: it
+results from the fact that his powerful foe, Louis of Orleans, was
+murdered in the year 1407 at the instigation of John Duke of Burgundy,
+and that then the quarrel of the two parties, which divided France,
+burst out with increased violence, and remained long undecided. From
+the French there was no longer anything to fear: they emulously sought
+the alliance of the highest power in England; there even arose
+circumstances under which the Lancasters could think of renewing the
+claims of Edward III, from whom they too were descended.
+
+At the time that Henry V ascended the English throne, the Orleanists
+had again gained the preponderance in France: they unfurled the
+Oriflamme against the Duke of Burgundy, who was now in fact hard
+pressed. Henry negociated with them both. But while the Orleanists
+made difficulties about granting him the independent possession of the
+old English provinces, Burgundy declared himself ready to acknowledge
+him as King.[67] The common interests moreover of home politics allied
+him with this house.
+
+Henry could reckon on the sympathies of a part of the population of
+France, when he led the power of England across the sea. A successful
+battle in which he destroyed the flower of the French nobility gave
+him an undoubted superiority. The vengeance which the Orleanists
+wreaked even under these circumstances on the Duke of Burgundy, who
+was now murdered in his turn, brought the Burgundian party over
+completely to his side, together with the greater part of the nation.
+Things went so far that Charles VI of France decided to marry his
+daughter to the victorious Lancaster and to acknowledge him, as his
+heir after his death, as his representative during his life.
+
+It was a very extraordinary position which Henry V now occupied. The
+two great kingdoms, each of which by itself has earlier or later
+claimed to sway the world, were (without being fused into one) to
+remain united for ever under him and his successors. Philip the Good
+of Burgundy was bound to him by ties of blood and by hostility to a
+common foe: as heir of France Henry sat in the Parliament by which
+the murderers of the last duke, who were also the chief opponents of
+the new state of things, were prosecuted. Another promising connexion
+was opened to him by the marriage of the youngest of his brothers with
+Jaqueline of Holland and Hainault, who possessed still more extensive
+hereditary claims. Henry recommended the eldest to Queen Johanna of
+Naples to be adopted as her son and heir. The King of Castile and the
+heir of Portugal were descended from his father's sisters. The
+pedigrees of Southern and Western Europe alike met in the house of
+Lancaster, the head of which thus seemed to be the common head of all.
+
+In England Henry did not neglect to guard the rights of the National
+Church; but at the same time no one exerted himself more energetically
+to close the schism: the solemn condemnation of Wiclif's doctrines by
+the General Council of Constance served to vouch for his attitude in
+religious matters: the English Church obtained in it a place among the
+great National Churches.
+
+Henry V found himself in the advantageous position of a potentate
+raised to power by a usurpation for which he was not however
+personally responsible. He could spare and reinstate Richard II's
+memory, as much as in him lay, though he owed the crown to his
+overthrow. That he furthered and advanced also in France the municipal
+and parliamentary interests, which were his mainstay in England,
+procured him the obedience which was there paid him, and a European
+influence. In his moral character Henry ranks above most of the
+Plantagenets. He had no favourites and let no unjust acts be imputed
+to him. He was stern towards the great and careful for the common
+people; at his first word men could tell what they had to expect from
+him. The French were frightened at the keenness of his expression, but
+they reverenced his high spirit, his bravery and truthfulness. 'He
+transacts all his affairs himself; he considers them well before he
+undertakes them; he never does anything fruitlessly. He is free from
+excesses, and truthful: he never makes himself too familiar. On his
+face are visible dignity and supreme power.'[68] He possessed in full
+measure the bold impulses of his ancestors, their attention to the
+general affairs of Western Christendom. In the war with the Lollards
+he was once wounded; that he recovered from his wound was designated
+as the work of divine Providence, which had destined him to be the
+conqueror of the Holy Land. He informed himself about its state as it
+was then constituted under the Mameluke rule: a Chronicle of Jerusalem
+and a History of Godfrey of Bouillon were two of the books he loved
+most to read. And without doubt such an undertaking would have been
+the true means, if any such means were possible, of uniting more
+closely, by common undertakings successes and interests, the realms
+already bound together under one sceptre. The Ottomans had not yet
+extended themselves in the East with their full force: something might
+yet have been effected there; for the King of France and England, who
+was yet young in years, a great future seemed to be at hand.
+
+Sometimes it seems as though fortune were specially making a mock of
+man's frailty. In this fulness of power and of expectations, Henry V
+was attacked by a disease which men did not yet know how to cure and
+to which he succumbed. His heir was a boy, nine months old.
+
+Of the two surviving brothers of the deceased King, the younger ruled
+England under the already established predominance of the Estates of
+the Realm, while the elder governed France with an increased
+participation on the part of the Estates: their efforts could only be
+directed towards preserving these kingdoms for their nephew Henry VI.
+We might almost wonder that this succeeded so well for a time: in the
+long run it was impossible. The feeling of French nationality, which
+had already met the victor himself with secret warnings, found its most
+wonderful expression in the Maid who revived in the French their old
+attachment to their native King and his divine right; the English, when
+she fell into their hands, with ungenerous hate inflicted on her the
+punishment of the Lollards: but the Valois King had already gained a
+firm footing. It was Charles VII who understood how to appease the
+enmity of Burgundy, and in unison with the great men of his kingdom to
+give his power a peculiar organisation corresponding to its character,
+so that he was able to oppose to the English troops better armed than
+their own, and make the restoration of a firm peace even desirable for
+them. But this reacted on England in two ways. The government, which
+was inclined for peace, fell into as bitter a quarrel as any that had
+hitherto taken place with the national bodies politic, which either did
+not recognise this necessity, or attributed the disasters incurred to
+bad management. The man most trusted by the King fell a victim to the
+public hate. But, besides this, there arose--awakened by these events
+and in a certain analogy with what happened in France--the recollection
+of the rights which had been set aside by the accession of the house of
+Lancaster. Their representative, Richard Duke of York, had hitherto
+kept quiet; for he was fully convinced that a right cannot perish
+merely because it lies dormant. Cautiously and step by step, while
+letting others run the first risk, he at last came forward openly with
+his claim to the crown. Great was the astonishment of Henry VI, who as
+far as his memory reached had been regarded as King, to find his right
+to the highest dignity doubted and denied. But such was now the case.
+The nation was split into two parties, one of which held fast to the
+monarchy established by the Parliament, while the other wished to recur
+to the principle of legitimate succession then violated. Not that
+political conviction was the leading motive for their quarrel. First of
+all we find that the opponents of the government--though themselves of
+Parliamentary views--rallied round the banners of the hitherto
+forgotten right of birth. Every man fought, less for the prince whose
+device he bore, the red or the white rose, than for his own share in
+the enjoyment of political power. On both sides there arose chiefs of
+almost independent power, who clad their partisans in their own
+colours, at whose call those partisans were ready any moment to take
+arms: they appointed the sheriffs in the counties and were lords of the
+land. But when blood had once been shed, no reconciliation of the
+parties was possible. Ha, cried the victor to the man who begged for
+mercy, thy father slew mine, thou must die by my hand. In vain did men
+turn to the judges: for the statutes contradicted each other, and they
+could no longer decide where the right lay. From the Parliaments no
+solution of these questions could be expected; each served the
+victorious party, whose summons it obeyed, and condemned its opponent.
+As the resources on each side were tolerably equal, even the battles
+were not decisive: the result depended less upon real superiority than
+on accidental desertions or accessions, and most largely on foreign
+help. After the English had failed, during the antagonism of Valois and
+Burgundy, in establishing their supremacy on the Continent, the
+quarrel--quieted for a moment--which broke out again between Louis XI
+and Charles the Bold in the most violent manner, reacted on them with
+all the more vehemence. King Louis would not endure that a good
+understanding should exist between Edward IV and Duke Charles, to whom
+Edward had married his sister: he drew the man who had hitherto done
+the most for the Yorkist interests, the Earl of Warwick, over to his
+own side; and scarcely had the latter appeared in England when Edward
+IV was forced to fly and Henry VI was reinstated. Louis had prepared
+church-thanksgivings to God for having given the English a king of the
+blood of France and a friend to that country. But meanwhile Edward was
+helped by Charles the Bold, to whom he had fled, though not openly in
+arms, yet with ships which he hired for him, with considerable sums of
+money, and even with troops which he allowed to join him.[69] To these,
+his Flemish and Easterling troops, it was chiefly attributed that
+Edward gained the upper hand in the field and recovered his throne. But
+what a state of things was this! The glorious crown of the
+Plantagenets, who a little while before strove for the supremacy of the
+world, was now--stained with blood and powerless as it was--tossed to
+and fro between the rival parties.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[56] 'I take it as a holesome counsell, that the Pope leeve his
+worldly lordship to worldly lords as Christ gafe him and move all his
+clerks to do so.' Wickleffs Bileve, in Collier i. Rec. 47.
+
+[57] 'Quod nullus est dominus civilis, nullus est episcopus, nullus
+est praelatus, dum est in mortali peccato--quod domini temporales
+possunt auferre bona temporalia ab ecclesia habitualiter delinquente
+vel quod populares possunt ad eorum arbitrium dominos delinquentes
+corrigere.'
+
+[58] Walsingham: 'Antistes belliger velut aper frendens dentibus.'
+
+[59] 'Si rex ex maligno consilio--se alienaverit a populo suo nec
+voluent per jura regni et statuta et laudabiles ordinationes cum
+salubri consilio dominorum et procorum regni gubernare et
+regulari--extunc licitum est eis cum communi assensu et consensu
+populi regem ipsum de regali solio abrogare et propinquiorem aliquem
+de stirpe regia loco ejus sublimare.' In Knyghton ii. 2683.
+
+[60] 'Comme chose fait traitoirousement et encontre sa regalie, sa
+coronne et sa dignitee--le roy de lassent de touts les srs et
+coes ad ordeine et establi que null tiel commission ne autre
+sembleable jammes ne soit purchacez pursue ne faite en temps advenir.'
+Statutes of the Realm II. 98.
+
+[61] Hayward, Life of King Henry IV, gives a detailed copy of this
+speech, which however can possess no more claim to authenticity than
+the words that Shakespeare puts into the Bishop's mouth.
+
+[62] Le record et proces de la renonciation du roi Richard avec la
+deposition. Twysden, ii. 2743.
+
+[63] Conclusiones Lollardorum porrectae pleno parliamento. Wilkins
+iii. 222. From the document in 229 we see that these doctrines had
+penetrated into Oxford.
+
+[64] The temporal possessions with which the prelates are as rightly
+endowed as it has been or might be best advised by the laws and
+customs of our kingdom; and of which they are as surely possessed as
+the lords temporal are of their inheritances.
+
+[65] Convocatio 6 die Oct. 1389 ... modus procedendi contra
+haereticos. Wilkins iii. 238, 254.
+
+[66] He imputes to them, 'l'entent de adnuller la foie chretienne auxi
+a destruer le roi mesme et tous maners estates dicell royaume et auxi
+toute politie et les leies de la terre.'
+
+[67] Treaty of 23rd May 1414. Certainly Duke John in September 1414
+concluded the treaty of Arras which is based on the assumption of his
+having no understanding with England; but he never ratified it.
+
+[68] 'De diligence portoit le gonphanon de ses besoignes.'
+Chastellain, Chronique du duc Philippe, ch. 98.
+
+[69] Chastellain, Chronique des derniers ducs de Bourgogne, ch 191.
+'Le duc cognossoit bien, que ceste mutacion en Angleterre etoit
+pratiquee pour le desfaire et non pour autre fin.'
+
+
+
+
+BOOK II.
+
+ATTEMPTS TO CONSOLIDATE THE KINGDOM INDEPENDENTLY IN ITS TEMPORAL AND
+SPIRITUAL RELATIONS.
+
+
+We may regard it as the chief result of the Norman-Plantagenet rule,
+that England became completely a member of the Romano-German family of
+nations which formed the Western world. In however many ways the
+invading nobility had mingled with the native houses, it yet held fast
+to its ancient language; even now it is part of the ambition of the
+great families to trace their pedigree from the Conquerors. Attempts
+had been made, sometimes of a more political, sometimes of a more
+doctrinal nature, to break loose from the hierarchy, which prevailed
+throughout these nations; but they had only increased its strength;
+the native clergy saw that its safety lay in the strictest adherence
+to the maxims of the Universal Church. Similarly the character of the
+Estates in England was akin to that of those in North France and
+especially in the Netherlands; on this rests the sympathy which the
+enterprises of Edward III and Henry V met with; for it was indeed the
+feeling of these centuries, that the members of any one of the three
+Estates felt themselves quite as closely bound to the members of the
+same Estate in other lands as to their own countrymen of the other
+Estates. There was but one Church, one Science, one Art in Europe: one
+and the same mental horizon enclosed the different peoples: a romance
+and a poetry varying in form yet of closely kindred nature was the
+common possession of all. The common life of Europe flowed also in the
+veins of England: an indestructible foundation for culture and
+progressive civilisation was laid. But we saw to what point matters
+had come notwithstanding, as regards the durability of its internal
+system and its power. The Plantagenets had extended the rule of
+England over Scotland and Ireland: in the latter it still subsisted,
+but only within the narrow limits of the Border Pale; in the former it
+was altogether overthrown. The best result that had been effected in
+home politics, the attempt to unite the Powers of the country in
+Parliament had, after a short and brilliant success, led to the
+deepest disorder by disregarding the rights of birth. The degraded
+crown above all had thus become the prize of battle for Pretenders
+allied with France or Burgundy. But it could not possibly remain thus.
+The time was come to give the English realm an independent position
+and internal order corresponding at once to its insular situation and
+to the degree of culture it had attained.
+
+The first who attempted this with some success was Edward IV, of the
+house of York, who in the war of the Roses had remained master of the
+field.
+
+But everywhere there began once more an era of autocratic princes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+RE-ESTABLISHMENT OF THE SUPREME POWER.
+
+
+Edward IV was a most brilliant figure, the handsomest man of his time,
+at least among the sovereigns, so that the impression he thus made was
+actually a power in politics; we find him incessantly entangled in
+love affairs: he was fond of music and enjoyment of all kinds, the
+pleasures of the table, the uproar of riotous company: his debauched
+habits are thought to have shortened his life, and many a disaster
+sprung from his carelessness; but he had also Sardanapalus' nature in
+him: with quickly awakening activity he always rose again out of his
+disasters; in his battles he appeared the last, but he fought perhaps
+the best; and he won them all. In the history of European Monarchy he
+is not unworthy to be ranked by the side of Ferdinand the Catholic,
+Charles the Bold, Louis XI, and some others who regained prestige for
+their dignity by the energy of their personal character.
+
+In itself we must rate it as important that he made good the
+birthright of the house of York, independent as it was of the maxims
+of Parliament, or rather contradictory to them, and maintained the
+throne. He deemed himself the direct successor of Richard II; the
+three kings who had since worn the crown by virtue of Parliamentary
+enactments were regarded by him as usurpers. We have Fortescue's
+contemporary treatise in praise of the laws of England, which (written
+for a prince who never came to the throne) contains the idea of
+Parliamentary right which the house of Lancaster upheld: but Edward IV
+did not so apprehend it. He allowed the lawfulness of his accession to
+be recognised by Parliament, because this was of use to him: but
+otherwise he paid little regard to its established rights. We find
+under him for five years no meeting of Parliament; then a Parliament
+that had met was prorogued some four or five times without completing
+any business, till it at last agreed to raise the customs duties,
+included under the names of Tonnage and Poundage; a revenue which
+being voted to the Kings for life (and this came gradually to be
+regarded as a mere formality) gave their government a strong financial
+basis. Other Parliaments repaid their summons with considerable
+grants, with large and full subsidies: yet Edward IV was not content
+even with these. Under him began the practice, by which the wealthy
+were drawn into contributions for his service in proportion to their
+property, of which the King knew how to obtain accurate information;
+these contributions were called Benevolences because they were paid
+under the form of personal freewill offerings, though none dared to
+refuse them:[70] we may compare the imposts which in the Italian
+republics the dominant parties were wont to inflict on their
+opponents. Though holding Church views in other points, and at any
+rate a persecutor of the Lollards, he did not however allow the clergy
+to enter on their temporalities without heavy payments: he created
+monopolies in the case of some especially profitable articles of
+trade. In short, he neglected no means to render the administration of
+the supreme power independent of the money-grants of Parliament. He
+made room for the royal prerogative as understood by the old kings, as
+well as for the right of birth.
+
+But yet he had not established a secure position, since the party of
+the enemy was still very powerful, and after his early death a quarrel
+broke out in his own house which could not fail to destroy it.
+
+To the characteristic traits of the Plantagenets, their world-wide
+views, their chivalry abroad, their versatility at home, the ceaseless
+war they waged with each other and with others for power, their
+inextinguishable love of rule, belongs also the way in which those who
+held power rid themselves of foes within their own family. As formerly
+King John had murdered in prison Arthur the lawful heir to the throne,
+so Richard II imprisoned and murdered his uncle Thomas of Gloucester,
+who was dangerous to himself. Richard II, like Edward II, died by the
+hand of a relative who had wrested the crown from him; of the details
+of his death we have not even a legend left. Another Gloucester, who
+had for many years guarded the crown for the infant Henry VI, was, at
+the very moment when he might become dangerous to the new government,
+found dead in his bed. So Henry VI perished in the Tower the day
+before Edward IV made his entry into London. Edward IV preferred to
+have his brother Clarence, though already under sentence of death,
+privately killed. But the most atrocious murder of all was that of the
+two infant sons of Edward IV himself; they were both murdered at once,
+as was fully believed, at the behest of their uncle Richard III, who
+had put himself in possession of the throne. I know not whether the
+actual character of Richard answered to that type of inborn wickedness
+which commits crime because it wills it as crime, such as following
+the hints of the Chronicle[71] a great poet has drawn for us in
+imperishable traits, and linked with his name: or whether it was not
+rather the love of power, that animated the whole family, which in
+Richard III grew step by step into a passion that made him forget all
+laws human and divine: enough, he did such deeds that the world's
+abhorrence weighs justly on him.
+
+But it was owing to the internal discord of the ruling family that
+throughout the course of its history a path was made for political and
+national development, and so it was now: these crimes opened a way out
+of the disorders of the time. For as Richard, while continuing to
+persecute the house of Lancaster, struck still harder blows against
+the chief members of that of York, he gave occasion to the principal
+persons of both parties, who were equally threatened, and had the
+same interest in opposing the usurper, to draw nearer to each other.
+
+The widowed Queen Elizabeth, who was lingering out her life in a
+sanctuary, was brought into secret connexion through the mediation of
+distinguished friends with the mother of the man who now came forward
+as head of the Lancasters, Henry Earl of Richmond, and it was
+determined that Henry and Elizabeth's daughter, in whom the claims of
+both lines were united, should marry each other, a prospect which
+might well prepare the way for the immediate combination of the two
+parties. Henry of Richmond at their head was then to confront the
+usurper and chase him from the throne. The fugitives scattered about
+in the sanctuaries and churches called him to be their captain.[72]
+
+The question arises--it has been often answered in the
+negative--whether Henry was rightfully a Lancaster, and whether he had
+any well-grounded claims on the English crown. He loved to derive his
+family from the hero of the Welsh, the fabulous Arthur. His
+grandfather, Owen Tudor, a Welshman, was brought into connexion with
+the royal house by his marriage with Henry V's widow, Catharine of
+France: for unions of royal ladies with distinguished gentlemen were
+then not rare. And Owen Tudor of course obtained by this a higher
+position, but there could be no question of any claim to the crown.
+This was derived simply from the fact that the son of this marriage,
+Edmund Tudor Earl of Richmond, married a lady of the house of
+Somerset, descended by her father from John of Gaunt, the ancestor of
+the Lancasters, by his third marriage with Catharine Swynford. It has
+been said that this marriage, in itself of an irregular nature, was
+only recognised as legitimate by Richard II on the condition that the
+issue from it should have no claim to the succession--and so it is in
+fact stated in the often printed Patent. But the original of the
+document still exists, and that in two forms, one of which is in the
+Rolls of Parliament, the other on the Patent Rolls. In the first the
+limitation is wanting, in the second it exists, but as an
+interpolation by a later hand. It may be taken as admitted that
+Richard II in legitimising the marriage did not make this condition,
+and that it was first inserted by Henry IV (who took offence at the
+legitimisation of his half-brothers) at the ratification. But the
+legitimisation once effected could not possibly be limited in a
+one-sided manner by a later sovereign. I think no objection can be
+made to the legality of Henry VII's claim, which then passed over to
+his successors.[73] The limitation belonged to those proceedings of
+one-sided caprice by which Henry IV tried to secure for his direct
+descendants the perpetual possession of the crown. It was not from
+him, but from his father, the founder of the family, that the Earls of
+Richmond derived their claim.
+
+Now that the banner of a true Lancaster appeared again in the field,
+and the discontented Yorkists, ill-treated by Richard, joined him, it
+might certainly be hoped that the usurper would be overthrown, and
+that a strong power would emerge from the union of both lines. Yet the
+issue was even then very doubtful.
+
+As in the earlier civil wars, so now too the help of a foreign power
+was necessary. With French help the Earl of Richmond led about 2000
+men, of which not more than perhaps 800 were English, to Wales;[74] in
+his further advance he was joined by proportionately considerable
+reinforcements; yet he did not number more than 5000 men under his
+banners, badly clothed and still worse armed, when Richard with his
+chivalry came upon him in overwhelming numbers. Henry would have been
+lost, had he not found partisans in Richard's ranks. Even before the
+engagement the desertion from Richard began: then in the middle of the
+battle the chief division of his army passed over to Henry. Richard
+found the death he sought: for he was resolved to be King or die: on
+the battlefield itself Henry was proclaimed King.
+
+There is no doubt that he owed to his union with the house of York,
+whose right was then generally regarded as the best, not only his
+victory, but the joyous recognition also which he experienced
+afterwards: yet his whole nature revolted against basing his state on
+this union: he cherished the ambition of ruling only through his own
+right.
+
+At the first meeting of Parliament, which he did not call till he was
+fully in possession and crowned King, he was met by a very genuinely
+English point of law. It arose from the fact that many members of the
+Lower House had been attainted by the late government. How could they
+make laws who were themselves beyond the pale of law? Who could
+cleanse them from the stain that clove to them? This objection could
+be raised against Henry himself. In this perplexity recourse was had
+to the judges: and they decided that the possession of the crown
+supplied all defects, and that the King was already King even without
+the assent of Parliament.[75] In the general disorder things had gone
+so far, that it was necessary to find some power outside the
+continuity of legal forms, from which they might start afresh. The
+actual possession of the throne formed this time the living centre
+round which the legal state could again form itself. By exercising the
+authority inherent in the possession of the crown, the King could
+effect the revocation of the sentences that weighed on his partisans
+and on a large portion of the Parliament. After the legal character of
+that Assembly had been established, it proceeded to recognise Henry's
+rights to the crown in the words used for the first of the Lancastrian
+house.
+
+In the papal bull which ratified Henry's succession, three grounds are
+assigned for it: the right of war, the undoubted nearest right to the
+succession, and the recognition by Parliament. On the first the King
+himself laid great stress: he once designates the issue of the battle
+as the decision of God between him and his foes. He thus avoided any
+mention of the marriage with Edward IV's daughter, which he did not
+complete till he was acknowledged on all sides. The papal bull
+declared that the crown of England was to be hereditary in Henry's
+descendants, even if they did not spring from the Yorkist marriage.
+
+We can easily understand this: Henry would not tolerate by his side in
+the person of his wife a joint ruler of equal, and even better, right
+than his own; but we can understand also that this proceeding drew on
+him new enmities. At the very outset the widowed Queen gave it to be
+understood that her daughter was rather lowered than raised by the
+marriage. The whole party of York moreover felt itself contemned and
+insulted. To the ferment of displeasure and ambition into which it
+fell must be attributed the fact that a pair of adventurers, who acted
+the part of genuine descendants of the house of York, Lambert Simnel
+and Perkin Warbeck, supported from abroad, found the greatest sympathy
+and recognition in England. The first Henry VII had to meet in open
+battle, the second he got into his hands only by a great European
+combination.
+
+But he did not wish to have always to encounter open disturbance. He
+was entirely of the opinion which his chancellor gave, that enmities
+of such a sort could not be extinguished by the sword of war, but only
+by well-planned and stringent laws which would destroy the seed of
+rebellion, and by institutions strong enough to administer those laws.
+Above all he found it intolerable that the great men kept numerous
+dependents attached to them under engagements which were publicly
+paraded by distinctive badges. The lower courts of justice and the
+juries did not do the service expected from them in dealing with the
+transgressions of the law that came before them. Uncertainty as to the
+supreme authority, and the power which the great party-leaders
+exercised, filled the weaker, who had to sit in judgment on them, with
+dread of their sure revenge. To put an end to this disorder Henry VII
+established the Starchamber. With consent of the Parliament, from
+which all hostile party-movements were excluded, he gave his Privy
+Council, which was strengthened by the chief judges, a strong
+organisation with this end in view. It was to punish all those
+personal engagements, the exercise of unlawful influence in the choice
+of sheriffs, all riotous assemblies, lastly to have power to deal with
+the early symptoms of a tumult before it came to an outbreak, and that
+under forms which were not usual in the English administration of
+justice. This powerful instrument in the hands of government might be
+much abused, but then seemed necessary to keep in check unreconciled
+enemies and the spirit of faction that was ever surging up again. We
+see the prevailing state of things from the fact, that the King's
+councillors themselves, to be secured against acts of violence, passed
+a special law, which characterised attacks on them as attacks on the
+King himself. But then, like men who stood in the closest connexion
+with the King and his State, they used their authority with
+unapproachable severity. The internal tranquillity of England has been
+thought to be mainly due to the erection of this court of justice.[76]
+
+Since Henry laid so much stress on his being a Lancaster, it might
+have been expected that he would revive the rights of the Parliament.
+But in this respect he followed the example of the house of York. He
+too imposed Benevolences, like Edward IV, and that to a yet greater
+extent; he made an ordinance that what was voluntarily promised should
+be exacted with as much strictness as if it were an ordinary tax.
+Another source of financial gain, which has brought on him still worse
+reproaches, was his commission against infractions of the law. It was
+inevitable that in the fluctuation of authority and of the statutes
+themselves innumerable illegalities should have taken place. And they
+were still always going on. The King took it especially ill that men
+omitted to pay the dues which belonged to the crown in right of its
+feudal superiority. All these negligences and failures were now
+visited and punished with the severity of the old Norman system, and
+at the same time with the officiousness of party-men of the day, who
+saw their own advantage in it. This proceeding pressed very many
+heavily on private persons and communities, and ruined families, but
+it filled the King's coffers. One of his maxims was that his laws
+should not be broken under any circumstances, another that a sovereign
+who would enjoy consideration must always have money: in this instance
+both worked together.
+
+If we look at the lists of his receipts we find that they consist, as
+in other kingdoms, of the crown's revenue proper, which was
+considerably increased by the escheated possessions of great families
+which had become extinct, the customs duties settled on him for life,
+the tenth from the clergy, and the feudal dues. It was estimated that
+they produced nearly the same revenue as that of the French kings at
+this time, but it was remarked that the King of England only spent
+about two-thirds of his income. He did not need a Parliamentary grant,
+especially as he kept out of dangerous foreign entanglements. In his
+last thirteen years he never once called a Parliament.
+
+This precisely corresponded to the idea of his government. After all
+had become doubtful owing to the alternate fluctuations of parties he
+had established his personal claim by the fortune of arms, and made it
+the central point of his government. Was he to allow it to be again
+endangered by the ceaseless ebb and flow of popular opinion? He
+founded a supreme court independent of popular agitation, a finance
+system independent of the grants of a popular assembly.
+
+But he thus found himself under the disadvantage of having to apply
+compulsion unceasingly: his government bore throughout the bitter and
+hateful character of a party-government. With untiring jealousy he
+watched the secret opponents who still looked out for some movement
+from abroad, as a signal for fresh revolt: he kept diaries of their
+doings and conduct: it was said he availed himself of the confessional
+for this purpose: men whose names were from time to time solemnly
+cursed at S. Paul's on account of past treasons, so that they counted
+for open enemies, became useful to him as spies. If the decision lay
+between services received and suspicious conduct, the latter easily
+weighed down the balance, to the ruin of the victim. William Stanley,
+who had played the most important part in the battle which decided the
+fate of the crown, and was regarded as almost the first man in the
+realm after the King, had at the appearance of Perkin Warbeck (who
+gave himself out as Edward's younger son, Richard of York) let slip
+the words, 'he would take his side, if he were the person he gave
+himself out to be.' He had to atone for these words by his death,
+since he had intimated a doubt as to the King's lawful right, which
+might mislead others into sedition. Gradually the movements ceased:
+the high nobility showed a loyal submission to the King: yet it did
+not attach itself to him, it let him and his government alone. The
+King's principle was, to execute the laws most strictly, yet he was
+not cruel by nature; if men implored his mercy, he was ready to grant
+it. The contracted position of a sovereign, who maintains his
+authority with the utmost strictness, does not however exclude a
+paternal care for the country. Henry clipped his people's wings, to
+accustom them to obedience, and then was glad when they grew again. We
+find even that he made out a sketch of how the land should be
+cultivated so that every man might be able to live. The people did not
+love him, but it did not exactly hate him either: this was quite
+enough for Henry VII.
+
+A slight man, somewhat tall, with thin light-coloured hair, whose
+countenance bore the traces of the storms he had passed through; in
+his appearance he gave the impression of being a high ecclesiastic
+rather than a chivalrous King. He was in this almost the exact
+opposite of Edward IV. He too certainly arranged public festivities
+and spared no expense to make them splendid, since his dignity
+demanded it, but his soul took no pleasure in them, he left them as
+soon as ever he could; he lived only in business. In his council sat
+men of mark, sagacious bishops, experienced generals, magistrates
+learned in the law: he held it to be his duty and his interest to hear
+their advice. And they were not without influence: one or two were
+noted as able to restrain his self-seeking will. But the main affairs
+he kept in his own hands. All that he undertook he conducted with
+great foresight and as a rule he carried it through. Foreigners
+regarded him as cunning and deceitful; to his own people his
+successful prudence seemed to have something supernatural about it. If
+he had personal passions, he knew how to keep them under; he seemed
+always calm and sober, sparing of words and yet affable.
+
+He directed almost his chief energies to this object, to keep off all
+foreign influences from his well-ordered kingdom.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[70] Historiae Croylandensis Continuatio II. 'Concessae sunt decimae
+ac quintodecimae multiplices in coetibus clericorum et laicorum,
+habentibus in faciendis concessionibus hujusmodi interesse. Praeterea
+haereditarii ac possessionati omnes de rebus immobilibus suarum
+possessionum partem libere concedebant. Cumque nec omnia praedicta
+sufficere visa sunt, inducta est nova et inaudita impositio oneris, ut
+per benevolentiam quilibet daret id quod vellet, imo verius quod
+nollet.'
+
+[71] At least Sir Thomas More has not invented the nature and manner
+of the murder; it is derived from a confession of the persons
+concerned in it in Henry VII's time. 'Dightonus traditionis hujus
+principale erat instrumentum' (Bacon 212). Tyrel too seems to have
+known of it.
+
+[72] 'Videntes, quod si novum conquestionis suae capitaneum invenire
+non possent brevi de omnibus actum foret.' Hist. Croyl. 568.
+
+[73] I take this from Nicolas, Observations on the state of historical
+literature, 1830, p. 178. Hume's objection, that the mother's right
+came before the son's, is done away with by the fact that men had in
+general never yet seen reigning Queens.
+
+[74] How the world regarded it then we ascertain from the words of the
+Chroniques de Jean Molinet, ed. Buchon, iii. 151. 'Le Comte de
+Richmond fut couronne et institue Henri VII, par le confort et
+puissant subside du roi de France.'
+
+[75] 'A quo tempore Rex coronam assumpserat, fontem sanguinis fuisse
+expurgatum--ut regi opera parlamentaria non fuisset opus.' So Bacon,
+Henricus VII. 29.
+
+[76] Edw. Coke: 4 Inst. cap. ix. 'It is the most honourable court, our
+Parliament excepted, that is in the Christian world.--In the judges of
+the same are the grandees of the realm: and they judge upon confession
+or deposition or witness.--This court doth keep all England in quiet.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+CHANGES IN THE CONDITION OF EUROPE.
+
+
+For the history of the world the decisive event of the epoch was the
+rapid rise of the French monarchy, which after it had freed itself
+from the English invasions, became master of all the hitherto separate
+territories of the great vassals, and lastly even of Brittany, and
+rapidly began to make its preponderance felt on all sides.
+
+Considered in itself no one would have been more called on to oppose
+this than the King of England, who even still bore the title of King
+of France. In fact Henry did once revive his claim on the French
+crown, on Normandy and Guyenne, and took part in a coalition, which
+was to have forced Charles VIII to give up Brittany; he crossed to
+Calais and threatened Boulogne. But he was not in earnest with these
+comprehensive views in his military enterprise, any more than Edward
+IV had once been in a similar one. Henry VII was contented when a
+considerable money payment year by year was secured to him, as it had
+been to Edward. The English called it a tribute, the French a pension.
+It was acceptable to the King, and advantageous for his home affairs,
+just at that moment--1492--to have a sum of money at his free
+disposal.
+
+And no one could have advised him to attach himself unconditionally to
+the house of Burgundy. Duke Charles' widow was still alive, who found
+it unendurable that the house of York, from which she sprang, should
+be dethroned from its 'triumphant majesty, which shone over the seven
+nations of the world'--for so she expressed herself. With her the
+fugitive partisans of the house of York found refuge and protection:
+by herself and her son-in-law Maximilian of Austria the pretenders
+were fitted out who contested the crown with Henry VII. Henry could
+not really wish Brittany to pass to his sworn foe, so that he might be
+threatened from this quarter also at every moment. For how could he
+delude himself with the hope that a transitory alliance would prevail
+over a dynastic antipathy?
+
+At this crisis Ferdinand the Catholic of Spain offered him an alliance
+and connexion by marriage.
+
+That which induced this sovereign to do so was above all Charles
+VIII's invasion of Italy, and his conquest of Naples, to which the
+crown of Aragon had just claims. His plan was to oppose to the mighty
+consolidated power of France a family alliance with the
+Austro-Burgundian House, with Portugal, above all with England: he
+hoped that this would react on Italy, always wont to adhere to the
+most powerful party. Ferdinand offered the King of England a marriage
+between his youngest daughter Catharine and the Prince of Wales. In
+the English Privy Council many objections were made to this; they did
+not wish to draw the enmity of France on themselves and would have
+rather seen the prince united to a princess of the house of Bourbon,
+as was then proposed. It was on Henry VII's own responsibility that
+the offer was accepted. In September 1496 an agreement was come to
+about the conditions: on 15th August 1497 the ceremony of betrothal
+took place in the palace at Woodstock.[77]
+
+The motive which impelled Henry to his decision is sufficiently clear;
+it was his relation to Scotland, on which the Spaniards already
+exercised influence.
+
+There the second pretender, Perkin Warbeck, had found a warm reception
+from the young and chivalrous James IV: he there married a lady of one
+of the chief houses: accompanied in person by this sovereign he made
+an attempt to invade England, which only failed owing to the
+unfavourable time of the year. The Spanish ambassador Pedro de Ayala
+then out of regard to Henry secured Perkin's withdrawal from Scotland.
+But in 1497 the danger revived in a yet greater degree. Warbeck landed
+in Cornwall where all the inhabitants rallied round him, and a revolt
+already once suppressed broke out again; at this moment James IV,
+urged on by the nobles of the land, crossed the border with a splendid
+army: the co-operation of the two movements might have placed the King
+in a serious difficulty. Again it was the Spanish ambassador who made
+James IV determine not to let himself be urged on further; but rather
+to give him the commission, to adjust his differences with England.
+Henry VII was set free to suppress the revolt in Cornwall; Perkin
+Warbeck was taken in his flight.
+
+As the object of the Spaniards was to sever Scotland from her old
+alliance with France, and that too by means of a family alliance, it
+was an essential point in their mediation that Henry VII, as he
+betrothed his son Arthur to a Spanish Infanta, should similarly
+betroth his daughter Margaret to James IV. The understanding with
+Spain and that with Scotland went hand in hand.
+
+And on another side too the alliance with Spain was very useful to the
+King of England. Ferdinand had married his elder daughter Juana to
+Maximilian's son the Archduke Philip: Philip could not possibly uphold
+the Yorkist interests so zealously as his father or his grandmother.
+It was an event of importance that at Whitsuntide 1500 a meeting took
+place between the English and the Austro-Burgundian Court in the
+neighbourhood of Calais. Henry applied himself to win over those whom
+he knew to be his enemies: but at the same time he wished it to be
+remarked that the Archduke showed him the honour which belongs to a
+lawful King. If there were still Yorkist partisans in England, who
+placed their hopes in the house of Burgundy, they would find that they
+had nothing more to hope from that quarter.
+
+So the Spanish alliance served the prudent and circumspect politician,
+to secure him from any hostile action on the side of Scotland and the
+Netherlands. When Catharine in 1501 came to England for her marriage,
+she was received with additional joy because it was felt that her near
+connexion with the Burgundian house promised good relations with the
+Netherlands.[78]
+
+But never was a more eventful marriage concluded.
+
+We do not know whether the Prince of Wales had really consummated it
+when he died before he was yet sixteen. But the two fathers were so
+well satisfied with an alliance which increased the security of the
+one and gained the other great consideration in the world, that they
+could not bring themselves to give up the family connexion, by which
+it was so much strengthened. The thought occurred to Ferdinand--a very
+unusual one in the rest of the European world, though not indeed in
+Spain--of marrying the Infanta to Henry, brother of the deceased
+prince, who was now recognised as Prince of Wales. With his condolence
+for the loss he united a proposal for the new marriage. In England
+from the beginning men did not hide from themselves that as regarded
+the future succession, which ought not to be contested from any side,
+the matter had its delicate points. The solution which Henry found
+shows clearly enough the natural tactics of the old politician. He
+obtained from the Roman Court a dispensation for the new marriage,
+which expressly included the case of the first marriage having been
+consummated. But it almost appears as though he did not fully trust
+this authorisation. High as the prestige of the supreme Pontiff still
+stood in the world, there were yet cases in which canonists and
+theologians doubted as to his dispensing power; men could not possibly
+have forgotten that, when Richard III wished to marry his niece
+Elizabeth, a number of doctors disapproved of such a marriage, even if
+the Pope should sanction it. At any rate Henry VII instigated, or at
+least did not oppose, his son's solemnly entering a protest, after the
+marriage ceremony between him and Catharine was performed, against its
+validity (on the ground of his being too young), the evening before he
+entered his fifteenth year, in the presence of the Bishop of
+Winchester, his father's chief Secretary of State. Hence all remained
+undecided. Catharine lived on in England: her dowry did not need to be
+given up; the general influence of the political union was saved; it
+could however be dissolved at any moment, and there was therefore no
+quarrel on this account with France, whence from time to time
+proposals proceeded for a marriage in the opposite interest. The
+prince kept himself quite free, to make use of the dispensation or
+not.
+
+For the King himself too, whose wife died in 1503, many negociations
+were entered into on both sides. The French offered him a lady of the
+house of Angouleme; he preferred Maximilian's daughter, Margaret of
+Austria, not indeed for her personal qualities, however praiseworthy
+they might be; he stipulated after his usual fashion for the surrender
+of the fugitive Edmund de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk, who was regarded
+as the chief representative of the house of York, and (as once
+previously in France) had at that time found a refuge in the
+Netherlands. Philip, who after the death of his mother-in-law wished
+to take possession of his wife's kingdoms in Spain, was on his voyage
+from Flanders driven by a storm on the English coasts: he was Henry's
+guest at Windsor, Richmond, and London. Here then the King's marriage
+with Philip's sister was concerted, and with it the surrender of
+Suffolk. Philip strove long against this: when he yielded, he at least
+got a promise that Henry VII would spare the life of the earl, whom he
+accused of treason. He kept his word: the prisoner was not executed
+till after his death.
+
+Margaret had no inclination to wed herself with the harsh and
+self-seeking King, who was growing old: he himself, when Philip
+shortly after his arrival in Castile was snatched away by an early
+death, formed the idea of marrying his widow Juana, though she was no
+longer in her right mind. He opened a negociation about it, which he
+pursued with zeal and apparent earnestness. The Spaniards ascribe to
+him the project of marrying himself to Ferdinand's elder daughter, and
+his son to the younger, and making the latter marriage, which he was
+purposely always putting off, the price of his own. One should hardly
+ascribe such a folly to the prudent and wise sovereign at his years
+and with his failing strength. That he made the proposals admits of
+no doubt: but we must suppose that he wished purposely to oppose to
+the pressure of the Spaniards for the marriage of his son with the
+Infanta a demand which they could never grant. For how could they let
+the King of England share in Juana's immense claims of inheritance?
+Henry wished neither to break off nor to complete his son's marriage;
+for the one course would have made Spain hostile, while the second
+might have produced a quarrel with France. Between these two powers he
+maintained an independent position, without however mixing in earnest
+with their affairs, and only with the view of warding off their enmity
+and linking their interests with his own. His political relations
+were, as he said, to draw a brazen wall round England, within which he
+had gradually become complete lord and master. The crown he had won on
+the battlefield, and maintained as his own in the extremest dangers,
+he bequeathed to his son as an undoubted possession. The son succeeded
+the father without opposition, without a rival--a thing that had not
+happened for centuries. He had only to ascend the throne, in order to
+take the reins of government into his hand.
+
+
+_Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolsey in their earlier years._
+
+But that the political situation should continue as it was could not
+be expected. What has not seldom in the history of great kingdoms and
+states formed a decisive turning point now came to pass: to the father
+who had founded and maintained his power with foresight and by painful
+and continuous labour, succeeded a son full of life and energy, who
+wished to enjoy its possession, and feeling firm ground under his feet
+determined to live in a way more after his own mind. Henry VIII too
+felt the need of being popular, like most princes on their accession:
+he sacrificed the two chiefs of the fiscal commission, Empson and
+Dudley, to the universal hate. In general his father's point of view
+seemed to him too narrow-hearted, his proceedings too cautious.
+
+The first great question which was laid before him concerned his
+marriage: he decided for it without further delay. No doubt that in
+this political reasons came chiefly into account. France had been ever
+growing mightier, it had just then struck down the republic of Venice
+by a great victory; men thought it would one day or another come into
+collision with England, and held it prudent to unite themselves
+beforehand with those who could then be useful as allies. At that time
+this applied to the Spaniards above all others.[79] Yet, unless
+everything deceives us, political considerations only coincided with
+the prince's inclinations. The Infanta was in the full bloom of her
+age; the prince, was even younger than herself and against his will
+had been kept apart from any association with her, might well be
+impressed by her: besides she had known how to conduct herself with
+tact and dignity in her difficult position; with a blameless earnest
+mien she combined gentleness and loveable qualities. The marriage was
+carried out without delay; in the ceremonies of her husband's
+coronation Catharine could actually take part as Queen. How fully did
+these festivities again breathe the ancient character of chivalrous
+splendour. Men saw the King's champion, with his own herald in front,
+in full armour, ride into the hall on his war-steed which carried the
+armorial bearings of England and France; he challenged to single
+combat any one who would dare to say that Henry VIII was not the true
+heir of this realm; then he asked the King for a draught of wine, who
+had it given him in a golden cup: the cup was then his own.
+
+Henry VIII had a double reason for confidence on his throne,--the
+blood of the house of York also flowed in his veins. In European
+affairs he was no longer content with keeping off foreign influences,
+he wished to take part in them like his ancestors with the whole power
+of England. After the dangers which had been overcome had passed out
+of the memory of those living, the old delight in war awoke again.
+
+When France now began to encounter resistance in her career of
+victory, first through Pope Julius II, then through King Ferdinand,
+Henry did not hesitate to make common cause with them. It marks his
+disposition in these first years, that he took arms especially because
+men ought not to allow the supreme Priest of Christendom to be
+oppressed.[80] When King Louis and the Emperor Maximilian tried to
+oppose a Council to the Pope, Henry VIII dissuaded the latter from it
+with a zeal full of unction. He drew him over in fact to his side:
+they undertook a combined campaign against France in which they won a
+battle in the open field, and conquered a great city, Tournay. Aided
+by the English army Ferdinand the Catholic then possessed himself of
+Navarre, which was given up to him by the Pope as being taken when it
+was in league with an enemy of the Church. Louis's other ally, the
+Scottish King James IV, succumbed to the military strength of North
+England at Flodden, and Henry might have raised a claim to Scotland,
+like that of Ferdinand to Navarre: but he preferred, as his sister
+Margaret became regent there, to strengthen the indirect influence of
+England over Scotland. On the whole the advantages of his warlike
+enterprises were for England small, but not unimportant for the
+general relations of Europe. The predominance of France was broken: a
+freer position restored to the Papacy. Henry VIII felt himself
+fortunate in the full weight of the influence which England had won
+over European affairs.
+
+It was no contradiction of the fundamental ideas of English policy,
+when Henry VIII again formed a connexion with Louis XII, who was now
+no longer formidable. He even gave him his younger sister to wife, and
+concluded a treaty with him, by which he secured himself a money
+payment, as his predecessors had so often done before. Yet he did not
+for this break at all with Ferdinand the Catholic, though he had
+reason to complain of him: rather he concluded a new alliance with
+him, only in a less close and binding manner. He would not have
+endured that the successor of Louis XII (who died immediately after
+his marriage), the youthful and warlike Francis I, after he had
+possessed himself of Milan, should have also advanced to Naples. For a
+moment, in consequence of these apprehensions, their relations became
+less close: but when the alarm proved to be unfounded, the alliance
+was renewed, and even Tournay restored for a compensation in money.
+Many personal motives may have contributed to this, but on the whole
+there was sense and system in such a policy. The reconquest of Milan
+did not make the King of France so strong that he would become
+dangerous, particularly as on the other side the monarchy which had
+been prepared by the Spanish-Netherlands' connexions now came into
+existence, and the grandson of Ferdinand and Maximilian united the
+Spanish kingdoms with Naples and the lordship over the Netherlands.
+
+To this position between the two powers it would have lent new weight
+and great splendour if the German princes could have been induced to
+transfer to the King of England the peaceful dignity of a Roman-German
+Emperor. He bestirred himself about this for a moment, but did not
+feel it much when it was refused him.
+
+But now since the empire too was added to the possessions in Spain,
+Italy, and the Netherlands, and hence redoubled jealousy awakened in
+King Francis I, which held out an immediate prospect of war, the old
+question came up again before King Henry, which side England was to
+take between them, and that in a more pressing form than ever. A
+special complication arose from the fact that yet another person with
+separate points of view now took part in the politics of the age.
+
+In another point Henry VIII departed from his father's tactics and
+habits; he no longer sat so regularly with his Privy Council and
+deliberated with them. He had been persuaded that he would best secure
+himself against prejudicial results from the discords that reigned
+among them, by taking affairs more into his own hand. A young
+ecclesiastic, his Almoner Thomas Wolsey, had then gained the greatest
+influence over him; he had been introduced alike into business and
+into intimacy with the King by Fox, Bishop of Winchester, who wished
+to oppose a more youthful ability to his rivals in the Privy Council.
+In both relations Wolsey was completely successful. It stood him in
+good stead that another favourite, Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk,
+who had married Henry's sister (Louis XII's widow), and was the King's
+comrade in knightly exercises and the external show of court-life, for
+a long time remained in intimate friendship with him. Wolsey was
+conversant with the scholastic philosophy, with Saint Thomas Aquinas;
+but that did not hinder him from cooperating also in the revival of
+classical studies, which were just coming into notice at Oxford: he
+had a feeling for the efforts of Art which was then attaining a higher
+estimation, and an inborn talent for architecture, to which we owe
+some wonderful works.[81] The King too loved building; the present of
+a skilfully cut jewel could delight him; and he sought honour in
+defending the scholastic dogmas against Luther's views; in all this
+Wolsey seconded and supported him, he combined state-business with
+conversation. He freed the King from the consultations of the Privy
+Council, in which the intrinsic importance of the matter always weighs
+more than one's own will; Henry VIII first felt himself to be really
+King when business was managed by a favourite thoroughly dependent on
+him, trusted by him, and in fact very capable. Wolsey showed the most
+many-sided activity and an indefatigable power of work. He presided in
+court though he was not strong in law; he mastered the department of
+finance; the King named him Archbishop of York, the Pope
+Cardinal-Legate, so that the whole control of ecclesiastical matters
+fell into his hands; foreign affairs were peculiarly his own
+department. We have a considerable number of his political writings
+and instructions remaining, which give us an idea of the
+characteristics of his mind. Very circumstantially and almost
+wearisomely do they advance--not exactly in a straight line--weighing
+manifold possibilities, multiplied reasons: they are scholastic in
+form, in contents sometimes fantastic even to excess, intricate yet
+acute, flattering to the person to whom they are addressed, but withal
+filled with a surprising self-consciousness of power and talent.
+Wolsey is celebrated by Erasmus for his affability, and to a great
+scholar he may have been accessible, but to others he was not so. When
+he went to walk in the park of Hampton Court, no one would have dared
+to come within a long distance of him. When questions were asked him
+he reserved to himself the option of answering or not. He had a way of
+giving his opinion so that every man yielded to him; especially as the
+possession of the King's favour, which he enjoyed, made it impossible
+to oppose him. If the government was spoken of, he was wont to say,
+'the King and I,' or 'we,' or at last 'I.' Just because he was of
+humble origin, he wished to shine by splendid appearance, costly and
+rare furniture, unwonted expenditure. Early one morning his
+appointment as Cardinal arrived, that same morning at mass he
+displayed the insignia of his new dignity. He required outward tokens
+of reverence, and insisted on being served on bended knee. He had many
+other passions, of which the chief was ecclesiastical ambition
+pervaded by personal vanity.
+
+It gave him high satisfaction that both the great powers emulously
+courted the favour and friendship of his King, of which he seemed to
+have the disposal.
+
+In June 1520 took place within the English possessions on French soil
+the meeting between Henry VIII and Francis I, which is well designated
+as the Field of the Cloth of Gold. It was properly a great tournament,
+proclaimed in both nations, to which the chief lords yet once more
+gathered in all their splendour. With the festivities were mingled
+negociations in which the Cardinal of York played the chief part.
+
+Immediately before this in England, and just afterwards on the
+continent, Henry VIII met Charles V also, with less show but greater
+intimacy; the negociations here took the opposite direction.
+
+In 1521, when war had already broken out between the two great powers,
+the cardinal in his King's name undertook the part of mediator. There
+in Calais he sat to a certain degree in judgment on the European
+powers. The plenipotentiaries of both sovereigns laid their cases
+before him: with apparent zeal and much bustle he tried at least to
+conclude a truce: he complained once of the Emperor, that he
+disregarded his good advice though weighty and to the point: on which
+the latter did come a step nearer him. It was a magnificent position
+if he understood and maintained it. The more powerful both princes
+became, the more dangerous to the world their enmity should be, the
+more need there was of a mediating authority between them. But the
+purity of intention which is required to carry out such a task is
+seldom given to men, and did not exist in Wolsey. His ambition
+suggested plans to him which reached far beyond a peace arbitration.
+
+When he promoted that first interview with Francis I against the will
+of the great men and of the Queen of England, the Emperor's
+ambassadors, who were thrown into consternation by it, remarked that
+the French King must have promised him the Papacy, which however, they
+add, is rather in the Imperial than in the royal gift. It does not
+appear that the Emperor went quite so far at once, he only warned the
+cardinal against the untrustworthy promises of the French, and sought
+to bring him to the conviction--while making him the most advantageous
+offers--that he could expect everything from him.[82] Clear details he
+reserved till they met in person; and then he in fact drew him over
+completely to his side. Under Wolsey's influence King Henry,
+immediately on the outbreak of the war, gave out his intention of
+making common cause with the Emperor. For he had not, he said, so
+little understanding as not to see that the opportunity was thus
+offered him of carrying out his predecessors' claims and his own, and
+he wished to use it. Only he preferred not to commence war at once,
+since he was not yet armed, and since a broader alliance should be
+first formed. The cardinal hoped to be able to draw the Pope, the
+Swiss, and the Duke of Savoy, as well as the Kings of Portugal,
+Denmark, and Hungary, into it. What an impression then it must have
+made on him, when Pope Leo X, without being pressed, at once allied
+himself with the Emperor! Wolsey's attempt at mediation--no room for
+doubt about it is left by the documents that lie before us--was only
+meant as a means of gaining time. At Calais Wolsey had already given
+the imperial ambassadors, in the presence of the Papal Nuncio, the
+most definite assurances as to the resolution of his King to take part
+in the war against France. Before he returned to England to call the
+Parliament together, which was to vote the necessary ways and means,
+he visited the Emperor at Bruges. At the last negociations, being at
+times doubtful about his trustworthiness, Charles V held it doubly
+necessary to bind him by every tie to himself. He then spoke to him of
+the Papacy, and gave him his word that he would advance him to that
+dignity.[83]
+
+The opportunity for this came almost too soon. When Leo X died, just
+at this moment, Wolsey's hopes rose in stormy impatience. When the
+Emperor renewed his assurance to him, he demanded of him in plain
+terms to advance his then victorious troops to Rome, and put down by
+main force any resistance to the choice proposed. Before anything
+could be done, before the ambassador whom Henry VIII despatched at
+once to Italy reached it, the cardinals had already elected, and
+elected moreover the Emperor's former tutor, Hadrian. But was not this
+a proof of his irresistible authority? Hadrian's advanced age made it
+clear that there would be an early vacancy: and to this Wolsey now
+directed his hopes. He gave assurance that he would administer the
+Papacy for the sole advantage of the King and the Emperor: he thought
+then to overpower the French, and after completing this work he
+already saw himself in spirit directing his weapons to the East, to
+put an end to the Turkish rule. At his second visit to England the
+Emperor renewed his promise at Windsor castle; he spoke of it in his
+conferences with the King.[84] Altogether the closest alliance was
+concluded. The Emperor promised to marry Henry's daughter Mary,
+assuming that the Pope would grant him the necessary dispensation.
+Their claims to French territories they would carry out by a combined
+war. Should a difficulty occur between them, Cardinal Wolsey was fixed
+on as umpire.
+
+So did the alliance between the houses of Burgundy and Tudor come to
+pass, the basis of which was to be the annihilation of the power of
+the Valois, and into which the English minister threw his world-wide
+ambition. From England also a declaration of war now reached Francis
+I. Whilst the war in Italy and on the Spanish frontiers made the most
+successful progress, the English, in 1522 under Howard Earl of Surrey,
+in 1523 under Brandon Earl of Suffolk, both times in combination with
+Imperial troops, invaded France on the side of the Netherlands,
+invasions which, to say the least, very much hampered the French.
+Movements also manifested themselves within France itself, which awoke
+hopes in the King that he might make himself master of the French
+crown as easily as his father had once done of the English. Leo X had
+already been persuaded to absolve the subjects of Francis I from their
+oaths to him. It was in connexion with this that the second man in
+France, the Constable of Bourbon, slighted in his station, and
+endangered in his possessions, resolved to help himself by revolting
+from Francis I. He wished then to recognise no other King in France
+but Henry VIII: at a solemn moment, after receiving the sacrament, he
+communicated to the English ambassador, who was with him, his
+resolution to set the French crown on King Henry's head: he reckoned
+on a numerous party declaring for him. And in the autumn of 1523 it
+looked as if this project would be accomplished. Suffolk and Egmont
+pressed on to Montdidier without meeting with any resistance: it was
+thought that the Netherland and English forces would soon occupy the
+capital, and give a new form to the realm. Pope Hadrian was just dead
+at Rome; would not the united efforts of the Emperor and the King of
+England succeed, by their influence on the conclave, especially now
+that they were victorious, in really raising Wolsey to the tiara?
+
+This however did not happen. In Rome not Wolsey but Julius Medici was
+elected Pope; the combined Netherland and English troops retreated
+from Montdidier; Bourbon saw himself discovered and had to fly, no one
+declared for him. This last is doubtless to be ascribed to the
+vigilance and good conduct of King Francis, but in the retreat of the
+troops and in the election of the Pope other causes were at work. In
+the conclave Charles V certainly did not act with as much energy for
+Wolsey as the latter expected: Wolsey never forgave him. But he too
+has been accused of having basely abused the confidence of the two
+sovereigns: he had kept up friendly connexions all along with Francis
+I and his mother, and they likewise had given him pensions and
+presents: he had purposely supported the Earl of Suffolk so ill that
+he was forced to retreat.[85] Of all the complaints raised against
+him, not so much before the world as among those who were behind the
+scenes, this was exactly the most hateful and perhaps the most
+effectual.
+
+In 1524 the English took no active part in the war. Not till February
+1525, when the German and Spanish troops had won the great victory of
+Pavia and King Francis had fallen captive into the Emperor's hands,
+did their ambitious projects and thoughts of war reawaken.
+
+Henry VIII reminded the Emperor of his previous promises, and invited
+him to make a joint attack on France itself from both sides: they
+would join hands in Paris; Henry VIII should then be crowned King of
+France, but resign to the Emperor not merely Burgundy but also
+Provence and Languedoc, and cede to the Duke of Bourbon his old
+possessions and Dauphine. The motive he alleges is very extraordinary:
+the Emperor would marry his daughter and heiress, and would at some
+future time inherit England and France also and then be monarch of the
+world.[86] Henry declares himself ready to press on with the utmost
+zeal, provided he can do it with some security, and himself undertake
+the conduct of the war in the Netherlands and the support of Bourbon.
+The letter is from Wolsey, full of copious and pressing conclusions;
+but should not the far-reaching nature of its contents have been a
+proof even to him that it could never be taken in earnest?
+
+Charles V could not possibly enter into the plan. He had lent it a
+hearing as long as it lay far away, but when it came actually close to
+view, it was very startling for him. The union of the crowns of France
+and England on the head of Henry VIII would in itself have deranged
+all European relations, above all it would have raised that
+untrustworthy man, who was still all powerful in his Council, to a
+most inconvenient height of power. The Spanish kingdoms too were
+pressing for the settlement of their succession. He was in the full
+maturity of manly youth: he could not wait for Mary of England who had
+barely completed her tenth year: he resolved to break off this
+connexion, and give his hand to a Portuguese princess, who was nearly
+of his own age.
+
+It could not be otherwise but that to the closest union, which was
+broken at the moment when it might well have been able to attain its
+object, the bitterest discord should succeed.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[77] Zurita Anales de Aragon v. 100. The Spanish ambassador who then
+negociated the marriage was Doctor Ruyz Gonzales de Puerta. But the
+idea was much older: in 1492 at the first alliance mention was made of
+it (v. II); in the recently published Journal of an English Embassy to
+Spain, there appears in March 1489, 'donne Katherine al notre princess
+de Angleterre.' Memorial of Henry VII, 180.
+
+[78] Zurita v. 221. 'La princesa fue recibida con tanta alegria
+communemente de todos, que affirmavan aver de ser esta causa, no solo
+de muy grande paz y presperidad de sodo a' quel reyno, pero de la
+union del y de los estados de Flandes.'
+
+[79] Zurita vi. 193. 'Por que el rey Luys cada dia se yva haziendo mas
+poderoso y no teniendo el rey de Inglaterra confederation y adherencia
+con los que avian de ser enemigos forcosos del rey de Francia, quedava
+aquel reyno en grande peligro.'
+
+[80] He accepts the doctrine: 'Christi vicarium nullum in terris
+judicem habere nosque ei debere vel dyscholo auscultare.' Lettres de
+Louys XII, iii. 307.
+
+[81] As it is said in Cavendish, Cardinalis Eboracensis:--
+
+ 'My byldynges somptious, the roffes with gold and byse
+ Craftely entaylled as conning could devise,
+ With images embossed most lively.'
+
+[82] In an opinion given at Corunna it is said that he must be
+persuaded, 'qu'il prende pour agreable et accepte ce que l'empereur
+lui a offert, luy traynant d'une souppe en miel parmy la bouche, que
+n'est le (que du) bien, que l'empereur luy veut (20 April 1520).'
+Monumenta Habsburgica ii. 1. 177, 183.
+
+[83] In a letter to his ambassador, the Bishop of Badajoz, the Emperor
+mentions 'les propos, que luy (au cardinal) avons tenu a Bruges
+touchants la papalite.' Monumenta Habsburgica ii. 1. 501.
+
+[84] Wolsey mentions in his letter to the King 'the conference and
+communications, which he (the Emperor) had with your grace in that
+behalf.' In Burnet iii. Records p. 11.
+
+[85] Du Bellay au Grandmaistre 17 October 1529, in Le Grand, Histoire
+du divorce iii. 374: 'Que il avait toujours en tems de paix et de
+guerre intelligence secrette a Madame, de la quelle la dicte guerre
+durant, il avoit eu des grants presens, qui furent cause, que Suffolc
+estant a Montdidier il ne le secourut d'argent comme il devoit dont
+advint que il ne print Paris.'
+
+[86] The Instructions to Tunstall and Wingfield (30 March 1525),
+hitherto known only from the extract in Fiddes, are now printed in the
+State Papers vi. 333. Compare my German History, Bk. IV. ch. 2, but
+the statement there made needs revision in accordance with the
+newly-found documents.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ORIGIN OF THE DIVORCE QUESTION.
+
+
+Perhaps it is not a matter of such very great weight whether the
+Emperor did his best for Wolsey in the conclave, or Wolsey his best
+for the Emperor in the campaign of 1523. That the result did not
+correspond to the expectations on either side was quite enough to
+bring about an estrangement. What could the Emperor do with an English
+minister who was not in a condition to support warlike enterprises
+properly? what could the English do with an ally who appropriated to
+himself exclusively the advantages of the victory they had won? Henry
+VIII, while trying to win the French crown, had only weakened it, and
+thereby given the house of Burgundy a preponderance in European
+affairs, by which all other powers, and himself as well, felt
+themselves threatened.
+
+After the battle of Pavia a feeling prevailed throughout the world
+that the rule of Spain and Burgundy would be intolerable, if France
+were no longer independent. The ministers of the Pope in Rome first
+came to a consciousness of this: as the best means of restoring the
+balance, they looked to the dissolution of the alliance between Henry
+VIII and Charles V. The Pope's Datary, Giberti, made approaches to the
+English Court, though still with timid caution, in order in the first
+place only to propose a reconciliation between England and France.[87]
+
+To his joy he remarked that Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolsey were more
+inclined to this plan than he had expected. If not before yet
+certainly since his alienation from the Emperor, the cardinal had
+entered into secret negociations with the mother of the King of
+France: the last proposals to the Emperor had been only an attempt to
+turn the success of his arms to the advantage of England also: when he
+rejected them, the cardinal entered into the French connexion with
+increased zeal. Before the end of the summer of 1523 peace between
+England and France was effected with the sympathising co-operation of
+Rome.
+
+In it the Regent Louise accepted the conditions laid down by the
+cardinal: she did not neglect to secure him by a considerable pension.
+From the beginning she had on her side also tried to excite his
+world-wide ambition; for Francis I and Henry VIII, if once they became
+friends, would do noble deeds to their own-undying renown and to the
+glory of God, and the direction of their enterprises would fall to the
+cardinal.[88]
+
+Even after Henry VIII abandoned him, the Emperor still kept the upper
+hand. He extorted the Peace of Madrid; the League of the Italian
+princes with France, by which its execution was to have been hindered,
+and to which England lent her moral support without actually joining
+it, led Charles V to new victories, to the conquest of Rome, and hence
+to a position in the world which now did really threaten the freedom
+of all other nations. The necessary result was that France and England
+drew still more closely together. Cardinal Wolsey appeared in France;
+a close alliance was concluded and (not without considerable English
+help) an army sent into the field, which in fact gained the upper hand
+in Italy and restored to the Pope, who had escaped to Orvieto, some
+feeling of independence. Soon the largest projects were formed on this
+side also, in which the two Kings expected to have the Pope entirely
+with them. The French declared their wish to conquer Naples and never
+restore it to the Emperor, not even under the most favourable
+conditions. Wolsey thought that the Pope might pronounce the
+deposition of the Emperor in Naples and even in the Empire, for which
+certain German electors could be won over; he boasted that he would
+bring about such a revolution as had not been seen for a century.
+
+It was at this crisis in the general situation, and when an attempt
+was being made to direct politics towards the annihilation of the
+Emperor, that the thought occurred of dissolving Henry VIII's marriage
+with the Emperor's aunt, the Infanta Catharine.
+
+It is very possible, as a contemporary tradition informs us, that
+Wolsey was instigated to this by personal feelings. His arrogant and
+wanton proceedings, offensive by their excesses, and withal showing
+all the priestly love of power, were hateful to the inmost soul of the
+pure and earnest Queen. She is said to have once reproached him with
+them, and to have even repelled his unbecoming behaviour with a
+threatening word, and he on his part to have sworn to overthrow
+her.[89] But this personal motive first became permanently important
+when joined with a more general one. The Queen was by no means so
+entirely shut out from the events of the day as has been asserted; in
+moments of difficulty we find her summoning the members of the Privy
+Council before her to discuss the pending questions with them. When
+Wolsey began a life and death struggle with the Emperor, the influence
+of the Queen, whose most lively sympathies were with her nephew, stood
+not a little in his way; it was his chief interest to remove her.
+
+It was indeed the feeling of the time, that family unions and
+political alliances must go hand in hand. At the very first proposal
+for a reconciliation between England and France, Giberti had advised
+the marriage of the English princess Mary, who had been rejected by
+the Emperor, with a French prince, and there had been much negociation
+about it. But owing to the extreme youth of the princess it was soon
+felt that this would not lead to the desired end. If a definitive
+rupture was to take place between England and the Burgundo-Spanish
+power, Henry VIII's marriage with Catharine must be dissolved and room
+thus made for a French princess. This marriage however was itself the
+result of that former state of politics which had led to the first war
+with France. Wolsey formed the plan of marrying his King, in
+Catharine's stead, with the sister or even with the daughter of
+Francis I who was now growing up:[90] then only would the alliance
+between the two powers become indissoluble. When he was in France in
+1527, he said to the Regent, the King's mother, that within a year she
+would live to see two things, the most complete separation of his
+sovereign from Spain, and his indissoluble union with France.[91]
+
+But to these motives of foreign policy was now added an extremely
+important reason of home policy: this lay in the precarious state of
+the Succession.
+
+When the King several years before was congratulated on the birth of
+his daughter, with an intimation that the birth of a son might have
+been still more acceptable, he replied quickly, they were both still
+young, he and his wife, why should they not still have a son? But
+gradually this hope had ceased, and as hitherto no Queen had ever
+reigned in her own right in England, the opinion gained ground that at
+the King's death the throne would fall vacant. It had a little before
+created a party among the people for the Duke of Buckingham, when he
+maintained that he was the nearest heir to the crown, and would not
+let it be taken from him. He had been executed for this: Mary's right
+to the succession met with no further opposition; but even so it was
+still always a doubtful future that lay before the country. People
+wished to marry Mary at one time to the Emperor, at another to the
+King or a prince of France: so that her claim to the inheritance of
+the crown should pass to the house of Burgundy or to that of Valois.
+But how dangerous this was for the independence of the country! Henry
+would surely not have lost himself in Wolsey's intrigues, had he had a
+son and heir, to represent the independent interests of England.
+
+In other times relations of this kind would have probably been
+reckoned as in themselves sufficient reason for a divorce: but not so
+in that age. The very essence of marriage lies in this, that it raises
+the union, on which the family and the order of the world rests, above
+the momentary variations of the will and the inclination; by the
+sanction of the Church it becomes one of that series of religious
+institutions which set limits on every side to individual caprice. No
+one yet dared so far to deny the religious character of marriage, as
+to have avowed mere political views in wishing for a separation,
+either before the world, or even to himself. But now there was no want
+of spiritual reasons which might be brought forward for it. The King's
+own confessor revived the doubts in him which had once been raised
+before his marriage with his brother's widow. And when the King was
+then reminded that such a marriage had been expressly forbidden in the
+books of Moses, and threatened with the punishment of childlessness,
+how could it fail to make an impression on him, when this threat
+seemed to be strictly fulfilled in his case? Two boys had been born to
+him from this marriage, but both had died soon after their birth. Even
+within the Catholic Church it had been always a moot point whether the
+Pope could dispense with a law of Scripture. The divine punishment
+inflicted on the King, as he thought, seemed to prove that the Pope's
+dispensation (encroaching as it did on the region of the divine
+power), on the strength of which the marriage had been concluded, had
+not the validity ascribed to it. Scruples of this sort cannot be said
+to be a mere pretence; they have something of the half belief, half
+superstition, so peculiarly characteristic of the spirit of the age
+and of that of the King. And none could yet foresee what results they
+implicitly involved.
+
+It still appeared possible that the Pope would revoke the dispensation
+given by one of his predecessors, especially as some grounds of
+invalidity could be found in the bull itself. Wolsey's idea was that
+the Pope, in the pressing necessity he was under of ranging England
+and France against the preponderance of the Emperor, could be brought
+to consent to recall the dispensation, and this would make the
+marriage null and void from the beginning. Always full of arrogant
+assumption of an influence to which nothing could be impossible,
+Wolsey assured the King that he would carry the matter through.[92]
+
+When tidings of this proposal first reached Rome, those immediately
+around the Pope took special notice of the political advantages that
+might accrue from it. For hitherto there was a doubt whether Henry
+VIII was really so decidedly in favour of France as was said: a
+project like this, which would make him and the Emperor enemies for
+ever, left no room for doubt about it. When the Pope saw himself
+secure of this support in reserve, his word, in a matter which
+concerned the highest personal and civil interests, acquired new
+weight even with the Emperor.[93]
+
+It is undeniable that the Pope at first expressed himself favourably.
+It appeared to make an especial impression on him, that the want of a
+male heir might cause a civil war in England, and that this must be
+disadvantageous to the Church as well.[94] He only asked not to be
+pressed as long as he was in danger of experiencing the worst
+extremities from the overwhelming power of the Emperor. In the spring
+of 1528, when the French army advanced victoriously into the
+Neapolitan territory and drove back the Emperor's forces to the
+capital, Wolsey's request for full powers to inquire into the affair
+in England was taken into earnest consideration by the Pope. It was at
+Orvieto, in the Pope's working room, which was also his
+sleeping-chamber: a couple of cardinals, the Dean of the Roman Rota,
+and the English plenipotentiaries sat round the Pope, to talk over the
+case thoroughly. One of the cardinals declared himself against the
+Commission demanded by Wolsey, since such a grant contravened the
+usage of the last centuries in the Roman tribunals; the Pope answered,
+that in a matter concerning a King who had done such service to the
+Holy See, they might well deviate from the usual forms; he actually
+delegated this Commission to Cardinal Campeggi, whom the English
+esteemed as their friend, and to Wolsey.
+
+By this nothing was yet effected: it even appears as though Clement
+VII had given tranquillising promises to the Emperor; the Bishop of
+Bayonne declared that the Pope's intention was thus to keep both sides
+dependent on him--but it was at all events one step on the road once
+taken, which aroused hope in England that it would lead to the desired
+end.
+
+But let us picture to ourselves the enormous difficulty of the case.
+It lay above all in the inner significance of the question itself. In
+his first interview with Henry VIII Campeggi remarks that the King was
+completely convinced of the invalidity of the Papal dispensation,
+which could not extend to Scripture precepts. No argument could move
+him from this; he answered like a good theologian and jurist. Campeggi
+says, an angel from heaven would not make him change his opinion. He
+could not but see that Wolsey cherished the same view.
+
+But was it possible for the Roman court to yield in this and to revoke
+a dispensation, which involved the very substance of its spiritual
+omnipotence? It would have thus only strengthened, and in reality
+confessed, the antagonism against its authority which was based on
+Holy Scripture. Campeggi could not yield a hair's breadth.
+
+The only solution lay--and Campeggi was authorised to attempt it--in
+inducing Queen Catharine to renounce her place and dignity. Soon after
+his arrival he represented to her at length how much depended on it
+for her and the world, and promised her that in return not only all
+else should be secured to her that she could desire, but above all
+that the succession of her daughter also should be guaranteed. The
+wish, in which both Pope and King agreed, that she should enter a
+convent, Campeggi at first did not mention to her; he thought she
+would herself seek for some expedient. But she avoided this. Campeggi
+had spoken to her in the name of the Pope: she only said she thought
+to abide till death in obedience to the precepts of God and of the
+Church: she would ask for counsellors from the King, would consult
+with them, and then communicate to the Holy Father what her conscience
+bade her. Her consent still remained possible. This gained, the legate
+would have no need to mention further the validity or invalidity of
+the dispensation. He was still hoping for it, when Wolsey came to him
+one morning early (26 Oct. 1528) and told him the Queen had asked the
+King for leave to make her confession to him (Campeggi), and had
+obtained it. A couple of hours later the Queen appeared before him.
+She told him of her earlier marriage, which was never really
+consummated; that she had remained as unchanged by it as she had been
+from her mother's womb; and this destroyed all grounds for the
+divorce. Campeggi was however far from drawing such a conclusion; he
+advised her in plain terms to make a vow and enter a convent,
+repeating the motives stated before, to which he now added the example
+of a Queen of France. But his words died away without effect. Queen
+Catharine declared positively that she would never act thus; she was
+called by God to her marriage, and resolved to live and die in it. A
+judgment might be pronounced in this matter; if the marriage was
+declared to be invalid, she would submit, she would then be as free as
+the King; but without this she would hold fast to her marriage union.
+She protested, in the strongest terms conceivable, that they might
+kill her, they might tear her limb from limb, yet she would not change
+her mind; had she two lives, she would lay them both down in such a
+cause. It would be better, she said, for the Pope to try to divert the
+King from his design; he would then be able to trust all the more in
+the inclination of her kinsman the Emperor to help in bringing about a
+peace.
+
+In the presence of the counsellors given her at her wish, both legates
+repeated two days later in a formal audience their admonition to the
+Queen not to insist on a definite decision; but already Campeggi had
+little hope left; he was astonished that the lady, usually so prudent,
+should in the midst of peril so obstinately reject judicious
+advice.[95]
+
+The question between King and Queen was, we might say, also of a
+dogmatic nature. Had the Pope the right to dispense with the laws of
+Scripture or had he not? The Queen accepted it as it had been accepted
+in recent times, especially as the presupposed conditions of a
+marriage had not been fulfilled in her case. The King rejected it
+under all circumstances, in agreement with scholars and the rising
+public opinion.
+
+But into this question various other general and personal reasons now
+intruded themselves. If the question were answered in the negative
+Wolsey held firmly to the view of forming an indissoluble union
+between France and England, of securing the succession by the King's
+marriage with a French princess, of restoring universal peace; to this
+he added the project, as he once actually said in confidential
+discourse, of reforming the English laws, doubtless in an
+ecclesiastical and monarchic sense; if he had once accomplished all
+this, he would retire, to serve God during the rest of his life.
+
+But he had already (and a sense of it seems almost to be expressed in
+these last words so unlike his usual mode of thought) ceased to be in
+agreement with his King. Henry VIII wished for the divorce, the
+establishment of his succession by male offspring, friendship with
+France, and Peace: but he did not care for the French marriage. He was
+some years younger than his wife, who inclined to the Spanish forms of
+strict devotion, and regarded as wasted the hours which she spent at
+her dressing table. Henry VIII was addicted to knightly exercises of
+arms, he loved pleasant company, music, and art; we cannot call him a
+gross voluptuary, but he was not faithful to his wife: he already had
+a natural son; he was ever entangled in new connexions of this kind.
+Many letters of his survive, in which a tincture of fancy and even of
+tenderness is coupled with a thorough sensuousness; just in the
+fashion of the romances of chivalry which were then being first
+printed and were much read. At that time Anne Boleyn, a lady who had
+lately returned from France, and appeared from time to time at Court,
+saw him at her feet; she was not exactly of ravishing beauty, but full
+of spirit and grace and with a certain reserve. While she resisted the
+King, she held him all the faster.[96]
+
+The reasons of home and foreign policy mentioned above, and even the
+religious scruples, have their weight; but we cannot shut our eyes to
+the fact that this new passion, nourished on the expectation of the
+divorce which was not unconditionally refused by the spiritual power,
+gave the strongest personal impulse to carry the affair through.
+
+The position of parties in the State also influenced it. Wolsey who
+had diminished the consequence of the great lords, and kept them down,
+and offended them by his pride, was heartily hated by them. Adorned
+though he was with the most brilliant honours of the Church, yet for
+the great men of the realm he was nothing but an upstart: they had
+never quite given up the hope of living to see his fall. But if he
+brought the French marriage to pass, as he designed, he would have won
+lasting support and have become stronger than ever. Besides the great
+men took the Burgundian side, not that they wished to make the Emperor
+lord of the world, but on the other hand they did not want a war with
+him: merchants and farmers saw that a war with the Netherlands, where
+they sold their wool, would be an injury to all. When Wolsey flattered
+the Pope with the hope of an attack on the Netherlands, he was, the
+Bishop of Bayonne assures us, the only man in the country who thought
+of it. He felt keenly the universal antipathy which he had awakened,
+and spoke of the efforts and devices he would have need of, to
+maintain himself.
+
+It was therefore just what the nobles wanted, that Wolsey fell out
+with the King in a matter of such engrossing nature, and that they
+found another means of access to him.
+
+The Boleyns were not of noble origin, but had been for some time
+connected with the leading families. Geoffrey the founder of the house
+had raised himself by success in business and good conduct to the
+dignity of Lord Mayor of London. His son William married the daughter
+of the only Irish peer who had a seat and vote in the English
+Parliament, Sir Thomas Ormond de Rochefort, Earl of Wiltshire. His
+titles passed through his daughter to his grandsons, of whom one,
+Thomas Boleyn, was created Viscount Rochefort, and married the
+daughter of the Duke of Norfolk; his daughter was Anne Boleyn: she
+took high rank and an especially distinguished position in English
+society because her uncle, Thomas Duke of Norfolk, was Henry VIII's
+chief lay minister (he held the place of High Treasurer) and was at
+the same time the leading man of the nobility. He had the reputation
+of being versed in business, cultivated, and shrewd; he was Wolsey's
+natural opponent. That the King showed an inclination to his niece,
+against the cardinal's views, was for him and his friends a great
+point gained.[97] It was soon seen that Anne's influence had obtained
+the recall of an opponent of Wolsey, who had insulted him and was
+banished from the Court.[98] It was of the greatest importance for
+home affairs, that the King was inclined to make Anne Boleyn his wife.
+The English kings in general did not think marriages in their own rank
+essential. Henry's own grandfather, Edward IV, had married a lady of
+by no means distinguished origin. It was seen beforehand that, if this
+happened, Wolsey could not maintain himself, and authority would again
+fall into the hands of the chief families. Even the cardinal's old
+friend, the Earl of Suffolk, now joined this combination: the whole
+of the nobility sided with it.
+
+But besides this the chief foreign affairs took a turn which made it
+impossible to carry out Wolsey's political ideas. In the summer of
+1528 the attacks of the allies on Naples were repulsed, and their
+armies annihilated. In the spring of 1529 the Emperor got the upper
+hand in Lombardy also. How utterly then did the oft-proposed plan, of
+depriving him of the supreme dignity, sink into nothingness: he was
+stronger than ever in Italy. The Pope was fortunate in not having
+joined the allies more closely; the relations of the States of the
+Church with Tuscany made a union with the Emperor necessary; he had a
+horror of a new quarrel with him. And as the Emperor now took up the
+interests of his mother's sister in the most earnest manner, and
+protested against proceeding by a Commission granted for England, the
+Pope could not possibly let the affair go on unchecked. When the
+English ambassadors pressed him, he exclaimed to them (for apart from
+this he would gladly have shown more favour to the King) that he felt
+himself as it were between anvil and hammer. Divers proposals were
+made, one more extraordinary than the other, if only the King would
+give up his demand;[99] but this was no longer possible. The two
+cardinals, Campeggi and Wolsey, had to begin judicial proceedings:
+King and Queen appeared before the Court, Articles were put forward,
+witnesses heard: the Correspondence shows that the King and Anne
+Boleyn expected with much confidence a speedy and favourable
+decision.[100] Wolsey too did not yet abandon this hope. It was
+thought at the time that he did not do all he might have done for it,
+that in fact he no longer favoured it, seeing as he did that it would
+turn out to the advantage of his rivals.[101] But it was in truth his
+fate, that the consequences of the design which originated with him
+recoiled on his own head. If it succeeded, it must be disadvantageous
+to him: if it failed, he was lost. The exhortations he addressed to
+the French Court, to exert yet once more its whole influence with the
+Papal Court for this matter, sound like a cry of distress in extreme
+peril. He had only undertaken it to unite France and England; the
+thing was reasonable and practicable, the Pope would not wish by
+refusing it to offend both crowns at once; he would value it more
+highly than if he himself were raised to the Papacy. But he had now to
+find that King Francis, as well as Pope Clement, was seeking a
+separate peace with the Emperor. Wolsey had given Henry the strongest
+assurances on this point, that such a thing would never happen, France
+would never separate herself from him. But yet this now happened, and
+how could any influence from that quarter on the Roman Court be still
+expected in favour of England, in a matter which was so highly
+offensive to the Emperor! The legates received from Rome distinct
+instructions to proceed slowly, and in no case to pronounce a
+decision.[102] While King Henry and those around him were eagerly
+expecting it, the cardinals (using the holidays of the Roman Rota as a
+pretence) announced the suspension of their proceedings.
+
+It appeared in an instant into what a violent ebullition of wrath,
+which unsettled every thing, the King fell in consequence; it seemed
+as if all his past way of governing had been a mistake. In
+contradiction to many of the older traditions of English history he
+had hitherto ruled chiefly through ecclesiastics to the disgust of the
+lay lords: now he betook himself to the latter, to complain of the
+proceedings of the two cardinals. These were still in the hall where
+they had sat, when Suffolk and some other lords appeared, and bade
+them bring the matter to an end without delay, even if it were by a
+peremptory decree, that might be issued on the next day, on which the
+holidays would not have begun. But the prorogation was in fact only
+the form under which the cardinals fulfilled their orders from Rome;
+they could not possibly recall it. Suffolk broke out into the
+exclamation that cardinals and legates had never brought good to
+England. The two spiritual lords looked at each other with amazement.
+Had they any feeling that his words contained a declaration of war on
+the part of the lay element in the State against ecclesiastical and
+foreign influences in general? Wolsey, at any rate, could not shut his
+eyes to the significance of such a war. He often said that what Henry
+VIII took in hand he could not be brought to give up by any
+representations; he had sometimes tried it, he had fallen at his feet,
+but it had been always in vain.
+
+Henry contained himself yet a while, as hopes had been given him that
+the proceedings might be resumed. But when a Breve came, by which
+Clement VII recalled his Commission and evoked the question of the
+divorce to Rome, he saw clearly that the influence of the Emperor in
+the Pope's Council had quite gained the upper hand over his own on
+this point. He was resolved not to submit to it. Had he not, before
+the mayor and aldermen of London, declared with a certain solemnity
+his resolution to carry through the divorce for the good of the land?
+his passion and his ambition had joined hands for this purpose before
+the eyes of the country. To prevent the need of recoiling, he formed a
+plan of incalculable importance, the plan of separating his nation and
+his kingdom from the spiritual jurisdiction of the Roman See.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[87] 'Giberto al Vescovo di Bajusa. 3 Luglio. Ci sono avisi
+d'Ingliterra de' 14 del passalo che mostrano gli animi di la e
+massimamente Eboracense non dico inclinati ma accesi di desiderio di
+concordia con Francia'.... Lettere di principi I. 168.
+
+[88] 'Le dit Cardinal sera conducteur, moderateur et gouverneur de
+toutes les entreprises.' The Regent's Instructions in Brinon,
+Captivite de Francois I. 57.
+
+[89] Riccardus Scellejus de prima causa divortii (Bibliotheca
+Magliabecch. at Florence). 'Catharina ita stomachata est, ut de
+Vulseji potentia minuenda cogitationem susciperet, quod ille cum
+sensisset, qui ab astrologo suo accepisset, sibi a muliere exitium
+imminere, de regina de gradu dejicienda consilium inivit.'
+
+[90] Lodovico Falier, Relatione di 1531 'avendo trattato, di dargli a
+sorella del Cristianissimo adesso maritata al re di Navarra, gli
+promese di far tanto con S. Sta che disfacesse le nozze.'
+
+[91] Du Bellay au Grandmaistre 21 October 1528; after Wolsey's own
+narrative in Le Grand, Histoire du divorce de Henri VIII, iii. 186.
+
+[92] He says so himself. Bellay's letter in Le Grand iii. 318.
+
+[93] In Sanga to Gambara, 9 February 1528. L. d. p. ii. 85. 'La cosa
+che V. S. sa, che non potra seguire senza gran rottura, fa S. S.
+facile a creder che posse essere cio che dice (Lotrec).
+
+[94] 'Considering the nature of men, being prone into novelties--the
+realm of England would not only enter into their accustomed divisions,
+but also would owe or do small devotion unto the church: wherefore his
+Holiness was right well content and ready to adhibit all remedy that
+in him was possible as in this time would serve.' Knight to the
+Cardinal, 1 Jan. 1528, in Burnet i. Collect. p. 22.
+
+[95] Incorrupta. Campeggi's letters to Sanga, 17, 26, 28 Oct. 1528.
+Laemmer, Monumenta Vaticana, 18 Oct. p. 25 seq. He gives his motive
+for communicating what the Queen said to him in confession as being
+her own wish. The archives too have long kept their secret.
+
+[96] According to Ricc. Scellejus, she prays the King, 'ne pergat suam
+oppugnare castitatem, quae dos erat maxima, quam posset futuro offerre
+marito, quaque violanda reginam etiam dominam proderet,--quoniam se
+illi fidelitatis sacramento obligasset.'
+
+[97] It seemed helpful to their working against the cardinal.
+Particularities of the life of Queen Anne, in Singer's Cavendish ii.
+187.
+
+[98] Du Bellay in Le Grand iii. 296. 'Le duc de Norfolk et sa ande
+commencent deja a parler gros (28 Jan. 1520).'
+
+[99] In a letter of Sanga to Campeggi (Lettere di diversi autori
+eccellenti p. 60), we read the following words: 'In quanto alla
+dispensa di maritar il figliolo con la figliola del re, se con haver
+in questa maniera stabilita la successione S. M. si rimanesse del
+primo pensiero della dissolutions S. Bne inclineria assai Piu.' This
+looks as if a marriage between Henry VIII's natural son and Mary was
+spoken of.--So I wrote previously. The thing is quite true. Campeggi
+writes 28 Oct. to Sanga. 'Han pensato si maritar la (la figliola) con
+dispensa di S. Sta al figlio natural del re, a che haveva pensato
+anch'io per stabilimento della successione.' (Monumenta Vaticana p.
+30.)
+
+[100] Sanga to Campeggi 2 Sept. 1528 in the Lettere di diversi autori
+eccellenti, Venetia 1556, p. 40. 'V. Sra. vedra l'esito che ha havuto
+l'impresa del regno.--Bisogna che S. Bne vedendo l'imperatore
+vittorioso non si precipiti a dare all'imperatore causa di nuova
+rottura.... Sia almanco avvertita di non lasciarsi costringere a
+pronuntiare senza nuova et expressa commissione di qua.'
+
+[101] Falier says so very positively.
+
+[102] Sanga 29 May. 'S. Bne ricorda che il procedere sia lento et in
+modo alcuno non si venghi al giudicio.' Of the same date is Bellay's
+letter in which those exhortations of Wolsey to the French Court are
+contained.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE SEPARATION OF THE ENGLISH CHURCH.
+
+
+Already at Orvieto Stephen Gardiner had told the Pope that, if the
+King did not obtain justice from him, he would do himself justice in
+his own kingdom. Later it was plainly declared to the Pope that, if
+they saw the Emperor had the ascendancy in his Council, the nobility
+of England with the King at their head would feel themselves compelled
+to cast off obedience to Rome. It seems as though the Roman Court
+however had no real fear of this. For the King, so they said, would do
+himself most damage by such a step.[103] The Papal Nuncio declared
+himself positively convinced, that it was necessary to deal with the
+English sharply and forcibly, if one would gain their respect.
+
+But these tendencies were more deeply rooted among the English than
+was remembered at Rome. They went back as far as the Articles of
+Clarendon, the projects of King John, the antipapal agitation under
+Edward III; the present question which involved an exceptionable and
+personal motive, exposed to public disapprobation, nevertheless
+touched on the deepest interests of the country. The wish to make the
+succession safe was perfectly justifiable. According to Clement VII's
+own declarations, the English were convinced that he was only hindered
+by regard for the Emperor from coming to a decision which was
+essential to them. His vacillation is very intelligible, very natural:
+but it did not correspond to the idea of the dignity with which he was
+clothed. There was to be an independent supreme Pontiff for this very
+reason, that right might be done in the quarrels of princes, without
+respect of persons, according to the state of the case. It clashed
+with the idea of the Papacy that alterations of political relations
+exercised such a decisive influence as they did in this matter. There
+was indeed something degrading for the English in their being made to
+feel the reaction of the Emperor's Italian victory, and his
+preponderance, in their weightiest affairs.
+
+Henry VIII had now made up his mind to throw off that ecclesiastical
+subjection, which was politically so disadvantageous; the
+circumstances were very favourable. It was the time at which some
+German principalities, and the kingdoms of the North, had given
+themselves a constitution which rested on the exclusion of the
+hierarchic influences of Rome: the King could reckon on many allies in
+his enterprise. Moreover he had no dangerous hostilities to fear, as
+long as the jealousy lasted between the Emperor and King Francis.
+Between them Henry VIII needed only to revert to his natural policy of
+neutrality.
+
+And the accomplishment of the affair was already prepared in the
+country itself, through no one more than through Cardinal Wolsey.
+
+The dignity of legate, which was granted him by Pope Leo, and then
+prolonged for five, for ten years, and at last for life, gave him a
+comprehensive spiritual authority. He obtained by it the right of
+visiting and reforming all ecclesiastical persons and institutions,
+even those which possessed a legal exemption of their own. Some orders
+of monks, which contended against it, were reduced to obedience by new
+bulls. But from the visitation of the monasteries Wolsey proceeded to
+their suppression: he united old convents (such as that one which has
+brought down to recent times the name of an Anglo-Saxon king's
+daughter, Frideswitha, from the eighth century) with the splendid
+colleges which he endowed so richly, for the advancement of learning
+and the renown of his name, at Oxford and at Ipswich. His courts
+included all branches of the ecclesiastical and mixed jurisdiction,
+and the King had no scruple in arming him with all the powers of the
+crown which were necessary for the government of the Church. What
+aspirations then arose are shewn by the compact which Wolsey made with
+King Francis I to counteract the influence which the Emperor might
+exert over the captive Pope. When it was settled in this, that
+whatever the cardinal and the English prelates should enact with the
+King's consent should have the force of law, does not this imply at
+least a temporary schism?
+
+When Clement became free, he named Wolsey his Vicar-General for the
+English Church: his position was again to be what it had been from the
+beginning, the expression of the unity between the Pope and the Crown.
+But now how if this were dissolved? The victorious Emperor exercised a
+still greater influence over the Pope when free than he had ever done
+over him when captive. Under these circumstances Wolsey submitted to
+the supreme spiritual power, the King resolved to withstand it: it was
+exactly on this point that open discord broke out between them. For a
+time the cardinal seemed still to maintain his courage; but when on
+St. Luke's day--the phrase ran that the evangelist had disevangelised
+him--the great seal was taken from him, he lost all self-reliance.
+Wolsey was not a Ximenes or a Richelieu. He had no other support than
+the King's favour; without this he fell back into his nothingness. He
+was heard to wail like a child: the King comforted him by a token of
+favour, probably however less out of personal sympathy than because he
+could not be yet quite dispensed with.[104] The High Treasurer,
+Norfolk, who generally acted as first minister, received the seals,
+and held them till some time afterwards Thomas More was named
+Chancellor. While these administered affairs in London, Suffolk, as
+President of the Privy Council, was to accompany the King in person.
+The chief direction of the administration passed over to the two
+leading lay lords.
+
+Henry VIII's resolution to call the Parliament together was of almost
+greater importance for the progress of events than the alteration in
+the ministry.
+
+During the fourteen years of his administration Wolsey had summoned
+Parliament only once, and that was when, in order to carry on the war
+in alliance with the Emperor against France, he needed an
+extraordinary grant of money. But his opening discourses were received
+with silence and dislike. Never, says a contemporary who was present,
+was the need of money more pressingly represented to a Parliament and
+never was there greater opposition; after a fortnight's consultation
+the proposal only passed at a moment when the members of the King's
+household and court formed the majority of those present.[105] The
+Parliament and the country always murmured at Wolsey's oppressive and
+lavish finance management;[106] a later attempt to raise taxes that
+had not been voted doubled the outcry against him. His fall and the
+convocation of a Parliament seemed a return to parliamentary
+principles in general, which in themselves exactly agreed with the
+view taken by the King in the present questions.
+
+In the first years of Henry VIII the Parliament had wished to do away
+with some of the most startling exemptions of the clergy from the
+temporal jurisdiction, for instance in reference to the crimes of
+felony and murder; the ecclesiastics had on the other hand extended
+their jurisdiction yet further, even to cases that had reference
+solely to questions of property. Hence the antagonism between the two
+jurisdictions had revived at that time with bitter keenness. It is
+noticeable that the temporal claims were upheld by a learned Minorite,
+Henry Standish, who declared it to be quite lawful to limit the
+ecclesiastical privileges for the sake of the public good; especially
+in the case of a crime that did not properly come before any spiritual
+court. Both sides then applied to the King: the ecclesiastics reminded
+him that he ought to uphold the rights of Holy Church, the laymen that
+he should maintain the powers of jurisdiction belonging to the crown.
+The King's declaration was favourable to the laymen; he recommended
+the clergy to acquiesce in some exceptions from their decretals. But
+the contest was rather suspended than decided. Wolsey's government
+followed, in which the spiritual courts extended their powers still
+further, and in reality exercised an offensive control over all the
+relations of private life. Even the ecclesiastics did not love his
+authority: they acquiesced in it because it was ecclesiastical: the
+laity endured it with the utmost impatience.
+
+It was inevitable that at the first fresh assembly of a Parliament
+these contests about jurisdiction should be mentioned. The Lower House
+began its action with a detailed charge against the spiritual courts,
+not merely against their abuses and the oppression that arose from
+them, but against their very existence and their legislation; the
+clergy made laws without the King's foreknowledge, without the
+participation of any laymen, and yet the laity were bound by them. The
+King was called on to reconcile his subjects of the spiritual and
+temporal estate with each other by good laws, since he was their sole
+head, the sovereign, lord and protector of both parties.
+
+It was a slight phrase,[107] 'the sole head of his subjects spiritual
+and temporal,' but one of the weightiest import. The very existence of
+the clergy as an order had hitherto depended precisely on their claim
+to a legislative power independent of the temporal supremacy as being
+their original right: on its universal maintenance rested the Papacy
+and its influence on the several countries. Were the clergy now to
+leave it to the King, who however only represented the temporal power,
+to adjust the differences between their legislation and that of the
+state? Were they, like the laity, virtually to recognise him as their
+Head?
+
+It is clear that they would thus sever themselves from the great union
+under one spiritual Head, from the constitution of the Latin Church.
+Whoever it was that introduced the word 'Head,' no doubt had this in
+view. The King and the laity took it up, they wished only to induce
+the clergy themselves to come to a resolution in this sense.
+
+The chief motive which was to serve this purpose is connected with the
+lordship which the Popes possessed in England in the thirteenth
+century, or rather with the reaction against it which went on
+throughout the fourteenth. This is most distinctly expressed in the
+statutes of 1393, which threatened with the severest penalties all
+participation in any attempt, to the injury of the King's supremacy,
+to obtain a church-benefice from Rome; and this too even where the
+King had given his consent to it. Clergy and laity were thus allied
+against the encroachments of the Roman Curia. Wolsey was now accused
+of having transgressed this statute:[108] he had in virtue of his
+legatine power given away benefices, and established a jurisdiction by
+which that of the King was encroached on; he was found guilty of this
+in regular form. He anticipated the full effect of this sentence by
+submitting without any defence and surrendering all his property to
+the King. It was then that York House in Westminster, with its gardens
+and the land adjoining, the Whitehall of later times, passed into the
+possession of the crown.[109] He still kept his archbishopric; we find
+him soon after at Caywood, the palace belonging to it, and in fact
+even busied once more with his buildings. At times the King again
+thought of his old counsellor, and to many it quite seemed as though
+he might yet recover power. In those days the general belief was, that
+Anne Boleyn had exerted her whole influence against it. But most of
+the other persons of distinction in court and state were also opposed
+to Wolsey. Did he then really, as was imputed to him, try to gain a
+party among the clergy, and move the Pope to pronounce excommunication
+against the King?[110] A pretext at any rate was found for arresting
+him as a traitor: but as he was being brought to the Tower, he died
+on the way. He wished, so far as we know, to starve himself to death;
+it was at that time supposed that in his wish to die he was aided by
+help from others.
+
+Neither for his mental nor for his moral qualities can Wolsey be
+reckoned among men of the first rank; yet his position and the ability
+which he showed in it, his ambition and his political plans, what he
+did and what he suffered, his success and his fall, have won him an
+imperishable name in English history. His attempt to link the royal
+power with the Papacy by the closest ties rent them asunder for ever.
+No sooner was he dead than the clergy became subject to the Crown--a
+subjection which could forebode nothing less than this final rupture.
+
+The whole clergy was so far involved in Wolsey's guilt that it had
+supported his Legatine Powers, and so had shared in the violation of
+the statutes. It shows the English spirit of keeping to the strict
+letter of the law, that the King, though he had for years given his
+consent and help in all this, now came forward to avenge the violation
+of the law. To avert his displeasure the Convocation of Canterbury was
+forced to vote him a very considerable sum of money, yet even this did
+not satisfy him. Rather it seemed to him the fitting and decisive
+moment for forcing the clergy, conformably with the Address of the
+Commons, to accept the Anglican point of view. He demanded from
+Convocation the express acknowledgment that they recognised him as
+_the Protector and the Supreme Head of the Church and Clergy of
+England_; he commanded the judges not to issue the Act of Pardon
+unless this acknowledgment were at once incorporated with the bill for
+the money payment. It is not hard to see what made him choose this
+exact moment for so acting; it was the serious turn which the affair
+of his Divorce had taken at Rome. He had once more made application to
+the Curia to let it be decided in England; the Cardinals discussed the
+point in their Consistory, Dec. 22, 1530, but resolved that the
+question must come of right before the Assessors of the Rota, who
+should afterwards report on it to the Sacred College.[111] What their
+sentence would be was the less doubtful, since the Curia was now
+linked closer than ever with the Emperor, who had just closed the Diet
+of Augsburg in the way they wished, and was now about to carry out its
+decrees. The traces of a new alliance with Rome, which was imputed to
+Wolsey as an act of treason, must have contributed to the same result.
+The King wished to break off this connexion by a Declaration, which
+would serve him as a standing-ground later on, and show the Court of
+Rome that he had nothing to fear from it. On Feb. 7, 1531, the King's
+demand was laid before both Houses of Convocation. Who could avoid
+seeing its decisive significance for the age? The clergy, which had
+without much trouble agreed to the money-vote, nevertheless strove
+long against a Declaration which altered their whole position. But a
+hard necessity lay on them. In default of the Pardon, which, as the
+judges repeatedly assured them, depended on this Declaration, they
+would have found themselves out of the protection of the King and the
+Law. They sent two bishops, to get the King's demand softened by a
+personal appeal; Henry VIII refused to hear them. They proposed that
+some members of both Houses should confer with the Privy Council and
+the judges; the answer was that the King wished for no discussion, he
+wanted a clear answer. Thus much however they ascertained, that the
+King would be content with a mode of statement in which he was
+unconditionally recognised as the protector and sovereign of the
+Church and clergy of England, but as its supreme head only so far as
+religion allows. This was comprehended in the formula _in so far as is
+permitted by the law of Christ_, an expression which men might assent
+to on opposite grounds. Some might accept it from seeing in it only
+the limitation which is set to all power by the laws of God; others
+from thinking that it excluded generally the influence of the secular
+power on what were properly spiritual matters. When the clause was
+laid before them, at the morning sitting of Feb. 11, it was received
+with an ambiguous silence; but on closer consideration, it was so
+evidently their only possible resource, that in the afternoon, first
+the Upper House of Convocation, and then the Lower, gave their
+consent. Then the King accepted the money-bill, and granted them in
+return the Act of Pardon.[112]
+
+The clergy had yet other causes for seeking the King's protection. The
+writings of the Reformers, which attacked good works and vows, the
+Mass and the Priesthood, and all the principles on which the
+ecclesiastical system rested, found their way across the Channel, and
+filled men's minds in England also with similar convictions. The only
+safeguard against them lay in the King's power; his protection was no
+empty word, the clergy was lost if it drew on itself Henry's aversion,
+which was now directed against the Papal See.
+
+The heavy weight of the King's hand and the impulse of
+self-preservation were however not the only reasons why they yielded.
+It is undeniable that the conception of the Universal Church,
+according to which the National Church did but form part of a larger
+whole, was nearly as much lost among the clergy as among the laity. In
+the Parliament of 1532 Convocation had presented a petition in which
+they desired to be released from the payments which had been hitherto
+made to the supreme spiritual authority, especially the annates and
+first-fruits. The National Church was the existing, immediate
+authority--why should they allow taxes to be laid on them for a
+distant Power, a Power moreover of which they had no need? As the
+bishops complained that this injured their families and their
+benefices, Parliament calculated the sums which Rome had drawn out of
+the country on this ground since Henry VII's time, and which it would
+soon draw at the impending vacancies; what losses the country had
+already suffered in this way, and would yet suffer.[113]
+
+The tendency of men's minds in this direction showed itself also in
+the understanding come to on the chief question of all.
+
+Parliament renewed its complaints of the abuses in the ecclesiastical
+legislation, and learned men brought out clearly the want of any
+divine authority to justify it; at last the bishops virtually
+renounced their right of special legislation, and pledged themselves
+for the future not to issue any kind of Ordinance or Constitution
+without the King's knowledge and consent. A revision of the existing
+canons by a mixed commission, under the presidentship of their common
+head, the King, was to restore the unity of legislation.
+
+The clause was then necessarily omitted by which the recognition of
+the Crown's supremacy over the clergy had been hitherto limited. The
+defenders of the secular power put forth the largest claims. They
+said, the King has also the charge of his subjects' souls, the
+Parliament is divinely empowered to make ordinances concerning them
+also.[114]
+
+So a consolidation of public authority grew up in England, unlike
+anything which had yet been seen in the West. One of the great
+statutes that followed begins with the preamble that England is a
+realm to which the Almighty has given all fulness of power, under one
+supreme head, the King, to whom the body politic has to pay natural
+obedience, next after God; that this body consists of clergy and
+laity; to the first belongs the decision in questions of the divine
+law and things spiritual, while temporal affairs devolve on the laity;
+that one jurisdiction aids the other for the due administration of
+justice, no foreign intervention is needed. This is the Act by which,
+for these very reasons, legal appeals to Rome were abolished. It was
+now possible to carry out what in previous centuries had been
+attempted in vain. All encroachments on the prerogative of the
+'Imperial Crown' were to be abolished, the supreme jurisdiction of the
+Roman Curia was to be valid no longer; appeals to Rome were not only
+forbidden but subjected to penalties.
+
+The several powers of the realm united to throw off the foreign
+authority which had hitherto influenced them, and which limited the
+national independence, as being itself a higher power.
+
+As the oaths taken by the bishops were altered to suit these statutes,
+the King set himself to modify his coronation oath also in the same
+sense. He would not swear any longer to uphold the rights of the
+Church in general, but only those guaranteed to the Church of England,
+and not derogatory to his own dignity and jurisdiction; he did not
+pledge himself to maintain the peace of the Church absolutely, but
+only the concord between the clergy and his lay subjects according to
+his conscience; not, unconditionally, to maintain the laws and customs
+of the land, but only those that did not conflict with his crown and
+imperial duties. He promised favour only for the cases in which favour
+ought to find a place.[115]
+
+How predominant is the strong feeling of aggrandisement, of personal
+right, and of kingly independence!
+
+Henry VIII too regarded himself as a successor of Constantine the
+Great, who had given laws to the Church. True, said he, kings are sons
+of the Church, but not the less are they supreme over Christian men.
+Of the doctrines which came from Germany none found greater acceptance
+with him than this--that every man must be obedient to the higher
+powers. We possess Tyndale's book in which these principles are set
+forth; by Anne Boleyn's means it came into Henry's hands. That Pope
+Clement summoned him formally before his judgment-seat, he declared to
+be an offence to the Kingly Majesty. Was a Prince, he exclaims, to
+submit himself to a creature whom God had made subject to him; to
+humble himself before a man who, in opposition to God and Right,
+wished to oppress him? It would be a reversal of the ordinance of
+God.[116]
+
+Whilst we follow the questions which here come into discussion--on the
+relations of Church and State, the rights of nations and
+kings--questions of infinite importance for this as for all other
+states, we almost lose sight of the affair of the Divorce, which had
+been the original cause of quarrel, and which had meanwhile moved on
+in the direction given it once for all. Pope Clement restrained
+himself as much as possible, he still more than once made advances to
+the King and offered him conciliatory terms; but the King had already
+gone too far in his separation from Rome to be able to accept them. At
+the beginning of 1533 he celebrated his marriage with Anne Boleyn
+privately. He had once, when he was still waiting for the Pope's
+decision, tried to influence it by favourable opinions of learned
+theologians.[117] With this view he had applied to the most
+distinguished universities in Italy and Germany, in France and in
+England itself; and managed to obtain a large number of decisions, by
+which the Pope's right of dispensation was denied; and this in spite
+of the constant efforts in various ways of the Imperial agents; even
+the two mother-universities, Bologna and Paris, had declared in his
+favour. He protested that he had been thereby enabled in his
+conscience to free himself from the yoke of an unlawful union,
+bordering on incest, and to proceed to another marriage. But all the
+more urgent was it that the legality of this marriage should be
+recognised according to the forms at that time lawfully valid. He no
+longer wished for a recognition from the Pope; he laid the question
+before the two Convocations of the English Church-provinces. For the
+general course of Church history we must admit it to be an event of
+the highest significance, that they dared to pronounce the
+dispensation of Pope Julius II invalid according to God's law. The
+authority hitherto regarded as the expression of God's will on earth
+was found guilty, by the representatives of the Church of one
+particular country, of transgressing that will. It now followed that
+the King's marriage, concluded on the strength of that dispensation,
+was declared by the Archbishop's court at Canterbury null and void,
+and invalid from the beginning. Catharine was henceforth to be
+treated no longer as Queen but only as still Princess-dowager.
+
+She was unable to realise the things that were happening around her.
+That she was expected to renounce her rank as Queen awoke in her quite
+as much astonishment as anger. 'For she had not come to England,' she
+said, 'on mercantile business at a venture, but according to the will
+of the two venerated kings now dead: she had married King Henry
+according to the decision of the Holy Father at Rome: she was the
+anointed and crowned Queen of England; were she to give up her title,
+she would have been a concubine these twenty-four years, and her
+daughter a bastard; she would be false to her conscience, to her own
+soul, her confessor would not be able to absolve her.' She became more
+and more absorbed in strict Catholic religious observances. She rose
+soon after midnight, to be present at the mass; under her dress she
+wore the habit of the third order of S. Francis; she confessed twice
+and fasted twice a week; her reading consisted of the legends of the
+saints. So she lived on for two years more, undisturbed by the
+ecclesiastico-political statutes which passed in the English
+Parliament. Till the very end she regarded herself as the true Queen
+of England.
+
+Immediately after the sentence on Catharine followed Anne's
+coronation, which was performed with all the ancient ceremonial, all
+the more carefully attended to because she was not born a princess. On
+the Thursday before Whitsuntide she was escorted from Greenwich by the
+Mayor and the Trades of London, in splendidly adorned barges, with
+musical instruments playing, till she was greeted by the cannon of the
+Tower. The Saturday after she went in procession through the City to
+Westminster. The King had created eighteen knights of the Order of the
+Bath. These in their new decorations, and a great part of the
+nobility, which felt itself honoured in Anne's elevation, accompanied
+her:[118] she sat on a splendid seat, supported by and slung between
+horses: the canopy over her was borne by the barons of the Cinque
+Ports; her hair was uncovered, she was charming as always, and (it
+appears) not without a sense of high good fortune. On Sunday she was
+escorted to Westminster Abbey by the Archbishop of Canterbury and six
+bishops, the Abbot of Westminster and twelve other abbots in full
+canonicals: she was in purple, her ladies in scarlet, for so old
+custom required; the Duke of Suffolk bore the crown before her, which
+was placed on her head by the hands of the archbishop. Nobles and
+commons greeted her with emulous devotion, the ecclesiastics joined
+in; they expected from her an heir to England.--Not a son, but a
+daughter, Elizabeth, did she then bear beneath her heart.
+
+Anne's coronation was at the same time the complete expression of the
+revolt of the nation collectively from the Roman See: it is noteworthy
+that Pope Clement VII, in his all-calculating and temporising policy,
+even then reserved to himself the last word. As he had once yielded to
+the Emperor, to conclude his peace with him, so now again--for he did
+not wish to be entirely dependent on him--he had entered into close
+relations with King Francis, who on his side saw in the continuance of
+his union with England one of the conditions of his position in
+Europe. The political weight of England reacted indirectly on the
+Pope: he indeed annulled Archbishop Cranmer's decision, but he could
+not yet bring himself to take a further step, often as he had promised
+the Emperor and pledged himself in his agreements to do so.[119]
+Charles V supplied his ambassador at Rome with yet another means to
+advance (as he expressed himself) the decision of the proceedings with
+the Pope and with the Holy See--for he made a distinction between
+them. The Pope inquired of him what, after this had ensued, would then
+be done to carry it out. The Emperor answered, his Holiness should do
+what justice pledged him to do, what he could not omit if he would
+fulfil his duty to God and the world, and maintain his own importance;
+this must come first, the Church must use all its own means before it
+called in the temporal arm: but if the matter came to that point, he
+would not fail to do his part; to declare himself explicitly
+beforehand might excite religious scruples.[120] And however much the
+policy of the Pope might waver, there could be no doubt about the
+decision of the Rota. On the 23 March 1534 one of the auditors,
+Simonetta, bishop of Pesaro, made a statement on the subject in the
+consistory of the cardinals: there were only three among them who
+demanded a further delay: all the rest joined without any more
+consideration in the decision that Henry's marriage with Catharine was
+perfectly lawful, and their children legitimate and possessed of full
+rights. The Imperialists held this to be a great victory, they made
+the city ring with their cries of 'the Empire and Spain':[121] yet
+even then the French did not give up the hope of bringing the Pope to
+another mind. But meanwhile in England the last steps were already
+taken.
+
+King Henry reckons it as honourable to himself that he had not yielded
+to the offer of the Roman Court, made to him indirectly, to decide in
+his favour, but had set himself against its usurped jurisdiction,
+without being influenced by the proposal,[122] not for himself alone
+but in the interest of all kings. Yet once more had he laid the
+question before learned ecclesiastics, whether the Pope of Rome had
+any authority in England by divine right; as the University of Oxford
+declares, their theologians had searched for this through the books of
+Holy Scripture and its most approved interpreters; they had compared
+the places, conferred with each other on them and come at last to the
+conclusion, to answer the King's question unreservedly in the
+negative. The Cambridge scholars and both Convocations declared
+themselves in the same sense. On this the Parliament had no scruple in
+abrogating piece by piece the hierarchic-Romish order of things; it
+was nothing but a revocable right which they had hitherto borne with.
+The Annates were transferred to the crown; never more was an English
+bishop to receive his pallium from Rome. It was made penal to apply
+for dispensing faculties; with their abolition the fees usually paid
+for them also ceased. The oldest token of the devotion of the
+Anglo-Saxon race to the Roman See, the Peter's penny, was definitely
+abolished. Care was taken that for the appeal in the last resort,
+hitherto made to the Roman courts, there should be a similar court at
+home. On the other hand the King granted a greater freedom in the
+election of bishops, at least in its outward forms. The existing laws
+against heretics were confirmed, though those independent proceedings
+of the bishops which had been usual in the times of the Lancasters
+received some limitation. For the episcopal constitution and the old
+doctrine were to be retained: the wish was to establish an
+Anglo-Catholic Church under the supremacy of the crown. The King added
+to his titles the designation of 'Supreme Head on earth of the Church
+of England immediately under God.' The Parliament awarded him the
+right of Visitation over the Church in reference to abuses and even to
+errors, as well as the right of reforming them. For the exercise
+moreover of the Papal authority, which so far passed over to him, he
+had an example before him which he had only to follow. Wolsey for a
+series of years, as Legate of the Pope and then as his Vicar General,
+had administered the English Church by means of English courts: the
+unity of the English common-weal had been represented in his twofold
+power as legate and first minister; practically it was no violent
+change when the King himself now appointed a Vicar General who,
+empowered by him, exercised this authority without any reference to
+the Pope. It was an assistant of Wolsey, Thomas Cromwell, who was at
+the same time Keeper of the Great Seal, who regulated the management
+of these affairs in a way not altogether new to him. From this point
+of view Wolsey represents exactly the man of the transition, who
+occupied the intermediate position in nationalising the English
+Church.
+
+Though Henry VIII did not always follow in his father's footsteps, he
+was yet his genuine successor in the work he began. What the first
+Tudor achieved in the temporal domain, viz. the exclusion of foreign
+influence, that the second extended to spiritual affairs. The great
+question now was, whether the conflicting elements, in themselves
+independent but ceaselessly agitated by their connexion with the rest
+of Europe, would continue loyal to the idea of the common-weal; then
+even their opposition might become a new impulse and help to perfect
+the power of the State and the Constitution.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[103] 'Quasi che quello, che minacciano, non fosse prima a danno
+loro.' So it is said in a letter of Sanga, April 1529, Lettere di
+diversi autori p. 69.
+
+[104] 'Pour ce qu'il n'est encoires temps qu'il meure que premierement
+l'on n'ayt entendu et veriffie plusieurs choses.' Chapuis to Charles
+V, 25 Oct. 1529, in Bradford, Correspondence of the Emperor Charles V,
+p. 291.
+
+[105] A letter printed in Fiddes (Life of Wolsey, Records II. p. 115,
+no 58), adds to the laconic parliamentary notices the desirable
+explanation: 'the knights being of the King's council, the King's
+servants and gentlemen ... were long time spoken with and made to see
+(a misprint for "say") yea, it may fortune, contrary to their heart.'
+
+[106] Giustiniani: Four Years, I. 162. 'They see that their treasure
+is spent in vain, and consequently loud murmurs and discontent prevail
+through the kingdom.'
+
+[107] 'The only head sovereign lord and protector of both the said
+parties, your subjects spiritual and temporal.' Petition of the
+Commons 1529, in Froude, History of England i. 200.
+
+[108] Indictment in Fiddes, Life of Wolsey p. 504.
+
+[109] 'Pro domino rege, de recuperatione.' Ibid. Collections no. 103.
+
+[110] Falier: 'comincio a machinar contra la corona con S. Sta.'
+
+[111] Pallavicino, Concilio di Trento III, XIV, V, from a Roman diary.
+
+[112] Original accounts in Burnet iii. 52, 53.
+
+[113] Proceedings in Burnet, History of the Reformation i. 117. Strype
+had already remarked its difference from the original demands.
+
+[114] Matters to be proposed in Convocation (in Strype, Ecclesiastical
+Memorials i. 215.) 'That the King's Majesty hath as well the care of
+the souls of his subjects as their bodies, and may by the law of God
+by his Parliament make laws touching and concerning as well the one as
+the other.'
+
+[115] Facsimile in Ellis's Original Letters, Ser. ii. vol i. But this
+alteration cannot have taken place at the beginning of his government.
+This would presuppose all the results won by so much effort. The
+handwriting too is not that of a boy, but of a grown man.
+
+[116] Instruction for Rochefort, State Papers vii. 427.
+
+[117] Jean Joachim au roi (de France) 15 Feb. 1510, afinche questa
+opinion (della Faculta di Parigi) insieme con altre opinion delle
+universita di Angliterra et d'altrove per Mr. Winschier [father of
+Anne Boleyn] al papa si possino monstrar o presentar.
+
+[118] 'The moste part of the nobles of the realm.' Cranmer's letter to
+Hawkyns. Archaeologia xviii. 79.
+
+[119] In the treaty of Bologna (1 Feb. 1533) is an article, 'pro
+administranda justitia super divortio Anglicano et--amputando omnem
+superfluam dilationem'
+
+[120] Instruccion para el Conde de Cifuentes y Rodrigo Avalos. Papiers
+d'etat de Granvelle ii. 45
+
+[121] In a later report to the Emperor it is said, that the rights of
+the Queen and Princess were recognised, 'a l'instante poursuite de S.
+Me. Imperiale.' Ibid. ii. 210.
+
+[122] In Halliwell, Letters of the Kings of England i. 337.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE OPPOSING TENDENCIES WITHIN THE SCHISMATIC STATE.
+
+
+Among the results of these transactions in England that which most
+directly concerned the higher interests of the nation was the
+abolition, by a formal decision of Parliament, on religious grounds,
+of the hereditary title of the King's daughter by his Spanish Queen,
+and the recognition of the succession of Queen Anne's issue to the
+throne, even in the case of her having only the one daughter who had
+been meanwhile born. This does not depend so much on the actual
+measures taken as on the fact, that now, according to Wolsey's plan,
+the government had broken with the political system which had
+prevailed hitherto, and indeed in a sense that went far beyond his
+views. Not merely was a French alliance avoided; the separation from
+the Church of Rome was to become the basis of the whole dynastic
+settlement of England.
+
+At home men felt most the harshness and violence of basing a political
+rule on Church ideas. The statute contains threats of the sharpest
+punishments against all who should do or write or even say anything
+against it: a commission was appointed, in which we find the Dukes of
+Norfolk and Suffolk, which could require every one to take an oath of
+conformity to it. It was to be carried out with the full weight of
+English adherence to the law.
+
+It was to this very statute that Bishop Fisher of Rochester and Sir
+Thomas More fell victims. They did not refuse to acknowledge the order
+of succession itself thus enacted, for this was within the competence
+of Parliament, but they would not confirm with their oath the reason
+laid down in the statute, that Henry's marriage with Catharine was
+against Scripture and invalid from the beginning. More ranks among the
+original minds of this great century: he is the first who learnt how
+to write English prose; but in the great currents of the literary
+movement he shrank back from the foremost place: after he had aided
+them by writings in the style of Erasmus, he set himself as Lord
+Chancellor of England to oppose their onward sweep with much rigour:
+he would not have the Church community itself touched. Of the last
+statute he said, it killed either the body if one opposed it, or the
+soul if one obeyed: he preferred to save his soul. He met his death
+with so lively a realisation of the future life, in which the troubles
+of this life would cease, that he looked on his departure out of it
+with all the irony which was in general characteristic of him. The
+fact that the Pope at this moment had named Bishop Fisher cardinal of
+the Roman Church seems to have still more hastened his execution. They
+both died as martyrs to the ideas by which England had been hitherto
+linked to the Church community of the West and to the authority of the
+Papacy.
+
+If we turn our eyes abroad, the succession statute above all must have
+made a most disagreeable impression on the Emperor Charles V. He saw
+in it a political loss, an injury to his house, and indeed to all
+sovereign families, and a danger to the Church. With a view to
+opposing it, he formed the plan of drawing the King of France into an
+enterprise against England. He proposed to him the marriage of his
+third son, the Duke of Angouleme, with the Princess Mary, who was
+recognised as the only lawful heiress of England by the Apostolic See,
+and whose claims would then accrue to this prince.[123] And they would
+not be difficult, so he said, to establish, as a great part of the
+English abhorred the King's proceedings, his second marriage, and his
+divergence from the Church. At the same time the Emperor proposed the
+closest dynastic union of the two houses by a double marriage of his
+two children with a son and a daughter of Francis I. What in the whole
+world would he not have attained, if he had won over France to
+himself! His combination embraced as usual West and East, Church and
+State, Italian German and Northern affairs.
+
+Perhaps the success of such a scheme was not probable; but
+independently of this, Henry VIII had good cause to prepare himself to
+meet the superior power of the Emperor, with whom he had so decidedly
+broken. As we have already hinted, he could have no want of allies in
+this struggle. It was under these circumstances that he entered into
+relations with the powerful demagogues who were then from their
+central position at Lubeck labouring to transform the North, and to
+sever it from all Netherlandish-Burgundian influence. But it was of
+still more importance to him to form an alliance with the Protestant
+princes and estates of Germany proper, who had gradually become a
+power in opposition to Pope and Emperor. In the autumn of 1535 we find
+English ambassadors in Germany, who attended the meeting of the League
+at Schmalkald, and the most serious negociations were entered on. Both
+sides were agreed not to recognise the Council which was then
+announced by the Pope, for the very reason that the Pope announced it,
+who had no right to do so. The German princes demanded an engagement
+that if one of the two parties was attacked, the other should lend no
+support to its enemy; for the King this was not enough; he wished, in
+case he was attacked, to be able to reckon on support from Germany in
+cavalry, infantry, and ships, in return for which he was ready to give
+a very considerable contribution to the chest of the League. It was
+even proposed that he should undertake the protection of the
+League.[124]
+
+All this however was based on a presupposition, which could not but
+lead the English to further ecclesiastical changes. It was not a
+schism affecting the constitution and administration of justice, but a
+complete system of dissentient Church doctrines, with which Henry VIII
+came in contact. The German Protestants made it a condition of their
+alliance with England, that there should be full agreement between
+them as to doctrine.
+
+We may ask whether this was altogether possible.
+
+If we compare the Church movements and events that had taken place
+during the last years in Germany and in England, their great
+difference is visible at a glance. In Germany the movement was
+theological and popular, corresponding to the wants and needs of the
+territorial state; in England it was juridico-canonical, not connected
+with appeals to the people or with free preaching, but based on the
+unity of the nation. Though the German Diet had for a moment inclined
+to the Reform and had once even given it a legal sanction, it
+afterwards by a majority set itself against it: to carry it through
+became now the part of the minority, the Protesting party. In England
+on the contrary all proceeded from the plan of the sovereign and the
+resolutions of Parliament, in which the bishops themselves with few
+exceptions took part. Perhaps a more deep-seated ground of difference
+may be that the German bishops were more independent than the English,
+and that an Emperor was then ruling who, being at the same time King
+of Spain and Naples, troubled himself little about the unity of
+Germany in particular; while in England a newly-formed strong
+political power existed which made the national interests its own and
+upheld them on all sides.
+
+Despite all this the English Schism had nevertheless a deep inner
+analogy with the German Reformation.
+
+From the beginning the dispute as to jurisdiction was based on the
+historical point of view, on which Luther too laid much stress.
+Standish, who has been already mentioned, derived the right to limit
+the ecclesiastical prerogatives, from this among other grounds, that
+there were Christian churches in which they were altogether rejected,
+for instance the rule as to the celibacy of the clergy was not
+accepted by the Greeks. He inferred too, that, as no one disputed the
+claim of the Greek Church to be Christian, the conception of the
+universal Church must be different from that which Romanism asserts.
+Both countries also found the groundwork of the true church-community
+in Scripture. In the chief instance before them, that of the divorce,
+the German theologians were not of the same mind as the English; but
+both sides agreed in this, that there was a revealed will of God,
+which the ecclesiastical power might not contravene: the conviction
+took root that the Papacy did not represent the highest communion of
+men with divine things, but that this rested on the divine record
+alone. The use of Scripture had at last influenced various questions
+in England also. For abolishing the Annates it was argued that such an
+impost contradicts a maxim of the Apostle Paul; for doing away the
+Papal jurisdiction, that no place of Scripture justifies it. This is
+what was meant when the assertion that the Papacy is of divine right
+was denied. This becomes quite clear when Henry VIII instead of the
+previous prohibitions against distributing the Bible in the vernacular
+gave his licence for it. As he once declared with great animation, the
+advancement of God's word and of his own authority were one and the
+same thing.[125] The engraved title-page of the translation which
+appeared with his _privilegium_ puts into his mouth the expression
+'Thy word is a light to my feet.' The order soon followed to place a
+copy of the Book of books in every church: there every man might look
+into the disputed places, and convince himself, by this highest of
+codes, as to the rightfulness of the procedure that had been chosen.
+
+But then it was impossible to stop at mere divergences of
+jurisdiction. The German interpretation of Scripture gained ground in
+every direction: a theological school grew up, though only here and
+there, which adhered to it more or less openly.
+
+It must needs have had the greatest effect, that the followers of this
+view obtained a great number of bishoprics. The archbishopric of
+Canterbury had already fallen to the lot of a man who had completed
+his theological training in Germany: this very man, Thomas Cranmer,
+had carried through the divorce; his was one of those natures which
+must have the support of the supreme power to help them to follow out
+their own views; as they then appear enterprising and courageous, so
+do they become pliant and yielding when this favour fails them; they
+do not shine through moral greatness, but they are well suited to
+preserve, under difficult circumstances, what they have once embraced,
+for better times. Hugh Latimer was cast in a sterner mould; he
+actually dared, in the midst of the persecutions, to admonish the
+King, whose chaplain he was, of the welfare of his soul and his duty
+as King. However little this act effected for the moment, yet he may
+have thus contributed to enlighten the King (who now and then showed
+him personal goodwill) as to his title of 'Defender of the Faith.'
+Latimer was a fervent and effective preacher: he was made bishop of
+Worcester. Nicolas Shaxton, Bishop of Salisbury, Hilsey of Rochester,
+Bisham of S. Asaph's and then S. David's, Goodrich of Ely, were all
+disposed to Protestantism. Edward Fox who had been named Bishop of
+Hereford, had at Schmalkald openly declared the Pope to be Antichrist,
+and assured the Protestants in the strongest manner of his sovereign's
+inclination to attach himself to their Confession. It was the grand
+union of these biblical scholars among the bishops, which in the
+Convocation of 1536 undertook to carry through the work of drawing
+their church nearer that of Germany. Latimer opened the war by a
+fervent sermon against image-worship, indulgences, purgatory, and
+other doctrines or rites which were at variance with the Bible.
+Cranmer proved that Holy Scripture contains all that is necessary for
+man to know for the salvation of his soul, and that tradition is not
+needed. The Bishop of Hereford communicated it, as an experience of
+his journey, that the laity everywhere would now be instructed only
+out of the Revelation. Thomas Cromwell, who took part in the sittings
+as the King's representative, lent them much support, and once brought
+with him a Scottish scholar who had just returned from Wittenberg, to
+combat the received doctrine of the Sacrament.[126] On the other side
+also stood men of weight and consideration, Lee archbishop of York who
+had expressly opposed himself, together with his clergy, to the
+adoption of the King's new title, Stokesley of London who broke a
+lance for the seven sacraments, Gardiner of Winchester and Longland of
+Lincoln who after contributing materially to the King's divorce
+nevertheless rejected any alteration in doctrine, Tonstall of Durham,
+Nix of Norwich.
+
+It seems as though the King, who was still busied in the Parliament
+itself with the confirmation of his church regulations, thought he
+detected in this party too much predilection for the Papacy. He found
+another motive in the necessity of having allies for the coming
+Council; he decisively took the side of Reform. Ten articles were laid
+before the Convocation in his name, the first five of which are taken
+from the Augsburg Confession or from the commentaries on it; as to
+these the Bishop of Hereford agreed with the theologians of
+Wittenberg. In them the faithful were referred exclusively to the
+contents of the Bible, and the three oldest creeds; only three
+sacraments were still recognised, Baptism, Penance, and the Lord's
+Supper. The real presence was maintained in them, in the words of
+those commentaries, and entirely in Luther's original sense.[127] But
+still this tendency was not yet so strong as to be able to make itself
+exclusively felt. In the following articles, the veneration, even the
+invocation, of saints, and no small part of the existing ceremonies,
+were allowed--though in terms which with all their moderation cannot
+disguise the rejection of them in principle. Despite these limitations
+the document contains a clear adoption of the principles of religious
+reform as they were carried out in Germany. It was subscribed by 18
+bishops, 40 abbots and priors, 50 members of the lower house of
+Convocation: the King, as the Head of the Church, promulgated it for
+general observance. His vicegerent in Church affairs commanded all the
+clergy entrusted with a cure of souls to explain the articles, and
+also at certain times to lay before the people the rightfulness of the
+abrogation of Papal authority. He required them to give warnings
+against image-worship, belief in modern miracles, and pilgrimages.
+Children were henceforth to learn the Lord's Prayer, the articles of
+the Creed, and the Ten Commandments in English.[128] It was the
+beginning of the Church service in the vernacular, which was rightly
+regarded as the chief means of withdrawing the national Church from
+Romish influence.
+
+But Cromwell was also engaged in another enterprise, not less hostile
+and injurious to the Papacy.
+
+As many of the great men in State and Church thought, so thought also
+the pious members of the monasteries and cloistered convents; they
+opposed the Supremacy, not as they said from inclination to
+disobedience, but because Holy Mother Church ordered otherwise than
+King and Parliament ordained.[129] The apology merely served to
+condemn them. In the rules they followed, in the Orders to which they
+belonged, the intercommunion of Latin Christianity had its most living
+expression; but it was exactly this which King and Parliament wished
+to sever. Wolsey had already, as we know, and with the help of
+Cromwell himself, taken in hand to suppress many of them: but in the
+new order of things there was absolutely no more place for the
+monastic system; it was necessarily sacrificed to the unity of the
+country, and at the same time to the greed of the great men.
+
+But it cannot be imagined that innovations which struck so deep could
+be carried through without opposition. After all the efforts of the
+old kings to establish Christianity in agreement with Rome, after the
+victories of the Papacy when the kings quarrelled with it, and the
+violent suppression of all dissent, it was inevitable that the belief
+of the hierarchic ages, which is besides so peculiarly adapted to this
+end, had in England as elsewhere sunk deep into men's minds, and in
+great measure still swayed them. Was what had been always held for
+heresy no longer to merit this name because it was avowed by the
+ruling powers? In the northern counties neither the clergy nor the
+people would hear of the King's supremacy; they continued to pray for
+the Pope; Cromwell's injunctions were disregarded. It may be that
+horrible abuses and vices were prevalent in the cloisters, but all did
+not labour under such reproaches; many were objects of reverence in
+their own districts, and centres of hospitality and charity. It would
+have been wonderful if their violent destruction had not excited
+popular discontent. And this temper was shared by those who enjoyed
+the chief consideration in the provinces. Among the nobles there were
+still men like Lord Darcy of Templehurst, who had borne arms against
+the Moors in the service of Isabella and Ferdinand: how offensive to
+them must innovations be which ran counter to all their reminiscences!
+The lords in these provinces were believed to have pledged their word
+to each other to suppress the heresies, as they called the Protestant
+opinions, together with their authors and abettors. The country
+people, who apprehended yet further encroachments, were easily stirred
+up to commotion; collections of money were made from house to house,
+and the strongest men of each parish provided with the necessary
+weapons: in the autumn of 1536 open revolt broke out. A lawyer, Robert
+Aske, placed himself at its head; he set before the people all the
+damage that the suppression of the monasteries did to the country
+around, by diverting their revenues and abstracting their treasures.
+In a short time he had gained over the whole of the North. The city of
+York joined him; Darcy admitted him into the strong castle of Pomfret:
+in that broad county only one single castle still held out in its
+obedience to the government: then the neighbouring districts also were
+carried away by the movement: Aske saw an army of thirty thousand men
+around him. He took the road to London to, as he said, drive base-born
+men out of the King's council, and restore the Christian church in
+England: he called his march a 'Pilgrimage of Grace.' But when he came
+into contact with royal troops at Doncaster he paused; for it was not
+a war, which would cost the country too dear, but only a great armed
+remonstrance in favour of the old system that he contemplated. He
+contented himself with presenting his demands--suppression of
+heresies, restitution of the supreme charge of souls to the Pope,
+restoration of the monasteries, and in particular the punishment of
+Cromwell with his abettors, and the calling of a Parliament.[130]
+
+When we consider that Ireland was in revolt, Cornwall in a state of
+ferment, men's Catholic sympathies stirred up by foreign princes, it
+is easy to understand how some voices in the King's Privy Council were
+raised in favour of concession. Henry VIII, a true Tudor, was not the
+man to give in on such a point. He upbraided the rebels in haughty
+words with their ignorance and presumption, and repeated that all he
+did and ordered was in conformity with God's law and for the interests
+of the country; but it was mainly by promising to call a Parliament at
+York that he really laid the gathering storm. But at the first breach
+of the law that occurred he revoked this promise;[131] if he had
+relaxed the maintenance of his prerogative for a moment, he exercised
+it immediately after all the more relentlessly. He at last got all the
+leaders of the revolt into his hands, and appeared to the world to be
+conqueror. But we cannot for this reason hold that the movement did
+not react upon him. His plan was not, and in fact could not be, to
+incur the hostility of his people or endanger the crown for the sake
+of dogmatic opinions. True, he held to his order that the Bible should
+be promulgated in the English tongue, for his revolt from the
+hierarchy, and demand of obedience from all estates, rested on God's
+written word: nor did he allow himself to swerve from the legally
+enacted suppression of the monasteries; but he abandoned further
+innovations, and an altered tendency displayed itself in all his
+proclamations. Even during the troubles he called on the bishops to
+observe the usual church ceremonies: he put forth an edict against the
+marriage of priests (although he had been inclined to allow it) from
+regard to popular opinion. The importation of books printed abroad,
+and any publication of a work in England itself without a previous
+censorship, were again prohibited. Processions, genuflexions, and
+other pious usages, in church and domestic life, were once more
+recommended. The sharpest edicts went forth against any dissent from
+the strict doctrine of the Sacrament and against any extreme
+variations in doctrine. The King actually appeared in person to take
+part in confuting the misbelievers. He would prove to the world that
+he was no heretic.
+
+It had also already become evident that no invasion by the Emperor was
+at present impending. Soon after his overtures to the King of France,
+Charles V perceived that he could not win him over to his side. In the
+Spanish Council of State they took it into consideration that Henry
+VIII, if anything was undertaken against him, would at all times have
+the King of France on his side, and in his passionate temperament
+might be easily instigated to take steps which they would rather
+avoid.[132] After Catharine's death they made mutual advances, which
+it is true did not bring about a good understanding, but yet excluded
+actual hostilities. It would only disturb our view if we were here to
+follow one by one the manifold fluctuations in the course of these
+political relations and negociations. One motive in favour of peace
+under all circumstances was supplied by the ever-growing commerce
+between England and the Netherlands, on which the prosperity of both
+countries depended, and the destruction of which would have been
+injurious to the sovereigns themselves. When, some time after, the
+prospect of an alliance with France against England was presented to
+him by the interposition of the new Pope, Paul III, Charles declined
+it. He remarked that the German Protestants, to whom his attention
+must be mainly directed, would be strengthened by it.[133] At the most
+an interruption of this system could only be expected in case civil
+disturbances in England invited the Emperor to make a sudden attack.
+Once it even appeared as if a Yorkist movement might be combined with
+the religious agitation. A descendant of Edward IV, the Marquis of
+Exeter, formed the plan of marrying the Princess Mary, and undertaking
+the restoration of the old church system. He found much sympathy in
+the country for this plan; the co-operation of the Emperor with him
+might have been very dangerous.
+
+Henry lost no time in fortifying the harbours and coasts against such
+an attack.
+
+But the chief means of preventing all dangers of this kind lay in
+cutting from under them the ground on which they rested. Henry VIII
+was not minded to yield a jot of the full power he had inherited: on
+the contrary his supremacy in church matters was confirmed in 1539 by
+a new act of Parliament: another finally ordained the suppression of
+the greater abbeys also, whose revenues served to endow some new
+bishoprics, but mainly passed into the possession of the Crown and the
+Lords: the unity of the Church and the exclusive independence of the
+country were still more firmly established. But the more Henry was
+resolved to abide by his constitutional innovations, the more
+necessary it seemed to him, in reference to doctrine, to avoid any
+deviation that could be designated as heretical. And though he some
+years before made advances to the Protestants because he needed their
+support against the Emperor and the Pope, things were now on the
+contrary in such a state that he could feel himself all the safer, the
+less connexion he had with the Germans. Under quite different auspices
+of home and foreign politics was the religious debate, that had led in
+1536 to the Ten Articles, resumed three years later. The bishops who
+held to the old belief were as steady as ever and, so far as we know,
+bound together still more closely by a special agreement. They knew
+how to get rid of the old suspicion of their having thought of
+restoring the Papal supremacy and jurisdiction, by showing complete
+devotion to the King. On the other hand the Protestants had suffered a
+very sensible loss in Bishop Fox of Hereford, who had always possessed
+much influence over the King, but had died lately. An understanding
+between the two parties on questions which were dividing the whole
+world was not to be thought of; they confronted each other as
+irreconcilable antagonists. The debates were transferred on Norfolk's
+proposal to Parliament and Convocation; at last it was thought best
+that each of the two parties should bring in the outline of a bill
+expressing its own views. This was done: but first both bills were
+delivered to the King, on whose word, according to the prevailing
+point of view, the decision mainly depended. We may as it were imagine
+him with the two religious schemes in his hand. On the one side lay
+progressive innovation, increasing ferment in the land, and alliance
+with the Protestants: on the other, change confined to the advantages
+already gained by the crown, the contentment of the great majority of
+the people, who adhered to the old belief, peace and friendship with
+the Emperor. The King himself too had a liking for the doctrines he
+had acknowledged from his youth. The balance inclined in favour of the
+bishops of the old belief: Henry gave their bill the preference. It
+was the bloody bill of the Six Articles, mainly, so far as we know,
+the work of Bishop Gardiner of Winchester.
+
+The doctrine of transubstantiation and all the usages connected with
+it, private masses and auricular confession, and the binding force of
+vows, were sanctioned anew; the marriage of priests and the giving the
+cup to the laity were prohibited; all under the severest penalties.
+The whole of the high nobility to a man agreed to it: the Lower House
+raised the resolutions of the clergy into law.
+
+How completely did the German ambassadors, who had come over with the
+expectation of seeing the victory in England of the theologians who
+were friendly to them, find themselves deceived! They still however
+cherished the hope that these resolutions would never be carried out.
+Their ground for hope lay in the King's marriage with a German
+Protestant princess, which was just then being arranged.
+
+Some years before Anne Boleyn had fallen a victim to a dreadful fate.
+How had the King extolled her shortly before his marriage as a mirror
+of purity, modesty and maidenliness! hardly two years afterwards he
+accused her of adultery under circumstances which, if they were true,
+would make her one of the most depraved creatures under the sun. If
+we go through the statements that led to her condemnation, it is
+difficult to think them complete fictions: they have been upheld quite
+recently. If on the other hand we read the letter, so full of high
+feeling and inward truthfulness, in which Anne protests her innocence
+to the King, we cannot believe in the possibility of the
+transgressions for which she had to die. I can add nothing further to
+what has been long known, except that the King, soon after her
+coronation, in November 1533, already showed a certain discontent with
+her.[134] Was it after all not right in the eyes of the jealous
+autocrat that his former wife's lady in waiting now as Queen wore the
+crown as well as himself? Anne Boleyn too might not be without blame
+in her demeanour which was not troubled by any strict rule. Or did it
+seem to the King a token of the divine displeasure against this
+marriage also, that Anne Boleyn in her second confinement brought a
+stillborn son into the world? It has been always said that the lively
+interest she took in the progress of the outspoken Protestantism,
+whose champions were almost all her personal friends, contributed most
+to her fall. For the house from which she sprung she certainly in this
+respect went too far. In the midst of religious and political parties,
+pursued by suspicion and slander, and in herself too tormented by
+jealousy, endangered rather than guarded by the possession of the
+highest dignity, she fell into a state of excitement bordering on
+madness.
+
+On the day after her execution the King married one of her maids of
+honour, the very same who had awakened her jealousy, Jane Seymour. She
+indeed brought him the son for whom his soul longed, but she died in
+her confinement.
+
+In the rivalry of parties Cromwell after some time formed the plan of
+strengthening his own side by the King's marriage with a German
+princess; he chose for this purpose Anne of Cleves, a lady nearly
+related to the Elector of Saxony, and whose brother as possessor of
+Guelders was a powerful opponent of the Emperor. This was at the time
+when the Emperor on his way to the Netherlands paid a visit to King
+Francis, and an alliance of these sovereigns was again feared. But by
+the time his new wife arrived all anxiety had already gone by, and
+with it the motive for a Protestant alliance for the King had ceased.
+Anne had not quite such disadvantages of nature as has been asserted:
+she was accounted amiable:[135] but she could not enchain a man like
+Henry; he had no scruple in dissolving the marriage already concluded;
+Anne made no opposition: the King preferred to her a Catholic lady of
+the house of Howard. But the consequent alteration was not limited to
+the change of a wife. The hopes the Protestants had cherished now
+completely dwindled away: it was the hardest blow they could receive.
+Cromwell, the person who had been the main instrument in carrying out
+the schism by law, and who had then placed himself at the head of the
+reformers, was devoted to destruction by the now dominant party. He
+was even more violently overthrown than Wolsey had been. In the middle
+of business one day at a meeting of the Privy Council he was informed
+that he was a prisoner; two of his colleagues there tore the orders
+which he wore from his person, since he was no longer worthy of
+them;[136] that which had been the ruin of so many under his rule, a
+careless word, was now his own.
+
+Now began the persecution of those who infringed the Six Articles, on
+very slight grounds of fact, and with an absence of legal form in
+proving the cases, that held a drawn sword over innocent and guilty
+alike. Bishops like Latimer and Shaxton had to go to the Tower. But
+how many others atoned for their faith with their life! Robert Barnes,
+one of the founders of the higher studies at Cambridge, well known and
+universally beloved in Germany, who avowed the doctrines imbibed there
+without reserve, lost his life at the stake. For what the peasants
+had once demanded now again came to pass;--the heretics perished by
+fire according to the old statutes.
+
+After some time a check was given to extreme acts of violence. Legal
+forms were supplied for the bloody laws, which softened their
+severity. To Archbishop Cranmer, who was likewise attacked, the King
+himself stretched out a protecting hand. When he once more made common
+cause with the Emperor against France, and undertook a war on the
+Continent, he previously ordered the introduction of an English
+Litany, which was to be sung in processions. The fact that the Bible
+was read in the vernacular, and popular devotional exercises retained
+in use, saved the Protestant ideas and efforts, despite all
+persecution, from extinction.
+
+It gives a disagreeably grotesque colouring to the government of Henry
+VIII to see how his matrimonial affairs are mixed up with those of
+politics and religion. Queen Catharine Howard, whose marriage with him
+marked also the preponderance of the Catholic principle, was without
+any doubt guilty of offences like those which were imputed to her
+predecessor Anne: at her fall her relations, the leaders of the
+anti-Protestant party, lost their position and influence at court. The
+King then married Catharine Parr, who had good conduct and womanly
+prudence enough to keep him in good temper and contentment. But she
+openly cherished Protestant sympathies; and she was once seriously
+attacked on their account. Henry however let her influence prevail, as
+it did not clash with his own policy.
+
+Now that once the sanctity of marriage had been violated, the place of
+King's wife became as it were revocable; the antagonistic factions
+sought to overthrow the Queen who was inconvenient to them; that which
+has been at various times demanded of other members of the household,
+that they should be in complete agreement with the ruling system, was
+then required with respect to their wives, and indeed to the wife of
+the sovereign himself; the importance of marriage was now shown only
+by the violence with which it was dissolved.
+
+This self-willed energetic sovereign however by no means so completely
+followed merely his own judgment as has been assumed. We saw how after
+Wolsey's fall he at first inclined to the protestant doctrines, and
+then again persecuted them with extreme energy. He sacrificed, as
+formerly Empson and Dudley, so Wolsey and now Cromwell to the public
+opinion roused against them. He recognised with quick penetration
+successive political necessities and followed their guidance. The most
+characteristic thing is that he always seemed to belong body and soul
+to these tendencies, however much they differed from each other: he
+let them be established by laws contradictory to each other, and
+insisted with relentless severity on the execution of those laws.
+
+Under him, if ever, England appears as a commonwealth with a common
+will, from which no deviation is allowed, but which moves forward
+inclining now to the one side now to the other. It was no part of
+Henry VIII's Tudor principles and inclinations to call the Parliament
+together; but for his Church-enterprise it was indispensable. He gave
+its tendencies their way and respected the opinion which it
+represented: but at the same time he knew how to keep it at all times
+under the sway of his influence. Never has any other sovereign seen
+such devoted Parliaments gathered round him; they gave his
+proclamations the force of law, and allowed him to settle the
+succession according to his own views; they then gave effect to what
+he determined.
+
+In this way it was possible for Henry VIII to carry through a
+political plan that has no parallel. He allowed the spiritual
+tendencies of the century to gain influence, and then contrived to
+confine them within the narrowest limits. He would be neither
+Protestant nor Catholic, and yet again both; an unimaginable thing, if
+it had only concerned these opinions: but he retained his hold on the
+nation because his plan of separating the country from the Papal
+hierarchic system, without taking a step further than was absolutely
+necessary, suited the people's views.
+
+In the earlier years it appeared as though he would alienate Ireland
+by his religious innovations, since there Catholicism and national
+feeling were at one. And there really were moments when the insurgent
+chiefs in alliance with Pope and Emperor boasted that with French and
+Scotch help they would attack the English on all sides and drive them
+into the sea. But there too it proved of infinite service to him that
+he defended dogma while he abandoned the old constitution. In Ireland
+the monasteries and great abbeys were likewise suppressed; the
+O'Briens, Desmonds, O'Donnels, and other families were as much
+gratified as the English lords and gentlemen with the property almost
+gratuitously offered them. Under these circumstances they recognised
+Henry VIII as King of Ireland, almost as if they had a feeling of the
+change of position as regards public law into which they thus came:
+they received their baronies from him as fiefs and appeared in
+Parliament.
+
+Towards the end of his life Henry once more drew the sword against
+France in alliance with the Emperor. What urged him to this however
+was not the Emperor's interest in itself, but the support which the
+party hostile to him in Scotland received from the French. Moreover he
+did not trouble himself to bring about a decisive result between the
+two great powers: he was content with the conquest of Boulogne. He had
+reverted to his father's policy and resolved not to let himself be
+drawn over by any of his neighbours to their own interests, but to use
+their rivalry for his own profit and security.[137]
+
+And he was able to do yet more than his father to increase England's
+power of defence against the one or the other. We hear of fifty places
+on the coast which he fortified, not without the help of foreign
+master-workmen: the two great harbours of Dover and Calais he put into
+good condition and filled them with serviceable ships. For a long time
+past he had been building the first vessels of a large size (such as
+the Harry and Mary Rose) which then did service in the wars.[138] It
+may be that the property of the monasteries was partly squandered and
+ought to have been better husbanded: a great part of their revenues
+however was applied to this purpose, and conferred much benefit on the
+country so far as its own peculiar interests were concerned.
+
+The characteristic of his government consists in the mixture of
+spiritual and temporal interests, the union of violence with fostering
+care. The family enmities, which Henry VII had to contend with, are
+combined with the religious under Henry VIII, for instance in the
+Suffolk family: as William Stanley under the father, so Fisher and
+More under the son, perished because they threw doubt on the grounds
+for the established right, and still more because they challenged that
+right itself. It raised a cry of horror when it was seen how under
+Henry VIII Papists and Protestants were bound together and drawn to
+the place of execution together, since they had both broken the laws.
+Who would not have been sensible of this? Who would not have felt
+himself distressed and threatened? Yet at the opening of the Session
+of 1542, after the Chancellor had stated in detail the King's services
+(who had taken his place on the throne), Lords and Commons rose and
+bowed to the sovereign in token of their acknowledgment and gratitude.
+In the Session of 1545 he himself once more took up the word. In
+fatherly language he exhorted both the religious parties to peace; a
+feeling pervaded the assembly that this address was the last they
+would listen to from him; many were seen to burst into tears.
+
+For his was the strong power that kept in check the fermenting
+elements and set them a law that might not be broken. On their
+antagonism, by favouring or restraining them, he established his
+strong system of public order. In Henry VIII we remark no free
+self-abandonment and no inward enthusiasm, no real sympathy with any
+living man: men are to him only instruments which he uses and then
+breaks to pieces; but he has an incomparable practical intelligence, a
+vigorous energy devoted to the general interest; he combines
+versatility of view with a will of unvarying firmness. We follow the
+course of his government with a mingled sense of aversion and
+admiration.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[123] Papiers d'etat du Cl. de Granvelle ii. 147, 210.
+
+[124] Documents in the Corpus Reformatorum ii. 1032, iii. 42.
+
+[125] Henry VIII to the judges--in Halliwell i. 342 (25 June 1535).
+
+[126] Burnet, History of the Reformation i. 213. Soames, History of
+the Reformation ii. 157.
+
+[127] Seckendorf, Historia Lutheranismi iii. 13, xxxix. p. 112: my
+German History iv. 46.
+
+[128] Injunctions given by the authority of the King. Burnet's
+Collection p. 160.
+
+[129] Prior of Charterhouse (Houghton), Speech, in Strype i. 313.
+
+[130] Froude, History of England iii. 104.
+
+[131] 'The people were unsatisfyed that the parliament was not held at
+York; but our King alledged that since they had not restaured all the
+religious houses [as they had promised] he was not bound strictly to
+hold promise with them.' Herbert, Henry VIII, p. 428.
+
+[132] Los impedimentos en que esta S. M. por la malignidad del dicho
+rey de Francia que haze gran fundamento en la adherencia del dicho rey
+de Inglaterra, y la obstinacion ceguedad y pertinacia en que esta.
+(Report in the State Archives at Paris.)
+
+[133] As it is said in the Emperor's letter of refusal to his
+ambassador at Rome. 'Los desviados de Germania se juntarian mas
+estrechamente con el rey de Inglaterra.' (Document in the Archives at
+Paris.)
+
+[134] In a letter of the Emperor, 2 November, is mentioned 'le
+descontentement, que le roi d'Ingleterre prenoit de Anna de Bolans.'
+Papiers d'etat ii. 224.
+
+[135] Marillac au roi, 8 Juillet 1540. 'Le peuple l'aymoit et estimoit
+bien fort, comme la plus douce gracieuse humaine Reyne, qu'ils eurent
+onque.'
+
+[136] A description of the scene, which deserves to be known, is
+contained in the letter of the French ambassador, Marillac, to the
+Constable Montmorency, 23 June 1540.
+
+[137] Froude iv. 104.
+
+[138] Marillac assures us that there were not more than eight vessels
+in England over 500 tons, that then the King built in 1540 fourteen
+larger ones, among them 'le grand Henri,' over 1800 tons; he had
+however 'peu de maistres que entendent a l'ouvrage. Les naufs
+(navires) du roi sont fournies d'artillerie et de munition beaucoup
+mieux que de bons pilots et de mariniers dont la plus part sont
+estrangers.' (Letter of 1 Oct. 1540.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+RELIGIOUS REFORM IN THE ENGLISH CHURCH.
+
+
+The question arises, whether it was possible permanently to hold to
+Henry's stand-point, to his rejection of Papal influence and to his
+maintenance of the Catholic doctrines as they then were. I venture to
+say, it was impossible: the idea involves an historical contradiction.
+For the doctrine too had been moulded into shape under the influence
+of the supreme head of the hierarchy while ascending to his height of
+power: they were both the product of the same times, events,
+tendencies: they could not be severed from each other. Perhaps they
+might have been both modified together, doctrine and constitution, if
+a form had been found under which to do it, but to reject the latter
+and maintain the former in its completed shape--this was
+impracticable.
+
+When it was seen that Henry could not live much longer, two parties
+became visible in the country as well as at court, one of which,
+however much it disguised it, was without doubt aiming at the
+restoration of the Pope's supremacy, while the other was aiming at a
+fuller development of the Protestant principle. Henry had settled the
+succession so that first his son Edward, then his elder daughter (by
+his Spanish wife), then the younger (by Anne Boleyn), were to succeed.
+As the first, the sovereign who should succeed next, was a boy of
+nine, it was of infinite importance to settle who during the time of
+his minority should stand at the helm. The nearest claim was possessed
+by the boy's uncle on the mother's side, Edward Seymour, Earl of
+Hertford, who had begun to play a leading part in Henry's court and
+army, was in close alliance with Queen Catharine Parr, and like her
+cherished Protestant sympathies. But the Norfolks with their Catholic
+sympathies who had previously so long exercised a leading influence on
+the government, would not give way to him. Norfolk's son, the Earl of
+Surrey, adopted the immoral plan of ensnaring the King, who though
+dying was yet supposed to be still susceptible to woman's charms, by
+means of his sister, in order to draw him back to the side of his
+family and the strict Catholics: a plot which failed at once when his
+sister refused to play such a part. The ambitious announcements into
+which he allowed himself to be hurried away could only bring about the
+opposite result: he himself was executed, his father thrown into
+prison, and the man who could have done most in the Catholic
+direction, Bishop Gardiner, was struck out of the list of those who,
+after the King's death, were to form the Privy Council.[139]
+Immediately afterwards, January 1547, Henry died. He had composed the
+Privy Council of men of both tendencies in the hope, as it appears,
+that in this way his system would be most surely upheld. But men were
+too much accustomed to see the highest power represented in one
+leading personage, for it to continue long in the hands of a Board of
+Councillors. From the first sittings of the Privy Council Edward VI's
+uncle, the Earl of Hertford, came forth as Duke of Somerset and
+Protector of the realm. In him the reforming tendency won the upper
+hand.
+
+It appeared at once with full force at the Coronation, which was not
+celebrated at all after the form traced out by Henry VIII, since even
+this would have tied them far too much to the existing system;
+Cranmer, in the discourse which he there addressed to the young King,
+departed in the most decided manner from all the ideas hitherto
+attached to a coronation. Whither had the times of the first Lancaster
+departed, in which a special hierarchic sacredness was given to the
+Anointing through its connexion with Thomas Becket? Becket's shrine
+had been destroyed. The present Archbishop of Canterbury went back to
+the earliest times of human history: he brought forward the example of
+Josias, who likewise came to the government in tender years and
+extirpated the worship of idols: so might Edward VI also completely
+destroy image-worship, plant God's true service, and free the land
+from the tyranny of the Bishop of Rome; it was not the oil that made
+him God's anointed, but the power given him from on high, in virtue of
+which he was God's representative in his realm. His duty to the Church
+was changed into his duty to religion: instead of upholding the
+existing state of things, it at once pledges and empowers him to
+reform the Church.[140]
+
+The great question now was, how an alteration could be prepared in a
+legal manner, and how far it would be possible to maintain in this the
+constitution of the realm in its relation to the states of Europe. On
+the ground of the supremacy and of a precedent of Henry VIII, they
+began with a resolution to despatch commissions throughout the realm,
+to revive the suppressed Protestant sympathies; the precedent was
+found in the ordinances that had once proceeded from Thomas Cromwell,
+just as if they had not in the least been annulled by what had
+happened since, but simply set aside by party feeling and neglect.
+They were to enquire whether, as therein ordered, the bishops had
+preached against the Pope's usurpation, the parish priests had taught
+men to regard not outward observances but fulfilment of duty as the
+real 'good works,' and had laboured to diminish feast-days and
+pilgrimages. Above all, images to which superstitious reverence was
+paid were at last to be actually removed: the young were to be really
+taught the chief points of the faith in English, a chapter of the
+Bible should be read every Sunday, and Erasmus' Paraphrase employed to
+explain it. In place of the sermon was to come one of the Homilies
+which had been published under the authority of the Archbishop and
+King. For this last ordinance also authority was found in an
+injunction of Henry VIII. Archbishop Cranmer, whose work they are,
+establishes in them the two principles, on which he had already
+proceeded in 1536, one that Holy Scripture contains all that it is
+necessary for men to know, the other that forgiveness of sins depends
+only on the merits of the Redeemer and on faith in Him. On this
+depends absolutely the possibility of rooting out of men's minds the
+belief in the binding force of Tradition, and the hierarchic views as
+to the merit of good works. The Archbishop's views were promoted by
+eloquent and zealous preachers such as Matthew Parker, John Knox, Hugh
+Latimer; more than all by the last, who had been released from the
+Tower, weak in body but with unimpaired vigour of spirit. The fact of
+his having maintained these doctrines in the time of persecution, his
+earnest way and manner, and his venerable old age doubled the effect
+of his discourses.
+
+No direct alteration could be thought of so long as the Six Articles
+still existed with their severe threats of punishment. In the
+Parliament elected under the influence of the new government it needed
+little persuasion to procure their repeal. The Protector assured the
+members that he had been urgently entreated to effect this, since
+every man felt himself endangered.[141]
+
+One of those popular beliefs gained ground, which are often more
+effective in great assemblies than elaborate proofs: the conviction
+that doctrine and authority were too closely akin for the separation
+from Rome to be maintained without deviation in doctrine; the breach
+must be made wider if it was to continue, and the hierarchic doctrines
+give way.
+
+So it came about that by a unanimous resolution of Convocation, which
+Parliament confirmed, the alteration was approved, which almost more
+than any other characterises those Church formularies that deviate
+from the Romish, the administration of the communion in both kinds.
+
+Now it was exactly from this that the transformation of the whole
+divine worship in England proceeded. The very next Easter (1548) a new
+form for the communion office was published in English. This was
+followed, according to a wish expressed by the young King, by a
+Liturgy for home and church use, in which the revised Litany of Henry
+VIII was also included. In this 'Common Prayerbook' they everywhere
+kept to what was before in use, but everywhere also made changes. The
+Reforming tendencies obtained the upper hand in reference to its
+doctrinal contents; thus even one of the rubrics previously in favour
+by which auricular confession was declared to be indispensable was now
+omitted; it was left to every man's judgment to avail himself of it or
+not. At times they again sought out what had been disused in later
+ages: they recurred to Anglo-Saxon usages. The Common Prayer-book is a
+genuine monument of the religious feeling of this age, of its learning
+and subtlety, its forbearance and decision. In the Parliament of 1549
+it was received with admiration: men even said it was drawn up under
+the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. The order went forth for its
+adoption in all churches of the land, no other liturgy was to be used;
+it has nourished and edified the national piety of the English
+people.[142]
+
+And just as it was now asserted that in all this they were only
+carrying out the views of the deceased King, as he had set them forth
+many years before and had at the last again proclaimed them, so now
+Somerset undertook to carry through another of his intentions as well,
+which was closely connected with his religious plans.
+
+In 1542 Henry VIII had agreed with some of the most powerful nobles of
+Scotland that in that country too the Church should be reformed, all
+relations with France broken off, and the young Queen brought to
+England in order if possible to marry his son Edward at some future
+day. The scheme broke down owing to all kinds of opposition, but the
+idea of uniting England and Scotland in one great Protestant kingdom
+had thus made its appearance in the world and could never again be set
+aside. The ambition to realise it filled the soul of Somerset. When,
+before the end of the summer of 1547, he took up arms, he hoped to
+bring about an acknowledgment of England's old supremacy over
+Scotland, to prepare the way for the future union of both countries by
+the marriage, and to annihilate the party there which opposed the
+progress of Protestantism. A vision floated before him of fusing both
+nations into one by a union of dynasty and of creed. It was mainly
+from the religious point of view that his ward regarded the matter.
+'They fight for the Pope,' wrote Edward to the Protector when he was
+already in the field, 'we strike for the cause of God, without doubt
+we shall win.[143]'
+
+Somerset had already penetrated far into the land when he offered the
+Scots to retreat and make peace on the one condition that Mary should
+marry Edward VI. But the ruling party did not so much as allow his
+offer to be known. A battle took place at Pinkie, in which Somerset
+won a brilliant victory. Not a little did this victory contribute to
+establish his consequence in the world: even in Scotland some
+districts on the borders took the oath of fidelity to King Edward. But
+in general the antipathies of the Scotch to the English were all the
+more roused by it; they would hear nothing of a wooing, carried on
+with arms in the hand: the young Queen was after some time (August
+1548) carried off to France, to be there married to the Dauphin. The
+Catholic interests once more maintained their ascendancy in Scotland
+over those of the English and the Protestants.
+
+And how could Somerset's plans and enterprises fail to meet with
+resistance in England itself? All the elements were still in existence
+that had once set themselves in opposition to King Henry with such
+energy. When an attempt was made in earnest to carry out the
+innovations at home, in the summer of 1549, the revolt burst into
+flame once more.
+
+In Cornwall a tumult arose at the removal of an image, and the King's
+commissary was stabbed by a priest. The troubles extended to
+Devonshire, where men forced the priests to celebrate the mass after
+the old ritual, and then took the field with crosses and tapers, and
+carrying the Host before them. When their numbers became so large as
+to embolden them to put forth a manifesto, they demanded before
+all--incredible as it may seem--the restoration of the Six Articles
+and the Latin Mass, the customary reverence to the Sacrament and to
+images. They did not go so far as to demand the restoration of the
+authority of the Roman See, like the rebels under Henry VIII; but they
+pressed for a fresh recognition of the General Councils, and of the
+old church laws as a whole. At least half of the confiscated church
+property was to be given back, two abbeys at least were to remain in
+each county. But this movement owed its peculiar character to yet
+another motive. The enclosures of the arable land for purposes of
+pasture, of which the peasantry had been long complaining, did not
+merely continue; the nobility, which took part in the secularisation
+of the church-lands in an increasing degree, extended its grasp also
+to the newly-gained estates. So it came to pass that a rising of the
+peasants against the nobles was now united with tendencies towards
+church restoration, as in previous times with ideas of quite a
+different kind. East and West were in revolt at one and the same time
+and for different reasons. On a hill near Norwich, the chief leader, a
+tanner by trade, called Ket, took his seat under a great oak which he
+called the Oak of Reformation; he had the mass read daily after the
+old use: but he also planned a remodeling of the realm to suit the
+views of the people. The wildest expectations were aroused. A prophecy
+found belief according to which monarchy and nobility were to be
+destroyed simultaneously, and a new government set up under four
+Governors elected by the common people. And woe to him who wished to
+reason with the peasants against their design. They were already
+bending their bows against a preacher who attempted to do so, he was
+only saved with difficulty. But they were still less capable this
+time of withstanding the organised power of the State than they had
+been under Henry VIII. In Devonshire they were beaten by Lord Russel,
+the ancestor of the Dukes of Bedford; in Norfolk, where they had risen
+in the greatest force, by John Dudley Earl of Warwick. Under his
+banners we find German troops as well, who were untouched by the
+national sympathies, and in the rebels combated only the enemies of
+Protestantism. The government obtained a complete victory.
+
+The insurrectionary movement was suppressed, but it once more produced
+a violent reaction in home affairs, by which this time the head of the
+government was himself struck down.[144] Among English statesmen there
+is none who had a more vivid idea of the monarchical power than the
+Protector Somerset. He started from the view that religious and
+political authority were united in the hand of the anointed King in
+virtue of his divine right. The prayer which he daily addressed to God
+is still extant; it is full of the feeling that to himself, as the
+representative and guardian of the King, not only his guidance but
+also the direction of all affairs is entrusted. Such was also the view
+of the young sovereign himself. In one of his letters he thanks the
+Protector for taking this employment on him, and for trying to bring
+his State to its lawful obedience, the country to acknowledge the true
+religion, and the Scots to submission. Somerset did not think himself
+bound by the opinion of the Privy Council, since with him, and with no
+other, lay the responsibility for the administration of the State. He
+held it to be within his competence to remove at pleasure those of its
+members who showed themselves adverse to him. He too had that jealousy
+of power, which always directs itself against those who stand nearest
+to it. There is no doubt that his brother, Thomas Lord Seymour,
+impelled by a restless ambition, hoped to overthrow the existing
+government and put himself in possession of the highest place, and
+committed manifold illegal acts; he--the Lord Admiral of the
+realm--even entered into alliance with the pirates in the
+Channel.[145] But despite this it was thought at the time very severe
+when the Protector gave his word that the vengeance of the law should
+be executed on his brother. His reason was that Lord Seymour would not
+submit to sue in person for mercy to him the injured party and
+possessor of power. Such were these men, these brothers. The one died
+rather than pray for mercy: the other made the bestowal of it depend
+on this prayer, this confession of his supreme authority.[146] The
+Protector took all affairs, home and foreign, exclusively into his own
+hand. Without asking any one, he filled up the ministerial and civil
+posts: to the foreign ambassadors he gave audience alone. He erected
+in his house a Court of Requests,[147] which encroached not a little
+on the business of Chancery. The palace in the Strand, which still
+bears his name, was to be a memorial of his power; not merely houses
+and gardens, but also churches which occupied the ground, or from
+which he wished to collect his building materials, were destroyed with
+reckless arbitrary power. Great historical associations are
+indissolubly linked with this house. For it was Somerset after all,
+who through personal zeal opened a free path for the Protestant
+tendency which had originated under Henry VIII but had been repressed,
+and gave the English government a Protestant character. He connected
+with this not merely the Union of Scotland and England, but a yet
+further idea of great importance for England itself. He wished to free
+the change of religion from the antipathy of the peasantry which was
+at that time so prominent. In the above-mentioned dissensions he took
+open part for the demands of the commons: he condemned the progress of
+the enclosures and gave his opinion that the people could not be
+blamed so heavily for their rebellion, as their choice lay only
+between death by hunger and insurrection. It seemed as though he
+wished in the next Parliament by means of his influence to carry
+through a legal measure in favour of the commons.
+
+But by this he necessarily awakened the ill will of the aristocracy.
+He was charged with having instigated the troubles themselves by
+proclamations which he issued in opposition to the Privy Council; and
+with not merely having done nothing to suppress them but with having
+on the contrary supported the ringleaders and taken them under his
+protection.[148] No doubt this was the reason why the campaign against
+the rebels in Norfolk was not entrusted to him, as he wished, but
+(after some vacillation) to his rival, John Dudley, Earl of Warwick.
+The victory gained by him, with the active sympathy of the nobility,
+which was defending its own interests, was a defeat for Somerset. Even
+those who did not believe that he had any personal share in the
+movement, nevertheless reproached him with having allowed conditions
+to be prescribed to himself and his government by the people; the
+common man would be King. Financial difficulties arising from an
+alteration in the coinage, and ill success in the war against France,
+contributed to give his opponents the ascendancy in the Privy Council.
+Somerset once entertained the idea of setting the masses in movement
+on his own behalf: one day he collected numerous bands of people at
+Hampton Court, under cover of summoning them to defend the King, by
+whose side his enemies wished to set up a regency. But this pretext
+had little foundation, it was only himself whom his rivals would no
+longer see at the head of affairs: after a short fluctuation in the
+relations between the main personages he was forced to submit. He
+saved his life for that time: after an interval he was released from
+prison and again entered the Privy Council: then he once more made an
+attempt to recover the supreme power by help of the people, but thus
+drew his fate on himself. The masses who regarded him as their
+champion showed him loud and heartfelt sympathy at his execution.
+
+On Somerset's first fall it was said that the Emperor Charles V had a
+share in bringing it about, and this is very conceivable; for what
+result could be more displeasing to this sovereign than that
+Protestantism, which he was putting down in Germany, should have
+gained at the same moment a strong position in England: it is certain
+that the change of administration was greeted with joy by the court at
+Brussels.[149]
+
+But it brought the Emperor no advantage. At the moment the new
+government assumed a hostile attitude towards France: but soon
+afterwards the Earl of Warwick, who now took the lead of affairs as
+Duke of Northumberland, found himself driven to the necessity of
+making a peace with that power, by which Boulogne was given up and
+Scotland abandoned to French influence. One article of the treaty
+contains indirectly a renunciation of the proposed marriage between
+the King of England and the Queen of Scotland. And this treaty was
+greatly to the Emperor's disadvantage, since it now set the French
+free to renew the hostility against him which had been broken off some
+years before by an agreement all in his favour. They allied themselves
+for this purpose with the German princes who found the Emperor's yoke
+intolerable. These princes had even applied to the English government:
+and Edward would personally have been much inclined to lend an ear to
+their proposals. If the fear of being involved in war with the Emperor
+on this account withheld him from open sympathy, yet it is certain
+that his general political attitude essentially contributed to enable
+them to take up arms and break the Emperor's ascendancy.
+
+Among the determining causes of a movement which is part of the
+history of the world must be specially reckoned the personal
+disposition of this prince, young as he was even at the close of his
+reign. Somerset had kept him rather close: the Duke of Northumberland
+gave him greater freedom, allowed him to manage his own money, and was
+pleased when he made presents and showed himself as King; he was
+careful to see that immediate obedience was paid him.[150] Whilst
+Edward had been hitherto almost exclusively busied with his studies,
+he now turned to knightly exercises for which he also showed aptitude:
+he sat well on horseback, drew his bow and broke his lance as well as
+any other young man of his age. But with all this his learning was not
+neglected.[151] Edward VI not merely possessed for his years
+extraordinary and manifold attainments; the written remains which are
+extant from his hand display a rare mental growth. What he has written
+for instance on his connexion with the two Seymours, his uncles,
+indicates a clear and almost a judicial conception of existing
+relations, which is very uncommon. On his tutor's advice, to prevent
+his passing thoughts from getting confused, he regularly noted them
+down, and composed a diary which has the same characteristics and may
+be regarded as a valuable historical monument. But studies and
+religion coincide in him: he is Protestant to the core; his chief
+ambition is by means of his rank and power to place himself at the
+head of the Protestant world. The duke could not have ventured to
+oppose the progress of the Reformation.
+
+In the days of distress, after the defeat in the Schmalkaldic war,
+England was regarded as the refuge of the gospel: men welcomed the
+scholars who fled thither, whose co-operation in the conflict with
+Catholicism, still so powerful, was very desirable. In Cranmer's
+palace at Lambeth were assembled Italians, French, Poles, Swiss, South
+Germans and North Germans; the Secretary of State, William Cecil, who
+had been trained in the service of the Protector, but had kept his
+place after his fall, obtained them the King's support. Martin Bucer
+and Paulus Fagius received promotion at Cambridge, Peter Martyr at
+Oxford: he there maintained the Calvinistic views on the communion in
+a great disputation. There were Walloon and French churches in the old
+centres of Catholic worship, Canterbury and Glastonbury; John a Lasco
+preached in the church of the Augustines in London. With no less
+vigour than these foreigners did natives, sometimes returned exiles,
+maintain the views then prevailing on the Continent. Under these
+influences it was impossible, in conformity with the view taken up in
+1536, to abide by the dogmas, which had been put forth by the school
+of Wittenberg, now completely overthrown. The difference comes out
+very remarkably when we compare the Common Prayer-book of 1549 with
+the revised edition of 1552. Originally men had held fast to the real
+presence in England also: Cranmer in his catechism expressly declared
+for it: in the formula of the first book, which was compiled out of
+Ambrose and Gregory, this view was retained:[152] but men in England
+had since convinced themselves that this doctrine had not prevailed so
+exclusively in Christian antiquity as had been hitherto thought:
+following the example of Ridley, the most learned of the Protestant
+bishops, the majority had given up the real presence: in the new
+Common Prayer-book a controversial passage was even inserted against
+it. First on their own impulse, and then with the help of the Privy
+Council, the zealous Protestant-minded bishops removed the high altars
+from the churches and had wooden tables for the communion put in their
+place: since with the word Altar was associated the idea of Sacrifice.
+
+It was now inevitable that the question from which all had started in
+England, as to the relation between State and Church, should be
+decided completely in favour of the secular principle. It is very true
+that Cranmer held fast to the objective view of the visible church. If
+the ceremonies were altered with which the Romish church imparts the
+spiritual consecration, yet in this respect only the mystical usages
+introduced in recent centuries were abandoned, and the ritual restored
+to the form used in more primitive times, especially in the African
+church. But it was surely a violent change, when those who wished to
+receive consecration were now previously asked, whether their inward
+call agreed both with the will of the Redeemer and the law of the
+land; they were required to assent to the principle that Scripture
+contains all which it is necessary for man to know, and to pledge
+themselves to guard against any doctrine not in conformity with
+Scripture. It is generally believed, and the fact is of lasting
+importance, that the Convocation of the clergy, a commission of the
+spiritualty, the Primate-Archbishop and a number of bishops, took part
+in the change; but yet the decisive decrees went forth from the
+Parliament, to which the spiritual power had been irrevocably attached
+since Henry VIII, and sometimes from the Privy Council alone. To
+establish a normal form of doctrine, men set to work to compose a
+Confession, which was completed at that time in forty-two Articles.
+There had been a wish that Melanchthon should have come over in person
+to aid in composing it; at any rate his labours had much influence in
+deciding the shape it took. The Articles belong to the class of
+Confessions, as they were then framed in Saxony by Melanchthon, in
+Swabia by Brenz, to be laid before the coming Council. And it is just
+in this that their value lies, that by them England attached herself
+most closely to the Protestant community on the Continent. They are
+the work of Cranmer, who was entrusted with their composition by the
+King and Privy Council, and communicated his labours first to the
+King's tutor, Cheke, and the Secretary of State, Cecil: in conjunction
+with them he next laid them before the King; with the assistance of
+some chaplains their final form was given them; then the Privy Council
+ordered them to be subscribed. The influence of the government on the
+nominations to the office of bishop was now still more open: the
+bishops were to hold office as long as they conducted themselves
+well,--in other words, as long as the ruling powers were content with
+them: the church jurisdiction was no longer administered in the name
+of the bishopric, but, like the temporal jurisdiction, in the King's
+name and under the King's seal; when they proceeded to revise the
+church laws, the primary maxim was, not to admit anything that
+contravened the temporal laws.[153] The use of the power of the keys
+was also derived by Cranmer from the permission of the sovereign.
+Against this ever-increasing dependence some bishops of the old views
+made a struggle; to avoid coming into direct conflict with the
+supremacy, which they had acknowledged, they put forth the assertion
+that it could not be exercised by a King under age; they connived at
+the mass being read in side-chapels of their cathedrals, or refused to
+allow the change of the altars into communion-tables, or kept alive
+the controversy as to the doctrine of faith. The government on their
+side persisted in enforcing uniformity. They brought all opponents
+before a commission consisting of secular as well as ecclesiastical
+dignities, which had no scruple in pronouncing the deprivation of the
+bishops: a fate which befell Gardiner of Winchester, Bonner of London,
+Day of Chichester, Heath of Worcester. In vain did they plead that the
+court before which they were brought was not a canonical one; the
+government appealed to the general rights of the temporal power as it
+had once been exercised by the Roman Emperors. In the conflict of
+church opinions the Protestant-minded prelates now had the upper hand.
+Many who did not conform bought toleration from the government by
+sacrifices of money and goods. Elsewhere the newly-appointed bishops
+assented to concessions which did not always profit even the crown,
+but sometimes, as at Lichfield, private persons.[154] Already the
+further question was discussed whether there is in fact any essential
+distinction between bishops and presbyters: a church of foreigners was
+set up in London, to present a pattern of the pure apostolic
+constitution as an example to the country. The government which had
+acquired such a thorough mastery over the clergy developed an open
+disinclination to the old forms of constitution in the church. Who
+could have said, so long as things remained in the path thus once
+entered upon, whither this would lead?
+
+NOTES:
+
+[139] Froude iv. 515 (extracts from the documents).
+
+[140] Collier ii. 220 (Records lii).
+
+[141] Proclamation of 8 July 1549 in Tytler, England under Edward VI
+and Mary I, p. 180.
+
+[142] The point of view under which it was drawn up appears in a
+declaration inserted in the edition of 1549: 'the most weighty cause
+of the abolishment of certain ceremonies was, that they were abused
+partly by the superstitious blindness of the unlearned, and partly by
+unsatiable avarice.--Where the old (ceremonies) may be well used there
+they [their opponents] cannot reprove the old only for their age. They
+ought rather to have reverence unto them for their antiquity, if they
+will declare themselves to be more studious of unity and concord, than
+of innovations and newfangleness which--is always to be eschewed.'
+
+[143] 12 Sept. 1547 in Halliwell ii. 31. Cranmer appointed a prayer in
+church for the marriage of Edward and Mary, 'to confound all those,
+which labour to the lett and interruption of so godly a quiet and
+amity.' In Somerset's prayer printed, since the first edition of this
+book, in Froude v. 47, it is said: 'Look upon the small portion of the
+earth, which professeth thy holy name; especially have an eye to thy
+small isle of Britain;--that the Scotismen and we might thereafter
+live in one love and amity, knit into one nation by the marriage of
+the King's Majesty and the young Scotish Queen.'
+
+[144] Godwin, Rerum Anglicarum Annales 315.
+
+[145] Proofs in Froude v. 136.
+
+[146] So Queen Elizabeth tells us. Ellis, Letters ii. ii. 257.
+
+[147] Cecil however was not the first Master of Requests: Thomas More
+already appears under this title; Nares, Life of Burghley i. 179.
+
+[148] 'You have suffered the rebels to lie in camp and armour against
+the King his nobles and gentlemen; you did comfort divers of the said
+rebels.' Articles against the Lord Protector, in Strype, Memorials of
+Cranmer ii. 342.
+
+[149] Marillac 26 Oct. 1549. 'Ceux-ci (at the Emperor's court) font
+une merveilleuse demonstration de joye de ce que le protecteur est
+abattu.' In Turnbull, Calendar of State Papers 1861 p. 47 an
+Instruction of the Council is mentioned, 'to acquaint the Emperor with
+the proceeding taken against the Duke of Somerset.' We should like to
+be better informed about this Instruction, in which too the Emperor
+was asked for aid.
+
+[150] Soranzo, Relatione d'Inghilterra 1554. 'Per posseder la sua
+grazia ben amplamente, non solo faceva qualche spettacolo, per dargli
+piacere, ma gli diede liberta di danari.' Florentine Collection viii.
+37.
+
+[151] As he advises a friend: 'Apply yourself to riding shooting or
+tennis--not forgetting sometimes when you have leisure, your learning,
+chiefly reading the Scripture.' Halliwell ii. 49.
+
+[152] Wheatly in Soames, History of the Reformation iii. 604.
+
+[153] In the commission of 32 members (bishops, divines, civilians,
+lawyers) we find the names of Will. Cecil, Will Peters, Thomas Smith.
+
+[154] Compare Heylin, History of the Reformation 50, 101.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+TRANSFER OF THE GOVERNMENT TO A CATHOLIC QUEEN.
+
+
+We can easily see how the power of the crown, founded by the first
+Tudor, and developed by the second through the emancipation from the
+Papacy, was further strengthened under the third. From Edward VI we
+have essays, in which he speaks about the spiritual and temporal
+government with the consciousness of a sovereign, whose actions depend
+only on himself. In the Homilies, which obtained legal sanction, there
+is found an express condemnation of resistance to the King, 'for Godes
+sake, from whom Kings are, and for orders sake.'
+
+Whilst men were now expecting that Edward VI would arrive at manhood,
+and take the government completely into his own hands, and conduct it
+in the sense he had hitherto foreshadowed--not merely carrying out the
+Reformation thoroughly at home, but assuming the leadership of the
+Protestant world, symptoms appeared in him of the malady to which his
+half-brother Richmond had succumbed at an early age. But how then if
+the same fate befell him? According to Henry VIII's arrangement Mary
+was then to ascend the throne who, through her descent from Queen
+Catharine and from an inborn disposition which had become all the more
+confirmed by her opposition to her father and brother, represented the
+Catholic and Spanish interest. Nothing else could be expected but that
+she would employ the whole power of the State in support of her own
+views, would, so far as it could possibly be done, bring back the
+church to its earlier form, would depress the men who had hitherto
+played a great part by the side of the King and subject them to the
+opposite faction. But were they quietly to acquiesce in their fate?
+
+The ambition of the Duke of Northumberland associated itself with the
+great interests of religion, to prevent the threatening ruin. He
+persuaded the young King that it lay in his power to alter his
+father's settlement of the succession, as in itself not conformable to
+law, neither Mary nor the younger sister Elizabeth being entitled to
+the throne, as the two marriages from which they sprang had been
+declared illegal, and a bastard could not be made capable of wearing
+the English crown by any act of Parliament. Henry VIII had in his
+settlement of the succession passed over the descendants of his elder
+sister, married in Scotland, as foreigners, but acknowledged those of
+the younger, Mary of Suffolk, as the next heirs after his own
+children. Mary's elder daughter Frances had married Henry Grey of
+Dorset, who had already obtained the title of Suffolk, and had three
+daughters, the eldest of whom was Jane Grey. It was to her, whom the
+Duke of Northumberland married to one of his sons, that he now
+directed the King's attention, and induced him to prefer her to his
+sisters. Yet it was not so much to herself in person as to her male
+issue that Edward's attention was originally directed. Never yet had a
+Queen ruled in England in her own right, and even now there was a wish
+to avoid it. Edward arranged that, if he himself died without male
+heirs, the male heirs of Lady Frances, and if she too left none, then
+those of Lady Jane, should succeed. He hoped still to live till such
+an heir should be eighteen years old, in which case he could enter on
+the government immediately after himself. If his death occurred
+earlier, Jane was to conduct the administration during the interval,
+not as Queen but as Regent, and conjointly with a Council of
+government still to be named by him.[155] This Council of executors
+was to avoid all war, all other change, and especially not to alter
+the established religion in any point: rather it was to devote itself
+to completing the ecclesiastical legislation in conformity with that
+religion, and to the abolition of the Papal claims.[156] We see that
+Edward's view was, like that of many other sovereigns, to secure the
+continuance of his political and religious system of government for
+long years after his own death. The members of the Privy Council,
+before whom these arrangements were laid in the King's handwriting,
+promised on their oath and their honour to carry them out in every
+article, and to defend them with all their power.[157]
+
+And if the affair had been undertaken in this manner, who could say
+that it might not have succeeded? Northumberland did not neglect to
+form a strong family interest in favour of the new combination that he
+designed. He married his own daughter to Lord Hastings, who was
+descended from the house of York, and one of Jane's sisters with the
+son of the powerful Earl of Pembroke. He could reckon on the support
+of the King of France, to whom the succession of a niece of the
+Emperor was odious, and on the consent of the Privy Council, which was
+in great part dependent on him; how could the Protestant feeling have
+failed to gain him a large party in the country, especially since
+something might be said for the plan itself.
+
+But Edward VI's malady developed quicker than was expected. At the
+last moment he was further induced to award the succession not to the
+male heirs of Lady Jane, but to herself and her male heirs.[158] He
+died with the prayer that God would guard England from the Papacy.
+
+Lady Jane Grey had hitherto devoted her days to study. For father and
+mother were severe and found much in her to blame: on the other hand
+quiet hours of inward satisfaction were given her by the instructions
+of a teacher, always alike kindly disposed, who initiated her into
+learning and an acquaintance with literature: bending over her Plato,
+she did not miss the amusement of the chase which others were
+enjoying in the Park. After her marriage too, which did not make her
+exactly happy, she still lived thus with her thoughts withdrawn from
+the world, when she was one day summoned to Sion-House where she found
+a great and brilliant assembly. She still knew nothing of the King's
+death. What were her feelings, when she was told that Edward VI was
+dead; that to secure the kingdom from the Popish faith and the
+government of his two sisters who were not legitimate, he had declared
+her, Lady Jane, his heiress, and when the great dignitaries of the
+realm bent their knees and reverenced her as their Queen! At times
+they had already talked to her of her claim to the throne, but she had
+never thought much of it. When it now thus became a reality, her whole
+soul was overcome by it: she fell to the ground and burst into a flood
+of tears. Whether she had a full right to the throne, she could not
+judge: what she felt was her incapacity to rule. But whilst she
+uttered this, a different feeling passed through her, as she has told
+us herself: she prayed in the depths of her soul that, if the highest
+office belonged to her legally, God might give her the grace to
+administer it to his honour. The next day she betook herself by water
+to the Tower, and received the homage offered her. The heralds
+proclaimed her accession in the capital.
+
+But here this proclamation was received in silence and even with
+murmurs. The succession had been settled by Henry VIII on the basis of
+an act of Parliament: nothing else was expected but that this would be
+adhered to, and Mary succeed her brother: that Edward without any
+legal authorisation of a similar kind had now put a distant relative
+in his sister's place, seemed an open robbery of the lawful heir. It
+made no impression, that at the proclamation men were reminded of the
+Popery of the Princess Mary and her intention to restore the Papal
+power. Religious discord had not yet become so strong in England as to
+make men forget the fundamental principles of right on its account.
+The man who brought the princess the first news of Edward's death
+(which was still kept secret) remarks expressly in telling it, that he
+did not love her religion but abhorred the attempt to set aside lawful
+heirs. Mary prudently betook herself to Norfolk, where she had the
+most determined friends, to a castle on the sea; so as to be able, if
+her opponent should maintain the upper hand, to escape to the Emperor.
+But every one declared for her, the Catholics who saw in her the born
+champion of their religion and were strongest in those very districts,
+and the Protestants to whom the princess made some, though not
+binding, promises; she was proclaimed Queen in Norwich. If the Duke of
+Northumberland wished to carry out his projects, it was necessary for
+him to suppress this movement by force. He at once took the field for
+this purpose, with a fine body of artillery and two thousand infantry,
+and occupied a position in the neighbourhood of Cambridge.
+
+It seemed as though the crown would once more be fought for in open
+field just as it had been a century before, and that in fact, just as
+then, the neighbouring powers would interfere. On Northumberland's
+side French help was expected; on the other hand application was
+already made to the Emperor to send armed troops over the sea to his
+cousin.[159] It was not however this time to reach such a point: while
+the combination attempted in favour of Jane Grey met with strong
+popular resistance, it was shattered to pieces by internal discord. If
+the new Queen had such a good right as they told her, she would share
+it with none, not even with her husband; she would not appear as a
+creature of the Dudleys and a tool of their ambition: she would only
+name him a duke and would not allow him to be crowned with her as
+King. We recognise in this her high idea of the kingly power and its
+divine right; but we can also easily conceive that the discord which
+broke out on this point in the family could not but act on the members
+of the Privy Council, of whom only a section were in complete
+understanding with Northumberland, while the rest had merely yielded
+to the ascendancy of his power. While the duke was expecting armed
+reinforcements from London, a complete revolution took place there:
+under the management of the Privy Council Mary was proclaimed Queen,
+and a summons sent to Northumberland to submit to her. The fleet which
+was destined to prevent Mary's flight had already declared for her;
+the troops which were called out in the counties to fight against her
+crossed over to her side; in Northumberland's camp the same opinion
+gained the upper hand: the duke felt himself incapable of withstanding
+it: he allowed himself to be carried along by it like the rest. Men
+saw the extraordinary spectacle of the man who had marched out to
+destroy Mary now ordering her accession to be proclaimed in his
+encampment, he accompanied the herald and himself cried out Mary's
+name.[160] These English nobles have boundless ambition, they grasp
+with bold hand at the highest prizes: but they have no inner power of
+resistance, as against the course of events and public opinion they
+have no will of their own. However the duke might behave, he could not
+save either his freedom or his life. Soon afterwards Mary entered
+London amid the joyous shouts of the people. She was still united as
+closely as possible with her sister Elizabeth: they appeared together
+hand in hand. Jane Grey remained as a prisoner in the Tower, which she
+had entered as Queen. Never did the natural right of succession, as it
+was established by the testator of the inheritance and the Parliament,
+obtain a greater triumph.
+
+After the succession was decided, the great questions of government
+came into the foreground, above all the question what position Mary
+should take up with regard to religious matters.
+
+Among the Protestants the opinion prevailed that it could not yet be
+known whether she would not let religion remain in the state in which
+she found it. Towns where the Protestant feeling was strongest
+joyfully attached themselves to her in this expectation.
+
+Her cousin, the Emperor Charles, who justly regarded her accession as
+a victory, and who from the first moment exercised the greatest
+influence on her resolutions, advised her before all things to
+moderate her Catholic zeal. She should reflect that many of the lords
+by whom she was now supported, a part of the Privy Council, and the
+people of London, were Protestants, and guard against estranging them.
+She should at once call a Parliament to show that she meant to rule in
+the accustomed manner, and take care that the Northern counties, as
+well as Cornwall, where men still held the most firmly to Catholicism,
+were represented in it.
+
+This good advice was not without influence on the Queen. In a tumult
+which arose two days after her arrival in the city, she had the Lord
+Mayor summoned in order to tell him that she would force no man's
+conscience, she hoped that the people would through good instruction
+come back to the religion which she herself professed with full
+conviction. When she repeated this soon after in a proclamation, she
+added that these things must shortly be ordered by common consent. But
+of what kind this order would be, there could be already no doubt
+after these words: she desired a change, but intended to bring it
+about in a legal manner.
+
+In all the steps taken by her government her Catholic sympathies
+predominated. She felt no scruple in using the spiritual rights, which
+the constitution gave her, in favour of Catholicism. As 'Head of the
+Church next under God,' Mary forbade all preaching and interpretation
+of Scripture without special permission. But she entrusted the power
+of giving this permission to the same Bishop Gardiner who had offered
+the most persevering resistance to the Protestant tendencies of the
+previous government. The antagonism between the bishops entered again
+on an entirely new phase: the Catholics rose, the Protestants were
+depressed to the uttermost. Tonstal, Heath, and Day were, like
+Gardiner, restored to their sees on the ground of the protests lodged
+against the proceedings taken with reference to them at their
+deprivation, protests which were regarded as valid. Ridley had to give
+up the see of London again to Bonner: the Bishops of Gloucester and
+Exeter experienced the royal displeasure; not merely Latimer but also
+Cranmer were imprisoned in the Tower. Everywhere the images were
+replaced, in many churches the celebration of the mass was revived.
+Those preachers who declared themselves against it had to follow their
+bishops to prison. The Calvinistic model-congregation was dissolved.
+The foreign scholars quitted the country; and their most zealous
+followers also fled to the continent before the coming storm of
+persecution.
+
+At the beginning of October the Queen's coronation took place with the
+old customary ceremonies, for which the Emperor's leading minister,
+Granvella, Bishop of Arras, sent over a vase of consecrated oil, on
+the mystical meaning of which great stress was again laid. The Queen
+had some scruples about the coronation, as she wished previously to
+get rid of her title, 'Head of the Church': but the Emperor saw danger
+in delay; he thought the declaration she had in the deepest secrecy
+made to the Roman See, that she meant to re-establish its authority,
+removed any religious scruple. He fully approved of the coronation
+preceding the Parliament, and recommended the Queen, in virtue of her
+constitutional right, without any delay to name bishops and prelates,
+who might be useful to her at its impending meeting.
+
+But the supreme power once constituted, as formerly in the civil wars,
+so also in the times of the Reformation movement, had always exercised
+a decisive influence on the composition of the Parliamentary
+assemblies; would not this then be the case when it had declared
+itself again Catholic? No doubt the government, at the head of which
+Gardiner appeared as Lord Chancellor, used all the means at its
+disposal to guide the elections according to its views. It appears to
+have been with the same motive that the Queen in a proclamation, which
+generally breathed nothing but benevolence, remitted payment of the
+subsidies last voted under her brother. Yet we can hardly attribute
+the result wholly to this. Parliamentary elections are wont to receive
+their impulse from the mistakes of the last administration and the
+evils that have come to light: and much had undeniably been done under
+Edward VI which could not but call forth discontent. The ferment at
+home was increased by financial disorder: church property had suffered
+enormous losses. But above all the supreme power had taken a sudden
+start in breaking through its ancient bounds. And, last of all, the
+Protestant tendencies had allied themselves with an undertaking which
+ran directly counter to the customary law and to previous
+Parliamentary enactments. And so it might come to pass that the same
+feelings swayed the elections which had mainly brought about Mary's
+accession.
+
+But, after all, the result of these elections was not such as to make
+a complete return to the Papal authority probable. The Emperor
+Charles, who mainly guided the Queen's steps, warned her from
+attempting it. She had prayed him to communicate to her the Pope's
+declarations issued in favour of her hereditary right: he sent them to
+her, but with the advice to make no use of them, since they might
+involve her in difficulties without end. It seemed to him sufficient
+if the Parliament simply repealed the enactments which had formerly
+been passed respecting the invalidity of her mother's marriage with
+her father. In the bill which was drawn up on this point in the Upper
+House it was merely stated that the marriage, in itself valid and
+approved by the wisest persons of the realm, had been made displeasing
+to the King through evil influences and annulled by a sentence of
+Archbishop Cranmer, on whom the greatest blame fell. To many men this
+seemed already going too far, since together with the dispensation the
+old church authority was again recognised: but as there was not a word
+about the Pope in it, this was less apparent: the bill was passed
+unanimously. The act might be regarded as a political one. On the
+other hand religion was very directly affected by the proposal to
+repeal the alterations in the church service which had been introduced
+under Edward VI, and to abolish the Common Prayer-book. On this ensued
+the hottest conflict. Once the proposal had to be laid aside: when it
+was resumed, the debate on it lasted six days: a third of the members
+were steadily against it. But in the majority the opinion again
+prevailed that Henry VIII's church constitution--retention of the
+Catholic doctrines and emancipation from the Papacy--was the most
+suitable for England: a resolution was carried to the effect that only
+such books as were in use under Henry VIII should be henceforth used
+in the church. The new forms of divine service, which contained a
+clearly marked body of doctrine, were abolished and the old ones
+restored.
+
+The position which the Parliament took up in relation to another
+scarcely less important question coincided with this sense of national
+independence.
+
+It was a very widespread wish in England that the Queen should give
+her hand to young Courtenay, son of that Marquis of Exeter who had
+himself once thought of marrying Mary against her father's wishes. He
+was a young man of suitable age, handsome figure, and mental activity;
+Mary had not merely freed him from the prison in which her brother had
+kept him, but also endowed him with the Earldom of Devon, one of his
+father's possessions; in this act many saw a token of personal
+inclination. Bishop Gardiner was decidedly in his favour, and we can
+conceive how a great ecclesiastic, who had the power of the state in
+his hands, wished to altogether exclude every foreign influence; he of
+course knew that Courtenay would also conform in church matters.
+
+Gardiner spoke once with the Queen about it and was very pressing: she
+was absolutely against it. The old chronicle is entirely in error when
+it repeats the then widespread rumour of Mary's inclination for
+Courtenay. Mary told the Imperial ambassador that she was altogether
+ignorant of what love was; she had never seen Courtenay but once in
+her life, at the moment when she released him. She intended to marry,
+since she was assured that the welfare of the realm required it, but
+not an Englishman, not one who was a subject. As in other things, so
+in this, she requested the Emperor to give her his advice.
+
+Charles V would not have been absolutely against the plan of his
+cousin giving her hand to an English lord, whom England might obey
+more easily than a stranger: but, when she showed such an aversion to
+it, he did not hesitate for a moment as to what advice to give her.
+One of his brother's sons was taken into consideration, but rejected
+by him on the ground that there was already much ill-will against
+Spain stirring in the Netherlands, and a union of the German line with
+England might some day make it difficult for his own son to maintain
+those provinces: he therefore proposed him to the Queen. Don Philip,
+not yet thirty but already a widower for the second time, was just
+then negociating for a marriage with a Portuguese princess. These
+negociations were broken off and counter ones opened with England.
+Mary showed a joyful inclination to it at the first word: it was to
+this that her secret thoughts had turned.
+
+It looked as if the dynastic union of the Burgundian-Spanish house
+with the English, which was also a political alliance and had been
+violently broken off at the same time with that alliance, would now be
+restored more closely than before, and this time for ever. Men took up
+the idea that Philip's eldest son was to continue the Spanish line, as
+Ferdinand and his sons the German, but that from the new marriage, if
+it should be blest with offspring, an English line of the house of
+Burgundy was to proceed: a prospect of the extension of the power of
+England and of her influence on the continent, which it was expected
+would set aside all opposition.
+
+In England however every voice was against it, among nobles and
+commons, people and Parliament, high and low. The imperial court fully
+believed that it was Gardiner who brought the matter forward in
+Parliament. The House resolved to send a deputation to the Queen with
+the request that she would marry an Englishman. Mary, who had as high
+an idea of her prerogative as any of her predecessors or successors,
+felt herself almost insulted; she interrupted the speech as soon as
+she understood its purport, and declared that Parliament was taking
+too much on itself in wishing to give her advice in this matter: only
+with God, from whom she derived her crown, would she take counsel
+thereon.[161] When the Parliament, not satisfied with this, prepared a
+fresh application to her, it was dissolved.
+
+But if this happened among men who adhered to her views in other
+points, what would those say who saw themselves, contrary to their
+expectation, oppressed and endangered by the Queen's measures in
+religious matters?
+
+The agitation was so general that men caught at the hope of putting an
+end to all that was begun by a sudden rising. We find a statement
+which must not be lightly rejected, that the English nobility, which
+had taken great part in the Reformation movement and put itself in
+possession of much church property, came to an understanding at
+Christmas 1553, and decided on a general rising on the next Palm
+Sunday, 18th March:[162] thus doing as the French, German,
+Netherlandish and Scotch nobility had done, who took the initiative in
+this matter. In Cornwall Peter Carew was to have the lead, in the
+Midland Counties the Duke of Suffolk, in Kent Thomas Wyatt. As the
+Queen's Privy Council was even now not unanimous, they hoped to bring
+about an overthrow of the government before it was yet firmly
+established: and either to compel the Queen to dismiss her evil
+counsellors and give up the Spanish marriage, or if she remained
+obstinate to put her sister Elizabeth in her place, who would then
+marry Courtenay. The French, who saw in the Queen's marriage with the
+prince of Spain a danger for themselves, urged on the movement, and
+had a secret understanding with the rebels; their plan was to support
+it by an incursion from Scotland where they were then the masters, and
+an attack on Calais.[163] But as often happens with such comprehensive
+plans, the government detected them; the attempt to carry them out had
+to be made before the preparations were complete; in most of the
+places where an effort was made it was suppressed without much
+trouble. Carew fled to France; Suffolk, who in vain tried to draw
+Coventry over to his side, was captured. On the other hand Sir Thomas
+Wyatt's rising in Kent was formidable. He collected a couple of
+thousand men, defeated the royal troops, some of whom joined him, and
+as he had the sympathies of a great part of the inhabitants of London
+with him, he attempted forthwith an attack on the capital. But the new
+order of things had too firm a legal foundation to be so easily
+overthrown. The Queen betook herself to the Guildhall and addressed
+the assembled people, decided as she was and confident in the goodness
+of her cause; the general feeling was in favour of supporting her. All
+armed for defence. For a couple of days, during which Wyatt lay before
+the city, every one was under arms, mayor, aldermen and people; the
+lawyers went to the courts with armour under their robes: priests were
+seen celebrating mass with mail under their church vestments. The
+Queen had some trustworthy troops, whose leader, the Earl of Pembroke,
+told her he would never show his face to her again if he did not free
+her from these rebels. When Wyatt at last appeared in Hyde Park with
+exhausted and badly fed men, he was met and beaten by an overwhelming
+body of Pembroke's troops; with a part of his followers he was driven
+into the city, and there made prisoner without much bloodshed.
+
+It has always been reckoned to the Queen's credit that amid the alarm
+of these days she never quitted the unfortified palace. She had now an
+opportunity to rid herself completely of Northumberland's faction.
+Jane Grey, whose name at least had been mentioned, her father Suffolk,
+her uncle Thomas Grey, were executed; Wyatt also and a great number of
+the prisoners paid for their rebellion with their lives.[164]
+
+NOTES:
+
+[155] King Edward: My devise for the succession: in 'Chronicle of
+Queen Anna, with illustrative documents and notes' by Nicholls, 89.
+
+[156] King Edward's Minutes for his last will. In 'Chronicle of Queen
+Anna, with illustrative documents and notes' by Nicholls, 101.
+
+[157] Engagement of the council, the signatures all autograph. Ibid.
+90.
+
+[158] This was done by a correction. The original text was 'to the
+Lady Jane's heires masle;' instead of 'Jane's,' the King now wrote 'to
+the Lady Jane and her h. m. (Nares' Burghley i. 452. Nicholls, 87.)
+
+[159] Lettre ecrite a l'empereur par ses ambassadeurs en Angleterre 19
+Juill. Luy (au roi de France) sera facile, d'envoyer 2 ou 3 m.
+Francais et quelques gens de chevaux. Plusieurs de ce royaume sont
+d'opinion, si V. M. assistoit ma dite dame (Mary) de gens et de
+secours contre le dit duc, la dite dame ne diminueroit en rien
+l'affection du peuple.
+
+[160] Proclama avec le dict herault Mm. Marie a haute voix. Lettre des
+ambassadeurs a l'empereur. Papiers d'etat de Granvelle iv. 58.
+
+[161] To the reports of the French and Spanish ambassadors (compare
+Ambassades de Mss. de Noailles en Angleterre ii. 269, Turner ii. 204,
+Froude vi. 124) may be added that of the Venetian: 'ch'ella si
+consiglierebbe con dio e non con altri.' I combine this with Noailles'
+account; for these ambassadors were immediately informed by their
+friends of the deputation and have noted down that part of the Queen's
+speech which made most impression on the bystanders.
+
+[162] Soranzo Relatione 79, a testimony worth consideration, as
+Soranzo stood in a certain connexion with the rebels.
+
+[163] So Simon Renard reports 24th Feb. 1553-4 to the Emperor after
+Wyatt's confession. 'Le roy feroit emprinse de coustel d'Escosse et de
+coustel de Guyenne (it should without doubt be Guisnes) et Calais': in
+Tytler ii. 207. Wyatt's statements in the 'State Trials' refer to a
+confession which is not given there, and from which the ambassador may
+have taken his account.
+
+[164] Renard a l'empereur, 8 Feb. The communications in Tytler, which
+come from Brussels, and the Papiers d'etat de Granvelle, which come
+from Besancon, supplement each other, yet even when taken both
+together they are still not quite complete.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE CATHOLIC-SPANISH GOVERNMENT.
+
+
+The effort to overthrow Mary's throne had strengthened it: for the
+second time she had rallied around it the preponderant majority of the
+nation. And this was all the more surprising, since no one could doubt
+any longer in what direction the Queen's exclusive religious views
+would lead her. In her victory she saw a divine providence, by which
+it was made doubly her duty to persevere, without looking back, in the
+path she had once taken. In full understanding with her Gardiner
+proceeded without further scruple, in the Parliament which met in
+April 1554, to attempt to carry through the two points on which all
+else depended, the abrogation of the Queen's spiritual title, which
+implied restoration of the Pope's authority, and the revival of the
+old laws against heretics. These views and proposals however met with
+unexpected opposition, both in the nation, and no less in the Privy
+Council and Parliament, especially in the Upper House. The lay lords
+did not wish to make the bishops so powerful again as they had once
+been, and rejected the restoration of the Pope's authority unless they
+previously had security for their possession of the confiscated church
+property. The first proposition could not, so far as can be seen, even
+be properly brought forward:[165] the second, the revival of the
+heresy laws, was accepted by the Commons over whom Gardiner exercised
+great influence, but the Peers threw it out. It was especially Lords
+Paget and Arundel who opposed Gardiner's proposals in the Privy
+Council and the Lords and caused their rejection.
+
+Only in one thing were the two parties united, in recognising the
+marriage contract concluded with Spain: it was passed unanimously by
+Parliament.
+
+In July 1554 Don Philip reached England with a numerous fleet, divided
+into three squadrons, with a brilliant suite on board. At Southampton
+the leader of one of the two parties, the Earl of Arundel, received
+him; Bishop Gardiner, the leader of the other, gave the blessing of
+the church to the marriage in Winchester cathedral. The day before the
+Emperor had resigned the crown of Naples to his son, to make him equal
+with the Queen in rank. How grand it sounded, when the king-at-arms
+proclaimed the united titles: Philip and Mary, King and Queen of
+England, France, Naples, Jerusalem, Ireland! A title with an almost
+Plantagenet sound, but which now however only denoted the closest
+union between the Spanish monarchy and the Catholics of England.
+Philip was solicitous to gain over the different parties and classes
+of England: for he had been told that England was a popular monarchy.
+He belied his Spanish gravity and showed himself, despite the
+stiffness that was his natural characteristic, affable to every man:
+he tried to make the impression, and successfully, that he desired the
+prosperity of England. One of the chief resources of the time, that of
+securing the most considerable persons by means of pensions, he made
+use of to a great extent. Both parties were provided for by annual
+payments and presents, Pembroke and Arundel as well as Derby and
+Rochester. We are assured that this liberality exercised a very
+advantageous influence on the disposition of the country.[166]
+Gardiner looked on it as a slight, that he was passed over in the
+list, for these pensions were considered at that time an honour, but
+this did not prevent him from praising the marriage in his sermons as
+ordained by heaven for the restoration of religion.
+
+All now depended on whether the King's influence would be sufficient
+to carry at the next meeting of Parliament in November, the proposals
+which had been rejected in the last session.
+
+But for this, according to the view not merely of the English lords,
+but of the imperial ambassador and of the Emperor himself, a previous
+condition was indispensable. The English nobles must be relieved from
+all apprehension lest the confiscated ecclesiastical property should
+ever again be wrested from them. Cardinal Pole had been already for
+some time residing in the Netherlands: but he was told that his
+arrival in England would be not merely fruitless but detrimental
+unless he brought with him a sufficient dispensation with regard to
+this. In Rome the concession was opposed on the ground that it would
+be setting a bad precedent. But when it was pointed out that the
+English confiscations did not touch any church lands, but only
+monastic property, and still more that without this concession the
+restoration of obedience to the church could not be attained, Pope
+Julius III yielded to the request. Two less comprehensive forms were
+rejected by the Emperor: at last one was granted which would satisfy
+the English. The form of the absolution which the Pope was to bestow
+after their submission was previously arranged: it was agreed to avoid
+everything that could remind men of the old pretensions and awaken the
+national antipathies.
+
+Meanwhile the elections to Parliament were completed. The proclamation
+issued gives the ruling points of view without reserve. An invitation
+to elect Catholic members of merit was coupled with the assurance that
+there was no intention of disturbing any kind of property. The means
+lately used for preventing any hostile influence were not yet
+sufficient: the advice was given from Brussels to go back to the older
+and stricter forms.
+
+The leading men of the Upper House were won over: there could be no
+doubt about the tone of the Lower. At their first sitting a resolution
+to release Cardinal Pole from the attainder that weighed on him, and
+invite him to return to England, passed without opposition. Now the
+Emperor had no longer any scruple in letting him go. He said as to
+this very matter, that what is undertaken at the wrong time hinders
+the result which might else have been expected; everything has its
+time: the time for this appeared to him now come. From Philip we have
+a letter to his sister Juana in which he extols himself with much
+satisfaction for the share he had taken in recalling the cardinal and
+restoring the Papal authority. 'I and the most illustrious Queen,' he
+says in it, 'commanded the Parliament of the three Estates of the
+realm to recall him; we especially used our efforts with the chief
+among them to induce them to consent to the cardinal's return: at our
+order prelates and knights escorted him to our Court, where he has
+delivered to us the Breve of his Holiness.'--'We then through the
+Chancellor of the realm informed the Estates of what seemed to us
+becoming, above all how much it concerned themselves to come to a
+conclusion that would give peace to their conscience.'[167]
+
+The Parliament declared itself ready to return to the obedience of the
+Roman See, and repeal all the statutes against it, provided that the
+cardinal pronounced a general dispensation, that every man might keep
+without scruple the ecclesiastical property which had fallen to his
+share.[168] On this understanding Cardinal Pole was allowed to
+exercise his legatine power, and the King and Queen were entreated to
+intercede that the absolution might be bestowed.
+
+With heartfelt joy Cardinal Pole pronounced it without delay, first at
+a meeting of the Parliament in the palace, then with greater solemnity
+at S. Paul's at a high mass attended by the Court with a brilliant
+suite; among those present were the knights who wore the Burgundian
+order of the Golden Fleece, and those who wore the English Order of
+the Garter. The King stood by the Chancellor when from the outer
+corridor of the church he announced the event and its motives to the
+great crowds there assembled. It made an impression on the imperial
+ambassadors that no outward sign of discontent was heard.
+
+The agreement that now followed bears more of a juridical than of a
+religious character. The jurisdiction was given back to the Pope which
+he possessed before the twentieth year of Henry VIII (1529): the
+statutes by which it was abolished were severally enumerated and
+repealed: on the other hand the Pope's legate in his name consented
+that the owners of church property should not be disturbed in their
+possession, either now or at any future time, either by church
+councils or by Papal decrees. Such property was henceforth to be quite
+as exclusively subject to the jurisdiction of the crown as any other;
+whoever dared to call in question the validity of the title in any
+spiritual court whatever, within or without the realm, was to be
+punished as an enemy of the Queen. The cardinal legate strove long to
+prevent the two enactments, as to the restoration of obedience and the
+title to the ecclesiastical property, from being combined together in
+one Act, since it might look as if the Pope's concession was the price
+of this obedience to him; he once said, he would rather let all remain
+as it was and go back to Rome than yield on this point. But the
+English nobility adhered immoveably to its demand; it wished to
+prevent all danger of the restoration of obedience becoming in any way
+detrimental to its acquisitions, an object which was clearly best
+secured by combining both enactments in a single statute, so that they
+must stand or fall together; even the King's representations effected
+no alteration in this; the cardinal had to comply.
+
+On the other hand the King's influence, if we believe himself, had all
+possible success in the other affair, which was at any rate not less
+weighty. 'With the intervention of the Parliament,' he continues in
+the above-mentioned letter, 'we have made a law, I and the most
+illustrious Queen, for the punishment of heretics and all enemies of
+holy church; we have revived the old ordinances of the realm, which
+will serve this purpose very well.' It was more especially the
+statute against the Lollards, by which Henry V had entered into the
+closest alliance with the hierarchy, that was to be re-enacted by
+Parliament. Gardiner had not been able to carry it through in the
+previous session, though it was known that the Queen wished it. Under
+the King's influence, who was accustomed to the execution of heretics
+in Spain, the Lords after some deliberation let their objections drop
+and accepted the bill.
+
+If we put together these four great Acts, the abolition of the Common
+Prayer-book, the Spanish marriage, the restoration of obedience to
+Rome, and the revival of the heresy laws, we could hardly doubt the
+intention of the members of the government, and of the Parliament, to
+return completely to the ancient political and religious state of
+things. With some members such an intention may have been the
+predominant one: to assume it in all, or even in the majority, would
+be an error.[169]
+
+The agreement then legalised as to ecclesiastical property, and the
+abolition of the monastic system, already formed such an anomaly in
+the Roman Catholic church, that the ecclesiastical condition of
+England would have always retained a very abnormal character. And the
+obedience expressed was by no means complete. For it should have
+included above all a recognition of that right of dispensation, about
+which the original quarrel had broken out, and the revocation of the
+order of succession which was based on its rejection. In fact
+Gardiner's intention was to bring matters to this; being besides a
+great enemy and even persecutor of Elizabeth, he wished to see her
+illegitimacy pronounced in due form;[170] the resolutions passed
+seemed necessarily to lead to it. Men however did not proceed this
+time so logically in England. They did not wish to base the future
+state of the realm on Papal decrees, but on the ordinances once
+enacted by King and Parliament. They could not deceive themselves as
+to the fact that Elizabeth, though she conformed outwardly, yet
+remained true at heart to the Protestant faith; but not on that
+account would the Parliament deny her right to the English throne. It
+also by no means entertained exactly Spanish sentiments. The Emperor
+expressed the wish that his son might be crowned: his ambassador's
+advice however was against proposing it in Parliament; since, with the
+high ideas entertained in England of the rights implied in the
+coronation, this would never be allowed. In the event of the Queen's
+dying before Philip, and leaving children, the guardianship was
+reserved to him: but even for this object conditions had been
+originally proposed which would have been much more advantageous to
+him: these the Upper House threw out. So little was even then the
+policy of the Queen and King at the same time the policy of the nation
+and Parliament. In the Privy Council the old discords continued. The
+government obtained a greater unity by the fact that Gardiner, who now
+followed the Queen's lead in every respect, carried most of the
+members with him by the authority which her favour gave him. As Paget
+and Arundel, since they could effect nothing, refused to appear any
+more, there always remained a secret support for the discontent that
+was stirring. In the beginning of 1555 traces of a conspiracy in
+favour of Courtenay were again detected: if the inquiry into it led to
+no discovery, it was because--so it was thought--the commission
+entrusted with it did not wish to make any.
+
+At this moment the revived heresy-laws began to be put into execution.
+Prosecutions were instituted for statements that under another order
+of things would have been considered as fully authorised. Still more
+than to single offences was attention directed to any variations in
+doctrine. In these proceedings we can remark the points which were
+then chiefly in question.
+
+The first of the accused, one of the earliest and most influential of
+the martyrs, John Rogers, was reminded of the article which speaks of
+the faith in one holy catholic church; he replied that by it was meant
+the universal church of all lands and times, not the Romish, which on
+the contrary had deviated in many points from the main foundation of
+all churches, Holy Scripture. Rowland Taylor, who gloried in a
+marriage blest with children, which Gardiner would not acknowledge to
+be a marriage at all, maintained that Christian antiquity had allowed
+the marriage of priests. Gardiner accused him of ignorance. 'But,'
+said Taylor, 'I have read the Holy Scripture, the Latin and the Greek
+fathers;' a canon of the Nicene council, which was cited on the point,
+he interpreted far more correctly than the bishop. John Hooper was
+called in question because he held divorce to be permissible on the
+ground given in Scripture, and because he found that the view of the
+real presence had no foundation in Scripture.[171] Their offence was
+the conception of church-communion as resting on the foundation of
+Scripture and extending therefore far beyond Romanism: the most
+telling defence could not save them here, for only the carrying out of
+old laws was concerned, and these unconditionally condemned such
+opinions. As the condemned were being taken back by night to their
+prison, many householders came out of their doors with lights in their
+hands, to greet them with their prayers and thank them for their
+steadfastness: a deep and sorrowful sympathy, but one which scarcely
+dared to utter itself, and thus renounced the attempt to effect
+anything. Rogers suffered death in London, Hooper at his episcopal see
+of Gloucester, Taylor (who on the way showed as much good wit as Sir
+Thomas More had formerly done) in his parish, Saunders at Coventry,
+Ferrar in the market-place at Caermarthen. Their punishment, in every
+place where they had taught, was intended to confirm the doctrines
+they had rejected. There have been more bloody persecutions elsewhere:
+this was distinguished by the fact that many of the more eminent men
+of the nation became its victims. Among them, besides those we have
+named, were Ridley, who was looked on as the most learned scholar in
+England, the eloquent Latimer, Bradford a man of deep piety, Philpot
+who united learning and religion. How could Archbishop Cranmer, who
+had contributed almost more than any one to carry through the
+Reformation, who had pronounced the divorce of the Queen's mother,
+possibly find mercy? He persuaded himself of it once; and, yielding as
+he was, allowed himself to be tempted into a recantation, in despite
+of which he was condemned to death. But then there awoke in him also
+the whole consciousness of the truth of his belief. The hand with
+which he had signed the recantation he held firm, and let it burn in
+unutterable agony, as an expiation which he imposed on himself, before
+the flame of the faggots closed over him. The executions extended
+themselves over the whole country and even over the neighbouring
+islands; the diaries show that they continued till 1558. Many could
+have fled, but wished to testify to the firmness of their belief by
+dying for it, and thus to strengthen in their faith the people from
+whom they were taken away. Most of them showed a sublime contempt of
+death, which inflamed others to imitate them. How many would have been
+prepared to throw themselves with their friends into the flames! And
+no one could say that here there was any question of tendencies to
+revolt. The Protestants had on the whole kept themselves far from it:
+they did not contest the Queen's right to the throne; they died as her
+obedient subjects.
+
+But now what an impression must these executions produce, combined
+with what preceded and followed them.
+
+Gardiner appears in all this imperious, proud, and with that confident
+tone which the possessors of power assume, implying that they regard
+themselves as being also mentally superior; Bonner Bishop of London
+fanatical, without any power of discernment, and almost bloodthirsty.
+His attention was once drawn to the ill effects of his rough acts of
+violence; he replied that he must do God's work without fear of men.
+Under the last government they had both had much to endure: they had
+been deprived by their enemies and thrown into prison: now they
+employed the temporal arm in their own favour; they felt no scruple in
+sentencing their old opponents to death in accordance with the
+severity of the laws which they had again brought into active
+operation. Such was the issue of the contest between the bishops
+under the changing systems of government.
+
+As Queen Mary is designated 'The Bloody,' we are astonished when we
+read the authentic descriptions, still extant, of her personal
+appearance. She was a little, slim, delicate, sickly woman, with hair
+already turning grey. She played on the lute, and had even given
+instruction in music; she had a skilful hand; on personal acquaintance
+she made the impression of goodness and mildness. But yet there was
+something in her eyes that could even rouse fear; her voice, which
+could be heard at a great distance, told of something unwomanly in
+her. She was a good speaker in public; never did she show a trace of
+timidity in danger. The troubles she had experienced from her youth,
+her constant antagonism to the authority under which she lived, had
+especially hardened in her the self-will which is recognisable in all
+the Tudors. A peculiarity found elsewhere also in gifted women, that
+they are weary of all which surrounds them at home, and give to what
+is foreign a sympathy above its worth, had become to her a second
+nature. She rejected with aversion the idea of marrying Courtenay, for
+this reason among others that he was an Englishman. She, the Queen of
+England, had no sympathy for the life, the interests, the struggles of
+her people: she hated them from her childhood. All her sympathies were
+for the nation from which her mother came, for its views and manners:
+her husband was her ideal of a man: we are assured that she even
+overlooked his infidelities to her because he did not enter into
+permanent relations with any other woman. Besides this he was the only
+man who could support her in the great project for which she thought
+herself marked out by God, the restoration of Catholicism.[172] This
+is the meaning of her pledging herself in her bedchamber before a
+crucifix, when she had not yet seen him, to give her hand to him and
+to no other. For with him and his fortunes were linked the hopes of a
+restoration of Catholicism. Mary was absolutely determined to do all
+she could to strengthen it in England. Gardiner assures us, and we may
+believe him in this, that it was not he who prompted the revival of
+the old laws against the Lollards; the chief impulse to it came on the
+contrary from the Queen. And as those laws ordered the punishment of
+heretics by fire, and Parliament had consented, and the orthodox
+bishops offered their aid, it would have seemed to her a blameable
+weakness, if out of feelings of compassion she had stood in the way of
+the execution of those laws, to the suspension of which the bishops
+ascribed the spread of heretical opinions. Many of the horrors which
+accompanied their execution may have remained concealed from her;
+still it cannot be doubted, that the persecutions would never have
+begun without her. No excuse can free her memory from the dark shade
+which rests on it. For that which is done in a sovereign's name, with
+his will and consent, determines his character in history.
+
+The conduct of the Queen and her government, without whose help
+ecclesiastical authority would have been null and void, had a result
+that extended far beyond her time: men began to inquire into the
+claims of the temporal power. John Knox, who had now to fly from
+England before a Queen, as he had previously from Scotland before a
+Queen-regent, and whose word was of weight, poured forth his feelings
+in a piercing call, which he himself named 'a blast of the trumpet,'
+against the right of women to the government of a country, which ought
+to be exercised only by men. And while Knox went no further than the
+immediate case, others examined into the powers of all State
+authority: above all, to prevent its taking part in religious
+persecution, they brought forward the principles according to which
+sovereignty issues originally from the people. Mary's government had
+awakened in Protestantism, and that not merely in England, the
+hostility of political theory.
+
+But besides no man could hide from himself, that discontent, even
+without theory, had grown in England in an alarming manner. The French
+and Imperial ambassadors both gave their courts information of it,
+the former with a kind of satisfaction, the latter with apprehension
+and pain. He laments the bad effect which the religious persecution
+produces, makes pressing objections to it and demands that the bloody
+zeal of the bishops shall be moderated; but the matter was regularly
+proceeding in a kind of legal way; we do not find that he effected
+anything.
+
+The Queen had hitherto flattered herself and her partisans with the
+hope that she would give the country an heir to the throne. When this
+expectation proved fallacious in the summer of 1555 it produced an
+impression which, as the imperial ambassador says, no pen could
+describe. The appearance had been caused by an unhealthy condition of
+body, which was now looked on rather as a prognostic of her fast
+approaching death. It is already clear, remarks the ambassador, that
+least confidence can be placed in those who have been hitherto most
+trusted: many a man still wears a mask: others even show their
+ill-will quite openly. For so badly is the succession at present
+arranged that my lady Elizabeth will without doubt ascend the throne
+on Mary's death and will restore heresy.
+
+While things were in this state, Philip II was led to resolve on going
+to the Netherlands by the vicissitudes of the French war and his
+father's state of health; he wished either to bring about peace, or to
+push the war with energy.
+
+He had hitherto exercised a moderating influence on the government.
+Not to let all fall back into the previous party-strife, he thought it
+best to give the eight leading members of the Privy Council a
+pre-eminent place in the management of business. He could not avoid
+admitting men of both parties even among these; but he had already
+found a man whom he could set over the others and trust with the
+supreme rule of affairs in complete confidence. This was Cardinal
+Pole, who after Cranmer's death received the Archbishopric of
+Canterbury, long ago bestowed on him at Rome, and was released from
+the duty of again returning to the Roman court. He was descended from
+the house of the Yorkist Suffolks, persecuted by the earlier Tudors
+with great severity; but how completely did this family difference
+recede before the world-wide interests of religion! He served with the
+most entire devotion a queen of the house of Lancaster-Tudor who on
+her side reposed in him unlimited reliance: she wished to have him
+about her for hours every day. Reginald Pole was a man of European and
+general ecclesiastical culture; he shared in a tendency existing
+within Catholicism itself, which approached very nearly to
+Protestantism on one dogmatic question: we also hear that he would
+gladly have moderated the persecution;[173] but when it is said, that
+the obstinacy of the Protestants hindered him in this, all that can be
+implied is, that they held fast to a confession which was now
+absolutely condemned by the hierarchic laws, while he was bound and
+resolved to carry these laws into effect. His chief care was above all
+not to be involved in English party-divisions: he therefore usually
+worked with a couple of Italian assistants who shared his sentiments
+and his plans. The union of the ecclesiastical and temporal authority
+is seen once more in Pole, as it had been in Wolsey: he combined the
+powers of a legate with the position of a first minister. His
+distinguished birth, his high ecclesiastical rank, the confidence of
+the King and Queen, enhanced by completely blameless personal
+conduct,[174] procured him an authority in the country which seemed
+almost that of the sovereign.
+
+A singular government this, composed of an absent king, who however
+had to be consulted in all weighty matters, a cardinal, and a dying
+queen who lived exclusively in church ideas. Difficulties could not be
+wanting: they arose first in church matters themselves.
+
+We know how much the recognition of the alienation of the church
+property, to which Julius III was brought to consent by the Emperor,
+contributed to the restoration of church obedience; among the English
+nobility it formed the main ground of its submission. But in May 1555
+Pope Paul IV ascended the Papal throne, in whom dislike of the
+Austro-Spanish house was almost a passion, and who wished to base his
+ecclesiastical reputation on the recovery of the alienated church
+property. His third Bull orders its restoration, including the
+possessions of monastic foundations, and the revenues hitherto
+received from them. The English ambassadors who had been sent to Rome
+under wholly different conditions, to announce the restoration of
+obedience, found this Pope there on their arrival. When they mentioned
+the confirmation of the alienation of the monastic property, he
+answered them in plain terms: for himself he would be ready to
+consent, but it lay beyond his power; the property of the church was
+sacred and inviolable, all that belonged to it must be restored to the
+uttermost farthing. And so ecclesiastically minded was Queen Mary that
+she in her heart agreed with the Pope. The monasteries in particular
+she held to be an indispensable part of the church-system, and wished
+for their restoration. Already the fugitive monks were seen returning:
+a number of Benedictines who had remained in the country resumed the
+dress of their Order; the Queen made no secret of her wish to restore
+the monastery of Westminster in particular. Another side of church
+life was affected by the fact that, owing to the suppression of the
+great abbeys, a number of benefices, which were dependent on them, had
+lost their incomes and had fallen into decay. That Henry VIII should
+have appropriated to the crown the tenths and first-fruits, which
+belonged to the church, seemed to Queen Mary unjustifiable; she felt
+herself straitened in her conscience by retaining these revenues, and
+was prepared to give them back, whatever might be the loss to the
+crown. But she could not by herself repeal what had been done under
+authority of Parliament: in November 1555 she attempted to gain over
+that assembly to her view. A number of influential members were
+summoned to the palace, where first Cardinal Pole explained to them
+that the receipt of the first-fruits was connected with the State's
+claim of supremacy over the church, but that, after obedience was
+restored, it had no longer any real justification. He put forward some
+further reasons, and then the Queen herself took up the word. She
+laid the greatest stress on her personal wish. She asked the
+Parliament, after having shown obedience to her in so many ways, to
+prove to her that the peace of her soul lay near their hearts, and to
+take this burden from her. But the conception of the crown and its
+property had in England already ceased to be so merely personal. The
+most universally intelligible motive in the whole church-movement was
+the feeling, that the resources of the nation ought to be devoted to
+national purposes, and every one felt that the diminution of the royal
+revenues would have to be made up by Parliamentary grants. In addition
+to this, it appeared to be only the first step to such an universal
+restitution, as Pope Paul IV clearly contemplated and directed. Was
+there not much more to be said for the recovery of the church revenues
+from private hands than for their withdrawal from the crown which used
+them for public purposes?--A member of the Lower House wished to
+answer the Queen at once after her address: but, as he was not the
+Speaker, he was not allowed to do so.
+
+When the proposal came under discussion in the Lower House, it met
+with lively opposition. A commission was then appointed, to which the
+Upper House sent two earls, two barons, and two bishops, and to which
+some lawyers were added; by these the proposed articles were revised
+and then laid before them again. The decisive sitting was on the 3rd
+December 1555. The doors were closed: no stranger was allowed to enter
+nor any member to leave the House. After they had sat in hot debate
+from early morning till three in the afternoon--just one of those
+debates, of which we have to regret that no detailed account has
+survived--the proposal was, it is true, accepted, but against such a
+large minority as was hitherto unheard of in the English Parliament,
+120 votes to 183. Queen and cardinal regarded it as a great victory,
+for they had carried their view: but the tone of the country was still
+against them. However strong the stress which the cardinal laid on the
+statement that the concession of the crown was not to react in any way
+on private men's ownership of church property, the apprehension was
+nevertheless universal,[175] that with the Queen's zeal for the
+monasteries, and a consistent carrying out of the Pope's principles,
+things would yet come to this. But the interests which would be thus
+injured were very widespread. It was calculated that there were 40,000
+families which in one way or another owned part of the church
+property: they would neither relinquish it nor allow their title to be
+called in question. Powerful lords were heard to exclaim that they
+would keep the abbey-lands as long as they had a sword by their side.
+The popular disposition was reflected in the widespread rumour, which
+gained credence, that Edward VI was still alive and would soon come
+back.
+
+From time to time seditious movements showed the insecurity of the
+situation. At the beginning of 1556 traces were detected of a plan for
+plundering the treasury in order to levy troops with the money.[176]
+The Western counties were discontented because Courtenay was removed
+from among them: he died subsequently in Italy. Sir Henry Dudley, the
+Duke of Northumberland's cousin, rallied around him some zealous and
+enterprising malcontents, who planned a complete revolution: he found
+secret support in France, whither he fled.[177] In April 1557 a
+grandson of the Duke of Buckingham, Thomas Stafford, also coming from
+France, landed and made himself master of Scarborough castle. He had
+only a handful of followers, but he ventured to proclaim himself
+Protector of the realm, which he promised to secure against the
+tyranny of foreigners, and 'the satanic designs of an unlawful Queen.'
+He was crushed without difficulty. But in the general ferment which
+this aroused, it was observed how universal was the wish for a
+change.[178]
+
+Meanwhile foreign affairs took a turn which threatened to involve
+England in a dangerous complication. The peace between the great
+powers had not been concluded: the truce they had made was broken off
+at the instigation of the Pope; hostilities began again, and Philip II
+returned to England for a couple of months to induce her to join in
+the war against France. The diplomatic correspondence shows that the
+imperial court from the beginning valued their near relation to
+England chiefly as the basis of an alliance against France. We can
+easily understand how this early object was now attained. Besides many
+other previous wrongs, Stafford's enterprise, which was ascribed to
+the intrigues of France, was a motive for declaring war against that
+Power. And a French war still retained its old charm for the English:
+their share in it surpassed all expectation. The English land forces
+co-operated with decisive effect in the great victory of S. Quintin,
+and similarly the appearance of the English fleet on the French coasts
+ensured Philip's predominance on the ocean. But it is very doubtful
+whether this was the part the English power should have played at this
+moment. By his father's abdication and retirement into the cloister
+Philip had become lord and master of the Spanish monarchy. Could it be
+the mission of the English to help in consolidating it in his hands?
+On the foundation then laid, and mainly through the peace which France
+saw herself compelled to make, its greatness was built up. For the
+Spanish monarchy the union with England, which rested on the able use
+to which the existing troubles and the personal position of the Queen
+were turned--and which, strictly speaking, was still a result of the
+policy of Ferdinand the Catholic--was of indescribable advantage: to
+the English it brought a loss which was severely felt. They had
+neglected to put Calais in a proper state of defence; at the first
+attack it fell into the hands of the French. The greatest value was
+still laid in England on a possession across the sea, which seemed
+indispensable for the command of the Channel; its extension was the
+main object of Henry VIII's last war: that now it was on the contrary
+utterly lost was felt to be a national disaster; the population of the
+town, which consisted of English, was expelled together with the
+garrison.
+
+And as Pope Paul IV was now allied with the King of France, the result
+was that he found himself at war with Philip II (whom he tried to
+chase from Naples), and hence with England as well. His hatred to the
+house of Austria, his aversion to the concessions made in England with
+reference to church property, and to the religious position which
+Cardinal Pole had hitherto taken up in the questions at issue within
+the Catholic Church, determined the Pope to interfere in the home
+affairs of England with a strong hand. For these Cardinal Pole was the
+one indispensable man, on whose shoulders the burden of affairs
+rested. But it was this very man whom Paul IV now deprived of his
+legatine power, on which much of his consequence rested, and
+transferred it to a Franciscan monk.
+
+But what now was the consequent situation of affairs in England! The
+Queen, who recognised no higher authority than that of the Papal See,
+was obliged to have Paul IV's messages intercepted, lest they should
+become known. While the ashes of the reputed heretics were still
+smoking on their Calvaries, the man who represented the Catholic form
+of religion, and was working effectively for its progress, was accused
+of falling away from the orthodox faith, and summoned to Rome to
+answer for it.
+
+Meanwhile England did not feel herself strong enough, even with the
+help that Philip offered, to attempt the reconquest of Calais. The
+finances were completely disordered by the war; and the Parliament
+showed little zeal in restoring the balance: just before this the
+Queen had found herself obliged even to diminish the amount of a
+subsidy already as good as voted. However unwilling she might be to
+take the step after her previous experiences, she had to decide once
+more in the autumn of 1558 on calling a Parliament. Circumstances wore
+an appearance all the more dangerous, as the Scotch were allied with
+the victorious French: the Queen represented to the Commons the need
+of extraordinary means of defence. A number of the leading lords
+appeared in the Lower House to give additional weight to the demand of
+the Crown by their presence. The Commons, though not quite willingly,
+were proceeding to deliberate on the subsidies demanded, when an event
+happened which relieved them from the necessity of coming to any
+resolution.
+
+A tertian or quartan fever was then prevalent in the Netherlands and
+in England, which was very fatal, especially to elderly persons of
+enfeebled health.[179] The Queen, who had been for some time visited
+by her usual attacks of illness, could not resist this disease, when
+suffering besides, as she was, from deep affliction at the
+disappointment of all her hopes, and from heart-rending anticipations
+of the future: once more she heard mass in her chamber--she died
+before it was ended, on the 17 November 1558. Cardinal Pole also was
+suffering: completely crushed by this news he expired the following
+night. It was calculated that thirteen bishops died a little before or
+after the Queen. As if by some predetermined fate the combination of
+English affairs which had been attempted during her government came at
+once to an end.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[165] The Queen imputed the chief blame to Paget 'Quand l'on a parle
+de la peyne des heretiques, il a sollicite les Seigneurs pour non y
+consentir ny donner lieu a peyne de mort' Renard a l'empereur, in
+Tytler ii. 386.
+
+[166] Les seigneurs quils ont pension du roy font tels et si bons
+offices es contrees et provinces du roy ou ils ont charge que l'on ne
+oye dire si non que le peuple est content de l'alliance; ce que
+divertit les mauvais.' Renard a l'empereur, 13 Oct. Papiers d'etat iv.
+348.
+
+[167] Carta del rey Don Felipe a la princesa de Portugal Donna Juana
+su hermana, in Ribadeneyra, Historia del Scisma 381.
+
+[168] Renard informs King Ferdinand that this resolution would be
+adopted the 29 Nov (Papiers d'etat iv. 344), 'Confiant que la dispense
+soit generale, pour sans scrupule confirmer la possession des biens
+ecclesiastiques es mains de ceux qui les tiennent.'
+
+[169] 'La chambre haulte y faict difficulte pour ce, que l'autorite et
+jurisdiction des evesques est autorizee et que la peine semble trop
+griefve.' Renard a l'empereur, Papiers d'etat iv. 347.
+
+[170] Renard, ibid. 341. 'Le chancellier insistoit, que l'on declaira
+Mme. Elizabeth bastarde en ce parlement' They feared 'l'evidente et
+congnue contrariete qui seroit en tout le royaume.'
+
+[171] Condemnatio Johannis Hooper, in Burnet Coll. iii. 246. Compare
+Foxe, Martyrs vol. iii; Soames iv.
+
+[172] According to a despatch of Micheli (25 Nov. 1555) she says to
+the Parliament: 'che non ad altro fine dalla Maesta di dio era
+predestinata e riservata alla successione del regno, se non per
+servirsi di lei principalmente nella riduttione alla fede cattolica.'
+
+[173] Erat tanta in plerisque animorum obstinatio ac pertinacia, ut
+benignitati et clementiae nullum plane locum relinquerent.' Vita Poli,
+in Quirini i. 42.
+
+[174] Micheli, Relatione, 'Incontaminatissimo da ogni sorte di
+passione et interessi humani, non prevalendo in lui ni l'autorita de
+principi ni rispetto di sangue ni d'amicizia.'
+
+[175] 'Assicurando e levando il sospetto, che per quello che
+privatamente ciascuno possedeva, non sarebbe mai molestato ni
+travagliato.' Micheli, despatch 25 Nov., from whose reports I draw my
+notices of these proceedings in general.
+
+[176] Micheli, despatch 1556, 7 April, notes 'la maggior parte dei
+gentilhuomini del contado di Dansur (Devonshire) come conscii et
+partecipi della congiura.' 5 Magg. 'Tutta la parte occidentale e in
+sospetto.'
+
+[177] The Constable to Noailles, Amb. v. 310. 'Le roy a advise
+d'entretenir doulcement Dudelay et secrettement toute fois, pour s'en
+servir s'il en est de besoing luy donnant moyen d'entretenir aussi par
+de la des intelligences, qu'il faut retenir.'
+
+[178] Suriano, despatch 29 April 1557. 'Si e scoperto l'animo di
+molti, che non si sono potuti contener di mostrarsi desiderosi di
+veder alteration del stato presente.'
+
+[179] Godwin 470 'Innumeri perierunt, sed aetate fere provectiores et
+inter eos sacerdotum ingens numerus.'
+
+
+
+
+BOOK III.
+
+QUEEN ELIZABETH. CLOSE CONNEXION OF ENGLISH AND SCOTCH AFFAIRS.
+
+
+To appreciate the motives which led Henry VIII to attach such
+importance to a male heir, and to exclude his daughter by the Spanish
+marriage from the succession, we need only cast our eyes on what
+happened under her, when in spite of all she had become Queen. The
+idea with which the Tudors had ascended the throne, and administered
+the realm, that of founding a political power strong in itself and
+alike independent of home factions and foreign influence, was
+sacrificed by Mary to her preference for the nation from which her
+mother came and from which she chose her husband. The military power
+of England served to support the Spanish monarchy at a dangerous and
+doubtful moment in the course of its formation. And while Mary's
+father and brother had made it the object of their policy to deprive
+the hierarchy of all influence over England, she on the contrary
+reinstated it: she put the power and all the resources of the State at
+its disposal. Though historically deeply rooted, the Catholic tendency
+showed itself, through the reactionary rule which it brought about and
+through its alliance with the policy of Spain, pernicious to the
+country. We have seen what losses England suffered by it, not merely
+in its foreign possessions, but--what was really irreparable--in men
+of talent and learning, of feeling and greatness of soul; and into
+what a state of weakness abroad and dissolution at home it thereby
+fell. A new order of things must arise, if the national element, the
+creation of which had been the labour of centuries, was not to be
+crushed, and the mighty efforts of later ages were not to succumb to
+religious and political reaction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ELIZABETH'S ACCESSION. TRIUMPH OF THE REFORMATION.
+
+
+During Mary's government, which had been endurable only because men
+foresaw its speedy end, all eyes were directed to her younger sister
+Elizabeth. She was the daughter of Anne Boleyn, who bore her under her
+heart when she was crowned as Queen. After many changes, Henry VIII,
+in agreement with Parliament, had recognised her right of inheritance;
+the people had risen against the enterprise of the Duke of
+Northumberland for her as well as for Mary. And it had also been
+maintained against Mary herself. Once, in Wyatt's conspiracy, letters
+were found, which pointed at Elizabeth's having a share in it: she was
+designated in them as the future Queen. The predominant
+Spanish-Catholic party had her examined and would have much wished to
+find her guilty, in order to rid themselves of her for ever. But
+Elizabeth was not so imprudent as to lend her hand to a movement,
+which if unsuccessful--a result not hard to foresee--must destroy her
+own good title. And moreover she, with her innate pride, could not
+possibly have carried out the wishes of the French by marrying
+Courtenay, whom her sister had rejected. The letter, which she wrote
+to Mary at this crisis, is full of unfeignedly loyal submission to her
+Queen, before whom she only wishes to bend her knee, to pray her not
+to let herself be prejudiced by false charges against her sister; and
+yet at the same time it is highminded and great in the consciousness
+of innocence. Mary, who was now no longer her friend, did not
+vouchsafe her a hearing, but sent her to the Tower and subjected her
+to a criminal examination. But however zealously they sought for
+proofs against her, yet they found none: and they dared not touch her
+life unless she were first publicly found guilty. She was clearly the
+heiress to the throne appointed under the authorisation of Parliament:
+the people would not give up the prospects of the future which were
+linked with her. When she appeared in London at this moment of peril,
+surrounded by numerous attendants, in an open litter, with an
+expression in which hopeful buoyant youth mingled with the feeling of
+innocence and distress, pale and proud, she swayed the masses that
+crowded round her with no doubtful sympathy.[180] When she passed
+through the streets after her liberation, she was received with an
+enthusiasm which made the Queen jealous on her throne.
+
+Yet Elizabeth was not merely the head of the popular opposition to her
+sister's policy: from the first moment onwards she was in collision
+with another female foe, whose pretensions would determine the
+relations of her life. If Henry VIII formerly in settling the
+succession passed over in silence the rights of his married sister in
+Scotland, which had now come to her granddaughter Mary Stuart, the
+memory of them was now all the more vividly revived by the Catholic
+party in the country. For with the religious reverence which men
+devoted to the Papacy it was not at all possible to reconcile the
+recognition of Elizabeth, whose very existence was as it were at
+variance with it. Nor was a political motive for preferring Mary
+Stuart wanting. That for which Henry VIII and Somerset had striven so
+zealously, the union of England and Scotland, would be thus attained
+at once. They were not afraid that Scotland might thus become
+predominant; Henry VII at the conclusion of the marriage, having his
+attention drawn to this possible risk, replied with the maxim, that
+the larger and more powerful part always draws the smaller after it.
+The indispensable condition for the development of the English power
+lay in the union of the whole island: this would have ensued in a
+Catholic, not in a Protestant, sense. Was not this union of political
+advantage and religious concord likely to influence the Privy Council
+of England, which under Mary was again zealously Catholic, and also to
+influence Queen Mary Tudor herself?
+
+Great political questions however do not usually present themselves to
+men in such perfect clearness, but are seen under the modifying
+circumstances of the moment. It was at that time all important that
+Mary Stuart had married the Dauphin: she would have united England not
+merely with Scotland, but at the same time with France, thus bringing
+it for ever under the influence of that country. How revolting must
+such a prospect have been to all English feeling! England would have
+become a transmarine province of France, it would in time have been
+absorbed like Brittany. Above all, French policy would have completely
+gained the upper hand in Europe. This apprehension induced the Spanish
+statesmen--Elizabeth's eager enemies as long as they expected their
+King to have issue of Mary Tudor--when this hope failed, to give the
+princess sympathy and attention. Philip II, when her troubles revived
+(for both Gardiner and Pole were her enemies), informed her through
+secret messengers, that he was her good friend and would not abandon
+her. Now that Mary was failing before all men's eyes, and every one
+was looking forward to her death, it was his evident interest to
+further Elizabeth's accession. In this sense spoke his ambassador
+Feria, whom he sent at this moment to England, before the assembled
+Privy Council;[181] even Mary was urged to declare herself to the same
+effect. From an advice written for Elizabeth during the first moments
+of her reign we see that all still looked very dangerous: she was
+urged in it to possess herself of the Tower and there to receive the
+allegiance of the high officers of State, to allow no departure from
+the English ports, and so on. Men expected turbulent movements at
+home, and were not without apprehension of an attempt at invasion
+from France. The decision however followed without any commotion and
+on the spot. Though most of its members were Catholic, the Privy
+Council did not hesitate. A few hours after Mary's decease the Commons
+were summoned to the Upper House, to receive a communication there: it
+was, that Mary was dead, and that God had given them another Queen, My
+lady Elizabeth. The Parliament dissolved; the new Queen was proclaimed
+in Westminster and in London. Some days afterwards she made her entry
+into the capital amidst the indescribable rejoicings of the people,
+who greeted her accession as their deliverance and their salvation.
+
+But if this, as we see, involved in its very essence a hostile
+attitude towards France and Scotland, on the other hand the question
+was at once laid before the Queen, and in the most personal way
+imaginable, how far she would unite herself with Spain, the great
+Power which was now on her side. Philip resolved, inasmuch as
+propriety in some measure allowed it, to ask for her hand--not indeed
+from personal inclination, of which there is no trace, but from policy
+and perhaps from religion: he hoped by this means to keep England firm
+to the Spanish alliance and to Catholicism.[182] And on the English
+side also much might be said for it. An ally was needed against
+France, even to obtain a tolerable peace: there was some danger that
+Philip, if rejected by the Queen, might perhaps marry a French
+princess; to be secure against the French claims the Queen seemed to
+need the support of Spain. Her first answer was not in the negative.
+She declared she must consult with Parliament as to the King's
+proposal: but he might be assured that, if she ever married, she would
+not give any one else the preference over him.
+
+Well considered, these words announce at once her resolution not to
+marry. Between Mary Tudor who thought to bring the crown to the heir
+of Spain, and Mary Stuart similarly pledged to the heir of France,
+nothing was left for her--since she would not wish the husband of her
+choice to be of inferior rank--but to remain unmarried. From
+listening to Philip's wooing she was kept back by her sister's
+example, whose marriage had destroyed her popularity. And for
+Elizabeth there would have been yet another danger in this alliance.
+Was not her legitimacy dependent on the invalidity of her father's
+marriage with his brother's widow? It would be a very similar case if
+she were to marry her sister's husband. Besides she would have needed
+the Pope's dispensation for such a union--as Philip had already
+explained to her--while her birth and crown were the results of a
+Papal dispensation being declared a nullity. She would thus have
+fallen into a self-contradiction, to which she must have succumbed in
+course of time. When told that Philip II had done her some service,
+she acknowledged it: but when she meditated on it further, she found
+that neither this sovereign nor any other influence whatever would
+have protected her from her enemies, had not the people shown her an
+unlimited devotion.[183] This devotion, on which her whole existence
+depended, she would not forfeit. After a little delay she let Philip
+know that she felt some scruples as to the Papal dispensation. She
+gave weight to the point which had been under discussion, but added
+that she was altogether disinclined to marry. We may doubt whether
+this was her immoveably formed resolution, considering how often
+afterwards she negociated about her marriage. It might seem to her
+allowable, as an instrument of policy, to excite hopes which she did
+not mean to fulfil: or her views may in fact have again wavered: but
+these oscillations in her statements can mean nothing when set over
+against a great necessity: her actual conduct shows that she had a
+vivid insight into it and held firm to it with tenacious resolution.
+She was Henry's daughter, but she knew how to keep herself as
+independent as he had thought that only a son could possibly do. There
+is a deep truth in her phrase, that she is wedded to her people:
+regard to their interests kept her back from any other union.
+
+But if she resolved to give up the relation of close union in which
+England had hitherto stood with Spain, it was indispensable to make
+peace with France. It was impossible to attain this if she insisted on
+the restoration of Calais; she resolved to give it up, at first for a
+term of years. Of almost the same date as her answer of refusal to
+Philip's ambassador is her instruction empowering her ambassador to
+let Calais go, as soon as he saw that the Spaniards would conclude
+their peace with France without stipulating for its restoration. She
+was able to venture this, for however deeply the nation felt the loss
+of the place, the blame for it could not be imputed to her. Without
+repeating what was then asserted, that her distinct aim was to turn
+the hatred of the nation against the late government and its alliance
+with Spain, we may still allow that this must have been the actual
+result, as it really proved to be. It was indeed said that Philip II,
+who not merely concluded peace with France but actually married a
+daughter of Henry II, would make common cause with him against
+England: but Elizabeth no more allowed herself to be misled by this
+possibility, which also had much against it, than Henry VIII had been
+under similar circumstances. Like him and like the founder of her
+family, she took up an independent position between the two powers,
+equally ready according to circumstances for war or peace with one or
+the other.
+
+Meanwhile she had already proceeded to measures which could never have
+been reconciled with the Spanish alliance, and to ecclesiastical
+changes which first gave her position its true character.
+
+Her earliest intimation of again deviating from the Church was given
+by restoring, like a devoted daughter, her father's monument, which
+Mary had levelled with the ground. A second soon followed, which at
+once touched on the chief doctrine in dispute. Before attending a
+solemn high mass she required the officiating bishop to omit the
+elevation of the host. As he refused, she left the church at the
+moment the ceremony was being consummated. To check the religious
+strife which began to fill the pulpits she forbade preaching, like her
+predecessors; but she allowed the Sunday Lessons, the Litany, and the
+Creed to be read in English. Elizabeth had hitherto conformed to the
+restored Catholic ritual: it could not be quite said that she
+belonged to either of the existing confessions. She always declared
+that she had read no controversial writings. But she had occupied
+herself with the documents of the early Church, with the Greek and
+Latin Fathers, and was thoroughly convinced that the Romanism of the
+later centuries had gone far astray from this pattern. She had made up
+her mind, not as to every point of doctrine, but as to its general
+direction: she believed too that she was upheld and guarded by God, to
+carry out this change. 'How wonderful are God's ordinances,' she
+exclaimed, when she heard that the crown had fallen to her.
+
+What course however was now to be taken was a question which, owing to
+the antagonism of the factions and the close connexion of all
+ecclesiastical and political matters, required the most mature
+consideration.
+
+The Queen was advised simply to revert to Edward VI's regulations, and
+to declare all things null and void that had been enacted under Mary,
+mainly on the ground that they had been enacted in violation of legal
+forms. A speech was laid before her, in which the validity of the last
+elections was disputed, since qualified members had been excluded from
+the sittings of both houses, although they were good Englishmen: the
+later proclamations of summons were held to be null, because in them
+the formula 'Supreme Head of the English Church' had been arbitrarily
+omitted, without a previous resolution of Parliament, though on this
+title so much depended for the commonwealth and people: but no one
+could give up a right which concerned a third person or the public
+interest; through these errors, which Mary had committed in her
+blindness, all that had then been determined lost its force and
+authority.[184] But the Queen and her counsellors did not wish to go
+so far. They remarked that to declare a Parliament invalid for some
+errors of form was a step of such consequence as to make the whole
+government of the nation insecure. But even without this it was not
+the Queen's purpose merely to revert to the forms which had been
+adopted under her brother. She did not share all the opinions and
+doctrines which had then obtained the upper hand: she held far more to
+ceremonies and outward forms than Edward VI or his counsellors: she
+wished to avoid a rude antagonism which would have called forth the
+resistance of the Catholics.
+
+In the Parliament that met immediately after the coronation (which was
+still celebrated by a Catholic bishop), they began with the question
+which had most occupied the late assembly, namely, should the Church
+revenues that had been attached to the crown be restored to it. The
+Queen's proposal, that they should be left to the crown, was quite the
+view of the assembly and obtained their full consent.
+
+The Parliamentary form of government however had also the greatest
+influence on religious affairs. Having risen originally in opposition
+to Rome, the Parliament, after the vicissitudes of the civil wars,
+first recovered its full importance when it took the side of the crown
+in its struggle with the Papacy. It did not so much concern itself
+with Dogma for its own sake: it had thought it possible to unite the
+retention of Catholicism with national independence. Under Mary every
+man had become conscious that this would be impossible. It was just
+then that the Parliament passed from its previous compliant mood into
+opposition, which was not yet successful because it was only that of
+the minority, but which prepared the way for the coming change of
+tone. It attached itself joyfully to the new Queen, whose birth
+necessarily made her adopt a policy which took away all apprehensions
+of a union with the Romish See injurious to the country.
+
+The complete antagonism between the Papal and the Parliamentary
+powers, of which one had swayed past centuries and the other was to
+sway the future, is shown by the conduct of the Pope, when Elizabeth
+announced her accession to him. In his answer he reproached her with
+it as presumption, reverted to the decision of his predecessors by
+which she was declared illegitimate, required that the whole matter
+should be referred to him, and even mentioned England's feudal
+relation to the Papacy:[185] but Parliament, which had rejected this
+claim centuries before, acknowledged Elizabeth as legitimately sprung
+from the royal blood, and as Queen by the law of God and of the land;
+they pledged themselves to defend her title and right with their lives
+and property.
+
+Owing to this the tendencies towards separation from Rome were already
+sure to gain the superiority: the Catholic members of the Privy
+Council, to whom Elizabeth owed her first recognition, could not
+contend effectively against them. But besides this, Elizabeth had
+joined with them a number of men of her own choice and her own views,
+who like herself had not openly opposed the existing system, but
+disapproved it; they were mainly her personal friends, who now took
+the direction of affairs into their hands; the change which they
+prepared looked moderate but was decided.
+
+Elizabeth rejected the title of 'Supreme Head of the Church,' because
+it not merely aroused the aversion of the Catholics, but also gave
+offence to many zealous Protestants; it made however no essential
+difference when she replaced it by the formula 'in all causes as well
+ecclesiastical as civil, supreme.' Parliament declared that the right
+of visiting and reforming the Church was attached to the crown and
+could be exercised by it through ecclesiastical commissioners. The
+clergy, high and low, were to swear to the ecclesiastical supremacy,
+and abjure all foreign authority and jurisdiction. The punishment for
+refusing the oath was defined: it was not to be punished with death as
+under Henry VIII, but with the loss of office and property. All Mary's
+acts in favour of an independent legislation and jurisdiction of the
+spiritualty were repealed. The crown appropriated to itself, with
+consent of Parliament, complete supremacy over the clergy of the land.
+
+The Parliament allowed indeed that it did not belong to it to
+determine concerning matters really ecclesiastical; but it held itself
+authorised, much like the Great-Councils of Switzerland, to order a
+conference of both parties, before which the most pressing questions
+of the moment, on the power of national Churches, and the nature of
+the Mass, should be laid.
+
+The Catholic bishops disliked the whole proceeding, as may be
+imagined, since these points had been so long settled; and they
+disliked no less the interference of the temporal power, and lastly
+the presidency of a royal minister, Nicolas Bacon. They had no mind to
+commit themselves to an interchange of writings: their declarations by
+word of mouth were more peremptory than convincing. In general they
+were not well represented since the deaths of Pole and Gardiner. On
+the other hand the Protestants, of whom many had become masters of the
+controverted questions during the exile from which they had now
+returned, put forward explicit statements which were completely to the
+point. They laid stress chiefly on the distinction between the
+universal, truly Catholic, Church and the Romish: they sought to reach
+firm ground in Christian antiquity prior to the hierarchic centuries.
+While they claimed a more comprehensive communion than that of
+Romanism, as that in which true Catholicity exists, they sought at the
+same time to establish a narrower, national, body which should have
+the right of independent decision as to ritual. Nearly all depended on
+the question, how far a country, which forms a separate community and
+thus has a separate Church, has the right to alter established
+ceremonies and usages; they deduced such an authority from this fact
+among others, that the Church in the first centuries was ruled by
+provincial councils. The project of calling a national council was
+proposed in Germany but never carried out: in England men considered
+the idea of a national decree, mainly in reference to ritual, as
+superior to all others. But we know how much the conception of ritual
+covered. The question whether Edward VI's Prayer-book should be
+restored or not, was at the same time decisive as to what doctrinal
+view should be henceforth followed.[186]
+
+The Catholic bishops set themselves in vain against the progress of
+these discussions. They withdrew from the conference: but the
+Parliament did not let itself be misled by this: it adopted the
+popular opinion, that they did not know what to answer. At the
+division in the Upper House they held obstinately fast to their
+opinion: they were left however, though only by a few votes, in the
+minority.[187] The Act of Uniformity passed, by which the Prayer-book,
+in the form which should be given it by a new revision, was to be
+universally received from the following Midsummer. The bishops raised
+an opposition yet once more, at a sitting of the Privy Council, on the
+ground that the change was against the promises made by Mary to the
+See of Rome in the name of the crown. Elizabeth answered, her sister
+had in this exceeded her powers: she herself was free to revert to the
+example of her earlier predecessors by whom the Papal power was looked
+on as an usurpation. 'My crown,' she exclaimed, 'is subject only to
+the King of Kings, and to no one else:' she made use of the words,
+'But as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.' The Protestant
+bishops had perished at the stake, but the victory was theirs even in
+their graves.
+
+The committee of revision consisted of men, who had then saved
+themselves by flight or by the obscurity of a secluded life. As under
+Edward men came back to the original tendencies prevalent under Henry
+VIII, so they now reverted to the settlement under Edward; yet they
+allowed themselves some alterations, chiefly with the view of making
+the book acceptable to the Catholics as well. Prayers in which the
+hostility of decided Protestantism came forward with especial
+sharpness, for instance that 'against the tyranny of the Bishop of
+Rome,' were left out. The chief alteration was in the formula of the
+Lord's Supper. Elizabeth and her divines were not inclined to let this
+stand as it was read in the second edition of Edward's time, since the
+mystical act there appeared almost as a mere commemorative
+repast.[188] They reverted to a form composed from the monuments of
+Latin antiquity, from Ambrose and Gregory, in which the real presence
+was maintained; this which already existed in the first edition they
+united with the view of the second. As formerly in the Augsburg
+confession in Germany, so in England at the last recension of the
+Common Prayer-book an attempt was made to keep as near as possible to
+the traditional system. For the Queen this had also a political value:
+when Philip II sent her a warning, she explained that she was only
+kept back from joining in the mass by a few points: she too believed
+in God's presence in the Sacrament.[189]
+
+She was of a similar mind in reference to other matters also. If at
+first, under pressure from zealous Protestants who saw in images an
+occasion for superstition, she ordered their removal, we perceive that
+in a short time she regretted it, especially as it made a bad
+impression in Wales and the Northern counties; in her chapel men again
+saw the cross and the lighted tapers, as before. The marriages entered
+into by priests had given much offence, and not unjustly, as they were
+often inferior unions, little honourable to them, and lowering the
+dignity of their order. Elizabeth would have gladly forbidden them
+altogether: she contented herself with setting limits to them by
+ordering that a previous permission should be requisite, but she
+always disliked them. She felt a natural pleasure in the splendour and
+order of the existing church service. For the future also the
+spiritualty were to be bound to appear--in the customary dress--in a
+manner worthy of God's service, with bent knees and with ceremonious
+devotion. When they proceeded to revise the confession drawn up by
+Cranmer, which two years afterwards was raised to a law in the shape
+of the 'Thirty-nine Articles,' they struck out the places that leant
+to Zwingli's special view; on the other hand they added some new
+propositions, which stated the right of the higher powers, and the
+authority of each kingdom to determine religious usages for
+itself.[190]
+
+For in this consisted the essence of the alteration, that the Civil
+Authority, as it was then composed, decided the church-questions that
+arose, and raised its decision into law.
+
+The Statute was, that no person should hold a public office, whether
+spiritual or temporal, who did not conform to this law. Thirteen
+bishops, four-and-twenty deans, eighty rectors of parishes, and most
+of the heads of colleges resigned. It has been said that this number,
+about two hundred, is not very considerable, since the English clergy
+held 9000 benefices and offices; but it comprehended all those who
+held the government of the church and represented the prevalent
+opinion in it. The difficulty arose how to replace the bishops in
+conformity with the principles of the English church constitution as
+then retained: perhaps the difficulty was intentional. There were
+however two conforming bishops who had received the laying on of hands
+according to the Roman ritual, and two others according to the
+Reformed: these consecrated the new Archbishop of Canterbury. It was
+objected to this act that none of them was in actual possession of a
+bishop's see: the Queen declared every defect, whether as to the
+statutes of the realm or church-usages, since time and circumstances
+demanded it, to be nullified or supplied. It was enough that,
+generally speaking, the mystery of the episcopal succession went on
+without interruption. What was less essential she supplied by the
+prerogative of the crown, as her grandfather had done once before. The
+archbishop consecrated was Dr. Parker, formerly chaplain to Anne
+Boleyn: a thoroughly worthy man, the father of learned studies on
+English antiquities, especially on the Anglo-Saxon times. By him the
+laying on of hands and consecration was bestowed on the other bishops
+who were now elected: they were called on to uphold at the same time
+the idea of episcopacy in its primitive import, and the doctrines of
+the Reformation.
+
+In regard to the election of bishops also Elizabeth went back one step
+from her brother's system; she gave up the right of appointment, and
+restored her father's regulations, by which it is true a strong
+influence was still reserved for the Civil Power. Under her supreme
+authority she wished to see the spiritual principle recognised as
+such, and to give it a representation corresponding to its high
+destiny.
+
+Thus it must needs be. The principle which comes forward for the first
+time, however strong it may appear, has yet to secure its future: it
+must struggle with the other elements of the world around it. It will
+be pressed back, perhaps beaten down: but in the vicissitude of the
+strife it will develop its inborn strength and establish itself for
+ever.
+
+An Anglican church,--nationally independent, without giving up its
+connexion with the reformed churches of the continent, and reformed,
+without however letting fall the ancient forms of episcopacy,--in
+accordance with the ideal, as it was originally understood, was at
+length, after a hard schooling of trials, struggles, and disasters,
+really set on foot.
+
+But now it is clear how closely such a thoroughgoing alteration
+affected the political position. Reckoning on the antipathies, which
+could not but hence arise against Elizabeth in the catholic world, and
+above all on the consent of the Roman See, the French did not hesitate
+to openly recognise the claims of the Dauphiness Mary Stuart to the
+English throne. She was hailed as Queen, when she appeared in public:
+the Dauphin's heralds bore the united arms of England, Ireland, and
+Scotland.[191] And this claim became still more important after the
+unexpected death of Henry II, when the Dauphin ascended the French
+throne as Francis II. The Guises, uncles of Mary the new Queen, who
+saw their own greatness in her success and were the very closest
+adherents of the church, got into their hands all the powers of
+government. The danger of their hostility lay above all in this, that
+the French already exercised a predominant influence over Scotch
+affairs, and hoped in a short time to become complete masters of that
+country in the Queen's right. She moreover had already by a formal
+document transferred to the French royal house an eventual right of
+inheritance to her crown. But if matters came to this, the old war of
+England and France would be transferred from the fields of Boulogne
+and Calais to the Scotch border. An invasion of the English territory
+from that side was the more dangerous, as the French would have
+brought thither, according to their custom, German and Swiss troops as
+well. England had neither fortresses, nor disciplined troops, nor even
+generals of name, who could face such an invasion. It was truly said,
+there was not a wall in England strong enough to stand a cannon
+shot.[192] How then if a defeat was sustained in the open field? The
+sympathies of the Catholics would have been aroused for France, and
+general ruin would have ensued.
+
+It was a fortunate thing for Elizabeth that the King of Spain, after
+she had taken up a line of conduct so completely counter to his wishes
+and ideas, did not make common cause with the French as they requested
+him. But she could not promise herself any help from him. Granvella
+told the English as emphatically as possible, that they must provide
+for themselves. Another Spanish statesman expressed his doubt to them
+whether they were able to do so: he really thought England would one
+day become an apple of discord between Spain and France, as Milan then
+was. It was almost a scoff, to compare the Island that had the power
+of the sea with an Italian duchy. But from this very moment she was to
+take a new upward flight. England was again to take her place as a
+third Power between the two great Powers; the opportunity presented
+itself to her to begin open war with one of them, without breaking
+with the other or even being exactly allied with it.
+
+At first it was France that threatened and challenged her.
+
+And to oppose the French, at the point where they might be dangerous,
+a ready means presented itself; England had but to form an alliance
+with those who opposed the French interests in Scotland. As these
+likewise were in opposition to their Queen, it was objected that one
+sovereign ought not to combine with the subjects of another.
+Elizabeth's leading statesman, William Cecil, who stood ever by her
+side with his counsel in the difficulties of her earlier years, and
+had guided her steps hitherto, made answer that 'the duty of
+self-preservation required it in this case, since Scotland would else
+be serviceable to France for war against England.'
+
+Cecil took into his view alike the past and the future. It was France
+alone, he said, that had prevented the English crown from realising
+its suzerainty over Scotland: whereas the true interest of Scotland
+herself lay in her being united with England as one kingdom. This
+point of view was all the more important, since the religious interest
+coincided with the political. The Scots, with whom they wished to
+unite themselves, were Protestants of the most decided kind.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[180] 'Ayant visage pale fier haultain et superbe pour desguyser le
+regret qu'elle a.' Renard to the Emperor 24 Feb. 1554, in Tytler ii.
+311. He adds, 'si pendant l'occasion s'adonne, elle (la reine) ne la
+punyt et Cortenay, elle ne sera jamais assuree.'
+
+[181] 'Manifesto el contentamiento grande que tendria el rey de saber
+que se declaba la sucesion en favor de ella (Isabel), cosa que S. M.
+habia descado sempre.' In Gonzalez, Apuntamientos para la historia del
+rey Don Felipe II. Memorias de la real academia de historia, Madrid,
+vii. 253.
+
+[182] One of the documents which Mackintosh (History of England iii.
+25) missed, the commission for the proposal to Elizabeth, which gives
+its contents, was soon after printed in Gonzalez, Documentos I. 405.
+
+[183] Feria: 'Dando a entender, que el pueblo la ha puesto en el
+estado que esta, y de esto no reconoce nada ni a V. M., ni a la
+nobleza del reino.'
+
+[184] An oration of John Hales to the Queen delivered by a certain
+nobleman, in Foxe, Martyrs iii. 978. 'It most manifestly appeareth,
+that all their doings from the beginning to the end were and be of
+none effect force or autority.'
+
+[185] P Sarpi, Concilio di Trento, lib. v. p. 420, confirmed by
+Pallavicino lib. xiv.
+
+[186] Horne's Papers for the reformed, in Collier ii. 416.
+
+[187] Ribadeneyra: 'No fueron sino tres votos mas, los que
+determinaron en las cortes, que se mudasse la religion catolica, que
+los que pretendian que se conservasse.' Ribadeneyra says the Queen
+gained Arundel's vote by allowing him to hope for her hand, and then
+laughed at him; but Feria's despatches show that she mocked at his
+pretensions even before her entry on the government.
+
+[188] Soames iv. 675. Liturgiae Britannicae 417.
+
+[189] From Feria's despatches, Apuntamientos 270.
+
+[190] In Heylin there is a comparison of the original forty-two with
+the later thirty-nine Articles; but he did not venture at last to do
+what he proposed at first, give his opinion as to the reason and
+nature of the variations.
+
+[191] Leslaeus de rebus gestis Scotorum: Henricus Mariam Reginam
+Angliae Scotiae et Hiberniae declarandam curavit,--Angliae et Scotiae
+insignia in ipsius vasis aliisque utensilibus simul pingi fingique ac
+adeo tapetibus pulvinis intexi jussit. (In Jebb i. 206.)
+
+[192] From one of Cecil's first notes, 'if they offered battle with
+Almains, there was great doubt, how England would be able to sustain
+it.' In Nares ii. 27.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+OUTLINES OF THE REFORMATION IN SCOTLAND.
+
+
+In its earliest period church reform was everywhere introduced or
+promoted by the temporal governments; in Germany by the government of
+the Empire, and by the Princes and towns which did not allow the
+authorisation, once given them through the Empire, to be again
+withdrawn; in the North by the new dynasties which took the place of
+the Union-Princes; in Switzerland itself by the Great-Councils which
+possessed the substance of the republican authority. After manifold
+struggles and vicissitudes this tendency had at last yet once more
+established itself in its full force under Queen Elizabeth in England.
+
+But another tendency was also very powerful in the world. In South
+Europe, France, the Netherlands, and a part of the German territory,
+the state attached itself to the principles of the old Church. At this
+very time in Italy and Spain this led to the complete destruction of
+what was there analogous to the Reformation; it has had more influence
+on the later circumstances of these countries than it had then. But
+where the religious change had already obtained a more durable
+footing, as in France and the Netherlands, politico-religious
+variances of the most thoroughgoing nature arose almost of necessity:
+the Protestantism of Western Europe was pervaded by anti-monarchical
+ideas. We noticed how much everything was preparing for this under
+Queen Mary in England also: that it did not so happen was owing to the
+arrangements made by Elizabeth. But this tendency appeared in full
+force in Scotland, and in fact more strongly there than anywhere else.
+
+In Scotland the efforts made by all the monarchic powers of this
+period in common were not so successful as in the rest of Europe. The
+kings of the house of Stuart, who had themselves proceeded from the
+ranks of the nobility, never succeeded in reducing the powerful lords
+to real obedience. The clannish national feeling, closely bordering on
+the old Keltic principle, procured the nobles at all times numerous
+and devoted followers: they fought out their feuds among themselves,
+and then combined anew in free confederacies. They held fast to the
+view that their sovereigns were not lords of the land (for they
+regarded their possessions as independent properties), not kings of
+Scotland but kings of the Scots, above all, kings of the great
+vassals, who had to pay them an obedience defined by laws. It gave the
+kings not a little superiority that they had obtained a decisive
+influence over the appointment to the high dignities in the Church,
+but this proved advantageous neither to the Church nor at last to
+themselves. Sometimes two vassals actually fought with each other for
+a rich benefice. The French abuses came into vogue here also:
+ecclesiastical benefices fell to the dependents of the court, to the
+younger sons of leading houses, often to their bastards: they were
+given or sold _in commendam_, and then served only for pleasure and
+gain: the Scotch Church fell into an exceedingly scandalous and
+corrupt state.
+
+It was not so much disputed questions of doctrine as in Germany, nor
+again the attempt to keep out Papal influence as in England, but
+mainly aversion to the moral corruption of the spiritualty which gave
+the first impulse to the efforts at reformation in Scotland. We find
+Lollard societies among the Scots much later than in England: their
+tendencies spread through wide circles owing to the anticlerical
+spirit of the century, and received fresh support from the doctrinal
+writings that came over from Germany. But the Scotch clergy was
+resolved to defend itself with all its might. Sometimes it had to sit
+in judgment on invectives against its disorderly and luxurious life,
+sometimes on refusals to pay established dues: or Lutheran doctrines
+had been preached: it persecuted all with equal severity as tending to
+injure the stability of holy Church, and awarded the most extreme
+penalties. To put suspected heretics to death by fire was the order of
+the day; happy the man who escaped the unrelenting persecution by
+flight, which was only possible amid great peril.
+
+These two causes, an undeniably corrupt condition and relentless
+punishment of those who blamed it as it well deserved, gave the Reform
+movement in Scotland, which was repressed but not stifled, a peculiar
+character of exasperation and thirst for vengeance.
+
+Nor was it without a political bearing in Scotland as elsewhere. In
+particular Henry VIII proposed to his nephew, King James V, to remodel
+the Church after his example: and a part of the nobility, which was
+already favourably disposed towards England, would have gladly seen
+this done. But James preferred the French pattern to the English: he
+was kept firm in his Catholic and French sympathies by his wife, Mary
+of Guise, and by the energetic Archbishop Beaton. Hence he became
+involved in the war with England in which he fell, and after this it
+occasionally seemed, especially at the time of the invasions by the
+Duke of Somerset, as if the English, and in connexion with them the
+Protestant, sympathies would gain the ascendancy. But national
+feelings were still stronger than the religious. Exactly because
+England defended and recommended the religious change it failed to
+make way in Scotland. Under the regency of the Queen dowager, with
+some passing fluctuations, the clerical interests on the whole kept
+the upper hand. In spite of a general sympathy the prospects of Reform
+were slender. It could not reckon on any quarrel between the
+government and the higher clergy: foreign affairs rather exercised a
+hostile influence. It is remarkable how under these unfavourable
+circumstances the foundation of the Scotch Church was laid.
+
+Most of the Scots who had fled from the country were content to
+provide for their subsistence in a foreign land and improve their own
+culture. But there was one among them who did not reconcile himself
+for one moment to this fate. John Knox was the first who formed a
+Protestant congregation in the besieged fortress of S. Andrew's; when
+the French took the place in 1547 he was made prisoner and condemned
+to serve in the galleys. But while his feet were in fetters, he
+uttered his conviction in the fiery preface to a work on
+Justification, that this doctrine would yet again be preached in his
+fatherland.[193] After he was released, he took a zealous share in the
+labours of the English Reformers under Edward VI, but was not
+altogether content with the result; after the King's death he had to
+fly to the continent. He went to Geneva, where he became a student
+once more and tried to fill up the gaps in his studies, but above all
+he imbibed, or confirmed his knowledge of, the views which prevailed
+in that Church. 'Like the first Reformers of French Switzerland, Knox
+also lived in the opinion that the Romish service was an idolatry
+which should be destroyed from off the earth. And he was fully
+convinced of the doctrine of the independence of the spiritual
+principle side by side with the State, and believed that the new
+spiritualty also was authorised to exclude men from the Church, views
+for which Calvin was at that very time contending. Thus he was equally
+armed for the struggle against the Papacy and against the temporal
+power allied with it, when a transient relaxation of ecclesiastical
+control in Scotland made it possible for him to return thither. In the
+war between France and Spain the Regent took the side of France: she
+lighted bonfires to announce the capture of Calais; out of antipathy
+to Mary Tudor and her Spanish government she allowed the English
+fugitives to be received in Scotland. Knox himself ventured to return
+towards the end of 1555: without delay he set his hand to form a
+church-union, according to his ideas of religious independence, which
+was not to be again destroyed by any State power.
+
+Among the devout Protestants who gathered together in secret the
+leading question was, whether it was consistent with conscience to go
+to mass, as most then did. Knox was not merely against any one doing
+wrong that good might come of it, but he went on further to restore
+the interrupted Protestant service of God. Sometimes in one and
+sometimes in another of the places of refuge which he found he
+administered the Communion to little congregations according to the
+Reformed rite; this was done with greater solemnity at Easter 1556 in
+the house of Lord Erskine of Dun, one of those Scottish noblemen who
+had ever promoted literary studies and the religious movement as far
+as lay in his power. A number of people of consequence from the Mearns
+(Mearnshire) were present. But they were not content with partaking
+the Communion; following the mind of their preacher they pledged
+themselves to avoid every other religious community, and to uphold
+with all their power the preaching of the Gospel.[194] In this union
+we may see the origin of the Scotch Church properly so called. Knox
+had no doubt that it was perfectly lawful. From the power which the
+lords possessed in Scotland he concluded that this duty was incumbent
+on them. For they were not lords for themselves, but in order to
+protect their subjects and dependents against every violence. From a
+distance he called on his friends--for he had once more to leave
+Scotland, since the government recurred to its earlier severity--not
+again to prefer their own ease to the glory of God, but for very
+conscience' sake to venture their lives for their oppressed brethren.
+At Erskine's house met together also Lord Lorn, afterwards Earl of
+Argyle, and the Prior of S. Andrews, subsequently Earl of Murray; in
+December 1557 Erskine, Lorn, Murray, Glencairn (also a friend of
+Knox), and Morton, united in a solemn engagement, to support God's
+word and defend his congregation against every evil and tyrannical
+power even unto death.[195] When in spite of this another execution
+took place which excited universal aversion, they proceeded to an
+express declaration, that they would not suffer any man to be punished
+for transgressing a clerical law based on human ordinances.
+
+What the influence of England had not been able to effect, was now
+produced by antipathy to France. The opinion prevailed that the King
+of France wished to add Scotland to his territories, and that the
+Regent gave him aid thereto. When she gathered the feudal array on the
+borders in 1557 (for the Scots had refused to contribute towards
+enlisting mercenaries) to invade England according to an understanding
+with the French, the barons held a consultation on the Tweed, in
+consequence of which they refused their co-operation for this purpose.
+The matrimonial crown was indeed even afterwards granted to the
+Dauphin, when he married Mary Stuart;[196] but thereupon
+misunderstandings arose with all the more bitterness. Meetings were
+everywhere held in a spirit hostile to the government.
+
+It was this quarrel of the Regent with the great men of the country
+that gave an opportunity to the lords who were combined for the
+support of religion to advance with increasing resolution. Among their
+proposals there is none weightier than that which they laid before her
+in March 1559, just when the Regent had gathered around her a numerous
+ecclesiastical assembly. They demanded that the bishops should be
+elected for the future by the nobility and gentry of each diocese, the
+parish clergy by the parishioners, and only those were to be elected
+who were of esteemed life and possessed the requisite capacity: divine
+service was to be henceforth held in the language of the country. The
+assembled clergy rejected both demands. They remarked that to set
+aside the influence of the crown on the elections involved a
+diminution of its authority which could not be defended, especially
+during the minority of the sovereign. Only in the customary forms
+would they allow of any amendments.
+
+But this assembly was not content with rejecting the proposals: they
+confirmed the usages and services stigmatised by their opponents as
+superstitious, and forbade the celebration of the sacraments in any
+other form than that sanctioned by the Church. The royal court at
+Stirling called a number of preachers to its bar for unauthorised
+assumption of priestly functions.
+
+The preachers were ready to come: the lords in whose houses they
+sojourned were security for them. And already they had the popular
+sympathy as well as aristocratic protection. It was an old custom of
+the country that, in especially important judicial proceedings, the
+accused appeared accompanied by his friends. Now therefore the friends
+of the Reformation assembled in great numbers at Perth from the
+Mearns, Dundee, and Angus, that, by jointly avowing the doctrines on
+account of which their spiritual leaders were called to account, their
+condemnation might be rendered impossible.
+
+As to the Regent we are assured that she was not in general firmer in
+her leaning towards the hierarchy than other Princes of the time, and
+had once even entertained the thought that the supreme ecclesiastical
+power belonged to her;[197] but, perhaps alarmed by the vehemence of
+the preachers, she had done nothing to obtain such a power. It now
+appeared to her that it would be a good plan to check the flow of the
+masses to the place of trial by some friendly words which she
+addressed to Erskine of Dun.[198] The Protestants saw in them the
+assurance of an interposition in the direction of lenity, and stayed
+away; but without regard to this and without delay the Justiciary at
+Stirling, Henry Levingstoune, proceeded to business on the day
+appointed, 20 May 1559. As the preachers did not appear, those who had
+become security for them were condemned to a money-fine, while they
+themselves were denounced as rebels,[199] as having withdrawn
+themselves from the royal jurisdiction; an edict followed which
+pronounced them exiled, and in the severest terms forbade any to give
+them protection or favour.
+
+The news fell like a spark of fire among the inflammable masses of
+Protestants assembled at Perth. The sentence promulgated was an open
+act of hostility against the lords, who felt themselves bound by their
+word which they had given to the preachers and by their vow to each
+other. They considered that the Regent's promise had given them a
+right against her; Lord Erskine, whom the others had warned, declared
+that he had been deceived by her. While the Regent had prevented a
+collision between the two parties at Stirling, she had occasioned in
+one of them, at Perth, the outbreak of a popular storm against the
+hierarchy of the land, their representatives, and the monuments of
+their religion. John Knox, who had come, as he said, to be where men
+were striving against Satan, called on them in a fiery sermon to
+destroy the images which were the instruments of idolatry. The attempt
+of a priest, after the sermon, to proceed to high mass and open the
+tabernacle of the altar, was all that was needed to cause a tumult
+even in the church itself, in which the images of the saints were
+destroyed; and the outbreak spreading through the city directed itself
+against the monasteries and laid them too in ruins. How entirely
+different is Knox from Luther! The German reformer made all outward
+change depend on the gradual influence of doctrine, and did not wish
+to set himself in rebellious opposition to the public order under
+which he lived. The Scot called on men to destroy whatever contravened
+his religious ideas. The Lords of the Congregation, who became ever
+more numerous, declared themselves resolved to do all that God
+commands in Scripture, and destroy all that tended to dishonour his
+name. With these objects, and with their co-operation and connivance,
+the stormy movement once raised surged everywhere further over the
+country. The monasteries were also destroyed in Stirling, Glasgow, and
+S. Andrews; the abbeys of Melrose, Dunfermline, and Cambuskenneth
+fell: and the proud abbey of Scone, an incomparable monument of the
+hierarchic feeling of earlier ages, was, together with the bishop's
+palace, levelled to the ground. It may be that the popular fury went
+far beyond the original intentions of the leaders, but without doubt
+it was also part of their purpose, to make an end above all of the
+monasteries and abbeys, from which nothing but resistance could be
+expected.[200] It has been regarded even in our days as a measure of
+prudence, dictated by the circumstances, that they destroyed these
+monuments, which by their imposing size and the splendour of the
+service performed in them would have always produced an impression
+adverse to the Reformation. On the other hand the cathedrals and
+parish churches were to be preserved, and after being cleansed from
+images were to be devoted to Protestant worship. Everywhere the
+church-unions, which were at once formed and organised on Protestant
+principles, gained the upper hand. The Mass ceased: the Prayer-book of
+King Edward VI took its place.
+
+So the reformed Scotch Church put itself in possession, in a moment,
+of the greatest part of the country. It was from the beginning a
+self-governed establishment: it found support in the union of some
+lords, whose power likewise rested on independent rights: but it first
+gained free play when the French policy of the Regent alienated the
+nobility and the nation from her. On the one side now stood the
+princess and the clergy, on the other the lords and the preachers. As
+their proposals were rejected and preparations made to defend the
+hierarchic system with the power of the State, the opposition also
+similarly arose, claiming to have an original right: revolt broke out;
+the church system of the Romish hierarchy was overthrown and a
+Protestant one put in its place. In the history of Protestantism at
+large the year 1559 is among the most important. During the very days
+in which the revised Common Prayer-book was restored in England (so
+definitely putting an end to the Catholic religion of the realm), the
+monuments of Roman Catholicism in Scotland were broken in pieces, and
+the unrevised Common Prayer-book introduced into the churches. But
+yet how great was the difference! In the one country all was done
+under the guidance of a Queen to whom the nation adhered, in
+consequence of Parliamentary enactments, the ancient forms being
+preserved as far as possible: here the whole transaction was completed
+in opposition to the Regent, under the guidance of an aristocracy
+engaged in conflict with her, amidst very great tumult, while all that
+was ancient was set aside.
+
+At the beginning of July the Scotch lords had become masters of the
+capital as well, and had reformed it according to their own views,
+with the most lively sympathy of the citizens. They were resolved to
+uphold the change of religion now effected, cost what it would, and
+hoped to do so in a peaceful manner. When Perth again opened her gates
+to the Regent after the first tumult, under the condition that she
+should punish no one, she promised at the same time to put off the
+adjustment of all questions in dispute to the next Parliament. There
+they intended to carry at once the recognition of the Reformation in
+its whole breadth, and the removal of the French. We perceive that it
+was their plan in that case to obey the Regent as before, and to unite
+the abbey-lands to the possessions of the crown. 'But if your Grace
+does not agree to this,' so runs the letter of a confederate, 'they
+are resolved to reject all union with you.'
+
+It was soon shown that the last was the only alternative. The regent
+collected so many French and Scotch troops that the lords did not
+venture to stop her return to Edinburgh. They came to an agreement
+instead, in which she promised to prosecute no member of the
+Congregation, and especially no preacher, and not to allow the clergy
+on the ground of their jurisdiction to undertake any annoying
+proceedings: in return for which the lords on their side pledged
+themselves not to disturb any of the clergy or destroy any more of the
+church buildings. It was a truce in which each party, sword in hand,
+reserved to itself the power of defending its partisans against the
+other. The two parties encountered in Edinburgh. The inhabitants had
+called Knox to be their preacher, and when he thought it unsafe to
+stay in the city after the Congregation withdrew, another champion of
+the Reformation, Willok, filled his place with hardly less zeal and
+success. But on the other side the bishop of Amiens appeared with some
+doctors of the Sorbonne at the Regent's court. Here and there the
+Protestant service was again discarded; the Paris theologians defended
+the old dogma among the Scotch scholars, and made even now some
+impression; the mass and the preaching contended with each other. As
+to the Regent's views there can be no doubt. She drew the attention of
+the French court to the frequent intercourse between the nobles of
+Protestant views in France and Scotland, and to the encouragement the
+Scots had from the French; but she gave the assurance that she would
+soon finish with the Scots if she received support. Some French
+companies had just landed at Leith, they had brought with them
+munitions of war and money: the Regent demanded four companies more,
+to make up twenty, and perhaps 100 hommes d'armes; if only four French
+ships were stationed at Leith to keep off foreign assistance, she
+pledged herself to put down the movement everywhere.[201]
+
+Then the Scots also decided that they must employ their utmost means
+of resistance. They had framed politico-religious theories, in virtue
+of which they believed in their right to do so. The substance of the
+whole is that they acknowledged indeed an obligation on the conscience
+which required obedience to the sovereign, but at the same time they
+held that the obligation came to an end as soon as the sovereign
+contravened the known will of God: an idolatrous sovereign, so said
+the preachers, could be deposed and punished:--should the supreme Head
+put off the reform which was required by God's law, the right and the
+duty of executing it falls on the subordinate authorities.
+
+But the lords claimed also an authority based on the laws of the land.
+When the French troops began to fortify Leith, they held themselves
+justified in raising remonstrances against it: they demanded that the
+Regent should desist from the design. As she replied with a
+proclamation which sounded very offensive to themselves, they had no
+scruple in taking up arms. Each noble collected his men round him and
+appeared at their head in the field. Relying on the fine army which
+was thus brought together, they repeated their demand, with the
+remark, that in receiving foreign troops into the harbour-town there
+was involved a manifest attempt to enslave the land by force: if the
+Regent would not lend an ear to their remonstrances, they being the
+hereditary councillors of the crown, they would remember their oath
+which bound them to provide for the general welfare. The Regent
+expressed her astonishment to the lords through a herald that there
+should be any other authority in the realm than that of her daughter,
+the Queen. She already felt herself strong enough to order them and
+their troops to disperse, on pain of the punishment appointed for high
+treason. On this the great men met in the old council-house at
+Edinburgh, to consider the question whether it was obligatory to pay
+obedience to a princess, who was but regent, and who disregarded the
+opinion of the hereditary councillors of the crown. The consultation,
+at which some preachers supported the views of the lords with similar
+arguments, ended in the declaration that the Regent no longer
+possessed an authority which she was using to the damage of the realm.
+In the name of the King and Queen they announced to her that the
+commission she had received from them was at an end. 'And as your
+Grace,' so they continued, 'will not acknowledge us as your
+councillors, we also will no longer acknowledge you as our
+regent.'[202]
+
+To this pass matters had now come. The combined interests, on the one
+side of the crown and the clergy, on the other of the lords and the
+Protestants, came into open and avowed conflict. The Act of Suspension
+is but the proclamation of war in a form which would enable them to
+avoid directly breaking with their duties towards their born prince.
+
+The lords' first enterprise was directed against the French troops
+which held Leith in their possession, and which were now first of all
+to be driven out of the country: but the hastily-constructed
+fortifications there proved stronger than was expected. And not merely
+were their assaults on Leith repelled, but the Lords soon saw
+themselves driven from their strongest positions, for instance from
+Stirling; their possessions were wasted far and wide; the war, which
+was transferred to Fife, took an unfortunate turn for them; to all
+appearance they were lost if they did not obtain help from abroad.
+
+But to whom could they apply for it if not to their neighbour, just
+now rising in power, Elizabeth Queen of England?
+
+They might have hesitated, as they had indeed repelled the influence
+of Henry VIII and of Somerset, even when it was united with reforming
+tendencies. But how entirely different were matters now from what they
+had been then! With their own hands they had already given themselves
+a Protestant church-system, which was national in a high degree, and
+somewhat opposite to the English one. So long as it existed, the
+influence England would gain by giving them help could never become
+the supremacy, at which it is certain attempts had previously been
+made.
+
+We know too the objections which were made in England against a union
+with the Scots. To these were added the Queen's decided antipathies to
+the new form of church government and to its leaders: she could not
+bear the mention of Knox's name. But all these considerations
+disappeared before the pressing danger and the political necessity. In
+opposition to France, Protestant England and Protestant Scotland,
+however different the religious and even the political tendencies
+prevailing in each of them, held out their hands to each other.
+
+Elizabeth had already at an earlier time privately given the Scots
+some support: the moment at which she gave them decisive assistance is
+worth noticing.
+
+The Regent's French and Scotch troops were planning an attack on S.
+Andrews, and had made themselves masters of Dysarts; the lords, again
+retreating, marched along the coast, and the French were in pursuit
+when a fleet hove in sight in the distance. The French welcomed it
+with salvos of cannon, for they had no doubt that it was their own
+fleet, bringing them help from France, long expected, and now in fact
+known to be ready. But it soon appeared that they were English
+vessels, in advance of the larger fleet which had put to sea under
+Vice-admiral Winter. Nothing remained for the French, when thus
+undeceived, but to give up their project and withdraw. But the whole
+state of things was thus altered. Soon after this the Scots, to whose
+assistance English troops had also come by land, were able to advance
+against Leith and resume the suspended siege.
+
+Everything that is to come to pass in the world has its right time and
+hour. Incredible as it may seem, the champion of the strictest
+Catholicism, the King of Spain, was at this moment not merely for help
+being given to the Scots, but pressing for it; his ministers
+complained not that the Queen interfered, but that she did not do so
+more quickly. For in the union of Scotland and France, which was
+already complete in a military sense, they saw a danger for
+themselves. The enthusiastic Knox, who only lived and moved in
+religious ideas, was, more than he foresaw, a link in the chain of
+European affairs. Without the impulse which he gave to the minds of
+men, that resistance to the Regent, by which a complete union with
+France was hindered, would have been impossible.
+
+A treaty was made in Berwick between Queen Elizabeth and the Scotch
+lords, by which they bound themselves to drive the French out of
+Scotland with their united strength. The lords promised to remain
+obedient to their Queen, but Elizabeth assented to the additional
+words, that this was not to be in such cases as might lead to the
+overthrow of the old Scottish rights and liberties. This was a very
+comprehensive clause, which placed the further attempts of the Scotch
+lords against the monarchical power under English protection.
+
+While the siege of Leith was being carried on by land and sea,
+commissioners from France appeared on the part of Queen Mary Stuart
+and her husband, as they had now assumed the place of the Regent (who
+had died in the midst of these troubles), to attempt to bring about an
+agreement. The chief among them was Monluc, bishop of Valence, a
+well-meaning and moderate man even in religious matters, who,
+convinced of the impossibility of carrying on the war any further with
+success, gave way step by step before the inflexible purpose of the
+English plenipotentiary, William Cecil. He put his hand to the treaty
+of Edinburgh, in which the withdrawal of the French troops from
+Scotland and the destruction of the fortifications of Leith were
+stipulated for. This satisfied the chief demand of the lords, and at
+the same time agreed with the wish of the neighbouring Power. The King
+and Queen of France and Scotland were no longer to bear the title and
+arms of England and Ireland. For Scotland a provisional government was
+arranged on the basis of election by the Estates; it was settled that
+for the future also the Queen and King should decide on war and peace
+only by their advice. It is easy to see how much a limitation of the
+Scotch crown was connected with the interests of the Power that was
+injured by its union with the crown of France.
+
+Religion was not expressly mentioned; Queen Elizabeth had purposely
+avoided it. But when the Scotch Parliament, to which the adjustment of
+the matters in dispute was once more referred in the treaty of
+Edinburgh, now met, nothing else could be expected than what in fact
+happened. The Protestant Confession was accepted almost without
+opposition, the bishops' jurisdiction declared to be abolished
+according to the view of the confederate lords, the celebration of the
+Mass not only forbidden, but, after the example of Geneva, prohibited
+under the severest penalties.
+
+How mightily had the self-governing church-society, founded three
+years and a half before in the castle at Dun, secured its foothold! By
+its union with the claims of the aristocracy it had broken up the
+existing government not merely of the Church but also of the State. It
+was of unspeakable importance for the subsequent fortunes of England
+that this vigorous living element had been taken under the protection
+of the Queen of that country and supported by her.
+
+But at the same time, if we may so say, it complicated her personal
+relations inextricably.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[193] Extract in M'Crie, Life of John Knox 36.
+
+[194] Knox, History of the Reformation,--a work which some later
+insertions have not deprived of its credit for trustworthiness, which
+it otherwise deserves,--p. 92. 'That they refussit all society with
+idolatri and band them selfes to the uttermost of their powery to
+manetein the trew preiching of the evangille, as God should offer unto
+thame preichers and opportunity.'
+
+[195] 'That we sall--apply our haill power substance and our verie
+lyves, to mantein set forward and establish the most blissit word of
+God, and his congregatioun sall labour--to have faithful ministeris,
+puirlie and trewlie to minister Christis evangell and sacramentis to
+his pepyll.'
+
+[196] According to Leslaeus 205, in this the promise was specially
+emphatic, that everything should be done, 'Ne regina nostra Angliae
+sceptro excluderetur.' This was during Mary Tudor's lifetime.
+
+[197] So King James said at the Conference of Hampton Court, State
+Trials ii. 85; negociations must have taken place of which we know
+nothing.
+
+[198] Knox: 'That she wald tak sume better order:' and so in
+Calderwood. Buchanan xvi. 590: 'Se interea nihil adversus quemquam
+illius sectae molituram.' Spottiswood i. 271: That the diet should
+desert and nothing be done to the prejudice of the ministres.'
+
+[199] Praefati Paulus Methven, Joannes Cristesoun, Willielmus Harlaw
+et Joannes Willok denunciati sunt rebelles S. D. N. regis et reginae.
+From the Justiciary records in M'Crie, Note GG. 360.
+
+[200] Kirkaldy of Grange, one of the leaders of the Protestants, to
+Sir Henry Percy, Edinburgh, 1 July, in Tytler vi. 107. 'The manner of
+their proceeding in reformation is this. They pull down all manner of
+friaries and some abbeys, which willingly receive not the reformation:
+as to parish churches they cleanse them of images and other monuments
+of idolatry and command that no masses be said in them.' Even now
+M'Crie says: 'I look upon the destruction of those monuments as a
+piece of good policy.' Life of Knox 130.
+
+[201] I find this only in Lesley 215, who is in general the best
+informed as to the relations of the Regent with the French court.
+
+[202] 'As your grace will not acknowledge us, our soverane lords and
+ladyis liegis for your subjectis and counssail, na mair will we
+acknowledge you for our regent.' Declaration of 23 Oct. 1559.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+MARY STUART IN SCOTLAND. RELATION OF THE TWO QUEENS TO EACH OTHER.
+
+
+People were now fully satisfied that they had obtained something
+great, and had laid a firm foundation for secure relations throughout
+all future time: but it became clear at once that this was not the
+case. Francis II and his wife seemed to have forgotten that they had
+promised on their royal word, in the instructions to their
+ambassadors, to accept whatever they should arrange: they refused to
+ratify the treaty of Edinburgh. For it was really concluded by the
+Queen of England with men in rebellion against them, by whom it was
+chiefly subscribed. They regarded it as an insult that the Scots
+deputed an embassy of great lords to England, whilst the request to
+confirm all that was arranged in Scotland was laid before them, their
+Queen and their King, by a gentleman of less distinguished birth. They
+felt themselves highly injured by a Parliament being called even
+before they had ratified the treaty, without any authorisation on
+their side. How were they to accept its resolutions? Francis II on the
+contrary said, he would prove to the Scots that they had no power to
+meet together in their own name, just as if they were a republic.[203]
+And as little was he inclined to give up the title and arms of England
+according to the treaty: he said he had hitherto borne them with good
+right, and saw no reason to give satisfaction to others, before he had
+received any himself.
+
+Those were the days in which the French government, guided by the
+Queen's uncles, including the Cardinal of Lorraine, had considerably
+repressed the Protestant movements which were stirring in France, had
+brought the insurgent princes into its power, and was occupied in
+establishing a strict system of obedience in ecclesiastical and
+political matters; with kindred aims it sought in Scotland also to
+revert to its earlier policy; all concessions made to the contrary it
+ignored. I see here, says the English ambassador Throckmorton, more
+intention of vengeance than inclination to peace.
+
+At this juncture occurred the unexpected event which gave French
+affairs another shape. King Francis II died at the beginning of
+December 1559 without issue; and the Guises could not maintain the
+authority they had hitherto possessed. The kingdom which, by the
+extent and unity of its power, was wont to exercise a dominant
+influence over all others, fell into religious and political troubles
+which engrossed and broke up its force.
+
+Elizabeth took some part also in these movements within France itself:
+it was her natural policy to support the opponents of the Guises, who
+likewise stood so near her in their religious confession. With their
+consent she once occupied Havre, but allowed it without much
+hesitation to fall again into the hands of the French government which
+was then guided by Catharine Medici, who for some time even made
+common cause with the leaders of the Huguenots. We cannot here follow
+out these relations any further, for to understand them fully would
+require us to go into the details of the changeful dissensions in
+France: for English history these are only so far important as they
+made it impossible for the French to act upon England.
+
+On the other hand the entire sequel of English history turns on the
+relation to Scotland: Scotch affairs already form a constituent part
+of the English, and demand our whole attention.
+
+At first sight it would not have seemed so impossible to bring about
+peace and even friendship between the Queen of Scotland and the Queen
+of England: for the former was of course no longer bound to the
+interests of the French crown. But this expectation also proved
+deceitful. A primary condition would have been the acceptance of the
+treaty of Edinburgh; Elizabeth demanded this expressly and as if it
+were obligatory on Mary, who would as little consent to it after, as
+before, the death of her husband. She ceased to bear the arms of
+England: all else she deferred till her arrival in Scotland.
+Immediately on this, at the first step, the mutual antipathy broke
+out.[204] In consequence of the refusal to ratify the treaty,
+Elizabeth declined Mary's request to be allowed to return home through
+England. Mary regarded this as an insult: it is worth while to hear
+her words. 'I was once,' so she said, 'brought to France in spite of
+all the opposition of her brother: I will return to Scotland without
+her leave. She has combined with my rebellious subjects: but there are
+also malcontents in England who would listen to a proposal from my
+side with delight: I am a Queen as well as she, and not altogether
+friendless, and perhaps I have as great a soul too.'
+
+Few words, but they contain motives of jealousy rising out of the
+depths of her inmost heart and announce a stormy future. But at first
+Mary could not give effect to them.
+
+Some Catholic lords did indeed request her to come to them in the
+northern counties, whence they would escort her to her capital with an
+armed force. But who could advise her to begin her government with a
+civil war? She would then have herself driven the Protestant lords
+over to the side of her foe. But she had connexions with them as well.
+Their leader, her half-brother James, Prior of S. Andrews, whom she
+now created Earl of Murray, a man of spirit, energy, and comprehensive
+views, appeared before her in France; his experience and caution and
+even the inner tie of blood-relationship always gave him a great
+influence over her resolutions. He showed her how it was possible to
+rule Scotland even under existing circumstances, so as to have a
+tolerable understanding with Elizabeth, but reserving all else for the
+future. These counsels she followed. Not with Elizabeth's help, but
+yet without hindrance from her, she arrived at Holyrood in August
+1561. Murray succeeded in obtaining, though not without great
+opposition, and almost by personally keeping off opponents, that she
+should be allowed to have mass celebrated before her. He took affairs
+into his own hands; the Protestants had the ascendancy in the country
+and in the royal council.
+
+Not that Queen Mary by this fully acquiesced in what had happened, or
+recognised the state of affairs in Scotland. She even now confirmed
+neither the treaty of Edinburgh, nor the resolutions of Parliament
+based on it: but in the first place took possession of her throne,
+reserving her dynastic rights.
+
+A sight without a parallel, these two Queens in Albion, haughty and
+wondrous creatures of nature and circumstances!
+
+They were both of high mental culture. From Mary we have French poems,
+of a truth of feeling and a simplicity of language, which were then
+rare in literature. Her letters are fresh and eloquent effusions of
+momentary moods and wishes: they impress us even if we know that they
+are not exactly true. She has pleasure in lively discussion, in which
+she willingly takes a playful, sometimes a familiar, tone; but always
+shows herself equal to the subject. From Elizabeth also we have some
+lines in verse, not exactly of a poetic strain, not very harmonious in
+expression, but full of high thoughts and resolves. Her letters are
+skilful but, owing to their allusions and antitheses, far from
+perspicuous products of reflection, although succinct and rich in
+matter. She was acquainted with the learned languages, had studied the
+ancient classics and translated one or two, had read much of the
+church-fathers: in her expressions there sometimes appears an insight
+into the inner connexion between history and ideas, which fills us
+with astonishment. In conversation she tried above all things to
+produce a sense of her gifts and accomplishments. She shone through a
+combination of grandeur and condescension which appeared like grace
+and sweetness, and sometimes awakened a personal homage, for which in
+the depths of her soul she cherished a longing. She did but toy with
+such feelings, to Mary they were a reality. Mary possessed that
+natural power of womanly charm which awakens strong, even if not
+lasting, passion. Her personal life fluctuates between the wish to
+find a husband who could advance her interests and those passionate
+ebullitions by which she is also herself overpowered. This however
+does not hinder her from devoting all her attention to the business of
+government. Both Queens work with like zeal in their Privy Council:
+and they only deliberate with men of intimate trust; the resolutions
+which are adopted are always their own. Elizabeth yields more to the
+wisdom of tried councillors, though even these are not sure of her
+favour for a moment, and have a hard place of it with her. Mary
+fluctuates between full devotion and passionate hate: she is almost
+always swayed by an unlimited confidence in the man who meets her
+wishes. Elizabeth lets things come to her: Mary is ever restless and
+enterprising.[205] Elizabeth appeared once in the field, to animate
+the courage of her troops in a great peril. Mary took a personal share
+in the local Scottish feuds: she was seen riding at the head of a
+small feudal army against the enemy, with pistols at her saddle-bow.
+
+But we here discontinue this representation of the antitheses of
+character between them, which first acquired historical import through
+the differences of position in which the two sovereigns found
+themselves.
+
+Elizabeth was mistress of her State, as well in its religious as its
+political constitution. She had revived the obedience once paid to her
+father; and remodelled the Church in the decidedly Protestant spirit
+which corresponded to her personal position; at first every man
+submitted to the new order of things, though many looked on its growth
+only with aversion. Mary on the contrary had to accommodate herself to
+a form of Church, and even of State, government, which was founded in
+opposition to the right of her predecessors, and above all to her own
+views. If she ever thought of making her own religion predominant, or
+of oppressing that which was newly established, open resistance was
+announced to her in threatening terms by its leader John Knox.
+However much this reaction against her religious belief straitened her
+on the one side, yet on another side it opened out to her a wider
+prospect. She already had numerous personally devoted partisans in
+Great Britain, both in Scotland where she could yet once more call
+them together, and in England where she was secretly regarded by not a
+few as the lawful Queen; but, besides this, she had many in Catholic
+Europe, which had become reunited during these years (the times when
+the Council of Trent was drawing to a close) around the Papal
+authority, and was preparing to bring back those who had fallen away.
+This great confederacy gave Mary a position which made her capable of
+confronting a neighbour in herself so much more powerful.
+
+Elizabeth once touched on the old claims of England to supremacy over
+Scotland: the ambition of all the Scotch kings, to prove to the
+English that they were independent of them, still lived in Mary: when
+queen was set over against queen, it took a more sharply-expressed
+shape; any whisper of subjection seemed to her an outrage.
+
+For the moment Mary had, as before mentioned, given up the title of
+'Queen of England': but all her thoughts were directed towards the
+point of getting her presumptive hereditary right to that kingdom
+recognised, and of preparing for its realisation at a later time.
+
+But now there were two ways by which she might gain her end. She might
+either get her claim to the English throne recognised by an agreement
+with its present possessor, which did not appear so unattainable, as
+Elizabeth was unmarried, and such a settlement would have been legally
+valid in England; or she might enter into a dynastic alliance with a
+neighbouring great power, so as to be enabled to carry her claims into
+effect one day through its military strength.[206]
+
+With this last view negociations were during several years carried on
+for a marriage with Don Carlos the son of the Spanish King. For in
+the same proportion that the union of Scotch and French interests
+dissolved, did the opposite alliance between Spain and England become
+looser. The most varied reasons made Philip II wish to enter into
+direct and close relations with Scotland. Immediately after the death
+of Francis II, a negociation was set on foot with a view to this
+alliance, on Mary's giving an audience to the Spanish ambassador, to
+the vexation of Queen Catharine of France, who wished to see this
+richest of princes, and the one who seemed destined to the greatest
+power, reserved for her own youngest daughter. After Mary returned to
+Scotland similar rumours were renewed, and from time to time we meet
+with a negociation for this object. When her minister Lethington was
+in London in the spring of 1563, he agreed with the Spanish ambassador
+that this marriage was the only desirable one: it was longed for by
+all Scotch and English Catholics. Soon afterwards the ambassador sent
+a young member of the embassy to Scotland, in the deepest secrecy, by
+a long circuit through Ireland; not without difficulty he obtained an
+interview with Mary Stuart, in which he assured himself of her
+inclination for the marriage. In the autumn of 1563 Catharine Medici
+showed herself well informed about this negociation and much
+disquieted by it.[207] It appeared to depend only on Philip's decision
+whether the marriage was concluded or not.[208] After some time the
+Scotch Privy Council sent the bishop of Ross to Spain, to bring the
+matter about. The Queen herself corresponded on it with Cardinal
+Granvella and the Duchess of Arschot.
+
+Don Carlos was too weak, too morbidly excited, to be married when
+young. King Philip, who did not wish to feed his ambition, at last
+gave the plan up, and recommended, instead of his son, his nephew the
+Archduke Charles of Austria.
+
+But the one was as disagreeable to the English court as the other.
+Elizabeth had announced eternal enmity to Queen Mary if she married a
+prince of the house of Austria. Besides, the Spanish influence in
+England troubled her: she now saw herself already under the necessity
+of demanding and enforcing the recall of the Spanish ambassador,
+because he drew the Catholic party round him and incited them to
+oppose the laws of England. What might have come of it, if a prince of
+this house should now obtain rule over a part of the island itself?
+
+But while Mary through these secret negociations tried to obtain the
+support of a great Catholic house for her claims, she neglected
+nothing that could contribute at the same time to make a good and
+friendly understanding with Queen Elizabeth possible, and to bring it
+about. In the company of her half-brother Murray, who held the reins
+of government with a firm hand, supported by his religious and
+political friends, she undertook a campaign into the Northern counties
+(which inclined to Catholicism), to make them submit to the universal
+law of the land. Only one priest was allowed at court, from whom she
+heard mass; some of those who read the mass elsewhere were
+occasionally punished for it; clergymen who complained of the hardship
+they experienced were referred to Murray. This proceeding too was only
+temporary, it was intended to incline the Queen of England to her
+wishes. All quarrel was carefully avoided: on solemn festivals she
+drank to the English ambassador, to the health of his mistress.
+Besides, there were negociations for a meeting of the two Queens in
+person at York, where Mary hoped to be solemnly recognised as
+presumptive heiress of England.[209] However much it otherwise lies
+beyond the mental horizon of this epoch of firm and mutually opposed
+convictions, Mary was then thought capable of willingly adopting the
+forms of the English Church; to this even the Cardinal of Lorraine had
+assented. She herself unceasingly declared that she wished to honour
+Elizabeth as a mother, as an elder sister. But the Queen of England,
+after all sorts of promises, preparations, and delays, declined the
+interview. She would hear absolutely nothing of any recognition of
+the claim of inheritance. With naive plainness she inferred that such
+a declaration would not lead 'to concord with her sister, the Queen of
+Scotland,' since naturally a sovereign does not love his heir;--how
+indeed could that be possible, since every one is wont to make the
+heir the object of his aim and hopes;--she might increase Mary's
+importance by the recognition, but at the same time she would
+undermine her own;--whether Mary had a right to the English throne,
+she did not know and did not even wish to know: for she was (and as
+she said this, she pointed to the ring on her finger in proof) married
+to the people of England; if the Queen of Scotland had a right to the
+English throne, that should be left to her unimpaired.
+
+And none could deny that such a declaration as Mary required had its
+hazardous side for Elizabeth. Henry VIII's settlement of the
+succession, on which Elizabeth's own accession rested, excluded the
+Scotch line: in virtue of it the descendants of the younger sister,
+who were natives of England, possessed a greater right. And how if the
+Queen of Scots, when recognised as heir to England, afterwards gave
+her hand to a Catholic prince hostile to Elizabeth? The dangers
+indicated above would then be doubled, the followers of the ancient
+Church would have attached themselves to the royal couple, and formed
+a compact party in opposition to Elizabeth's arrangements, which would
+never have attained stability.
+
+To meet this very objection, it was suggested that Mary might marry a
+Protestant, in fact Robert Dudley Earl of Leicester, who was looked
+upon as the favourite of the Queen of England herself. Elizabeth could
+have been quite secure of him: she herself recommended him. Mary was
+at the first moment unpleasantly affected by the idea that she was
+expected to take as a husband one who was a born subject of England;
+but she was by no means decidedly against it, always supposing that in
+that case Elizabeth would recognise her right of inheritance in a
+valid form for herself and her issue by this marriage. Above all men
+Murray was in favour of this. He said, although his power must be
+diminished by the Queen's union with Leicester, yet he wished for it,
+in so far as it was bound up with the confirmation of the heirship;
+for that was the hope by which he had kept Mary firm to the existing
+system, and separated her from her old friends all these years past.
+Such was without doubt the case: it is this point of view that renders
+Mary's policy and conduct during the last years intelligible. If he,
+so Murray continued, could not make his promise good, Mary would think
+he had deceived her: should she afterwards marry a Catholic prince,
+what would be their position?[210] Once more was the request brought
+before Queen Elizabeth. But even under these circumstances she could
+not be induced to grant it. She said, if Mary trusted her and married
+Leicester, she should never repent it: but these words, which
+contained no definite engagement, had rather an opposite effect on
+Mary. In the hope of the recognition of her heirship she had hitherto
+endured the absolute constraint of her position: she would even have
+agreed to the choice of a husband by which she feared to be disparaged
+and controlled: for how could she have concealed from herself, that by
+it she would have fallen into a permanent dependence on the policy of
+England? With all her compliances and advances she had nevertheless
+gained nothing. Her vexation relieved itself by a violent outburst of
+tears: but during this inward storm she decided at the same time to
+drop her union with Elizabeth, and thus leave herself free for an
+opposite policy.
+
+She had refused the Archduke because his possessions were too small to
+secure her ends, too distant for him to be able to help her. Then
+another suitor presented himself for her hand, who would not indeed
+bring her any increase of power, but would strengthen her claims,
+which seemed to her very desirable. This was the young Henry Lord
+Darnley, through his mother likewise a descendant of Henry VII's
+daughter who had married in Scotland, and through his father Matthew
+Earl of Lennox related to that family of the Stuarts which was
+descended from Alexander, a younger son of James Stuart the ancestor
+of the Scotch kings. In his descent there lay a double recommendation
+for him. It was remarked also that he had in his favour in Scotland
+itself the numerous and important Stuarts (Lord Athol too belonged to
+them); but mainly that a scion of this marriage would not find in
+England any rival of similar claims, which might be easily the case if
+young Darnley should marry into a family of the English nobility and
+bring it his rights.[211] Darnley was a youth remarkable for his fine
+figure, tall and well built; he made a great impression on the Queen
+at his very first appearance. In July 1565 the marriage was celebrated
+and Henry Darnley proclaimed King: the heralds named his name first,
+when they delivered the royal proclamations.
+
+He had hitherto, at least publicly, held to the Protestant faith: even
+now he occasionally attended the preaching: but after a little
+wavering he avowed himself a Catholic and drew over a number of lords
+with him by his example. The Catholic interest thus obtained a
+complete ascendancy at court.
+
+And now Mary did not delay a moment longer in making decisive advances
+to the Catholic powers. She had in fact no need to fear that the King
+of Spain would be offended at her refusing his nephew, if she attached
+herself to him in other matters. When she announced her marriage to
+him, she not merely requested him to interest himself for her and her
+husband's claims in England; she designated him as the man whom God
+had raised up above all others to defend the holy Catholic religion,
+and asked for his help to enable her to withstand the apostates in her
+kingdom: as long as she lived, she would join him against all and
+every enemy.[212] This quite fell in with the ideas which Philip
+himself cherished. From the park of Segovia in October 1565 he
+commissioned Cardinal Pacheco to reassure the Pope with the
+declaration that he meant to support the Queen of Scots not less than
+the Pope himself. In this they must, he remarked, keep three points in
+view: first the subjugation of her rebellious subjects, which he
+thought not difficult, as Elizabeth would not support them; then the
+restoration of the Catholic Church in Scotland, than which nothing
+would give him greater satisfaction; lastly, the most difficult of
+all, the obtaining the recognition of her right to the English throne:
+in all this he would support the Queen with his counsel and with
+money: he could not however come forward himself, it could only be
+done in the Pope's name.[213]
+
+The ordinary accounts of the conferences at Bayonne have proved
+erroneous, as the proposals which were certainly made there by the
+Spaniards were not accepted. But Philip II's resolutions seem not less
+comprehensive in this case; these were his hostility to Queen
+Elizabeth, still concealed from the world but fully clear to his own
+consciousness, and his resolve to do everything in his power to place
+Mary, if not now, yet at a future time on the English throne. The
+great movement he was designing was to begin from Scotland. Like the
+Guises at a later time, so now Mary and her partisans in England and
+Scotland, if he supported her, were to be instruments in his hand.
+
+Mary had the good fortune to break up the seditious combination of
+some lords who opposed her marriage. Strengthened by this she prepared
+for quite a different state of things. She received money from Spain:
+Pope Pius V had promised to support her as long as he had a single
+chalice to dispose of. She expected disciplined Italian troops from
+him: artillery and other munitions of war were brought together for
+her in the Netherlands. Leaning on Rome and Spain the spirited Queen
+hoped to become capable of any great enterprise.[214]
+
+It was clearly to be expected that she would unite a political
+tendency with the religious one. In the letter quoted above Philip
+reminds her how dangerous to monarchy were the doctrines of the
+pretended Gospellers:[215] opinions like those which Knox, regardless
+of all else, put before her personally, as to the limitations of royal
+power justified by religion, she as a matter of course would not
+endure. It is more surprising to find that she also called in question
+the rights which the nobility claimed as against the royal government,
+assigning a sort of theoretic ground for her view. The nobles base
+them, so she said, on the services of their ancestors; but if the
+children have renounced their virtue, neglect honour, care only for
+their families, despise the King and his laws and commit treason, must
+the sovereign even then still let his power be limited by theirs? How
+vast were the plans which this Queen entertained--to restore
+Catholicism in Scotland, to resume the war against the nobility in
+which her ancestors had failed, to overthrow the Protestant opinions,
+and therewith to become one day Queen of England!
+
+Among those around her was an Italian, David Riccio of Poncalieri in
+Piedmont, who had previously been secretary to the Archbishop of
+Turin, and then in the same capacity accompanied his brother-in-law,
+the Conte di Moretta, who went to Scotland as ambassador of the Duke
+of Savoy. He knew how to express himself well in Italian and French,
+and was besides skilful in music.[216] As he exactly supplied a voice
+which was wanting in the Queen's chapel, she asked the ambassador to
+let him enter her service. Riccio was not a blooming handsome man;
+though still young, he gave the impression of advanced years: he had
+something morose and repellent about him; but he showed himself
+endlessly useful and zealous, and won greater influence from day to
+day. He not merely conducted the foreign correspondence, on which all
+now depended and for which he was indispensable,--it became his office
+to lay everything before the Queen that needed her signature, and
+through this he attained the incalculable actual power of a
+confidential cabinet-secretary; he saw the Queen, who took pleasure
+in his company, as often as he wished, and ate at her table. James
+Melvil, whom she had commissioned to warn her, if he saw her
+committing faults, did not neglect doing it in this case; he
+represented to her the ill effects which favouring a foreigner drew
+after it: but she thought she could not let her royal prerogative be
+so narrowly limited.[217] Riccio had promoted the marriage with
+Darnley: the latter seemed to depend on him;[218] it was even said
+that the secretary used at pleasure a signet bearing the King's
+initials. It was no wonder indeed if this influence created him
+enemies, especially as he took presents which streamed in on him
+abundantly: yet the real hostility came from quite another quarter.
+
+The English Council of State did not fail to notice the danger which
+lay in a policy of estrangement on the part of Scotland. It was
+proposed to put an end to its progress once for all by an invasion of
+Scotland: or at least the wish was expressed to arm for defence, e.g.
+to fortify Berwick, and above all to renew the understanding with the
+Scotch lords; Murray, whom Mary had in vain tried to gain over by
+reminding him of the interest of their family and the views of their
+father, would most gladly have delivered Darnley at once into the
+hands of the English. By thus openly choosing his side he had been
+forced, together with his chief friends, Chatellerault, Glencairn,
+Rothes, and some others, to leave Scotland: the Queen, refused with
+violent words the demand of the English court that she should receive
+them again; she called a Parliament instead for the beginning of
+March, in which their banishment was to be confirmed and an attempt
+made to restore Catholicism. This was not so difficult, as the
+resolutions of 1560 had never yet been ratified. There appeared at
+court the Catholic lords, Huntley, Athol, and Bothwell who was ever
+ready for fighting (he had returned from banishment); they came to an
+understanding with Riccio. But now it happened that the personal
+union (on which all rested) between the King, the Queen, and the
+powerful secretary changed to discord. Darnley, who wished not merely
+to be called King but to be King, demanded that the matrimonial crown
+should be conferred on him by the Parliament; this would have given
+him independent rights. The Queen on her side wished to keep the
+supreme power undiminished in her hands: and Riccio may well have
+confirmed her in this, as his own importance depended thereon: Darnley
+ascribed the opposition he met with from his wife not so much to her
+own decision as to the low-born foreigner against whom he now
+conceived a violent hatred. His father, Lennox, who cared little for
+the restoration of Catholicism in itself, entirely agreed with him as
+to this. They held it allowable to put out of the way the intruder who
+dared to hinder their house from mounting to the highest honours, and
+who by the confidential intimacy in which he stood with the Queen gave
+rise to all kinds of offensive rumours. With this object they--for the
+instigation came from them--joined in a union with the Protestant
+nobles. These regarded Riccio as their most thoroughgoing opponent:
+they too wished him to be got rid of; but his death alone could not
+content them. A Parliament was to meet at once, from which they
+expected nothing but a complete condemnation of their former friends,
+and absolutely ruinous resolutions against themselves. They made the
+overthrow of this system a condition of their taking a share in
+getting rid of Riccio. The King consented that Murray should be again
+placed at the head of the government, in return for which the
+matrimonial crown was promised him.
+
+On the 7th March the Queen went to the old council-house of Edinburgh
+to make the necessary arrangements for the Parliament. The insignia of
+the realm, sword crown and sceptre, were borne before her by the
+Catholic lords, Huntley, Athol, and Crawford, the heads of those
+houses which had once already, in France, offered her their alliance.
+The King had refused to take part in the ceremony. She named the Lords
+of Articles, who from of old exercised a decisive influence in the
+Scotch Parliaments, and restored the bishops to their place among
+them. As the Queen declares, her object was to promote the restoration
+of the old religion and to have the rebels sentenced by the assembled
+Estates. In Holyrood, besides Huntley and Athol, Bothwell, Fleming,
+Levingstoun, and James Balfour had also found favour, all men who had
+taken an active part for the restoration of Catholicism or for the
+re-establishment of the power of the crown: how much it must have
+surprised men to find that the Queen granted Huntley and Bothwell, who
+had been declared traitors, admittance into the Privy Council. If the
+Parliament adopted resolutions in accordance with these preliminaries,
+it was to be expected that the work of political and religious
+reaction would begin at once, with the active participation not only
+of the Pope from whom some money had already come, but also of other
+Catholic powers with whom Riccio kept the Queen in communication.
+
+A serious danger assuredly for the lords and for Protestantism; there
+was not a moment to lose if they wished to avert it; but the attempt
+to do so assumed, through the wild habits of the time and the country,
+that character of violence which has made it the romance of centuries.
+The event had such far-reaching results that we too must devote a
+discussion to it.
+
+In the low, narrow, and gloomy rooms of Holyrood House there is a
+little chamber to which the Queen retired when she would be alone: it
+was connected by an inner staircase with the King's lodgings. Here
+Mary was sitting at supper on Saturday the 9th March 1566, with her
+natural sister the Countess of Argyle, her natural brother the Laird
+of Creich, who commanded the guard at the palace, and some other
+members of her household, among whom was also Riccio; when the King,
+who had been expected somewhat earlier, appeared and seated himself
+familiarly by his wife. But at the same moment other unexpected guests
+also entered. These were Lord Ruthven, who had undertaken to execute
+the vengeance of King and country on Riccio, and his companions; under
+his fur-fringed mantle were seen weapons and armour: the Queen asked
+in affright what brought him there at that unwonted hour. He did not
+leave her long in doubt. 'I see a man here,' said Ruthven, 'who takes
+a place that does not become him; by a servant like this we in
+Scotland will not let ourselves be ruled,'[219] and so prepared to lay
+hands on him.
+
+Riccio took refuge near her; the Queen declared that she would punish
+an attack on him as high treason, but swords were bared before her
+eyes, Riccio was wounded by a thrust over her shoulder, and dragged
+away: on the floor and on the steps he received more than fifty
+wounds: the King's own dagger was said to have been seen in the body
+of the murdered man. This may be doubted, as his jealousy was by no
+means so real; yet he said soon after that he was responsible for the
+honour of his wife. In the turmoil he had only just stretched out his
+hand, to guard her person from any accident. For the nobles, who
+though acting with the utmost violence yet did not wish to risk their
+whole future, it was enough that he was there: his presence would
+authorise their act and give it impunity. When the murder was done
+Ruthven returned to the Queen and declared to her that the influence
+she had given Riccio had been unendurable to them, as had been also
+his counsels for the restoration of the old religion, his enmities
+against the great men of the land, his connexions with foreign
+princes; he announced to her plainly the return of the banished lords,
+with whom the others would unite in an opposite policy. For they had
+not merely aimed at Riccio: at the same time the Lords Morton and
+Lindsay, who had collected a number of trustworthy men, had advanced
+with them and beset the approaches to the palace-yard. Their plan was
+to get into their hands all their enemies who had gathered round the
+Queen. But while their attention was fastened on Riccio's murder, most
+of the threatened persons succeeded in escaping. All the rest who did
+not belong to the household, and were taken in the palace, were
+removed without distinction: the Queen was treated like a
+prisoner.[220] She still possessed a certain popularity, as being
+hereditary sovereign: a movement arose in the city in her favour, but
+this was counterbalanced by the antipathies of the Protestants, and a
+declaration of the King sufficed to still it. The next day a
+proclamation appeared in his name which directed the members of the
+Parliament, who had already arrived, to depart again.
+
+It was at any rate secured that a restoration of Catholicism or a
+legal prosecution of the banished lords was not to be thought of; the
+original plan however was not completely carried out. As it appears,
+the temper of the country had not been so far prepared beforehand as
+to make it possible to deprive the Queen of her power. And the
+spirited princess did not let herself be so easily subdued. Above all
+she succeeded in gaining over her husband again, to whom the
+predominance of the lords was itself derogatory; he helped her to
+escape and accompanied her in her flight. When they were once safe in
+a strong place, her partisans gathered round her; she placed herself
+at the head of a force, small though it was, and occupied the capital;
+the chief accomplices in the attack of Holyrood, Morton and Ruthven,
+fled from the country. She did not however revert to her old plans:
+she resumed her earlier connexions instead, her half-brother Murray
+again obtained influence, the old members of the Privy Council stood
+by his side, after some time Morton was able to return. Foreigners
+found that Scotland was as quiet as before.
+
+But this apparent quiet concealed a discord destined to produce still
+greater complications. The Queen had only learnt afterwards the share
+which Darnley had taken in Riccio's murder: it was her husband who had
+instigated this insult to her royal honour: how could she ever again
+repose confidence in him? And he no longer found support in the lords
+whom he had deserted at the moment of the crisis. He was very far now
+from obtaining the matrimonial crown or even any real influence: he
+saw himself excluded from affairs more than ever, and despised. When
+his son was baptised at Stirling, the father could not appear, though
+he was in the palace: he was afraid of being insulted in public. His
+condition filled him with shame: he often thought of leaving the
+kingdom, and made preparations for doing so. But he was not able to
+state and prove his grievances: he had to acknowledge before the
+assembled Privy Council that he had no complaints worth mentioning.
+
+The Queen on her side had sometimes let drop her wish to be rid of
+such a husband. She could not however think seriously of having her
+marriage with him dissolved, as this could only be done by declaring
+it null and void, and by that step her son, of whom she had just been
+delivered, and who was to inherit all her rights, would have been at
+the same time declared illegitimate. She was told that means would be
+found to carry the matter through without prejudice to her son. She
+warned her friends not to undertake anything which, though meant to
+help her, might prepare yet more trouble.
+
+How men stood to each other is clear from the fact that on the one
+side Darnley and his father linked themselves with the Catholic
+party--they were said to have adopted a plan of seizing the
+government, in the Queen's despite, in the name of her new-born
+son[221]--while on the other side the rest of the barons pledged
+themselves not to recognise him but only the Queen. A league was
+already concluded between some of them, originating with Sir James
+Balfour (who had been marked out for death by the halter in Holyrood),
+to rid the world by force of a tyrant and enemy of the nobility,
+against whom men must secure their lives.
+
+Thus all was in preparation for a fresh catastrophe; a new personal
+relation of the Queen brought it to pass.
+
+Among the nobles of Scotland James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell, was
+especially distinguished for a fine figure, for youthful strength,
+intrepid manly courage, proved in a thousand adventures, and decided
+character. Though professedly a Protestant, he had attached himself to
+the Regent without wavering, and assured the Queen of his assistance
+while she was still in France. Can we wonder if Mary, under the
+pressure of the party combinations around, needing before all things
+a friend personally devoted to her, sought for support in this tried
+and energetic man? As she in general prized nothing more highly than
+bold and valiant deeds, she had often told him how much she admired
+him; but yet more than this,--we cannot doubt that she let herself be
+drawn into a passionate connexion with him. Who does not know the
+sonnets and the love-intoxicated letters she is believed to have
+addressed to him? I would not say that every word of the latter is
+genuine; through the several translations--from the French original
+(which is lost) into the Scotch idiom, from this into Latin, and then
+back into French as we now have them--they may have suffered much
+alteration: we have no right to lay stress on every expression, and
+interpret it by the light of later events: but in the main they are
+without doubt genuine: they contain circumstances which no one else
+could then know and which have since been proved to be true; no human
+being could have invented them.[222] It does not seem as if Mary's
+fondness for Bothwell was returned by him in the same degree: in her
+letters and poems she is constantly combating a rival, to whom his
+heart seems to give the preference. This was Bothwell's own wife whom
+he had only shortly before married: she stayed with him for a time in
+the neighbourhood of the court, but he took care that the Queen knew
+nothing of her being there. As he was before all things ambitious and
+desirous of power, he only cared for the Queen's love and the
+possession of her person so far as it would enable him to share her
+authority and to obtain the supreme power in Scotland. But for this
+another thing was necessary; the King must be removed out of the way.
+As Darnley had once joined Riccio's political enemies in the Holyrood
+assassination, so Bothwell now united himself with Darnley's enemies
+with a view to his murder, for which they were already quite prepared.
+Morton was asked to join the enterprise this time also: but he
+demanded a declaration from the Queen that she was not against it:
+and this Bothwell could not obtain.
+
+But, it may be said, was not the Queen in collusion with him? Did she
+not purposely bring back her husband, who had fallen sick at Glasgow,
+to Edinburgh, and did she not lodge him in a lonely house there not
+far from the palace under the pretence that the purer air would
+contribute to his recovery, but in fact to deliver him over all the
+more surely to destruction? Such has been always the general belief:
+even her partisans, the zealous Catholics, at that time inclined to
+believe that the Queen at least connived in the plot.[223] But there
+was yet another view taken at the time, according to which the better
+relations that had begun between husband and wife were not due to
+hypocrisy but were genuine, and a complete reconciliation and reunion
+was to have been expected: the returning inclination towards her
+husband was contending in the Queen with her passion for Bothwell; and
+he was driven on, by the apprehension that his prey and the prize of
+his ambition would escape him, to hasten the execution of his
+scheme.[224] And psychologically the event might be best explained in
+this way. But the statement has not sufficiently good evidence for it
+to be maintained historically. A poet might, I think, so apprehend it:
+for it is one of the advantages of poetic representation, that it can
+take up even a slightly supported tradition, and following it can
+infer the depths of the heart, those abysmal depths in which the
+storms of passion rage, and those actions are begotten which laugh
+laws and morality to scorn, and yet are deeply rooted in the souls of
+men. The informations on which our historical representation must be
+based do not reach so far: on a scrupulous examination they do not
+allow us to attain a definite conviction as to the degree of
+complicity. Only there can be no doubt as to the fact that this time
+too ambition and the lust of power played a great part. If Bothwell
+once said he would prevent Darnley from setting his foot on the necks
+of the Scotch, he thereby only expressed the feeling of the other
+nobles. Yet he executed his murderous plot without their joining in it
+and by means of his own servants.[225] In the house before mentioned
+he caused a quantity of gunpowder to be laid under the chamber in
+which Darnley slept, in order to blow him into the air: alarmed at the
+noise made by opening the door, the young sovereign sprang from his
+bed; while trying to save himself, he was strangled together with the
+page who was with him: the powder was then fired and the house laid in
+ruins.[226]
+
+So the dreadful deed was done: the news of it filled men at first with
+that curiosity which always attaches to dark events that touch the
+highest circles; they then busied themselves with the question as to
+who would ascend the Scottish throne and give the Queen his
+hand,--among the other suitors Leicester now thought the time come for
+him, and for renewing good relations between England and
+Scotland:--but meanwhile to every man's astonishment and horror a
+rumour spread that the Queen would unite herself with the man to whom
+the murder of her husband was ascribed. Men fell on their knees before
+her, to represent the dishonour she would thus draw on herself, and
+even the danger into which she would bring her child. Letters from
+England were shown her in which the ruin of all her prospects as to
+the English throne was intimated, if she took this step: for it would
+strengthen the suspicion, which had arisen on the spot, that she had
+been an accomplice in her husband's murder. But she was already no
+longer her own mistress. Bothwell now did altogether what he would. He
+obtained from the lords, who feared him, a declaration that he was
+guiltless of any share in the King's murder, and even their consent to
+his marriage with the Queen. He said publicly he would marry the
+Queen, whoever might be against it, whether she would or not. And if
+Mary wished ever again to govern the country, and make the lords feel
+her vengeance, Bothwell might appear to her the only man who could
+assist her in this. Half of her free will, half by force, she fell
+into his power and thus into the necessity of giving him her hand. An
+archiepiscopal matrimonial court found in a near relationship between
+Bothwell and his wife a pretext for dissolving his previous
+marriage.[227] Bothwell was created Duke of Orkney: he began to
+exercise the royal power for his own objects; his friends, even the
+accomplices in the murder, were promoted.[228]
+
+But how could it be expected that the Lords would tolerate in the much
+more dangerous hands of Bothwell a power they would not have endured
+in Darnley's? Against him they had the full support of the people;
+filled with moral aversion to the Queen for the guilt she had
+incurred, or which was attributed to her, they expressed their loyalty
+only in hostility to her; a general uneasiness showed itself as to the
+safety of her son who was likewise threatened by his father's
+murderers.
+
+Under a banner on which were depicted the murdered King and his child
+the latter praying for help, a great army marched against the castle
+where the newly-married pair dwelt. Bothwell merely regarded the
+hostile lords as his rivals, who envied him the great position to
+which he had raised himself, and thought to rout them all with the
+feudal array which gathered round him at the Queen's summons. But at
+the decisive moment the feeling of the country infected his own people
+as well; instead of being able to fight he had to fly. He was forced
+to live as a pirate in the Northern Seas; for he could no longer
+remain in the country. The Queen fell into the power of the Lords, who
+placed her in the strong castle which the Douglas had built in the
+middle of Loch Leven, and detained her as a prisoner.
+
+In France it was not wholly forgotten that she had once been the Queen
+of that realm; a fiery champion of the Catholics boasted that, if they
+would give him a couple of thousand arquebusiers, he would free her
+from custody in despite of the Scots; but Catharine Medici, who
+besides was no friend of hers, rejected this absolutely, as they had
+already so many irons in the fire.[229] On the other hand Elizabeth
+concerned herself for the interests of her endangered neighbour with a
+certain emphasis. But the Scots were already discontented with the
+conduct of England, and complained loudly that since the treaty of
+Leith nothing good had come to them from thence;[230] they were
+resolved to pay their neighbour no more attention, but to manage their
+own affairs for themselves.
+
+Their path was clearly marked out for them. They had murdered Riccio,
+conspired against Darnley, driven Bothwell away, and all for the
+special reason that they had tried to create a strong supreme power
+over them: they could not possibly allow the Queen, irritated and
+insulted as she was, to again obtain the exercise of her power. Mary
+therefore was forced to resign the Scotch crown in favour of her son,
+and to name her brother Murray regent during his minority. Immediately
+on this the ceremony of anointing and crowning the child was performed
+in an almost grotesque manner.[231] Two superintendents and a bishop
+set the crown on his head, which the Lords there present touched in
+token of their consent; two of them, Morton and Hume, then swore in
+the name of the new King, James VI, that he would uphold the religion
+now prevailing in Scotland, and combat all its enemies.
+
+When after this Murray, who had exiled himself to France, and had
+taken no share in the last catastrophe (which he foresaw), returned,
+he was in a position once more to conduct the government according to
+his old policy, only with greater independence. A Parliament was
+called which now for the first time confirmed the statutes made in
+1560 in favour of the Kirk, and also came to such an arrangement about
+the confiscated church-property as made it possible for it to exist.
+
+So ruinous for Mary were the results of her attempt to break through
+the combination which formed the condition of her government in
+Scotland, and to effect a restoration of the old ecclesiastical and
+political forms. Before the power which she wished to overthrow her
+own had gone down.
+
+But she was not yet minded to submit to it. And mainly through a
+personal relation which she had entered into with the young George
+Douglas, who conceived hopes of her hand, she succeeded in escaping
+out of her prison and over the lake, bold and venturous as she always
+was. In the country there were many who thought themselves to stand so
+high above the bastard Earl of Murray, that they held it a disgrace to
+obey him: all these gathered round her; and as she then, the very day
+after her escape, revoked her abdication, they bound themselves
+together to replace her on the throne. In the league, at the head of
+which stood the Hamiltons, we find eight bishops and twelve
+abbots,--for the re-establishment of the Catholic Church was part of
+the plan: a considerable army was brought into the field with this
+object. Murray and his party were however the stronger of the two,
+they represented the organised power of the State, and their soldiers
+were the best disciplined. The Queen, who, at Langsyde, from a
+neighbouring eminence, looked on at the battle between the two armies,
+had to witness her own men being scattered without having done the
+enemy any damage,--Murray is said to have lost only one man. He
+himself put a stop to the slaughter of the fugitives. Still even now
+her affairs did not seem to those around her utterly lost, for all her
+friends had not yet appeared in the field, and there were still strong
+places to which she could retreat. But she aimed not merely at
+defence, but at overpowering her enemies. As what she had just seen
+left her no hope of this in Scotland, she adopted the idea of
+demanding help from the Queen of England. For the latter had in the
+strongest terms made known to the Scotch barons her displeasure at the
+treatment of their Queen, which was not in harmony with the laws of
+God or man, and had threatened to punish them for the wound thus
+inflicted on the royal dignity. She had once sent Mary herself a jewel
+as a pledge of her friendship. Mary was warned by those around her not
+to put full trust in these assurances. But she was quite accustomed to
+take her resolutions under passionate emotion, and could not then be
+dissuaded from her views. Through forests and woods, over stock and
+stone, without a single woman attendant, without any other food than
+the Scotch oatcake, day and night she kept on her way to the coast,
+from which she betook herself in a small boat to Carlisle. Her soul
+was thirsting to subdue the rebels: her firm trust was to draw Queen
+Elizabeth into the war against them: she came, not to seek a refuge,
+but to gain troops and assistance.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[203] Throckmorton to Chamberlain, 21 Nov. 1560, in Wright, Elizabeth
+i. 52.
+
+[204] Throckmorton, in Tytler, History of Scotland vi. 194. In a
+memoir of Cecil, 'a note of indignities and wrongs done by the Queen
+of Scots to the Queen's Majesty,' in Murdin 582, the greatest stress
+is justly laid on this refusal.
+
+[205] Castelnau, Memoires iii. 13. 'Cette jeune princesse avoit un
+esprit grand et inquiete, comme celui du feu Cardinal de Lorraine son
+oncle, auxquels ont succede la pluspart des choses contraires a leurs
+deliberations.'
+
+[206] As it is once expressed in one of her letters: 'pour
+l'advanchement de mes affaires tant en ce pays (Scotland) qu'en celuy
+la, ou je pretends quelque droit (England).' In Labanoff, Lettres et
+Memoires de Marie Stuart i. 247.
+
+[207] 'Que la conveniencia publica, en especial la de la religion
+aconsejaba que la reina su ama, se casase con el principe Don Carlos.'
+From the ambassador's reports in Gonzalez 299.
+
+[208] 'Qu'il ne tiendra, qu'au dit Espagne qu'il (ce mariage) se ne
+fasse.' Additions a Castelnau.
+
+[209] Compare Conaeus, Vita Mariae, in Jebb i. 24.
+
+[210] Conversation with Randolph, in Tytler vi. 316. Murray says to
+him: 'the Queen would dislike and suspect him, because he had deceived
+her with promises which he could not realise: he was the counsellor
+and devizer of that line of policy, which for the last five years had
+been pursued towards England; he it was that had induced her to defer
+to Elizabeth.'
+
+[211] Spottiswood, History of the Church of Scotland ii. 25. 'If it
+should fall him to marry with one of the great families of England, it
+was to be feared that some impediment might be made to her in the
+right of succession.'
+
+[212] Lislebourc (Edinburgh), 24 July 1565, in Labanoff vii. 430.
+
+[213] Compare Apuntamientos 312. The letter itself in Mignet ii. App.
+E.
+
+[214] Sacchinus, Historia societatis Jesu, pp. iii, xiii, no. 166.
+
+[215] Fragment d'un Memoire de Marie Stuart sur la noblesse. Labanoff
+vii. 297.
+
+[216] Memoire adresse a Cosme I, from the Archivio Mediceo at
+Florence, in Labanoff vii. 65.
+
+[217] James Melvil, Memoirs 59.
+
+[218] From a despatch of Randolph's in Mackintosh, History of England
+iii. 73. 'David is he that worketh all, chief secretary of the Queen
+of Scotland, only governor to her good man.' Can the date be right?
+
+[219] 'Volemo quel galante la e non volemo esser governati per un
+servitor.' Letter to Cosimo I, in Tuscany, in Labanoff vii. 92.
+
+[220] Queen Mary to the Archbishop of Glasgow, 2 April 1566, in Keith
+and Labanoff. Of all the reports on this event the most important and
+trustworthy.
+
+[221] 'That the king ... suld take the prince our son and crown him
+and being crownit as his father suld tak upon him the government.'
+Mary to the Archbishop of Glasgow, in Labanoff i. 396.
+
+[222] Compare Robertson, Dissertation on King Henry's murder, Works
+i., History of Scotland 243. From a letter of Thuanus to Camden (1606)
+it is clear how much trouble it already cost him to arrive at a
+decided opinion.
+
+[223] 'Monsenor de Moreta ... anadio (to his narrative of the event)
+algunas particularidades, que en juicio del embajador probaban o
+inducian mucha sospecha que la reina avia sabido y aun permetido el
+suceso.' Apuntamientos 320. The affair has been very wrongly drawn
+into the sphere of religious controversy.
+
+[224] Account in the collection for the history of the times of the
+Emperor Maximilian II, which Simon Schardius embodied in the tomus
+rerum Germanicarum iv, not authentic, yet based on what was then held
+in Scotland to be true. It runs: 'Rex cum illa se accedente ita
+suaviter sermones commutat, ut reconciliatae annulum daret, hoc pacto,
+ut illa se in lectum conjugalem intra duos dies admitteret. Erant in
+aula, qui hanc offensionem placari minime vellent, unde, priusquam rex
+voti compos fieret, eum e medio tollere constituerunt.'
+
+[225] Trial of James Earl Bothwell. State trials.
+
+[226] Report of the Nuncio, which agrees fairly with the statements in
+Schardius.
+
+[227] Mary's confessor told the Spanish ambassador in answer to his
+questions: 'Que el caso se habia consultado con los obispos catolicos
+y que unanimemente havian dicho que lo podia hacer (casarse) por que
+la muger de Bodwell era pariente sua en quarto grado.'
+
+[228] Memorandum of Cecil. 'She committed all autority to him and his
+compagnons, who exercised such cruelty as none of the nobility that
+were counsel of the realm durst abide about the Queen.'
+
+[229] Norris to Elizabeth 23 July 1567, in Wright i. 260.
+
+[230] Throckmorton to Cecil: 'upon other accidents [since Leith] they
+have observed such things in H. My's doings, as have tended to the
+danger of such as she had dealt withall.' Wright 251.
+
+[231] Calderwood ii. 384: 'Modo cha ha usato la regina di Scotia per
+liberarsi,' from the Florentine archives, in Labanoff vii. 135.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+INTERDEPENDENCE OF THE EUROPEAN DISSENSIONS IN POLITICS AND RELIGION.
+
+
+If we inquire into the reason why Philip II gave up his previous
+relations with England and sided with the Queen of Scots, we shall
+find it mainly in the fact that the victory of Protestant ideas in
+England exercised a counter-action which was insupportable for the
+government he had established in the Netherlands. But that he gave
+Mary no help in her troubles, though information was once collected as
+to how it might be done, may also be traceable to the disturbances
+that had broken out in the Netherlands, the suppression of which
+occupied all his attention and resources.
+
+In 1568 the Duke of Alva was master of the Netherlands: he was already
+able to send a considerable force to help the French government, which
+had once more broken an agreement forced upon it by the Huguenots; the
+stress of the religious war was transferred to France, and there too
+the Catholic military force by degrees gained the upper hand.
+
+It was under these circumstances that Mary Stuart appeared in England
+with a demand for help. If in the Netherlands the attempts of the
+nobles and the Protestant tendencies had been alike defeated, they had
+on the other hand, by a similar union, achieved a decisive victory in
+Scotland. Was Elizabeth to join Mary in combating them?
+
+Elizabeth disliked the proceedings of the Scotch nobles towards their
+lawful Queen; the adherents of the Scotch church-system were already
+troublesome to her in England: but, however much she found to blame in
+them, in the great contest of the world they were her allies. Mary on
+the other hand held to that great system of life and thought with
+which the English Queen and her ministers had broken. Whatever
+Elizabeth might have previously promised, she did not mean to be bound
+by it under circumstances so completely altered.[232] Had she chosen
+to restore Mary, she would have opened the island to all the
+influences which she desired to exclude. Nor did she wish to let her
+retire to France, for while Mary had resided there previously, England
+had not had a single quiet day: without doubt the Catholic zeal
+prevailing there would have been at once excited in support of her
+claims to the English throne. An attempt was again made to reconcile
+the Scotch nobles with their Queen: but as this led to an enquiry
+respecting her share in the guilt of the King's murder--those letters
+of Mary to Bothwell now first came to the knowledge of the public--the
+dissension became rather greater and quite irreconcilable.
+
+One now begins to feel sympathy with the Queen of Scots, especially as
+her share in the crime imputed to her is not quite clear. Of her own
+free will she had come to England to seek for assistance on which she
+thought she could reckon: but high considerations of policy not merely
+prevented its being given but also made it seem prudent to detain her
+in England.[233] Elizabeth and her ministers brought themselves to
+prefer the interests of the crown to what was in itself right and fit.
+Mary did not however on this account vanish from the stage of the
+world: rather she obtained an exceedingly important position by her
+presence in England, where one party acknowledged her immediate claim
+to the throne, the other at least her claim to the succession; and
+hence arose not merely inconveniences but very serious dangers for the
+English government. Even in 1569, at a moment when the Catholic
+military power had the superiority in France and the Netherlands,
+Mary's uncle, the Cardinal of Lorraine, proposed to the King of Spain
+an offensive alliance against Queen Elizabeth.[234] In the civil wars
+of France they had just won the victory in two great battles. Who
+could say what the result would have been if in the still very
+unprepared condition of England an invasion had been undertaken by the
+combined Catholic powers?
+
+But the life and the destiny of Europe depend on the fact that the
+great general antagonisms are perpetually crossed by the special ones
+of the several states. Philip did not wish for an alliance with the
+French; it seemed to him untrustworthy, too extensive and, even if it
+led to victory, dangerous. He declared with the greatest distinctness,
+that he thought of nothing but of putting down his rebels (including
+at the time the Moriscoes), and the complete pacification of the
+Netherlands; he would not hear of a declaration of war against
+England. The difficulty of this sovereign's position on all sides and
+his natural temperament were the determining element in the history of
+the second half of the sixteenth century. His great object, the
+re-establishment and extension of the Catholic religion, he never
+leaves out of sight for a moment; but yet he pursues it only in
+combination with his own special interests. He is accustomed to weigh
+all the chances, to proceed slowly, to pause when the situation
+becomes critical, to avoid dangerous enterprises. Open war is not to
+his taste, he loves secret influences.
+
+In November 1569 a rebellion broke out in England, not without the
+connivance of the Spanish ambassador, but mainly under the impression
+made by the Catholic victories in France, as to which Mary Stuart also
+had let it be known that they rejoiced her inmost soul. It was mainly
+the Northern counties that rose, as had before been the case in 1536
+and 1549. Where the revolt gained the upper hand, the Common
+Prayer-book and sometimes the English translation of the Bible as well
+were burnt, and the mass re-established. Many nobles, above all in the
+North itself, still held Catholic opinions. At the head of the present
+insurrection stood the Percies of Northumberland, the Nevilles of
+Westmoreland, the Cliffords of Cumberland; Richard Norton, who rose
+for the Nevilles, venerable for his grey hair, and surrounded by a
+troop of sons in their prime, carried the Cross as a banner in front
+of his men. The nobility did not exactly want to overthrow the Queen,
+but it wished to force her to alter her government, to dismiss her
+present ministers, and above all to recognise Mary Stuart's claim to
+the succession--which would have given her an exceedingly numerous
+body of supporters in England and thus have seriously hampered the
+Queen. But now the government possessed a still more decided
+ascendancy than even in 1549. It had come upon the traces of the
+enterprise in time to quell it at its first outbreak, and had at once
+removed the Queen of Scots out of reach of the movement. The commander
+in the North, Thomas Ratcliffe, Earl of Sussex, one of the Queen's
+heroes, who bore himself bravely and blamelessly in other spheres of
+action as well as in this, and has left behind him one of the purest
+of names, encountered the rebels with a considerable force, composed
+entirely of his own men; these the rebels were the less able to
+withstand, as they knew that still more troops were on the march. As
+the ballad of a northern minstrel says, the gold-horned bull of the
+Nevilles, the silver crescent of the Percies, vanished from the field:
+the chiefs themselves fled over the Scotch border, their troops
+dispersed, their declared partisans underwent the severest
+punishments. Many who knew themselves guilty passed over to the
+Queen's party in order to escape.
+
+But at the very time of this victory the war against the Queen at home
+and abroad first received its most vivid impulse through the supreme
+head of the Catholic faith. Pope Pius V, who saw in Elizabeth the
+protectress of all the enemies of Catholicism, had issued the long
+prepared and hitherto withheld excommunication against her. In the
+name of Him who had raised him to the supreme throne of Right, he
+declared Elizabeth to have forfeited the realm of which she claimed to
+be Queen: he not merely released her subjects from the oath they had
+taken to her: 'we likewise forbid,' he added, 'her barons and peoples
+henceforth to obey this woman's commands and laws, under pain of
+excommunication.'[235] It was a proclamation of war in the style of
+Innocent III: rebellion was therein almost treated as a proof of
+faith.
+
+The way in which the Queen opened her Parliament in 1571 forms as it
+were a conscious contrast to the Papal bull, and its declaration that
+she was deposed. She appeared in the robes of state, the golden
+coronal on her head. At her right sat the dignitaries of the English
+Church, at her left the lay lords, on the woolsack in the centre the
+members of the Privy Council, by the sides stood the knights and
+burgesses of the lower house. The keeper of the great seal reminded
+the Houses of the late years of peace, in which--a thing without
+example in England--no blood had been shed; but now peace seemed
+likely to perish through the machinations of Rome. All were of one
+accord that they must confront this attempt with the full force of the
+law. It was declared high treason to designate the Queen as heretical
+or schismatic, to deny her right to the throne, or to ascribe such a
+right to any one else. To proselytise to Catholicism, or to bring into
+England sacred objects consecrated by the Pope, or absolutions from
+him, was forbidden and treated as an offence against the State. What a
+decidedly antipapal character did the Church, which retained most of
+the hierarchic usages, nevertheless assume! The oath of supremacy
+became indispensable even for places at court and in the country
+districts, in which it had not hitherto been required. Men deemed the
+Queen's ecclesiastical power the palladium of the realm.
+
+In this form the war of religion appeared in England. The Protestant
+exiles from the Netherlands and France sought and found a refuge here
+in large bodies; it has been calculated that they then composed
+one-twentieth of the inhabitants of London, and they were settled in
+many other places. But the fiery passions, which on the Continent led
+to the re-establishment of Catholicism, reacted on the old English
+families of the Catholic faith as well, and produced, under the
+influence of Spanish or Italian agitators, ever new attempts at
+overthrowing the government.
+
+It was just then, there cannot be any doubt of it, that Thomas duke of
+Norfolk, who might be regarded as almost the chief noble of the realm,
+became concerned in such an attempt. Somewhat earlier the idea had
+been entertained that his marriage with Mary Stuart might contribute
+to restore general quiet in both kingdoms: but Queen Elizabeth had
+abandoned this plan, and he had pledged himself to her under his hand
+and seal not to enter into any negociation about it without her
+previous knowledge. Nevertheless he had allowed himself to be drawn by
+an Italian money-changer, Roberto Ridolfi, who had lived long in
+England, not merely into a new agreement with this object in view but
+into treasonable designs. Norfolk possessed an immense following among
+the nobility of both religious parties: and, as he would not declare
+himself a Catholic at once, he thought to have the Protestant lords
+also on his side, if he married Mary Stuart, whom many of them
+regarded as the lawful heiress of the realm. He applied for the Pope's
+approval of his proceedings, and promised to come forward without
+reserve if a Spanish force landed in England: he affirmed that his
+views were not directed to his own advancement, but only to the
+purpose of uniting the island under one sovereign, and re-establishing
+the old laws and the Catholic religion. These thoughts hardly
+originated with the duke, they were suggested to him by Ridolfi, who
+himself drew up the instructions with which Norfolk and Mary
+despatched him to the Pope and the King of Spain.[236] Ridolfi had
+been sent to Mary with full powers from the Pope, and also well
+provided with money. When he now appeared again in Rome with his
+instructions, which really contained simply the acceptance of his
+proposals, he was, as may be imagined, received with joy: the Pope,
+who expected the salvation of the world from these enterprises,
+recommended them to King Philip. In Spain also they met with a good
+reception. We are astonished at the naivete with which the Council of
+State proceeded to deliberate on the proposal of a sudden stroke by
+which an Italian partisan undertook to seize the Queen and her
+councillors at one of her country-houses. The King at last left the
+decision to the Duke of Alva. Alva would have been in favour of the
+plan itself, but he took into consideration that an unsuccessful
+attempt would provoke a general attack from all sides on the
+Netherlands, which were only just subdued and still full of ferment.
+He thought the King should not declare himself until the conspirators
+had succeeded in getting the Queen into their hands, alive or dead. If
+Norfolk made his rising contingent on the landing of a Spanish force
+in England, Alva on the other hand required that he should already
+have got the Queen into his power before his own master made his
+participation in the scheme known.[237]
+
+But while letters and messages were being exchanged in this way (for
+Ridolfi held it necessary to be in communication with his friends in
+England and Scotland), Elizabeth's watchful ministers had already
+discovered all. Even before Ridolfi reached Spain, Elizabeth gave the
+French ambassador an intimation of the commission with which the Queen
+of Scots had entrusted him.[238] The latter had not yet received any
+kind of answer from Spain when the Earl of Shrewsbury, in whose
+custody she then was at Sheffield, reproached her with the schemes in
+which she was implicated, and announced to her a closer restriction of
+her liberty as a punishment for them: further Elizabeth would not at
+that time as yet proceed against her. In Spain and Italy they were
+still expecting the Duke of Norfolk to take up arms, when he was
+already a prisoner. Elizabeth struggled long against giving him over
+to the arm of the law, but her friends held an execution absolutely
+necessary for her personal security. On the scaffold in the Tower
+Norfolk said he was the first to die on that spot under Queen
+Elizabeth and trusted he would be the last. All people said Amen.
+
+The scheme of this revolt proceeded more from Italy and Rome than from
+Spain: King Philip had taken no active part in it, the Duke of Alva
+had rather set himself against it: but we need only glance at their
+correspondence to perceive how completely nevertheless they were
+implicated in the matter. To carry on the war against Elizabeth not in
+his own name but in the name, and for the restoration of the rights,
+of the Queen of Scotland, would have exactly suited the policy of
+Philip II: he thought such an opportunity would never present itself
+again; they must avail themselves of it and finish the affair as
+quickly as possible, that France might not take part in it. If Alva
+counts up the difficulties which manifestly stood in the way of the
+scheme, yet he promises to execute the King's wishes with all the
+means in his power, with person and property: 'God will still send the
+King other favourable opportunities as a reward for his religious
+zeal.'[239]
+
+Queen Elizabeth expelled the Spanish ambassador, Gueran de Espes, who
+had undeniably taken part in Ridolfi's schemes as well as in the last
+rising, from England; as soon as he reached Brussels, the English and
+Scotch fugitives gathered round him, and communicated to him many new
+schemes of invasion, to which his ear was more open than that of the
+Duke of Alva. An attack was to be tried, now on Scotland, now on
+Ireland, now on England itself.
+
+We cannot suppose that in England they knew every word that was
+uttered about these plans, or that everything they did believe there
+was well grounded. But from year to year men's minds were more and
+more filled with the idea that Philip II was the great enemy of their
+religion and of their country. In the sphere of classical literature
+the translation of Demosthenes in 1570 is noteworthy in this respect.
+What Demosthenes says against Philip of Macedon, in regard to the
+Athenians, the translator finds applicable to Philip II; he calls the
+English to open war in the words of the ancient orator, 'for as it was
+then, so is it now, and ever will be.'
+
+But for this Elizabeth on her side did not feel inclined or prepared.
+Many acts of hostility took place at sea in a piratical war, in
+politics they stood sharply opposed to each other: but they were not
+inclined on either side for an open contest, front to front.
+
+Above all the English held it necessary now to come to a good
+understanding with the other of the two great neighbouring powers. It
+stood them in good stead that a tendency to moderate measures gained
+sway in France; the English ambassadors took a very vivid interest in
+the project of a marriage between Henry of Navarre and Margaret of
+Valois. While the victory of Lepanto filled the hearts of the
+partisans of Spain with fresh hopes, the jealousy it awakened in the
+French contributed largely to their withdrawal from Spain and the
+Pope, and their readiness for an alliance with England. The two powers
+promised each other mutual support against any attack, on whatever
+ground it might at any time be undertaken. A later explanation of the
+treaty expressly confirmed its including the case of religion.[240]
+
+Thus secured on this side the Queen proceeded to carry out an idea
+which had immense consequences. It is not a mere suspicion, partially
+derived from the result, to suppose that she thought King Philip's
+combining with her rebels gave her a right to combine with the King's
+revolted subjects: she herself said so once to the French ambassador:
+while talking with him, she one day dropped her voice, and said that
+as Philip kept her state disturbed, she did not hold herself any
+longer bound to treat him with the regard she had hitherto shewn him
+in the quarrels of the Netherlands.
+
+It is not quite true that she supported with her own power the Gueux
+('Beggars'), who had fled to the sea from Alva's persecutions, in the
+decisive attacks they now made on Brielle and Vliessingen (Brill and
+Flushing): but this was hardly needed, it was quite enough that her
+feeling was known, she merely let things take their way, she did not
+prevent the attack of the rebels against Philip II (powerful at sea as
+they were) being supported by the fugitive Walloons residing in
+England, and by Englishmen also. It was estimated that there were then
+in Vliessingen 400 Walloons and 400 English: 1500 English lay before
+the town, to keep off the attacks of the Spaniards. French troops gave
+aid in corresponding numbers. They were all recalled at a later time;
+but meanwhile the insurrection had gained a consistency which made it
+impossible for the Spaniards to subdue the Netherlands.
+
+As formerly Elizabeth had joined the Scotch lords against the Regent
+and the Queen of Scotland, so now she helped the insurgents of the
+Netherlands against the King of Spain. In the first case she had
+Philip II himself on her side, in the second case France.
+
+By this policy she found the means of securing herself at home, from
+the Spanish attacks. It was more than ever necessary for Philip to
+concentrate on the war in the Netherlands all the forces of which he
+could dispose. The Queen did not yet take direct part in it, and
+Philip had to avoid everything that could induce her to do so. It was
+not her object to bring about the independence of the Provinces: but
+she insisted on the departure of the Spanish troops, the observance of
+the provincial constitutions, and above all assured liberty for the
+Protestant faith. In 1575 she offered the King her mediation, not
+however without including one special English matter, namely the
+mitigation of the severe religious laws in reference to English
+merchants in the Spanish countries: the King took the opinion of the
+Grand Inquisitor on it. As if he could ever have been in its favour
+himself! The Pacification of Ghent in 1576 was quite in accordance
+with the Queen's views, since it established the supremacy of the
+Estates, and freedom of religion for the chief Northern provinces. To
+maintain this, she had no hesitation in concluding an alliance with
+the States, and in consequence despatching a body of English troops to
+the Netherlands. She informed the King himself of this, and requested
+him to recall the Stadtholder Don John, his half-brother (who was
+trying to break the peace), and to receive the Estates into his
+favour: she did not by this think to come to a breach with him.
+
+The idea of entrusting Don John of Austria, the victor of Lepanto,
+with the restoration of Catholicism in West Europe had been at that
+time adopted in Rome. His was a fiery nature pervaded by Catholic
+principles, and seized with the most vivid ambition to be something in
+the world and to effect something. The Irish wished him to be their
+king; he was to free Mary Stuart from prison, vindicate her rights
+alike in Scotland and in England, and at her side ascend the throne of
+the British kingdoms now united in Catholicism. Mary gladly acceded to
+this, as she had already long wished for a marriage with the Spanish
+house. It was probably to give this combination a firmer basis that
+she proposed, in case her son did not prove to be a Catholic, to
+transfer her claims on the throne of England to the King of Spain, or
+to any of his relatives whom he should name in conjunction with the
+Pope.[241] But whom could she mean by these last words but Don John
+himself, who then stood in close connexion with the Guises, whom she
+also recommended most pressingly to the King. But she had at the same
+time directed her aim towards Scotland. There her enemies Murray and
+Lennox had perished by assassination; under the following regents, Mar
+and Morton, Mary had still nevertheless so many partisans, that they
+never could have ventured, as they were requested to do from England,
+to allow Mary to come to Scotland and be put on her trial: their own
+power would have been endangered by it. Mary too believed herself to
+have prepared everything there so well for an enterprise by Don John
+that, as she says, an overthrow of the Scotch government would
+infallibly have ensued if Philip II had only put his hand to the work.
+And how closely were his interests bound up with it! Without a
+conquest of the island-kingdom, as his brother represented to him, the
+Netherlands could never be subdued. But even now he shunned an open
+rupture. Besides this his brother's restlessness and thirst for
+action, and his political intrigues which were already reacting on
+Spain, were disagreeable to him; he could not make up his mind to take
+a decisive step.
+
+He had again and again been vainly entreated to interest himself in
+the population of Ireland, in which national and religious antagonism
+contended against the supremacy of England. One of the confidential
+agents secretly sent thither assured him that he was implored by
+nine-tenths of the inhabitants to take them under his protection and
+save their souls, that is restore them the mass, which they could no
+longer celebrate publicly: they appealed to their primeval
+relationship with the Iberian people, to ancient prophecies which
+looked forward to this, and to the great political interests at stake.
+Philip was not disinclined to attempt the enterprise; but he required
+the co-operation of France, without doubt to break the opposition of
+this power in the affairs of the Netherlands; a condition which could
+not be made acceptable to the French by any interposition of Rome.
+
+And so, if Pope Gregory XIII wished to undertake anything against
+Ireland, he had to do it himself. Men witnessed the singular spectacle
+of an expedition against Ireland being fitted out on the coasts of the
+States of the Church. A papal general from Bologna came to the
+assistance of the powerful Irish chief, Fitzmaurice. They commanded
+the Irish districts far and wide, and made inroads into the English:
+for a long time they were very troublesome, although not really
+dangerous.
+
+King Philip was then busied in an undertaking which interested him
+still more closely than even that of the Netherlands: he made good his
+hereditary claim to Portugal, without being obstructed in it either by
+the opposition of a native claimant or by the counter-working of the
+European powers.
+
+In the face of this success, by which the Spanish monarchy became
+master of the whole Pyrenean peninsula and its many colonies in East
+and West, it was all the more necessary for the other two powers to
+hold together. Many causes of quarrel indeed arose between them. How
+could the shocking event of the night of St. Bartholomew fail to
+awaken all the antipathies of the English, and indeed of Protestantism
+in general! Elizabeth did not let herself be prevented by her treaty
+from supporting the French Protestants in the manner she liked, that
+is without its being possible to prove it against her. Under Charles
+IX she contributed to prevent them from succumbing, under Henry III
+she helped them in recovering a certain political position: for this
+very object the Palsgrave Casimir led into France German troops paid
+with English money. Catharine Medici often reproached her with
+observing a policy like that of Louis XI. But the common interest of
+the two kingdoms was always more powerful than these differences;
+frequent and long negociations were carried on for even a closer
+union. The marriage of Queen Elizabeth with Catharine's youngest son
+was once held to be as good as certain: he actually appeared
+personally in England. We refrain from following the course of these
+negociations. The interest they awaken constantly ends in
+disappointment, for they are always moving towards their object
+without attaining it. But perhaps it will repay our trouble to
+consider the reasons which came into consideration for and against the
+proposed connexion.
+
+The main reason for it was that England must hinder an alliance
+between Spain and France, especially one in favour of the Queen of
+Scots. And certainly nothing had stood the English policy in Scotland
+in such stead as the good understanding with France. But much more
+seemed attainable if France and England were united for ever. They
+would then be able to compel the King of Spain to conclude a peace
+with the Netherlands which would secure them their liberties; and, if
+he did not observe it, they would have grounds for a common occupation
+of a part of the Provinces. If there should be any issue of the
+marriage, this would put an end to all attacks on Elizabeth's life,
+and greatly strengthen the attachment of her subjects.
+
+But against it was the fact that this marriage would bring the Queen
+into disagreeable personal relations; and the country would be as
+unwilling to see a French king as it had once a Spanish one. And how
+would it be, if a son sprung from the marriage, to inherit both the
+French and the English throne? was England to be ruled by a viceroy?
+What an opposition the world would raise to the union of these mighty
+kingdoms, into what complications might it not lead! Scotland would
+again attach itself to the French: the Netherlands and the German
+princes would be alienated.
+
+The members of the Privy Council, after they had weighed all these
+considerations, at last pronounced themselves on the whole against it.
+They recommended the continuance of the present system,--the support
+of the Protestants, especially in France, a good understanding with
+the King of Scotland, and the maintenance of religion and justice in
+England: thus they would be a match for every threat of the King of
+Spain.[242]
+
+But that sovereign had one ally against whom these precautions could
+not suffice, the Order of Jesuits and the seminaries of English
+priests under its guidance.
+
+Young exiles from England, who were studying in the Universities of
+the Netherlands, to prevent the Catholic priesthood from perishing
+among the English at home, had been already in Alva's time brought
+together in a college at Douay, which was then removed to Rheims as
+the revolt spread in the Netherlands. Pope Gregory XIII was not
+content with supporting this institution by a monthly subsidy; he was
+ambitious of imitating Gregory the Great and exercising a direct
+influence on England: he founded in Rome itself a seminary for the
+reconversion of that country. He made over for this purpose the old
+English hospital which was also connected with the memory of Thomas
+Becket. The first students however fell out with each other, and there
+was seen in Rome the old antagonism of the 'Welsh' and the 'Saxons';
+in the end the latter gained the upper hand, it was mainly their doing
+that the institution was given over to the Jesuits. Not long after its
+activity began. Each student on his reception was bound to devote his
+powers to spreading the Catholic doctrines in England; by April 1580 a
+company of thirteen priests was ready, after receiving the Pope's
+blessing, to set out with this object. The chief among them were
+Robert Parsons, who passed into England disguised as a soldier, and
+Edmund Campion as a merchant. The first went to Gloucester and
+Hereford, the other to Oxford and Northampton: they and the friends
+who followed them found everywhere a rich harvest.[243] It was
+arranged so that they arrived in the evening at the appointed houses
+of their friends: there they heard confessions and gave advice to the
+faithful. Early in the morning they preached, and then broke up again;
+it was customary to provide them an armed escort to guard them from
+any mischance.
+
+Withal the forms of the church-service in England had been so arranged
+that it might remain practicable for the Catholics also to take part
+in it. How many had done so hitherto, perhaps with a rosary or a
+Catholic book of prayers in their hands! The chief effort of the
+seminarist priests, on their return to the country, was to put an end
+to this: they dissuaded intercourse with the Protestants even on
+indifferent matters. The Queen's statesmen were astonished to find how
+much the number of recusants increased all at once; from secret
+presses proceeded writings of an aggressive, and exceedingly
+malignant, character; in many places Elizabeth was again designated as
+illegitimate, a usurper, no longer as Queen. On this the repressive
+system, which had been already set in motion in consequence of Pope
+Pius V's bull, was made more stringent; this is what has brought on
+the Queen's government the charge of cruelty. The Catholics too began
+to compose their martyrologies. One of the first priests whose
+execution they describe, Cuthbert Mayne, was condemned by the jury for
+bringing the Bull with him into other people's houses together with
+some _Agnus Dei_.[244] Young people were condemned for trying to make
+their way to the foreign seminaries. On the wish of the missionaries
+Pope Gregory XIII explained the bull so far, that the excommunication
+pronounced in it against all who should obey the Queen's commands was
+meant to be in suspense till it was possible to execute it against the
+Queen herself on whom it continued to weigh.[245] This limitation
+however rather increased the danger. The Catholics could remain quiet
+till rebellion was possible, then it became a duty. The law-courts now
+sought above all to make the accused priests declare themselves as to
+the validity of the bull and its obligation. Men held themselves
+justified in extreme severity against those who 'slip into the country
+at the instigation of the great enemy, the Pope, and poison the hearts
+of the subjects with pernicious doctrines.'[246] On this ground
+Campion met his death; Parsons escaped. Assuredly there were not so
+many executed as the Catholic world wished to reckon, but yet probably
+more than the statesmen of England admitted. They persisted that it
+was not a persecution for religion: and in fact the controverted
+questions lay mainly in the region of the conflict between Papacy and
+Monarchy: those executed were not so much martyrs of Catholicism as of
+the idea of the Papal supremacy over monarchs. But how closely
+connected are these ideas with each other! The priests for their part
+believed that they were dying for God and the Church. But the effect
+which the English government had in view was, with all its severity,
+not produced. We are assured on Catholic authority that in 1585 there
+were yet several hundred priests actively engaged. From their reports
+it is clear that they were still always counting on a complete
+victory. They vigorously pressed for the attempt at an invasion, which
+they represented as almost sure of success; 'for two-thirds of the
+English are still Catholic; the Queen has neither strong places nor
+disciplined troops: with 16,000 men she might be overthrown.' This
+time also the house of the Spanish ambassador, Bernardino Mendoza,
+formed the meeting-point for these tendencies; he kept up a constant
+communication with the emigrants who had been declared rebels, and
+with the discontented at home, with Mary Stuart and her friends in
+Scotland, with the zealous Catholics throughout the world, especially
+with the Guises, with whom Philip II himself now had an understanding.
+The increasing power of his sovereign gained him also an
+ever-increasing consideration.
+
+It was in these days that the Western and Southern Netherlands were
+again subdued by King Philip. After the death of his brother, his
+nephew Alexander Farnese of Parma had formed an army of unmixed
+Catholic composition, which had naturally from its inner unity gained
+the upper hand over the government of the States, which had called now
+a German and now a French prince to its head, and was composed of
+different religions and nationalities. First the seaports, then the
+towns of Flanders, and at last the wealthy Antwerp also, which by its
+mental activity and commercial resources had materially nourished the
+revolt, fell into the hands of the Spaniards. The Prince of Orange was
+assassinated by a fanatic. Alexander of Parma, who ascribed his
+victories to the Virgin Mary, pushed on his conquests gradually till
+they reached the Northern and Eastern Provinces.
+
+The reaction of these events, even while they were still in progress,
+was first felt in Scotland. There the young King James VI after many
+vicissitudes had, while still under age, taken the reins of government
+into his own hands: and a son of his great uncle, Esme Stuart (who
+exchanged the title Aubigny which he brought from France for the more
+famous name of Lennox, and was a great friend of the Guises and the
+Jesuits) obtained the chief credit with him. Lennox promoted
+Catholicism, which was not so difficult, as part of the nobility still
+adhered to it, at least in secret; he too lived and moved in
+comprehensive plans for the re-establishment of the Church. Through
+the Guises he hoped to be placed in a position to invade England with
+a Catholic army of 15,000 men; if the English Catholics then did their
+duty, everything they wanted could be attained: for himself he was
+resolved to liberate Mary or die in the attempt. Mary was also to
+reascend the Scotch throne: her son was to be co-regent with her,
+provided that he himself returned to the bosom of the Catholic Church.
+Mary Stuart with her indestructible energy was involved in these
+designs also. She commended them warmly to the Pope and the King of
+Spain: for it was precisely in Scotland that the universal
+re-establishment could best be begun.[247] She wished only to know on
+what resources in men and money her friends there might reckon. We
+must remember the situation and the peril of these schemes and
+preparations, if we would understand to some degree the violent
+measures on which the Protestant lords in Scotland resolved. As in a
+similar case of an earlier time in Germany, they closed the castle, in
+which King James was received, against his attendants: Lennox had to
+leave Scotland. But the young King was shrewd enough, and sufficiently
+well advised, to rid himself of the lords almost in the same way that
+they had taken him. He succeeded, chiefly through the help of the
+French ambassador, a friend of the Guises. Hereupon too he seemed much
+inclined to favour the undertaking with which Henry Guise occupied
+himself in 1583, a scheme for a revolution in the affairs of both
+countries. Guise hoped, with the support of the King of Spain, the
+Pope, and the Duke of Bavaria, to be able to effect something
+decisive. James VI let his uncle know his full agreement with the
+proposed schemes. But, in fact, it did not seem to matter much
+whether he agreed or not. It was reported to Queen Mary, that the
+Catholic party in Scotland reckoned on having the most powerful king
+of Christendom on their side, with or against James' will; that Philip
+II was building so many vessels that in a short time he would become
+completely master of the Western ocean, and be able to invade whatever
+countries he pleased.
+
+It is evident how dangerous for England these Scotch movements were in
+themselves: Queen Elizabeth thought herself most vulnerable on the
+side of Scotland: moreover she already saw herself directly
+threatened. A plan fell into her hands, in which the number of ships
+and men necessary for an invasion of England, the harbours where they
+were to land, the places they were to seize, even the men on whose
+help they could reckon, were enumerated.[248] She convinced herself
+that the plan came from Mendoza, who held out the prospect of his
+King's assistance for the purpose, as the attack was to be made
+simultaneously from the Netherlands and from Spain. This time too
+Elizabeth dismissed the hostile ambassador; but how could she flatter
+herself with having thus exorcised the threatening elements? Now that
+the foe, with whom she had been for fifteen years at war--though not
+an open war yet one of which both sides were conscious--had become
+very much stronger, she was forced to take up a decisive position
+against him, to save herself from being overpowered.
+
+In 1584 her chief minister, William Cecil, now Lord Burleigh, High
+Treasurer of the kingdom, drew her attention to this necessity. He
+represented to her that she had nothing to fear from any one in the
+world except from Spain--but from Spain everything. King Philip had
+gained more victories from his cabinet, than his father in all his
+campaigns: he ruled a nation which was thoroughly of one mind in
+religion, ambitious, brave, and resolute; he had a most devoted party
+among the discontented in England. The question for the Queen was,
+whether she hoped to tame the lion or whether she wished to bind him.
+She could not build on treaties, for the enemy would not keep them.
+And, if he was allowed to subdue the Netherlands completely, no one in
+the world could avoid seeing to what object his power would be
+directed. He advises the Queen not to let things go so far--for those
+countries were the counterscarp of England's fortress--but to proceed
+to open war, to withstand the Spaniards in the Netherlands and attack
+them in the Indies. 'Better now,' he exclaims, 'while the enemy has
+only one hand free, than later when he can strike with both.'[249]
+
+In August 1585 Antwerp fell into the hands of the Spaniards; in the
+capitulation the case is already taken into consideration, that
+Holland and Zealand also might submit. The Northern Netherlands were
+threatened from yet another side, as Zutphen and Nimuegen had just
+been taken by the Spaniards. In this extreme distress of her natural
+ally she delayed no longer. The sovereignty they offered her she
+refused anew, but she engaged to give considerable assistance, in
+return for which, as a security for her advances, the fortresses
+Vliessingen and Briel were given up into her possession. To prove how
+much she was in earnest in this, she entrusted the conduct of the war
+in the Netherlands to Dudley, Earl of Leicester, who was still
+accounted her favourite and was one of the chief confidants of her
+policy. In December 1585 Leicester reached Vliessingen; on the 1st of
+January 1586, Francis Drake appeared before St. Domingo and occupied
+it. The war had broken out by land and by sea.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[232] Randolph states that the promise was given before Darnley's
+death. Strype, Annals iii. i. 234.
+
+[233] That this was thought of from the first is not to be supposed;
+the Queen had once previously declared herself against it. 'We fynde
+her removing either into this our realm or into France not without
+great discommodities to us.' Letter to Throckmorton, in Wright i. 253.
+
+[234] Gonzalez, Apuntamientos 338. From the 'short memoryall' of 1569
+in Hayne's State Papers 585 (though much in it is incorrect), we see
+that men believed in the union of both crowns against England, with
+'the ernest desyre to have the Quene of Scotts possess this crown of
+England.'
+
+[235] 'Sentenza declaratoria contra Elizabetta, che si pretende reina
+d'Inghilterra.' In Catena, Vita di Pio V, 309. The agreement of the
+bull (e.g. as to the 'huomini heretici et ignobili,' who had
+penetrated into the royal privy council) with the manifesto of the
+last rebellion, is worth observing.
+
+[236] The instructions which Mary and Norfolk gave their Italian agent
+for the Roman See are preserved in the Vatican archives and printed in
+Labanoff iii. 221. From Leslie's expression (Negociations, in Anderson
+iii. 152) that the duke negociated with Ridolfi through a Mr. Backer,
+'because he had the Italian tongue,' and that then all the plans were
+communicated to _him_ ('the whole devises'), we might conclude that
+Norfolk was in general very much in foreign hands.
+
+[237] Lo que se platico en consejo 7 Julio 1571. Some other weighty
+documents are in Appendix V to Mignet's Histoire de Marie Stuart, vol.
+ii.
+
+[238] Already on the 16th April the French ambassador, while speaking
+with Elizabeth on the conclusion of the treaty agreed on, remarks,
+'qu'elle a quelque nouvelle offence contre la dite reyne d'Ecosse,'
+which could have been nothing else but the first news of the seizure
+of one of Ridolfi's servants at Dover on the 10th April, who then
+under torture had confessed all.
+
+[239] 'Vendran otras ocasiones en tiempo di V. M. per pagarle dios el
+celo, con que tam caldamente abraza este su negocio.' Contestation del
+duque di Alba, in Gonzalez 450.
+
+[240] De la Mothe Fenelon au roi de France 22 Dec. 1571.
+Correspondence diplomatique de Bertrand de Salignac de la Mothe
+Fenelon iv. 317.
+
+[241] Sketch of a will, in Labanoff iv. 354. 'Je cedde mes droits, que
+je pretends et puis pretendre a la couronne d'Angleterre et autres
+seignuries et royaulmes en dependant au roy catholique ou autres des
+siens qu'il lui plaira, avesque l'advis et consentement de S. S.'
+
+[242] Conference at Westminster touching the Queen's marriage with the
+Duke of Anjou 1579. Egerton Papers 78. Sussex, who had previously
+given a somewhat different opinion, was one of those who signed.
+
+[243] Sacchinus, Historia societatis Jesu iii. 1; vii. 1; viii. 96.
+
+[244] 'Perche contro alle leggi d'Inghilterra egli havesse portato
+seco una bollo papale, alcuni grani benedetti et agnus dei.' Martyrio
+di Cutberto Maino, in Pollini, Istoria eccl. delle rivolutioni
+d'Inghilterra p. 499. It is a pity that the eminent Hallam had not the
+first reports at hand.
+
+[245] Facultates concessae Rob. Personio et Edm. Campiano 14 April
+1580. 'Catholicos tum demum obliget, quando publica ejusdem bullae
+executio fieri poterit.'
+
+[246] Execution of Justice in England. Somers Tracts i.
+
+[247] Lettre a Don Bernardino de Mendoza 6-8 April 1582. 'La grande
+aparence, qu'il ha de pourvenir (parvenir) maintenant au dict
+restablissement de la religion en ceste isle, comencant pour la Scotia
+(par l'Ecosse).' In Mignet App. 522.
+
+[248] According to the Venetian accounts (Dispaccio di Spagna, Marzo
+1584) the King had sent an experienced soldier as a spy to England to
+investigate the possibility of a landing, 'havendo pensato di
+concertarsi bene con il re di Scotia, perche ancora egli a un tempo
+medesimo si movesse da quella parte.'
+
+[249] The Lord Treasurers advise in matters of Religion and State.
+Somers Tracts i. 164.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE FATE OF MARY STUART.
+
+
+How completely the circumstances of these times are misunderstood,
+when they are measured by the rules of an age of peace! Rather they
+were filled with hostilities in which politics and religion were
+mingled; foreign war was at the same time a domestic one. The
+religious confessions were at the same time political programmes.
+
+The Queen took up arms not to make conquests, but to secure her very
+existence against a daily growing power that openly threatened her,
+before it had become completely an overmatch for her: she provoked an
+open war: but she had not done enough when she now, as is necessary in
+such cases, took into consideration the training of soldiers, securing
+the harbours, fortifying strong places, improving the navy: the most
+pressing anxiety arose from the general Catholic agitation in the
+country.
+
+Elizabeth's statesmen were well aware that the sharp prosecution of
+the seminarist priests was not enough to put an end to it. With
+reference to the laity, the Lord Treasurer, however strict in other
+respects, recommends to his sovereign quite a different mode of
+proceeding. We should never proceed to capital punishment of such men:
+we should rather mitigate the oath imposed on them: in particular we
+should never force the nobles to a final decision between their
+religious inclinations and their political duties, never drive them to
+despair. But at the same time he gives a warning against awakening any
+hope in them that their demands could ever be satisfied, for this
+would only make them more obstinate. And on no consideration should
+arms be put into their hands. 'We do not wish to kill them, we cannot
+coerce them, but we dare not trust them.' Nothing would be more
+dangerous than to assume a confidence which was not really felt.
+
+Even before this the Privy Council had recommended the Queen to employ
+Protestants only in the government of her State, and to exclude all
+Catholics from a share in it.[250] The before-mentioned 'Advice' of
+Lord Burleigh is remarkable for extending the Protestant interest and
+adding a popular one to it. He thinks it intolerable that the
+copyholders and tenants of the Catholic lords, even when they fulfil
+their obligations in all other respects, experience bad treatment from
+them on account of religion: it is impossible to let many thousand
+true subjects be dependent on such as have hostile intentions. The
+plan Henry VIII had once entertained, of diminishing the authority of
+the Lords, is now brought by the High Treasurer at this crisis once
+more into vivid recollection. The Queen is to bind the Commons to
+herself, to win over their hearts. And Burleigh advises allowing the
+followers of dissenting Protestant Churches, especially the Puritans,
+to worship as they please: in preaching and catechising they are more
+zealous than the Episcopalians, very far more successful in converting
+the people, and indispensable for weakening the popish party. We see
+how the necessity of the war acts on home affairs. The chief minister
+favoured the elements which were forcing their way out through the
+existing forms of the state.
+
+In this general strain on men's minds their eyes once more turned to
+the Queen of Scots in her captivity. What would there have been at all
+to fear at other times from a princess under strong custody and cut
+off from all the world? But in the excitement of that age she could
+even so be still an object of apprehension. Her personal friends had
+from the first not seen a great mischance in her enforced residence in
+England. For by blameless conduct she refuted the evil report which
+had followed her thither from Scotland; and her right as heiress of
+the crown came to the knowledge of the whole nation.[251] In the days
+at which we have arrived we know with certainty that her presence in
+the country formed a great lever for Catholic agitation. A report
+found in the papal archives has been published, by which it is clear
+how much support men promised themselves from her for every resolute
+undertaking.[252] This document says that since she has numberless
+partisans, and although in prison has uninterrupted communication with
+them, she will always find means, when the time comes, of giving them
+notice of the approaching opportunity: she is resolved to encounter
+every hardship, nay even death itself, for the great cause.[253]
+
+Occupied with measures of defence on all sides, the English government
+had already long been considering how to meet this danger. This was
+the very reason why Elizabeth's marriage was so often spoken of with
+popular approbation: if she had children, Mary's claims would lose
+their importance. Gradually however every man had to confess to
+himself that this was not to be expected, and on other grounds hardly
+to be wished. Then men thought how to solve the difficulty in another
+way.
+
+The chief danger was this: if an attempt on Elizabeth's life
+succeeded, the supreme authority would devolve on Mary, who was on the
+spot, who cherished entirely opposite views, and would have at once
+realised them:--the thought occurred as early as 1579 of declaring by
+formal act of parliament that all persons by whom the reigning Queen
+should be in any way endangered or injured should forfeit any claim
+they might have to the crown;[254] terms which though general were in
+reality directed only against the Queen of Scots; at that time the
+proposal was not carried into effect.
+
+The negociations are not yet completely cleared up which were carried
+on with Mary in 1582-3 for her restoration in Scotland. The English
+once more repeated their old demand, that Mary should even now ratify
+the treaty of Edinburgh, and annul all that had been done in violation
+of it by her first husband or by herself. She was further not merely
+to renounce every design against the security and peace of England,
+but to pledge herself to oppose it: and in general, as long as
+Elizabeth was alive, to put forward no claim to the English throne:
+whether she had such a right after Elizabeth's death the parliament of
+England was to decide.[255] Here too the old view came into the
+foreground: Parliament was to be made the judge of hereditary right.
+The negociation failed owing to the Scotch intrigues of these years,
+in which the intention rather was to assert the claim of inheritance
+with the strong hand.
+
+And from day to day new attempts on Elizabeth's life came to light. In
+1584 Francis Throckmorton, who took part in these very schemes, was
+executed: in 1585 Parry also, who confessed having been in connexion
+with Mary's plenipotentiary in France, and who had come over to
+assassinate Queen Elizabeth. Writings were spread abroad in which
+those about her were called on to imitate, against this female
+Holofernes, the example set in the book of Judith.
+
+Protestant England in the danger of its sovereign saw its own. In all
+churches prayers were offered for her safety. The most remarkable
+proof of this temper is contained in an association of individuals for
+defending the Queen, which was at that time subscribed to far and wide
+through the country. It begins with a statement that, to promote
+certain claims on the crown, the Queen's life was threatened in a
+highly treasonable manner, and enters into a union in God's name, in
+which each man pledges himself to the others, to combat with word and
+deed, and even to pursue with arms, all who should make any attempt on
+the Queen's person; and not to rest till these wretches were
+completely destroyed. If the attempt was so far successful as to raise
+a claim to the crown, they pledged themselves never to recognise such
+a claim: whoever broke this oath and separated himself from the
+association should be treated by the other members as a perjurer.[256]
+
+The main object of this association was to cut off all prospect of the
+succession from any attempt in favour of the Queen of Scots: a great
+part of the nation pledged itself to reject a claim made good in this
+manner as exceptionable in every respect. The Parliament of 1585, many
+of whose members belonged to the association, not merely confirmed it
+formally: it now also expressly enacted, that persons in whose favour
+a rebellion should be attempted, and an attack on the Queen
+undertaken, should lose their right to the crown: if they themselves
+took part in any such plots, they were to forfeit their life. The
+Queen was empowered to appoint a commission of at least twenty-four
+members to judge of this offence.
+
+These resolutions and unions were of a compass extending far beyond
+the present occasion, however weighty. How important the
+ecclesiastical contest had become in all questions concerning the
+supreme temporal power! That the deposition of Queen Elizabeth,
+pronounced by the Pope, had no effect was due to the Protestant
+tendencies of the country, and to the fact that her hereditary claim
+had been hitherto unassailed. But now it was a similar hereditary
+claim, made by Queen Mary, not, it is true, formally recognised, but
+also not rejected, on which the partisans of this princess based their
+chief hope. Mary herself, who always combined the most vivid dynastic
+feelings with her religious inclinations, in her letters and
+statements does not lay such stress on anything as on the
+unconditional validity of her claim to inherit the throne. When for
+instance her son rejected the joint government which she proposed to
+him, she remarked with striking acuteness that this involved an
+infringement of the maxims of hereditary right; since he rejected her
+authorisation to share in the government, and recognised as legitimate
+the refusal of obedience she had experienced from her rebellious
+subjects. Once she read in a pamphlet that people denied Queen
+Elizabeth the power to name a successor who was not of the Protestant
+faith: she wrote to her that the supreme power was of divine right,
+and raised high above all these considerations, and warned her against
+opinions of that kind which were avowed by some near her, and which
+might lead to the elective principle and become dangerous to herself.
+This could not fail to have an exactly opposite effect on Elizabeth.
+She was again threatened through the strict dynastic right that she
+also enjoyed: she needed some other additional support. Despite all
+inclination to the contrary, she decided to look for it in the
+Parliament. She likewise aimed at making Mary submit the validity of
+her claim to its previous decision. She could not but be thankful that
+her subjects pledged themselves not to recognise any right to the
+succession which was to be asserted by an attack on her life; she
+ratified the act by which Parliament gave these feelings a legal form.
+It is obvious how powerfully the rights of Parliament were thus
+advanced as against the absolute claim of the hereditary monarchy. In
+the course of the development of events this was to be the case in a
+still higher degree.
+
+Mary rejected with horror the suspicion that she could take part in an
+attempt on Elizabeth's life: she wished to enrol herself in the
+Association for her security.[257] And who could have failed to
+believe at least that the threats against her own right and life, in
+case of a second attempt at assassination, would deter her partisans
+as well as herself from any thought of it! For they well understood
+the energy with which the Parliament knew how to vindicate its laws.
+
+But it is vain to try to bridle men's passions by showing them their
+results. If the attempt on the Queen's life succeeded, this
+Parliament of course would be annihilated as well as the Queen
+herself, and another order of things begin.
+
+In the seminary at Rheims the priests persuaded an English emigrant,
+called Savage, who had served in the army of the Prince of Parma, that
+he could not better secure himself eternal happiness than by ridding
+the world of the enemy of religion who was excommunicated by the holy
+father. Another English emigrant, Thomas Babington, a young man of
+education and ambition, in whom throbbed the pulse of chivalrous
+devotion to Mary, was informed of this design by a priest of the
+seminary, and was fired with a kind of emulation which has something
+highly fantastic about it. Thinking that so great an enterprise ought
+not to be confided to one man, he sought and found new confederates
+for it; when the murder was effected, and the Spanish troops landed,
+he was to be the man who with a hundred sturdy comrades would free his
+Catholic Queen from prison and lead her to her throne. Mendoza at that
+time (and indeed by Mary's recommendation, as she tells us) was
+Spanish ambassador in France: he was in communication with Babington
+and strengthened him in his purpose. Of all the distinguished men of
+the age Mendoza is perhaps the one who took up most heartily the idea
+of uniting the French and Spanish interests, and advocated it most
+fervently. King Philip II was also informed of the design. He now, as
+he had done fifteen years before, declared his intention, if it
+succeeded, of making the invasion simultaneously from Spain and
+Flanders. The Queen's murder, the rising of the Catholics, and at the
+same moment a twofold invasion with trained troops would have
+certainly been enough to produce a complete revolution. The League was
+still victorious in France: Henry III would have been forced to join
+it: the tendencies of the strictest Catholicism would have gained a
+complete triumph.
+
+If we enquire whether Mary Stuart knew of these schemes, and had a
+full understanding with the conspirators, there can be no doubt at all
+of it. She was in correspondence with Babington, whom she designates
+as her greatest friend. The letter is still extant in which she
+strengthens him in his purpose of calling forth a rising of the
+Catholics in the different counties, and that an armed one, with
+reasons for it true and false, and tells him how he may liberate
+herself. She reckons on a fine army of horse and foot being able to
+assemble, and making itself master of some harbours in which to
+receive the help expected not merely from Flanders and Spain, but also
+from France. In the letter we even come upon one passage which betrays
+a knowledge of the plot against Elizabeth's life; there is not a word
+against it, rather an approbation of it, though an indirect one.[258]
+
+And we have yet another proof of her temper and views at this time
+lying before us. As the zeal of the Catholics for her claim to the
+succession might be weakened by the fact that her son in Scotland, on
+whom it naturally devolved, after all the hopes cherished on his
+behalf, still remained Protestant, she reverted to an idea that had
+once before passed through her mind: she pledged herself to bring
+matters in Scotland to such a point that her son should be seized and
+delivered into the hands of the King of Spain: he was then to be
+instructed in the Catholic faith and embrace it; if James had not done
+so at the time of her death, her claim on England was to pass to
+Philip II. Day and night, so she said, she bewailed her son's being so
+stiffnecked in his false faith: she saw that his succession in England
+would be the ruin of the country.
+
+So it stands written in her letters: it is undeniable: but was that
+really her last and well-considered word? Was it her real wish that
+Elizabeth should be killed, her son disinherited notwithstanding her
+dynastic feelings, and that Philip II should become King of England?
+Were the Catholic-Spanish tendencies of Elizabeth's predecessor, Queen
+Mary Tudor, so completely reproduced in her?
+
+I think we can hardly maintain this with full historic certainty. Mary
+Stuart was not altogether animated by hot religious zeal: if she had
+been, how could she formerly have left the Protestant lords in
+possession of power so long as she did, and even have once thought of
+marrying Leicester with his Protestant views? Her son affirmed that he
+possessed letters from her, in which she approved of his religious
+views and confirmed him in them. It was not religious conviction and
+the abhorrence of any other faith, as in Mary Tudor, but her dynastic
+right and her self-confidence as sovereign that were the active and
+predominant motives in all the actions of Mary Stuart. And if there
+are contradictions in her utterances, we cannot hold her capable, like
+Catharine Medici, of taking up and secretly furthering two opposite
+plans at the same time; her different tendencies appear consecutively,
+not simultaneously, in exact accordance with her impulses. For Mary
+Stuart was never quiet an instant: even in her prison she shared in
+the movement of the world; her brain never ceased working; she was
+brooding over her circumstances, her distress and her hope, how to
+escape the one and realise the other: sometimes indeed there came a
+moment of resignation, but only soon to pass away again. She throws
+all her thoughts into her letters which, even if they are aiming at
+some object close at hand, are at the same time ebullitions of the
+moment, passionate effusions, productions of the imagination rather
+than of the understanding. Who could think such a letter possible as
+that in which she once sought to inform Elizabeth of the evil reports
+about her which the Countess of Shrewsbury made, and recounted a mass
+of scandalous anecdotes she had heard from her. The communication was
+meant to ruin the countess: Mary did not remark that it must also draw
+down the Queen's hatred on herself. No one would have dared even to
+lay the letter before the Queen. Mary's was a passionate nature,
+endowed with literary gifts: she let her pen run on without saying
+anything she did not really think at the instant, but without
+remembering in the least what lay beyond her momentary mood. Who will
+hold women of this character strictly to what stands in their letters?
+These are often as inconsiderate and contradictory as their words.
+
+While Mary was writing the above-mentioned letters, she was completely
+taken up with the proposals made to her. She guarded herself from
+inserting anything that could hinder their being carried into effect:
+by the eventual transfer of her son's claims to the foreign King, all
+opposition on the part of zealous Catholics would be done away. Her
+hopes and wishes hurried her away with them, so that she lost sight of
+the danger in which she thus placed herself. And was she not a Queen,
+raised above the law? Who would take it on himself to attack her?
+
+Mary Stuart was then under the charge of a strict Puritan, Sir Amyas
+Paulet, of whom she complained that he treated her as a criminal
+prisoner and not as a queen. The government now allowed a certain
+relaxation in the external circumstances of her custody, but not in
+the strictness of the superintendence. There hardly exists another
+instance of such a striking contrast between projects and facts. Mary
+composes these letters full of far-ranging and dangerous schemes in
+the deepest secrecy, as she thinks, and has them carefully re-written
+in cipher: she has no doubt that they reach her friends safely by a
+secret way: but arrangements are made so that every word she writes is
+laid before the man whose business it is to trace out conspiracies,
+Walsingham, the Secretary of State. He knows her ciphers, he even sees
+the letters that come for her before she does: while she reads them
+with haste and in hope of better fortune at hand, he is only waiting
+for her answer to use it against her as a decisive proof of her guilt.
+
+Walsingham now found himself in possession of all the threads of the
+conspiracy; as soon as that letter to Babington was in his hands, he
+delayed no longer to arrest the guilty persons: they confessed, were
+condemned and executed. By further odious means--the prisoner being
+removed from her apartments on some pretence and the rooms then
+searched--possession was obtained of other papers which witnessed
+against her. Then the question could be laid before the Privy Council
+whether she should now be brought to trial and sentenced in due form.
+
+Who had given the English Parliament any right to make laws which
+should be binding on a foreign queen, and in virtue of which, if she
+transgressed them, she could be punished with death? In fact these
+doubts were raised at the time.[259] Against them it was alleged that
+Mary, who had been forced to abdicate by her subjects and deprived of
+her dignity, could not be regarded any longer as a queen: while a
+deposed sovereign is bound by the laws of the land in which he
+resides. If she was still a queen, yet she was subject to the feudal
+supremacy of England, and because of her claim to its crown also
+subject to its sovereignty--two arguments that contradict each other,
+one of a feudal, the other of a popular character and closely
+connected with the idea of popular sovereignty. Whether the one or the
+other convinced any person, we do not hear; it was moreover not a
+matter for argument any longer.
+
+For how could anything else be expected but that the judicial
+proceedings prepared several years before would now be put in force? A
+law had been passed calculated for this case, if it should occur. The
+case had occurred, and was proved by legal evidence. It was necessary
+for the satisfaction of the country and Parliament--and Walsingham
+laid particular stress on this--that the matter should be examined
+with full publicity.
+
+The commission provided for in the Act of Parliament was named: it
+consisted of the chief statesmen and lawyers of the country. In
+Fotheringhay, whither the prisoner had now been brought, the splendid
+ancestral seat of the princes of the house of York, at which many of
+them were buried, they met together in the Hall on the 14th October.
+Mary let herself be induced to plead by the consideration that she
+would be held guilty, if she did not make any defence: it being
+understood that it was with the reserve that she did not by this give
+up any of the rights of a free sovereign. Most of the charges against
+her she gradually admitted to be true, but she denied having consented
+to a personal attempt on Elizabeth's life. The court decided that this
+made no essential difference. For the rebellion which Mary confessed
+to having favoured could not be conceived of apart from danger to the
+Queen of England's life as well as her government.[260] The court
+pronounced that Mary was guilty of the acts for which the punishment
+of death had been enacted in the Parliamentary statute.
+
+We cannot regard this as a regular criminal procedure, for judicial
+forms were but little observed; it was the decision of a commission
+that the case had occurred in which the statute passed by Parliament
+found its application. Parliament itself, then just summoned, had the
+proceedings of the Commission laid before it and approved their
+sentence.
+
+But this did not bring the affair to an end. Queen Elizabeth deferred
+the execution of the judgment. For in relation to such a matter she
+occupied quite a different position from that of Parliament.
+
+From more than one quarter she was reminded that, by carrying out the
+sentence, she would violate the divine right of kings; since this
+implied that subjects could not judge, or lay their hands on,
+sovereigns. How unnatural if a queen like herself should set her hand
+to degrade the diadem.[261]
+
+In the Privy Council some were of opinion that, as Mary could not be
+regarded as the author of the last plot, but only as privy to it,
+closer imprisonment would be a sufficient punishment for her.
+Elizabeth caught at this idea. The Parliament, she thought, might now
+formally annul Mary's claim to the English throne, declare it to be
+high treason to maintain it any longer, and high treason also to
+attempt to liberate her from prison: this would deter her partisans
+from an attempt then become hopeless, and also satisfy foreign
+nations. But it was urged in reply, that now to repudiate Mary
+Stuart's claim for the first time would be equivalent to recognising
+its original validity; and an English law would make no impression
+either on Mary or on her partisans. The remembrance of what had
+happened in Scotland revived again; of Darnley's murder, which men
+imputed to her without hesitation: she was compared to Johanna I of
+Naples who had taken part in her husband's murder: it was said, Mary
+has doubled her old guilt by attempts against the sacred person of the
+Queen; after she had been forgiven, she has relapsed into the same
+crime, she deserves death on many grounds.[262]
+
+Spenser, in the great poem which has made him immortal, has depicted
+the conflict of accusations and excuses which this cause called forth.
+One of his allegorical figures, Zeal, accuses the fair and splendid
+lady, then on her trial, of the design of hurling the Queen from her
+throne, and of inciting noble knights to join in this purpose. The
+Kingdom's Care, Authority, Religion, Justice, take part with him. On
+the other side Pity, Regard for her high descent and her family, even
+_Grief_ herself, raise their voices, and produce a contrary
+impression. But Zeal once more renews his accusation: he brings
+forward Adultery and Murder, Impiety and Sedition, against her. The
+Queen sitting upon the throne in judgment recognises the guilt of the
+accused, but shrinks from pronouncing the word: men see tears in her
+eyes; she covers her face with her purple robe.
+
+Spenser appears here, as he usually does, an enthusiastic admirer of
+his Queen. But neither should we see hypocrisy in Elizabeth's
+scruples, which sprang much more from motives which touched her very
+nearly. She kept away from all company: she was heard to break her
+solitary meditation by uttering old proverbs that applied to the
+present case. More than once she spoke with the deputation of
+Parliament which pressed for a decision. What she mainly represented
+to them was, how hard it was for her, after she had pardoned so many
+rebellions, and passed over so much treason in silence, to let a
+princess be punished, who was her nearest blood-relation: men would
+accuse her, the Virgin Queen, of cruelty: she prayed them to supply
+her with another means, another expedient: nothing under the sun would
+be more welcome to her. The Parliament firmly insisted that there was
+no other expedient; it argued in detailed representations that the
+deliverance of the country depended on the execution of the sentence.
+The Queen's own security, the preservation of religion and of the
+state, made it absolutely necessary. Mary's life was the hope of all
+the discontented, whose plots were directed only to the object of
+enabling her to ascend the throne of England, to destroy the followers
+of the true religion, and expel the nobility of the land--that is the
+Protestant nobility. And must not satisfaction be given to the
+Association which was pledged to pursue a new attempt against the
+Queen's life even to death? 'Not to punish the enemy would be cruel to
+your faithful subjects: to spare her means ruin to us.'
+
+Meanwhile they came upon the traces of a new attempt. In presence of
+the elder French ambassador, Aubespine, a partisan of the Guises,
+mention was made of the necessity of killing Elizabeth in order to
+save Mary at the last moment. One of his officers spoke with a person
+who was known in the palace, and who undertook to pile up a mass of
+gunpowder under Elizabeth's chamber sufficient to blow it into the
+air; he was led to hope for rewards from Guise and his brother
+Mayenne, whose interests would have been greatly promoted by such a
+deed.[263] But this time too Elizabeth was made acquainted with the
+design before it came to maturity. She ascribed her new danger to the
+silence, if not to the instigation, of the ambassador, the friend of
+the Guises: in its discovery she saw the hand of God. 'I nourish,' she
+exclaims, 'the viper that poisons me;--to save her they would have
+taken my life: am I to offer myself as a prey to every villain?'[264]
+At a moment when she was especially struck with the danger which
+threatened her from the very existence of her rival, after a
+conversation with the Lord Admiral, she had the long-prepared order
+for the execution brought to her, and signed it with quick and
+resolute strokes of the pen.
+
+The observation of Parliament, that her safety and the peace of the
+country required her enemy's death, at last gained the upper hand with
+her as well. But this did not imply that her conflicting feelings were
+completely silenced. She was haunted in her dreams by the idea of the
+execution. She had once more recourse to the thought that some
+serviceable hand might spare her the last authorisation, by secretly
+executing the sentence of the judges--an act which seemed to be
+justified even by the words of the Association; the demand was made in
+due form to the Keeper of the prisoner, Sir Amyas Paulet; he rejected
+it--and how could anything else have been expected from the
+conscientious Puritan--with an expression of his astonishment and
+indignation. Elizabeth had commissioned Secretary Davison, when she
+signed the order, to have it sealed with the Great Seal. Her idea
+seems to have been that, when all the forms had been duly complied
+with, she might the more easily get a secret execution, or that at
+some critical moment it might be at once performed; but she still
+meant to keep the matter in her own hand: for the custom was, before
+the last step, to once more ask her approval. But Davison, who marked
+her hesitation, did not think it advisable at this moment. Through
+Hatton he acquainted Lord Burleigh with the matter, and Burleigh put
+the question to the other members of the Privy Council: they took it
+on themselves to despatch the order, signed and sealed as it now was,
+without further delay to Fotheringhay.[265]
+
+On the 8th of February 1587 it was executed on Mary in the very hall
+where the sittings of the court had been held. As compared with
+Elizabeth's painful disquiet, who shrank from doing what she held to
+be necessary, and when she at last did it wished it again undone and
+thought she could still recall it, the composure and quiet of soul,
+with which Mary submitted to the fate now finally decided, impresses
+us very deeply The misfortune of her life was her claim to the English
+crown. This led her into a political labyrinth, and into those
+entanglements which were connected with her disastrous marriage, and
+then, through its combination with the religious idea, into all the
+guilt which is imputed to her more or less justly. It cost Mary her
+country and her life. Even on the scaffold she reminded men of her
+high rank which was not subject to the laws: she thought the sentence
+of heretics on her, a free queen, would be of service to the kingdom
+of God. She died in the royal and religious ideas in which she had
+lived.
+
+It is undeniable that Elizabeth was taken by surprise at this news:
+she was heard sobbing as though a heavy misfortune had befallen
+herself. It may be that her grief was lightened by a secret
+satisfaction: who would absolutely deny it? But Davison had to atone
+for taking the power into his own hands by a long imprisonment: the
+indispensable Burleigh hardly obtained pardon. In the city on the
+other hand bells were rung and bonfires kindled. For the universal
+popular conviction agreed with the judgment of the court, that Mary
+had tried to deliver the kingdom into the hands of Spaniards.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[250] Consultation at Greenwich 1579, In Murdin 340. 'Pluck down
+presently the strengthe and government of all your papists and deliver
+all the strengthe and government of your realm into the hands of wise
+assured and trusty protestants.'
+
+[251] Bishop Leslie's negociations, in Anderson iii. 235.
+
+[252] 'De praesenti rerum statu in Anglia brevis annotatio,' in
+Theiner, Annales ecclesiastici iii. 480 (at the year 1583). As mention
+is made in this writing of the restoration of order in the States of
+the Church, 'per felicissima novi pontificis auspicia,' we must
+certainly attribute it to the first years of Sixtus V.
+
+[253] 'Tam ad hos (haereticos) quam ad catholicos omnes ad nostras
+partes trahendos supra modum valebit, licet in carcere, reginae
+Scotiae opera. Nam illa novit omnes secretos fautores suos et hactenus
+habuit viam praemonendi illos atque semper ut speramus habitura est,
+ut cum venerit tempus expeditionis, praesto sint. Sperat etiam--per
+amicos--et per corruptionem custodum personam suam ex custodia
+liberare.' In Theiner, Annales ecclesiastici iii. 482.
+
+[254] The means to assure Her Majesty of peace. Egerton Papers 79.
+
+[255] 'Jus successionis judicio ordinum Angliae subjecturam.' Camden,
+i. 360. Compare Strype, Annals iii. i. 131.
+
+[256] Association for the assecuration of the Queen, subscribed by the
+members of Lincoln's Inn (Egerton Papers 208). We may assume that this
+was the general idea.
+
+[257] In a pamphlet of the time it is stated that she had subscribed
+and sworn to the Association.
+
+[258] Tytler (History of Scotland viii. App) maintains that the
+passage was inserted by Mary's enemies, and brings forward some
+reasons for this view which are worth considering. But Mignet (ii.
+348) has already remarked how many other improbable suppositions this
+necessitates. And what would have been the use of it, as the letter
+even without this addition would have sufficed to condemn her.
+
+[259] 'Objections against bringing Maria Queen of Scots to trial, with
+answers thereunto.' In Strype, Annals iii. 2. 397.
+
+[260] Evidence against the Queen of Scots. Hardwicke Papers i. 245.
+'Invasion and destruction of Her Majesty are so linked together, that
+they cannot be single. For if the invader should prevail, no doubt
+they would not suffer Her Majesty to continue neither government nor
+her life: and in case of rebellion the same reason holdeth.'
+
+[261] The French ambassador began, according to Camden 480, with the
+maxim 'regum interesse ne princeps libera atque absoluta morte
+afficiatur.' What Camden quotes from a letter of James makes a certain
+impression; the words are still more characteristic in the original:
+'quho beingh supreme et immediate lieutenants of godd in heaven,
+cannot thairefoire be judget by thaire aequallis in earth, quat
+monstruous thing is it that souveraigne princes thaimeselfis shoulde
+be the exemple giveris of thaire own sacred diademes prophaining.' 27
+Jan. 1586-7. In Nicolas, Life of Davison 70.
+
+[262] Reasons gathered by certain appointed in Parliament. In Strype
+iii. 1, 534.
+
+[263] According to the protocol of an interview with the ambassador
+(in Murdin, 579) there can be no doubt of the reality of the plot. The
+ambassador does not deny that he had been spoken to about it, he only
+excuses himself for not having had the Queen informed of it, but
+asserts that he had rejected it with abhorrence.
+
+[264] To James I, Letters of Elizabeth and James 42.
+
+[265] Arraignment of Mr. Davison in the Star Chamber, State Trials
+1230. In Nicolas, Life of William Davison, are printed the statements
+and memoranda of Davison as to his share in this matter. They are not
+without reserve; but, in what they contain, they bear the stamp of
+truth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE INVINCIBLE ARMADA.
+
+
+At this moment the war with the Spaniards--the resistance which the
+English auxiliaries offered to them in the Netherlands, as well as the
+attack now being made on their coasts--occupied men's minds all the
+more, as the success of both the one and the other was very doubtful,
+and a most dangerous counter-stroke was to be expected. The lion they
+wished to bind had only become exasperated. The naval war in
+particular provoked the extreme of peril.
+
+Hostilities had been going on a long while, arising at first from the
+privateering which filled the whole of the Western Ocean. The English
+traders held it to be their right to avenge every injustice done them
+on their neighbours' coasts--for man has, they said, a natural desire
+of procuring himself satisfaction--and so turned themselves into
+freebooters. Through the counter operations of the Spaniards this
+private naval war became more and more extensive, and then also
+gradually developed more glorious impulses, as we see in Francis
+Drake, who at first only took part in the mere privateering of injured
+traders, and afterwards rose to the idea of a maritime rivalry between
+the nations. It was an important moment in the history of the world
+when Drake on the isthmus of Panama first caught sight of the Pacific,
+and prayed God for His grace that he might sail over this sea some day
+in an English ship--a grace since granted not merely to himself but
+also in the richest measure to his nation. Many companies were formed
+to resume the voyages of discovery already once begun and then again
+discontinued. And as the Spaniards based their exclusive right to the
+possession of the other hemisphere on the Pope's decision, Protestant
+ideas, which mocked at this supremacy of the Romish See over the
+world, now contributed also to impel men to occupy lands in these
+regions. This was always effected in the main by voluntary efforts of
+wealthy mercantile houses, or enterprising members of the court and
+state, to whom the Queen gave patents of authorisation. In this way
+Walter Ralegh, in his political and religious opposition to the
+Spaniards, founded an English colony on the transatlantic continent,
+in Wingandacoa: the Queen was so much pleased at it that she gave the
+district a name which was to preserve the remembrance of the quality
+she was perhaps proudest of: she called it Virginia.[266]
+
+But at last she formally undertook the naval war; it was at the same
+time a motive for the league with the Hollanders, who could do
+excellent service in it: by attacking the West Indies she hoped to
+destroy the basis of the Spanish greatness.
+
+Francis Drake was commissioned to open the war. When, in October 1585,
+he reached the Islas de Bayona on the Gallician coast, he informed the
+governor, Don Pedro Bermudez, that he came in his Queen's name to put
+an end to the grievances which the English had had to suffer from the
+Spaniards. Don Pedro answered, he knew nothing of any such grievances:
+but, if Drake wished to begin war, he was ready to meet him.
+
+Francis Drake then directed his course at once to the West Indies. He
+surprised St. Domingo and Carthagena, occupied both one and the other
+for a short time, and levied heavy contributions on them. Then he
+brought back to England the colonists from Virginia, who were not yet
+able to hold their own against the natives. The next year he inflicted
+still more damage on the Spaniards. He made his way into the harbour
+of Cadiz, which was full of vessels that had either come from both the
+Indies or were proceeding thither: he sank or burnt them all. His
+privateers covered the sea.
+
+Often already had the Spaniards planned an invasion of England. The
+most pressing motive of all lay in these maritime enterprises. The
+Spaniards remarked that the stability and power of their monarchy did
+not rest so much on the strong places they possessed in all parts of
+the world as on the moveable instruments of dominion by which the
+connexion with them was kept up; the interruption of the
+communication, caused by Francis Drake and his privateers, between
+just the most important points on the Spanish and the Netherlandish
+coasts, seemed to them unendurable: they desired to rid themselves of
+it at any price. And to this was now added the general cry of
+vengeance for the execution of the Queen of Scots, which was heard
+from the pulpit in the presence of the King himself. But this was not
+the only result of that event. The life of Queen Mary and her claim to
+the succession had always stood in the way of Spanish ambition: now
+Philip II could think of taking possession of the English throne
+himself. He concluded a treaty with Pope Sixtus V, under which he was
+to hold the crown of England as a fief of the Holy See, which would
+thus, and by the re-establishment of the Church's authority, have also
+attained to the revival of its old feudal supremacy over England.[267]
+
+Once more the Spanish monarchy and the Papacy were closely united in
+their spiritual and political claims. Sixtus V excommunicated the
+Queen afresh, declared her deposed, and not merely released her
+subjects from their oath of allegiance, but called on every man to aid
+the King of Spain and his general the Duke of Parma against her.
+
+Negociations for peace however were still being carried on in 1587
+between Spanish and English plenipotentiaries. It was mainly the
+merchants of London and Antwerp that urged it; and as the Spaniards at
+that time had manifestly the best of the struggle, were masters of the
+lower Rhine and the Meuse, had invaded Friesland, had besieged and at
+last taken Sluys in despite of all resistance, we can understand how
+the English plenipotentiaries were moved to unexpected concessions.
+They would have consented to the restoration of the Spanish supremacy
+over the northern Netherlands, if Philip would have granted the
+inhabitants freedom of conscience. Alexander of Parma brought forward
+a proposal, to make, it is true, their return to Catholicism
+obligatory, but with the assurance that no Inquisition should be set
+over them, nor any one punished for his deviation from the faith. Even
+if the negociation was not meant to be completely in earnest, it is
+worth remarking on what rock it was wrecked. Philip II would neither
+grant such an assurance, which in its essence involved freedom of
+conscience, nor grant this itself completely in a better form. His
+strength lay precisely in his maintaining the Catholic system with
+unrelenting energy: by this he secured the attachment of the priests
+and the zealous laity. And how could he, at a moment when he was so
+closely united with the Pope, and could reckon on the millions heaped
+up in the castle of St. Angelo for his enterprise, so completely
+deviate from the strictness of exclusive belief. He thought he was
+within his right when he refused any religious concession, seeing that
+every other sovereign issued laws prescribing the religion of his own
+territories.[268]
+
+If the war was to be continued, Alexander of Parma would have wished
+that all his efforts should be first directed against Vliessingen,
+where there was an English garrison; from the harbour there England
+itself could be attacked far more easily and safely. But it was
+replied in Spain that this enterprise was likewise very extensive and
+costly, while it would bring about no decisive result. And yet
+Alexander himself too held an invasion of England to be absolutely
+necessary; his reports largely contributed to strengthen the King in
+this idea; Philip decided to proceed without further delay to the
+enterprise that was needful at the moment and opened world-wide
+prospects for the future.
+
+He took into consideration that the monarchy at this moment had
+nothing to fear from the Ottomans who were fully occupied with a
+Persian war, and above all that France was prevented from interfering
+by the civil strife that had broken out. This has been designated as
+the chief aim of Philip's alliance with the Guises, and it certainly
+may have formed one reason for it. Left alone, with only herself to
+rely on (so the Spaniards further judged), the Queen of England would
+no longer be an object of fear: she had no more than forty ships; once
+in an engagement off the Azores, in the Portuguese war, the English
+had been seen to give way for the first time: if it came to a
+sea-fight, the vastly superior Spanish Armada would without doubt
+prove victorious. But for a war on land also she was not prepared, she
+had no more than six thousand real soldiers in the country, with whom
+she could neither meet nor resist the veteran troops of Spain in the
+open field. They had only to march straight on London; seldom was a
+great city, which had remained long free from attack, able to hold out
+against a sudden assault: the Queen would either be forced to make a
+peace honourable to Spain, or would by a long resistance give the King
+an opportunity of forming out of the Spanish nobility, which would
+otherwise degenerate in indolence at home, a young troop of brave
+warriors. He would have the Catholics for him and with their help gain
+the upper hand, he would make himself master of the strong places,
+above all of the harbours; all the nations of the world could not take
+them from him again; he would become lord of the ocean, and thus lord
+and master of the continent.[269]
+
+Philip II would have preferred to begin the work as early as the
+autumn of 1587. He hoped at that time that Scotland, where the
+Catholic lords and the people showed a lively sympathy with Queen
+Mary's fate, would be thrown open to him by her son, who was supposed
+to wish to avenge her death. But to others this seemed not so certain;
+in especial the experienced Admiral Santa Cruz called the King's
+attention to the perils the fleet might incur in those seas: they
+would have to contend with contrary winds, and the disadvantage of
+short days and thick mists. Santa Cruz did not wish to endanger his
+fame, the only thing he had earned during a long life, by an ill-timed
+or very venturous undertaking. He held an invasion of England to be
+more difficult than most other enterprises, and demanded such
+preparations as would make the victory certain. While they were being
+made he died, after having lost his sovereign's favour. His successor,
+the duke of Medina Sidonia, whom the King chose because he had
+distinguished himself at the last defence of Cadiz, did not make such
+very extensive demands; but the fleet, which was fitted out under him
+and by him, was nevertheless, though not in number of ships (about
+130), yet in tonnage, size, and number of men on board (about 22,000)
+the most important that had ever been sent to sea by any European
+power. All the provinces of the Pyrenean peninsula had emulously
+contributed to it: the fleet was divided into a corresponding number
+of squadrons; the first was the Portuguese, then followed the
+squadrons of Castille, Andalusia, Biscay, Guipuzcoa, and then the
+Italian--for ships and men had come also in good number from Italy.
+The troops were divided like the squadrons; there was a 'Mass in time
+of war' for each province.
+
+With not less zeal did men arm in the Netherlands; the drum beat
+everywhere in the Flemish and Walloon provinces, all roads were
+covered with military trains. In the Netherlands too there were a
+great number of Italians, Corsicans and inhabitants of the States of
+the Church and Neapolitans, in splendid accoutrements; there were the
+brothers of the grand duke of Tuscany and of the duke of Savoy: King
+Philip had even allowed the son of a Moorish prince to take part in
+the Catholic expedition. Infantry and cavalry also had come from
+Catholic Germany.
+
+It was a joint enterprise of the Spanish monarchy and a great part of
+the Catholic world, headed by the Pope and the King, to overthrow the
+Queen who was regarded as the Head, and the State which was regarded
+as the main support, of Protestantism and the anti-Spanish policy.
+
+We do not find any detailed and at the same time authentic information
+as to the plan of the invasion; a Spanish soldier and diplomatist
+however, much employed in the military and political affairs of the
+time, and favoured with the confidence of the highest persons, J.
+Baptista de Tassis, gives us an outline, which we may accept as quite
+trustworthy. We know that in Antwerp, Nieuport, and Dunkirk, with the
+advice of Hanseatic and Genoese master-builders, transports had been
+got ready for the whole force: from Nieuport (to which place also were
+brought the vessels built at Antwerp) 14,000 men were to be conveyed
+across to England, and from Dunkirk 12,000. But where were they to
+effect a junction with each other and with the Spaniards? Tassis
+assures us that they had selected for this purpose the roadstead of
+Margate on the coast of Kent, a safe and convenient harbour;[270]
+there immediately after the Spanish armada had arrived, or as nearly
+as possible at the same time with it, the fleet of transports from the
+Netherlands also was to make the shore, and Alexander of Parma was
+then to assume the command in chief of the whole force and march
+straight on London.
+
+All that Philip II had ever thought or planned was thus concentrated
+as it were into one focus. The moment was come when he could subdue
+England, become master of the European world, and re-establish the
+Catholic faith in the form in which he professed it. When the fleet
+(on the 22nd July 1588) sailed out of Corunna, and the long-meditated,
+long-prepared, enterprise was now set in action, the King and the
+nation displayed deep religious emotion: in all the churches of the
+land prayers were offered up for forty days; in Madrid solemn
+processions were arranged to our Lady of Atocha, the patroness of
+Spain: Philip II spent two hours each day in prayer. He was in the
+state of silent excitement which an immense design and the expectation
+of a great turn in a man's fortune call forth. Scarcely any one dared
+to address a word to him.
+
+It was in these very days that people in England first really became
+conscious of the danger that threatened them. A division of the fleet
+under Henry Seymour was watching, with Dutch assistance, the two
+harbours held by the prince of Parma: the other and larger division,
+just returned from Spain and on the point of being broken up, made
+ready at Plymouth, under the admiral, Howard of Effingham, to receive
+the enemy. Meanwhile the land forces assembled, on Leicester's
+advice,[271] in the neighbourhood of London. The old feudal
+organisation of the national force was once more called into full
+activity to face this danger. Men saw the gentry take the field at the
+head of their tenants and copyholders, and rejoiced at their holding
+together so well. It was without doubt an advantage, that the
+threatened attack could no longer be connected with a right of
+succession recognised in the country; it appeared in its true
+character, as a great invasion by a foreign power for the subjugation
+of England. Even the Catholic lords came forward, among them Viscount
+Montague (who had once, alone in the Upper House, opposed the
+Supremacy, and had also since not reconciled himself to the religious
+position of the Queen), with his sons and grandsons, and even his
+heir-presumptive who, though still a child, bestrode a war-horse; Lord
+Montague said, he would defend his Queen with his life, whoever might
+attack her, king or pope. No doubt that these armings left much to be
+desired, but they were animated by national and religious enthusiasm.
+Some days later the Queen visited the camp at Tilbury: with slight
+escort she rode from battalion to battalion. A tyrant, she said, might
+be afraid of his subjects: she had always sought her chief strength in
+their good will: with them she would live and die. She was everywhere
+received with shouts of joy: psalms were sung, and prayers offered up
+in which the Queen joined.
+
+For, whatever may be men's belief, in great wars and dangers they
+naturally turn their eyes to the Eternal Power which guides our
+destiny, and on which all equally feel themselves dependent. The two
+nations and their two chiefs alike called on God to decide in their
+religious and political conflict. The fortune of mankind hung in the
+balance.
+
+On the 31st July, a Sunday, the Armada, covering a wide extent of sea,
+came in sight of the English coast off the heights of Plymouth. On
+board the fleet itself it was thought most expedient to attempt a
+landing on the spot, since there were no preparations made there for
+defence and the English squadron was not fully manned. But this was
+not in the plan, and would, especially if it failed, have incurred a
+heavy responsibility. Medina Sidonia was only empowered and prepared
+to accept battle by sea if the English should offer it. His galleys,
+improved after the Venetian pattern, and especially his galleons
+(immense sailing ships which carried cannon on their different decks
+on all sides), were without doubt superior to the vessels of the
+English. When the latter, some sixty sail strong, came out of the
+harbour, he hung out the great standard from the fore-mast of his ship
+as a signal for all to prepare for battle. But the English admiral did
+not intend to let matters come to a regular naval fight. He was
+perfectly aware of the superiority of the Spanish equipment and had
+even forbidden boarding the enemies' vessels. His plan was to gain the
+weather-gauge of the Armada, and inflict damage on them in their
+course, and throw them into disorder. The English followed the track
+of the Armada in four squadrons, and left no advantage unimproved that
+might offer. They were thoroughly acquainted with this sea, and
+steered their handy vessels with perfect certainty and mastery: the
+Spaniards remarked with dissatisfaction that they could at pleasure
+advance, attack, and again break off the engagement. Medina Sidonia
+was anxious above all things to keep his Armada together: after a
+council of war he let a great ship which lagged behind fall into the
+hands of the enemy, as her loss would be less damaging than the
+breaking up of the line which would result from the attempt to save
+her: he sent round his sargentes mayores to the captains to tell them
+not to quit the line on pain of death.[272]
+
+On the whole the Spaniards were not discontented with their voyage,
+when after a week of continuous skirmishing they, without having
+sustained any very considerable losses, had traversed the English
+channel, and on Saturday the 6th August passed Boulogne and arrived
+off Calais: it was the first point at which they had wished to touch.
+But now to cross to the neighbouring coast of England, as seems to
+have been the original plan, became exceedingly difficult, because the
+English fleet guarded it, and the Spanish galleons were less able in
+the straits than elsewhere to compete with those swift vessels, It was
+also being strengthened every moment; the young nobility emulously
+hastened on board. But neither could the admiral proceed to Dunkirk,
+as the harbour was then far too narrow to receive his large ships, and
+his pilots were afraid of being carried to the northward by the
+currents. He anchored in the roadstead east of Calais in the direction
+of Dunkirk.
+
+He had already previously informed the Duke of Parma that he was on
+the way, and had then, immediately before his arrival at Calais,
+despatched a pilot to Dunkirk, to request that he would join him with
+a number of small vessels, that they might better encounter the
+English, and bring with him cannon balls of a certain calibre, of
+which he began to fall short.[273] It is clear that he still wished to
+undertake from thence, if supported according to his views, the great
+attempt at a disembarkation which he was commissioned to effect. But
+Alexander of Parma, whom the first message had found some days before
+at Bruges, had not yet arrived at Dunkirk when the second came: the
+preparations for embarking were only then just begun for the first
+time; and they could scarcely venture actually to embark, as English
+and Dutch ships of war were still ever cruising before the harbour.
+
+Alexander Farnese's failure to effect a junction with Medina Sidonia
+has been always traced to personal motives; it was even said in
+England, at a later time, that Queen Elizabeth had offered him the
+hand of Lady Arabella Stuart, which might open the way to the English
+throne for himself. It is true that his enterprises in the Netherlands
+appeared to lie closest to his heart; even Tassis, who was about his
+person, remarks that he carried on his preparations more out of
+obedience than with any zeal of his own. But the chief cause why the
+two operations were not better combined lay in their very nature. The
+geographical relation of the Spanish monarchy to England would have
+required two separate invasions, the one from the Pyrenean peninsula,
+the other from the Netherlands. The wish to combine the forces of such
+distant countries in a single invasion made the enterprise, especially
+when the means of communication of the period were so inadequate,
+overpoweringly helpless. Wind and weather had been little considered
+in the scheme. In both those countries immense materials of war had
+been collected with extreme effort; they had been brought within a few
+miles of sea of each other, but combine they could not. Now for the
+first time came to light the full superiority which the English gained
+from their corsair-like and bold method of war, and their alliance
+with the Dutch. It was seen that a sudden attack would suffice to
+break the whole combination in pieces: Queen Elizabeth was said to
+have herself devised the plan and its arrangement.
+
+The Armada was still lying at anchor in line of battle, waiting for
+news from Alexander Farnese, when in the night between Sunday and
+Monday (7th to 8th August) the English sent some fire-ships, about
+eight in number, against it. They were his worst vessels which Lord
+Howard gave up for this purpose, but their mere appearance produced a
+decisive result. Medina Sidonia could not refuse his ships permission
+to slip their anchors, that each might avoid the threatening danger:
+only he commanded them to afterwards resume their previous order. But
+things wore a completely different appearance the following morning.
+The tide had carried the vessels towards the land, a direction they
+did not want to take; now for the first time the attacks of the
+English proved destructive to them: part of the ships had become
+disabled: it was completely impossible to obey the admiral's orders
+that they should return to their old position. Instead of this,
+unfavourable winds drove the Armada against its will along the coast;
+in a short time the English too gave up the pursuit of the enemy, who
+without being quite beaten was yet in flight, and abandoned him to his
+fate. The wind drove the Spaniards on the shoals of Zealand: once they
+were in such shallow water that they were afraid of running aground:
+some of their galleons in fact fell into the hands of the Dutch.
+Fortunately for them the wind veered round first to the W.S.W., then
+to the S.S.W., but they could not even then regain the Channel, nor
+would they have wished it; only by the longest circuit, round the
+Orkney Islands, could they return to Spain.
+
+A storm fraught with ruin had lowered over England: it was scattered
+before it discharged its thunder. So completely true is the expression
+on a Dutch commemorative medal, 'the breath of God has scattered them'
+(_flavit et dissipati sunt_).
+
+Philip II saw the Armada, which he had hoped would give the dominion
+of the world into his hand, return home again in fragments without
+having, we do not say accomplished but even, attempted anything worth
+the trouble. He did not therefore renounce his design. He spoke of his
+wish to fit out lighter vessels, and entrust the whole conduct of the
+expedition to the Prince of Parma. The Cortes of Castille requested
+him not to put up with the disgrace incurred, but to chastise this
+woman: they offered him their whole property and all the children of
+the land for this purpose. But the very possibility of great
+enterprises belongs only to one moment: in the next it is already gone
+by.
+
+First the Spanish forces were drawn into the complications existing in
+France. The great Catholic agitation, which had been long fermenting
+there, at last gained the upper hand, and was quite ready to prepare
+the way for Philip II's supremacy. But Queen Elizabeth thought that
+the day on which France fell into his hands would be the eve of her
+own ruin. She too therefore devoted her best resources to France, to
+uphold Philip II's opponent. When Henry IV, driven back to the verge
+of the coast of Normandy, was all but lost, he was by her help put in
+a position to maintain his cause. At the sieges of the great towns, in
+which he was still often threatened with failure, the English troops
+in several instances did excellent service. The Queen did not swerve
+from her policy even when Henry IV saw himself compelled, and found it
+compatible with his conscience, to go over to Catholicism. For he was
+clearly thus all the better enabled to re-establish a France that
+should be politically independent, in opposition to Spain and at war
+with it; and it was exactly on this opposition that the political
+freedom and independence of England herself rested. Yet as his change
+of religion had been disagreeable to the Queen, so was also the peace
+which he proceeded to make; she exerted her influence against its
+conclusion. But as by it the Spaniards gave up the places they
+occupied on the French coasts, which in their possession had menaced
+England as well, she could not in reality be fundamentally opposed to
+it.
+
+These great conflicts on land were seconded by repeated attacks of the
+English and Dutch naval power, by which it sometimes seemed as if the
+Spanish monarchy would be shaken to its foundations. Elizabeth made an
+attempt to restore Don Antonio to the throne from which Philip II had
+driven him. But the minds of the Portuguese themselves were very far
+from being as yet sufficiently prepared for a revolt: the enterprise
+failed, in an attack on the suburbs of Lisbon. The war interested the
+English most deeply. Parliament agreed to larger and larger grants:
+from two-fifteenths and a single subsidy (about L30,000), which was
+its usual vote, it rose in 1593 to three subsidies and six-fifteenths;
+the towns gladly armed ships at their own expense, and sailors enough
+were found to man them: the national energy turned towards the sea.
+And they obtained some successes. In the harbour of Corunna they
+destroyed the collected stores, which were probably to have served
+for renewing the expedition. Once they took the harbour of Cadiz and
+occupied the city itself: more than once they alarmed and endangered
+the West Indies. But with all this nothing decisive was effected; the
+Spanish monarchy maintained an undoubted ascendancy in Europe, and the
+exclusive possession of the other hemisphere: it was the Great Power
+of the age. But over against it England also now took up a strong and
+formidable position.
+
+Events in France exercised a strong counter-action on the Netherlands;
+under their influence the reconquest of the United Provinces became
+impossible for Spain. Elizabeth also contributed largely to the
+victories by which Prince Maurice of Orange secured a strong frontier.
+But these could not prevent a powerful Catholic government arising on
+the other side in the Belgian provinces: and though they were at first
+kept apart from Spain, yet it did not escape the Queen that this would
+not last for ever: she seems to have had a foreboding that these
+countries would become the battleground of a later age. However this
+might be, the antagonism of principle between the Catholic Netherlands
+(which were still ruled by the Austro-Spanish House) and the
+Protestant Netherlands (in which the Republic maintained itself), and
+the continued war between them, ensured the security of England, for
+the sake of which the Queen had broken with Spain. Burleigh's objects
+were in the main attained.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[266] Oldys, Life of Sir W. Raleigh 38.
+
+[267] Spondanus, Continuatio Baronii ii. 847. The word 'dicitur,'
+which Spondan uses, is omitted in Timpesti, Vita di Sisto V, ii. 51.
+
+[268] A letter of Philip's to the King of Denmark, in the Venetian
+Dispacci of this year, which in general would be of great value for a
+detailed account of the event.
+
+[269] The reports are in Herrera, Historia del mundo iii. 60 seq. In
+1860 Mr. Motley (History of the United Netherlands ii. ch. xviii.)
+communicated extracts from the letters exchanged at that time between
+Alex. Farnese and Philip II, which reveal the wishes of each
+successive moment.
+
+[270] J. B. de Tassis Commentarii: 'eo consilio, ut cum adventasset
+classis et constitisset in Morgat, qui est prope Dormiram [I read
+Douvram, as the copy from which the printed text is taken is very
+defective] districtus maris quietus portumque efficit satis securum,
+trajiceret Parmensis cum navigiis.' Papendrecht, Analecta Belgica II.
+ii. 491. In Motley i. ch. viii we now see that Al. Farnese in his very
+first plan pointed out the coast between Dover and Margate as the most
+proper place for the landing. A junction of the whole transport fleet
+with the Armada before Calais has something too adventurous in it to
+have been contemplated from the beginning.
+
+[271] The Earl of Leicester to the Queen. Hardwicke State Papers i.
+580. The dates given above are New Style.
+
+[272] Diario de los sucesos de armada Ilamada la invencible, in Salva,
+Collection de documentos ineditos xvi. 449: essentially the same
+report as that used by Barrow, Life of Sir Francis Drake.
+
+[273] Diario 458: 'mandase salir 40 filipotes luego para juntarse con
+esta armada para poder con ellos trabarse con los enemigos, que a
+causa de ser nuestros baseles muy pesados en comparacion de la
+ligereza de los enemigos no era posible en ninguna maniera venir a las
+manos con ellos.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE LATER YEARS OF QUEEN ELIZABETH.
+
+
+Every great historic existence has a definite purport; the life of
+Queen Elizabeth lies in the transactions already recorded, and their
+results in the change of policy which she brought about.
+
+The issue of the war between the hierarchy, which had once swayed
+every act and thought of the West, and those who had fallen off from
+it was not yet decided as long as England with its power vacillated
+between the two systems. Then this Queen came forward, attaching
+herself to the new view as by a predetermined destiny; she carried it
+out in a form answering to the historical institutions of her kingdom,
+and with an energy by which she at the same time upheld that kingdom's
+power. It was against her therefore that the hierarchy, when it could
+renew the contest, mainly directed its most energetic efforts: an
+author of the period makes those leagued with the Pope against the
+Queen say to each other, 'come let us kill her, and the inheritance
+shall be ours.' The chief among these was the mighty King who had
+himself once ruled England. She maintained a war with this league, in
+which it was at each moment a question of existence for her. She was
+assailed with all the weapons of war and of treason; but she adopted
+corresponding means of defence against every assault: she not only
+maintained herself, but created in the neighbouring countries a
+powerful representation of the principle which she had taken up,
+without pressing the adoption of a form for it exactly like her own.
+Without her help the church-reformation in Scotland, and at that time
+in France, would have been probably suppressed, and in the Netherlands
+it would have never taken actual shape. The Queen is the champion of
+West-European Protestantism and of all the political growth that was
+attached to the new faith. She herself expresses her astonishment at
+her success in this: 'more at the fact,' she says once, 'that I am
+still alive, than that my enemies would not have me to live.' That
+Philip effected so little against her, she believes to be due above
+all to God's justice; for the King attacked her in an unkingly manner
+while negociations were still going on: she sees in this a proof that
+an ill beginning leads to a disgraceful end, despite all power and
+endeavour. 'What was to ruin me, has turned to my glory.'[274]
+
+It is surely the greatest happiness that can be granted to any human
+being, while defending his own interest, to be maintaining the
+interests of all. Then his personal existence expands into a central
+part of the world's history.
+
+That personal and universal interest was likewise a thoroughly English
+one. Commerce grew amidst arms: the maintenance of internal peace
+filled the country with wellbeing and riches; palaces were seen rising
+where before only huts had stood: as the philosophic Bacon remarks,
+England now won her natural position in the world.
+
+Elizabeth was one of those sovereigns who have beforehand formed an
+idea for themselves as to the duties of government. Four qualities,
+she says once, seemed to her necessary for it: justice and
+self-control, highmindedness and judgment; she might pride herself on
+the two first: never in a case of equal rights had she favoured one
+person more than another: never had she believed a first report, but
+waited for fuller knowledge: the two others she would not claim for
+herself, for they were men's virtues. But the world ascribed a high
+degree of these very virtues to her. Men descried her subtle judgment
+in the choice of her servants, and the directing them to the services
+for which they were best fitted. Her high heart was seen in her
+despising small advantages, and in her unshaken tranquillity in
+danger. While the storm was coming on from Spain, no cloud was seen on
+her brow: by her conduct she animated nobles and people, and
+inspirited her councillors. Men praised her for two things, for
+zealous participation in deliberation and for care in seeing that
+what was decided on was carried into effect.[275]
+
+But we may not look for an ideal female ruler in Queen Elizabeth. No
+one can deny the severities which were practised under her government
+even with her knowledge. The systematic hypocrisy imputed to her may
+seem an invention of her enemies or of historians not thoroughly
+informed; she herself declares truthfulness a quality indispensable
+for a prince; but in her administration, as well as in that of most
+other rulers, reasonings appear which rather conceal the truth than
+express it; in each of her words, and in every step she took, we
+perceive a calculation of what is for her advantage; she displays
+striking foresight and even a natural subtlety. Elizabeth was very
+accessible to flattery, and as easily attracted by an agreeable
+exterior as repelled by slight accidental defects; she could break out
+at a word that reminded her of the transitory nature of human affairs
+or of her own frailty: vanity accompanied her from youth to those
+advancing years, which she did not wish to remark or to think were
+remarked. She liked to ascribe successes to herself, disasters to her
+ministers: they had to take on themselves the hatred felt against
+disagreeable or doubtful regulations, and if they did not do this
+quite in unison with her mood, they had to fear her blame and
+displeasure. She was not free from the fickleness of her family: but
+on the other hand she displayed also the amiable attention of a female
+ruler: as when once during a speech she was making in a learned
+language to the learned men of Oxford, on seeing the Lord Treasurer
+standing there with his lame foot, she suddenly broke off, ordered a
+chair to be brought him, and then continued; indeed it was said she at
+the same time wished to let it be remarked that no accident could
+discompose her. As Harrington, who knew her from personal
+acquaintance, expresses himself: her mind might be sometimes compared
+to a summer morning sky, beneficent and refreshing: then she won the
+hearts of all by her sweet and modest speech. But she was repellent in
+the same degree in her excited state, when she paced to and fro in her
+chamber, anger in every look, rejection in every word: men hastened
+out of her way. Among other correspondence we learn to know her from
+that with King James of Scotland,--one side of her political
+relations, to which we shall return:--how does every sentence express
+a mental and moral superiority as well as a political one! not a
+superfluous word is there: all is pith and substance. From care for
+him and intelligent advice she passes to harsh blame and most earnest
+warning: she is kind and sharp, friendly and rough, but almost ever
+more repellent and unsparing than mild. Never had any sovereign a
+higher idea of his dignity, of the independence belonging to him by
+the laws of God and man, of the duty of obedience binding on all
+subjects. She prides herself on no external consideration influencing
+her resolutions, threats or fear least of all; when once she longs for
+peace, she insists on its not being from apprehension of the enemy,
+but only from abhorrence of bloodshed. The action of life does not
+develop merely the intellectual powers: between success and failure,
+in conflict and effort and victory, the character moulds itself and
+acquires its ruling tone. Her immense good fortune fills her with
+unceasing self-confidence, which is at the same time sustained by
+trust in the unfailing protection of Providence.[276] That she,
+excommunicated by the Pope, maintains herself against the attacks of
+half the world, gives her whole action and nature a redoubled impress
+of personal energy. She does not like to mention her father or her
+mother: of a successor she will not hear a word. The feeling of
+absolute possession is predominant in her appearance. It is noticeable
+how on festivals she moves in procession through her palace: in front
+are nobles and knights in the costume of their order, with bared
+heads; next the bearers of the insignia of royalty, the sceptre, the
+sword, and the great seal: then the Queen herself in a dress covered
+with pearls and precious stones; behind her ladies, brilliant in
+their beauty and rich attire: to one or two, who are presented to her,
+she reaches out her hand to kiss as she goes by in token of favour,
+till she arrives at her chapel, where the assembled crowd hails her
+with a 'God save the Queen,' she returning them thanks with gracious
+words. Elizabeth received the whole reverence, once more unbounded,
+which men paid to the supreme power. The meats of which she was to eat
+were set on the table with bended knee, even when she was not present.
+It was on their knees that men were presented to her.[277]
+
+Between a sovereign like this and her Parliament points of contention
+could not be wanting. The Commons claimed the privilege of absolute
+freedom of speech, and repeatedly attacked the abuses which still
+remained in the episcopal Church, and the injurious monopolies which
+profited certain favoured persons. The Queen had members of the Lower
+House imprisoned for speeches disagreeable to her: she warned them not
+to interfere in the affairs of the Church, and even not in those of
+the State, and declared it to be her prerogative to summon and
+dissolve Parliament at her pleasure, to accept or reject its measures.
+But with all this she still did not on the other hand conceal that, in
+reference to the most important affairs of State, she had to pay
+regard to the tone of the two Houses: however much she might be loved,
+yet men's minds are easily moved and not thoroughly trustworthy. In
+its forms Parliament studied to express the devotion which the Queen
+claimed as Queen and Lady, while she tried to make amends for acts by
+which the assembly had been previously offended: for statements of
+grievances, as in the instance of the monopolies, she even thanked
+them, as for a salutary reminder. A French ambassador remarks in 1596
+that the Parliament in ages gone by had great authority, but now it
+did all the Queen wished. Another who arrived in 1597 is not merely
+astonished at its imposing exterior, but also at the extent of its
+rights. Here, says he, the great affairs are treated of, war and
+peace, laws, the needs of the community and the mode of satisfying
+them.[278] The one statement is perhaps as true as the other. The
+solution of the contradiction depends on this, that Queen and
+Parliament were united as to the general relations of the country and
+the world. The Queen, as is self-evident, could not have ruled without
+the Parliament: from the beginning of her government she supported
+herself by it in the weightiest affairs; but a simple consideration
+teaches us how much on the other hand Parliament owed precisely to
+that introduction into these great questions, which the Queen thought
+advisable. They avoided, and were still able to avoid, any enquiry
+into their respective rights and the boundaries of those rights. And
+besides Elizabeth guarded herself from troubling her Parliament too
+much by demands for money. She has been often blamed for her economy
+which sometimes became inconvenient in public affairs: as in most
+cases, nature and policy here also coincided. That she was sparing of
+money, and once was actually in a condition to decline a grant offered
+her, gave the administration an independence of any momentary moods of
+Parliament, which suited her whole nature, and without this might have
+been easily lost.
+
+William Cecil, Lord Burleigh, her treasurer, as economical as herself,
+was likewise her first minister. He had assisted her with striking
+counsel even before her accession, and since lived and moved in her
+administration of the state. He was one of those ministers who find
+their calling in a boundless industry,--he needed little sleep, long
+banquets were not to his taste:[279] never was he seen inactive even
+for half an hour; he kept notes of everything great and small;
+business accompanied him even to his chamber, and to his retirement at
+S. Theobald's. His anxious thoughts were visible in his face, as he
+rode on his mule along the roads of the park; he only lost sight of
+them for a moment when he was sitting at table among his growing
+children: then his heavy eyebrows cleared up, light merriment even
+came from his lips. Every other charm of life lay far from him: for
+poetry and poets he had no taste, as Spenser was once made to feel:
+in literature he patronised only what was directly useful; he
+recommended no one except for his being serviceable. Magnanimous he
+was not; he was content with being able to say to himself, that he
+drew no advantage from any one's ill fortune. He was designated even
+then as the man who set the English state in motion: this he always
+denied, and sought his praise in the fact that he carried out the
+views of the Queen, as she adopted them after hearing the plans
+proposed or even after respectful remonstrances. He had to bear many a
+slander: most of the reproaches made against him he brought himself to
+endure quietly: but if, he said, it could be proved against him that
+he neglected the Queen's interest, the war against Spain, and the
+support of the Netherlands, then he was willing to become liable to
+eternal blame. He was especially effective also through a moral
+quality--he never lost heart. It was remarked that he worked with the
+greatest alacrity when others were most doubtful. For he too had an
+absolute confidence in the cause which he defended. When the enemies'
+fortune stood highest, he was heard to say with great tranquillity,
+'they can do no more than God will allow.'[280]
+
+By the side of this pilot of the state, Robert Dudley, who was
+promoted to be Earl of Leicester, drew all eyes on himself as the
+leading man at court. Burleigh was looked on as Somerset's creation,
+Dudley was the youngest son of the Earl of Northumberland: for it was
+of advantage to Elizabeth, especially at first, to unite around her
+important representatives of the two parties which had composed her
+brother's government. One motive for her attachment to Leicester is
+said to have been the fact that he was born on the same day, and at
+the very same hour with herself: who at that time would not have
+believed in the ruling influence of the stars? But, besides this, the
+Earl dazzled by a fine person, attractive manners, and an almost
+irresistible charm of disposition. The confidential intimacy which
+Elizabeth allowed him caused scandalous rumours, probably without
+ground; for if they had been true, Leicester, who had his father's
+ambition, would have played a very different part. Elizabeth heard of
+them; she once actually brought a foreign ambassador into her
+apartments, to convince him how utterly impossible it would be for her
+to see any one whatever without witnesses; she censured a foreign
+writer for letting himself be deceived by a groundless rumour, but she
+would not on this account dismiss the favourite from court. She liked
+to have him about her, and to receive his homage which had a tinge of
+chivalry in it: his devotion satisfied a need of her heart. He could
+not however take any power to himself which would infringe on her own
+supreme authority; once, when such a case occurred, she reminded him
+that he was not in exclusive possession of her favour: she could
+bestow it on whom she would, and again recall it; at court, she
+exclaimed, there should be no Master, but only a Mistress.[281]
+Neither did Leicester display great mental gifts: in the campaigns of
+the Netherlands he did not at all answer even the moderate
+expectations that had been formed of him. If the Queen nevertheless
+put him at the head of her troops when the Spanish danger threatened,
+this was because he possessed her absolute personal confidence.
+
+With Leicester the Sidneys were most closely allied. Henry Sidney, his
+sister's husband, introduced civilisation and monarchic institutions
+into Wales, and was selected to extend them in Ireland. In his son
+Philip the English ideal of noble culture seemed to have realised
+itself; he combined a very remarkable literary power peculiar to
+himself, and talents suited for the society of men of the world (which
+well fitted him for the duties of an ambassador), with disinterested
+kindness to others, and a chivalrous courage in war, which gained him
+universal admiration both at home and in presence of the enemy.
+
+Leicester's good word is also said to have opened an entrance to court
+for young Walter Ralegh and to have promoted his first successes.
+Ralegh combined in his own person the aspirations of the age in a most
+vivid manner. He was ambitious, fond of show, with high aims, deeply
+engaged in the factions of the court; but at the same time he had a
+spirit of noble enterprise, was ingenious and thoughtful. In
+everything new that was produced in the region of discoveries and
+inventions, of literature and art, he played the part of a fellow
+worker: he lived in the circle of universal knowledge, its problems
+and its progress. In his appearance he had something that announced a
+man of superior mind and nature.
+
+Around Cecil were grouped the statesmen who had been promoted by him,
+and worked in sympathy with him: for instance Bacon the Keeper of the
+Seals, whom the Queen regarded as the oracle of the laws, and who also
+amused her by many a witty word; Mildmay, the Chancellor of the
+Exchequer, who though adhering to the principles now adopted yet
+gladly favoured the claims of Parliament, and even the tendencies of
+the Puritans; Francis Walsingham, Secretary of State, who had once
+suffered exile for his Protestantism and now supported it after his
+return with all the resources of the administration; it is said of him
+that he heard in London what was whispered in the ear at Rome; he met
+the crafty Jesuits with a network of secret counter-action which
+extended over the world; there has never been a man who more
+vigilantly and unrelentingly hunted down religious and political
+conspiracies; to pay his agents, in choosing whom he was not too
+particular, he expended his own property. Cecil and Bacon had married
+two daughters of that Antony Cooke, who had once taken part in Edward
+VI's education: the other sisters, wedded to Hobby and Killigrew, men
+who were engaged in the most important embassies, extended the
+connexion of these statesmen. Walsingham was allied by marriage with
+Mildmay, and with Randolph the active ambassador in Scotland.
+
+Once the Queen brought a man among them, who owed his rise only to her
+being pleased with his person and conversation, which likewise brought
+her much ill repute:[282] she promoted her vice-chamberlain
+Christopher Hatton to be Lord Chancellor of England. The lawyers made
+loud and bitter complaints of this disregard of their claims and their
+order. Hatton had however been long on good terms with the leading
+statesmen: in all the late questions of difficulty as to Mary Stuart's
+trial he had held firm to them. His nephew and heir soon after married
+a granddaughter of Burleigh.
+
+The Queen's own relations on the mother's side had always some
+influence with her. Francis Knolles who had married into this family,
+and was appointed by the Queen treasurer of her household, won himself
+a good name with his contemporaries and with posterity by his
+religious zeal and openness of heart. A still more important figure in
+this circle is Thomas Sackville, who is also named with honour among
+the founders of English literature; the part of the 'Mirror for
+Magistrates' which was due to him witnesses to an original conception
+of the dark sides of man's existence, and to a creative imagination.
+But the poet likewise did excellent service to his sovereign: he makes
+his appearance when an important treaty is to be concluded, or the
+people are to be called on to defend the country, or even when any
+agitation is feared in the troubles at home. He was selected to inform
+the Queen of Scots that the sentence of death had been pronounced on
+her. He is the Lord Buckhurst from whom the dukes of Dorset are
+descended.
+
+The distinguished family to which Anne Boleyn belonged, and which had
+such an important influence on her rise, that of the Howards, proved
+in its elder branch as little loyal to the daughter as it had once
+been to the mother. On the other hand Elizabeth had experienced the
+attachment of the younger line, that of Effingham, and had since
+repaid it with manifold favours. From this branch came the Admiral,
+who commanded the sea-force in the decisive attacks on the Spanish
+Armada. We know that he was not himself a great seaman; but he
+understood enough of the matter to enable him to avail himself of
+those who understood more than he did. The Queen looked on him as the
+man marked out by Providence for the defence of herself and of the
+country.
+
+General Norris, who gained reputation for the English arms on the
+continent by the side of Henry IV, was also related to her though more
+distantly: besides this, she wished to repay him for the good
+treatment she had formerly received in her distress from his
+grandfather.
+
+How predominantly the personal element once more manifests itself in
+this administration! As the Queen's own interest is also that of all,
+those who belong to her family or have won her favour and done her
+essential service, are the chiefs of the State and the leaders in war.
+The royal patronage extended this influence over the Church and the
+universities. But we find it no less in all other branches. Sir Thomas
+Gresham, the Queen's agent in money-matters, was the founder of the
+Exchange of London, to which she at his request gave the name of the
+Royal Exchange.
+
+In literature also we see the traces of her taste and her influence.
+Owing to the tone of good society the classics were studied by every
+one. The higher education was directed to them, as indeed the Queen
+herself found in them refreshment and food for the mind: many
+classical authors were translated, and the forms of the old poets
+revived or imitated. The Italians and Spaniards, who had led the way
+in similar attempts, further awoke the emulation of the English. In
+Edmund Spenser, in whom the spirit of the age shows itself most
+vividly, we constantly meet with imitations of the Latin or Italian
+poets, which here and there aspire to be paraphrastic translations,
+and may be inferior to his originals, even to the modern ones, in
+delicacy of drawing, since he purposely selected their most successful
+passages: yet how thoroughly different a spirit do his works breathe
+in their total effect! What in the Italians is a play of fancy is in
+him a deep moral earnestness. The English nation has an inestimable
+possession in these works of a moral and religious grandeur, and a
+simple view of nature, which happily expressed in single stanzas stamp
+themselves on every man's memory. Spenser has assigned to allegory, as
+a style, a larger sphere than perhaps belongs to it, and one allegory
+is always interweaving itself with another; the heroes whom he takes
+from the old romances become to him representatives of the different
+virtues, but he possesses such an original power of vivid
+representation that even in this form he gains the reader's interest.
+But, if we ask what is the main thing which he celebrates, we find
+that it is precisely the course of the great war in which his nation
+is engaged against the Papacy and the Spaniards. The Faery Queen is
+his sovereign, whose figure under the manifold symbols of the
+qualities which she possessed, or which were ascribed to her, is
+always coming forward afresh in his verse. With wonderful power
+Elizabeth united around her all the aspiring minds and energies of the
+nation.
+
+Not a few of the productions of the time have so strong an infusion of
+reverence for the Queen that we cannot help smiling: but it is true
+nevertheless that at her court the language formed itself, and all
+great aspirations found their central point. Elizabeth's statesmen,
+who had to deal with a Parliament that could not be led by mere
+authority, studied the rules of eloquence in the models of antiquity,
+and made their doctrines their own. On their table Quintilian lay by
+the side of the Statutes.
+
+The Queen, who loved the theatre and declared it a national
+institution by a proclamation, made it possible for Shakespeare to
+develop himself; his roots lie deep in this epoch, he represents its
+manners and mode of life: but he spreads far out beyond it. We shall
+return to him in a more suitable place than this, in which we are
+treating of the Queen's influence.
+
+It would contradict the nature of human affairs were we to expect that
+the general point of view, which swayed the State as a whole, could
+have induced every one who took part in its administration to move on
+to their common aim in one way. Of the great nobles of the court many
+rather supported the Puritans, as indeed the father of the Puritan
+Cartwright owed his position at Warwick to Leicester's protection;
+others inclined to favour the Catholics. The severity which the
+bishops thought themselves bound to exercise met with opposition among
+the leading statesmen: and to these again the soldiers were opposed.
+It was a society full of life, and highly gifted, but for that very
+reason in continual ferment and internal conflict.
+
+We have still to grasp clearly the event in which these antagonisms
+and the Queen's temperament yet once more led to a great catastrophe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The aged Burleigh, who had provoked the war with Spain, wished also to
+end it. From his past experience he concluded that he could not
+inflict any decisive blow on the Spanish monarchy, which still
+displayed a vast power of resistance; in 1597 it could again offer a
+high price for peace. The Spaniards, who had taken Calais from the
+French by a sudden attack, offered the Queen the restoration of this
+old English possession in exchange for the strong places in the
+Netherlands, entrusted to her in pledge.[283] For the Netherlands no
+other provision would have been thus made than was proposed in 1587:
+but England would have again won as strong a position on the Continent
+as it had before, and would have established its rule over the
+neighbouring seas: an open commerce would have been re-established,
+and Ireland freed from the hostile influence of the Spaniards: the
+Queen would have enjoyed peace in her advancing years. Burleigh saw as
+it were the conclusion of his life in this: he said that, if God
+granted him a good agreement with Spain, his soul would depart with
+joy.
+
+But for this policy he could not possibly get the approval of the
+young, whose ambitious hopes were connected with the continuance of
+the war. They measured the power of the country by their own thirst
+for action. If the Queen, so they said, would only not do everything
+by halves and not follow her secretaries so much, she could,
+especially now she had the Dutch as allies, tear the Spanish monarchy
+in pieces. How could they fail, with some effort, in occupying the
+Isthmus of Panama? And then they would at one blow deprive the
+monarchy of all its resources. And above all, the man who then played
+the most brilliant part at court, Robert Devereux Earl of Essex, was
+of this opinion. He was Leicester's stepson, introduced by him at
+court, and after his death his successor as it were in the Queen's
+favour. An attractive manly appearance, blooming youth, chivalrous
+manners, won him all hearts from the very first. With the Queen he
+entered into that rare relation, in which favour on the one side and
+homage on the other took the hues of mutual inclination, and even
+passion.
+
+What Essex's idea of it was he once revealed at a dramatic festivity
+which he arranged for the Queen in honour of her accession. There he
+made a hermit, an officer of state, and a soldier come forward and
+address their exhortations to an esquire who was intended to represent
+himself. By the first the knight was desired to give up all feelings
+of love, by the second to devote his powers to State affairs, by the
+third to apply himself to war. The answer is: the knight cannot give
+up his passion for his lady, since she animates all his thoughts with
+divine fire, teaches him true policy, and at the same time qualifies
+him to lead an army. Essex had taken part in some campaigns of Henry
+IV, and afterwards commanded the squadron which was in possession of
+the harbour of Cadiz for a moment, but without being able to hold it:
+he also failed in another enterprise which was planned to seize the
+plate-fleet; but this did not prevent him from evermore designing
+fresh and comprehensive plans. His view in this matter he also once
+represented dramatically.[284] He brought forward a native American
+prince who utters the wish to be freed from the Castilians and their
+oppressive rule: an oracle refers him to the Queen whose kingdom lies
+between the old and the new world, and who is naturally inclined to
+come to the aid of all the oppressed.
+
+The negociations for peace were wrecked mainly through their inherent
+difficulties: the Spaniards however had no hesitation in ascribing the
+ill result to the influence of the Queen's favourite, who had been won
+over by the King of France.[285] But the war could not after this be
+waged on the grand scale contemplated, because Henry IV himself now
+concluded peace, which freed the hands of the Spaniards to act against
+England, and even awoke once more their ideas of an invasion.
+
+Under the double influence of English oppression and the instigation
+of both Spain and Rome a revolt broke out in Ireland, in which the
+English suffered a defeat on the Blackwater, which is designated as
+the greatest mishap they had ever suffered in that island. Ulster,
+Connaught, and Leinster were in arms: their chief, Tyrone, who had
+learnt war in the English service, came forward as The O'Neil, and was
+already recognised by the Pope as sovereign of Ulster; the Irish
+reckoned on Spanish assistance, either in Ireland itself, or through
+an attack on England. Priests and Jesuits fed the Irish with hopes
+that this time they would free themselves, and destroy the very memory
+of the English rule.
+
+The Queen decided, in order to keep her hold on the island, to send
+over an unusually strong armament of horse and foot: and Essex, who
+had always been the loudest in blaming the errors of previous
+commanders, could not avoid at last himself undertaking its direction,
+though he did not do it with complete alacrity.
+
+Though Burleigh was dead, his son Robert Cecil nevertheless maintained
+himself in possession of the secretaryship of state and was at the
+head of his father's old friends, joined as they were by others who
+were not indeed his friends but were enemies of Essex. It was
+unwillingly that Essex quitted the court and thus left the field open
+to them: especially as his personal relation to the Queen was no
+longer what it had been of old. Aspiring by nature, supported by the
+good opinion of the people (on which his grand appearance and his bold
+spirit of enterprise had made much impression), and by the devotion
+of brave officers who were ready to follow him in any undertaking by
+land or sea, he presumed to desire to be something for himself. He
+wished to be no longer absolutely dependent on the nod of his
+mistress. The story goes that she once, in a violent passion at his
+disrespectful conduct, gave him a box on the ear, and that he laid his
+hand on his sword. Even in his letters expressions indicating
+resistance break through his declarations of submission. His friends
+indeed advised him to return to absolute obedience: then the Queen
+would raise the man whom she honoured above all others. He rejected
+this advice because he held that the Queen was a woman, from whom one
+gets nothing but by superior authority. It almost appears as though he
+thought he might obtain such an authority by the Irish war.
+
+But he found this expedition far harder than he had expected.
+Previously he had always said that the great rebel, Tyrone, must be
+tracked to Ulster, where were the roots of his power, and conquered
+there: then the rest of the country would return to obedience of
+itself. How great was the astonishment when he now nevertheless began
+with a march into Munster and Leinster, in which he wasted his
+resources without obtaining any great success! He maintained that the
+Privy Council of Ireland had urged him on to this: its members denied
+it. At last the campaign to the North was undertaken: but in this
+region the Irish were found to have the complete superiority: the
+Queen's newly-levied troops on the other hand were neither adapted,
+nor quite willing, to venture on a decisive action: the officers
+signed a protest against it: and Essex saw himself obliged to enter
+into negociations with Tyrone.
+
+The conditions which that chief demanded in return for his submission
+are exceedingly comprehensive: complete freedom of the Catholic church
+under the Pope, and a transfer of the dignities of state to the
+natives, so that only a viceroy, who should always belong to the high
+nobility, was to come from England: the chief Irish families were to
+be restored to their old possessions, and freed from the most
+oppressive laws, for instance that of wardship; and the Irish were to
+be allowed free trade with England.[286] These stipulations would
+have promised a free development to the Irish nation, and made the
+yoke of England exceedingly light. Essex accepted them, because the
+Spaniards were just now threatening an attack on England, and Tyrone
+could only be separated from them on these conditions; even then
+Tyrone begged that for the present they might be kept a profound
+secret, that he might not quarrel with the Spaniards too soon.
+
+But how could such comprehensive concessions be expected from the
+proud Queen? How could her counsellors, who always preferred direct
+negociation with Spain, have accepted them?
+
+The idea occurred to the Earl of Essex to return to England with a
+part of his troops, and at their head enforce the acceptance of his
+treaty, after which he would throw himself with all his might into the
+Spanish war. And without doubt this would have been the only way to
+carry out his plan, and become altogether master of the government.
+
+But it was represented to him that this looked exactly like an attempt
+at rebellion. Essex was induced to give it up, and make everything yet
+once more depend on the influence which he was confident he could
+exercise on the Queen by appearing in person. Even this however was a
+great risk: he not merely had no leave to do so, but it had been
+expressly forbidden him just previously: he thought it however the
+only way of obtaining his end. Without even having announced his
+departure to the Queen, he suddenly appeared with slight attendance at
+Nonsuch, her country house.[287] He dismounted before the door, and
+did not even take time to change his dress: as he was, with the dust
+of the journey on his face and clothes, he hastened to the Queen: that
+he did not find her in the reception-room did not check him; he rushed
+on into her chamber, where he entered without being announced, and
+kissed her hand: her hair was still flying about her face. At the
+first moment she received him graciously--in a couple of hours he
+might see her again: when he returned to her at table, she began to
+reproach him. From minute to minute the Queen predominated in her over
+the friend: by evening his arrest was announced to him.
+
+Already by his conduct in Ireland Essex had supplied food for the
+slander of his enemies: how much more must this have been the case
+through his self-willed return! As he was fond of tracing his descent
+from royal blood, he was accused of even aspiring to the throne, after
+the example of Bolingbroke: for this purpose he had leagued himself
+with Tyrone and the Irish grandees, whose loyalty he praised
+notwithstanding their revolt. We can say with certainty that the views
+of the Earl of Essex never went so far. In the question as to the
+Queen's successor, which occupied every one, he had taken his side for
+the rights of the King of Scotland: he imputed to his enemies the
+design of favouring on the other hand the claim of the Infant of Spain
+(which was at that time put forward in all seriousness in a book much
+read) with the view of purchasing peace by his recognition. He
+assigned, as the motive for his conduct, his inability to endure the
+atheists, papists, and Spanish partisans in the Queen's council: as a
+Christian he could not possibly look on while religion perished, and
+as an Englishman he would not stand aloof while his fatherland was
+being ruined.[288] He had never wished to be anything else than a
+subject--but 'only of his Queen, not the underling of an unworthy and
+low vassal.' So far as men saw, he stood in connexion with both the
+parties opposed to the prevailing system. He was prayed for in the
+churches of the Puritans: Cartwright was one of his friends; the
+Scotch doctrine, that the Supreme Power, if it showed itself negligent
+in matters of religion, could be compelled by those immediately under
+it to take them in hand, is said to have been preached with reference
+to him. As Earl Marshal of England, Essex indeed thought he possessed
+an independent right of interference. But the mitigation of the
+ecclesiastical laws would also have benefited the Catholics; and it
+was among them that he had perhaps the most decided allies. If we
+might combine his views into a whole, they were directed towards
+raising the natives of America against Spain, at the same time that by
+toleration both in England and Ireland he united all patriots in the
+war against that power, in which he discerned that the chief interest
+of the nation lay.
+
+Essex remained a long while in the custody of the Keeper of the Seal,
+who was favourably disposed towards him; then he was sentenced by the
+Star Chamber not to exercise any longer his high offices as member of
+the Privy Council, as Earl Marshal, and Master of the Ordnance, and to
+live as a prisoner in his own house during the Queen's pleasure. He
+seemed to reconcile himself to this fate, and behaved modestly for a
+considerable time: he was still flattering himself with the hope of
+regaining his sovereign's favour, when a monopoly was withdrawn from
+him which formed the chief part of his income. This new victory of his
+enemies was intolerable to him: he would not let himself be brought so
+low by them as to be forced to live like a poor knight, without
+influence and independence. The thought occurred to him that, if he
+could but see the Queen once more, he might effect a change in his own
+destiny and in that of England. The popularity he enjoyed in the
+capital, the continued attachment of his old companions in arms, the
+friendship of some considerable nobles, allowed him to entertain the
+hope that he could attain this in despite of those around her, could
+make himself master of the palace, and force her to summon a
+Parliament--in which the change of government and the succession of
+the King of Scotland should be alike confirmed. Essex was no longer
+the blooming man of times past, he was seen moving along with his neck
+bowed down, but he still had his mind fixed on wide-ranging and
+ambitious thoughts: from his youth up elevated by good fortune and
+favour, he held everything possible which he set his hand to do. On
+the 8th February 1601 an armed band assembled at his house under
+certain lords; the Keeper of the Seal and his attendant, whom the
+Queen despatched in order to inform herself of the cause of the
+agitation, were detained. Essex dared to march through the capital
+with his armed men, in order to raise it on his behalf. He reckoned on
+the desertion of the city militia to him, and the connivance of the
+city magistrates; but instead of finding support he only excited
+astonishment. No one stirred in his favour. He was scarcely able--for
+royal troops were soon in arms against him--to make his way back to
+his house: there was nothing left for him but to surrender at
+discretion.
+
+At his trial the principle, which had already had so much weight in
+the proceedings against Mary Stuart, was expressly stated, that every
+attempt at rebellion must be looked on as directed against the life of
+the reigning sovereign.[289] A crisis had occurred which obliged
+Elizabeth to execute the man for whom among all men living she
+cherished the deepest and warmest feeling, just as formerly she had
+been forced to condemn one of the grandees connected with her by
+blood, and then her sister Queen of equal rights with herself--all of
+them for traitorous attempts against her government and person. She
+said she would gladly have saved Essex, but she was forced to let the
+laws of England take their course.
+
+Essex is to be compared with his contemporary Biron in so far as they
+both rebelled against sovereigns with whom they had stood in the
+closest relations. In both it was mainly injured self-esteem which
+goaded them on. As Biron had a portion of the lower French nobility
+for him, so Essex had the soldiers by profession and the officers of
+the army to a great extent on his side: they both appealed once more
+to religious antipathies. But above all they thought of again making
+room for the old independence of the warlike nobles: they both
+succumbed to the authority of the firmly-rooted power of the state.
+
+At that time there were fresh negociations going on for a peace
+between Spain and England; but they could as little now as before
+agree on the great subjects in dispute, the question of the
+Netherlands, and the interests of commerce, which at the same time
+involved points of religion. And the Spaniards broke off negotiations
+all the more readily, as exaggerated rumours of Essex's conspiracy
+resounded everywhere, making a revolt in England appear possible. They
+then instantly thought of a landing in an English harbour, and this
+the Catholics promised to support with considerable bodies of horse
+and foot. In Ireland, where the refusal of the concessions held out to
+them by Essex revived the national enmities, the Spaniards really
+effected a landing: under Don Juan d'Aguilar they occupied Kinsale:
+and hoped not merely to become masters of Ireland but to cross from
+thence to their friends' assistance in England.
+
+Hence Queen Elizabeth, who perceived the connexion of these
+hostilities, now reverted to the necessity of carrying on the war
+again on a larger scale. Her view was chiefly directed to a new
+enterprise against Portugal: its separation from Castile she held to
+be the greatest European success that was possible: but she hoped to
+bring about a change in Italy as well: there Venice was to attack the
+nearest Spanish territories. When she called the Venetians to
+aid--among other things she wished also to obtain a loan from the
+government--she put them in mind how much her resistance to the
+Spanish monarchy had benefited the European commonwealth: hence it was
+that Spain had been prevented from carrying out her tyrannical views
+throughout the world, in the Netherlands and in Germany, in France and
+Italy; the Republic, which loved freedom, would recognise this.
+Elizabeth thought to resume the war, if possible, at the head of all
+that part of Europe which was opposed to Spain, and in league with
+Henry IV, with whom she negociated on this subject. In the beginning
+of 1603 a squadron was fitted out under Sir Richard Lawson to attack
+the coasts of the Pyrenean peninsula. Men discussed the comparative
+forces which the two kingdoms could bring into the field.
+
+But the Queen's days were already drawing to a close.
+
+In February 1603 the Venetian secretary Scaramelli had an audience of
+her, and gives a report of it from which we see that she still
+completely preserved her wonted demeanour. He found the whole court,
+the leading ecclesiastics and the temporal dignitaries, assembled
+around her: they had been entertained with music. When he entered, the
+Queen rose in her usual rich attire, with a diadem of precious stones,
+almost encircled with pearls: rubies hung from her neck; and in her
+mien no one could detect any decay of her powers. 'It is time at
+last,' she said to the secretary, who wished to throw himself on his
+knees before her, while she raised him with both hands, 'it is time at
+last for the Republic to send its representative to a Queen by whom it
+has been always honoured.' The letter of the Republic was handed to
+her, and she gave it to the Secretary of State; after he had opened it
+and given it back to her again, she sat down to read it: it contained
+a complaint that Venetian ships had been seized by the English
+privateers, who then made all seas unsafe. The English nation, she
+then said, is not so small but that evil and thievish men may be found
+in it: while she promised enquiry and justice, she nevertheless
+reverted to her main point that she had received nothing from the
+republic during the forty-four years of her government but grievances
+and demands,--even the loan had been refused;--Venice had hitherto,
+contrary to her custom, not sent any embassy to her; not, she thought,
+because she was a woman, but through fear of other powers. Scaramelli
+answered that no temporal or even spiritual sovereign had any
+influence on the Republic in such matters; he ascribed the neglect to
+circumstances which no one could control. The Queen broke off: I do
+not know, she added, whether I have expressed myself in good Italian:
+I learned the language as a child, and think I have not forgotten it.
+After that serious address she again seemed gracious, and gave the
+secretary her hand to kiss, when she dismissed him. The next day
+commissioners were appointed to enquire into his grievances.[290]
+
+At that time the affairs of Ireland were once more occupying the
+Queen. The Spaniards had been compelled by Lord Mountjoy to leave the
+island; he had beaten them together with the Irish in a decisive
+action: but, despite his victory, many further conflicts took place,
+and the rebellion was not suppressed; Tyrone still maintained himself
+in the hills and woods of Ulster; and, as a return of the Spaniards
+was feared, Mountjoy too was at last disposed to come to an agreement
+with him. The Queen was in her inmost soul against this, for only
+fresh rebellions would be occasioned by it; she required an absolute
+surrender at discretion: if she once allowed the rebels to have their
+lives secured to them, she soon after retracted the concession. She
+even spoke of wishing to go to Ireland, in person; the impression
+produced by her presence would put an end to all revolt.
+
+But at this moment a sudden alteration was remarked in her: she no
+longer appeared at the festivities before Lent, which went off in an
+insignificant style. At first her seclusion was explained by the death
+of one of her ladies whom she loved, the Countess of Nottingham: but
+soon it could not be concealed that the Queen herself was seized with
+a dangerous illness: sleep and appetite began to fail her: she showed
+a deep melancholy. 'No,' she replied to one of the kinsmen of her
+mother's house, Robert Cary, who at that moment had come back to court
+and addressed friendly words to her about her health, 'No Robin, well
+I am not, my heart has been for some time oppressed and heavy;' she
+broke off with painful groans and sighing, hitherto unwonted in her,
+now no longer suppressed. It was manifest that mental distress
+accompanied the bodily decay.[291]
+
+Who has not heard of the ring which Elizabeth is said to have once
+given to the Earl of Essex with the promise that, if it were presented
+to her, she would show him mercy, whatever might have occurred: he
+had, so the tale runs, in his last distresses wished to send it her
+through the Countess of Nottingham: but she was prevented from giving
+it by her husband who was an enemy of Essex, and so he had to die
+without mercy: the Queen, to whom the Countess revealed this on her
+death bed, fell into despair over it. The ring is still shown, and
+indeed several rings are shown as the true one: as also the tradition
+itself is extant in two somewhat varying forms; attempts have been
+made to get rid of the improbabilities of the first by fresh fictions
+in the second.[292] They are both so late, and rest so completely on
+hearsay, that they can no longer stand before historical criticism.
+
+Nevertheless we cannot deny, as the reports in fact testify in several
+places, that the remembrance of Essex weighed on the Queen's soul. It
+must certainly have reminded her of him, that she was now brought back
+exactly to the course he had insisted on, namely a friendly agreement
+with the invincible Irish chief. She had allowed less imperious, more
+compliant, declarations to reach Ireland. But was the man a traitor,
+who had recommended a policy to which they had been forced to have
+recourse after such repeated efforts? Had he deserved his fate at her
+hands?[293] It was remarked that the anniversary of the day on which
+Essex two years before had suffered on the scaffold, Ash Wednesday,
+thrilled through her with heart-rending pain; the world seemed to her
+desolate, since he was no longer there; she imputed his guilt to the
+ambition, against which she had warned him, and which had misled him
+into steps, from the consequences of which she could not protect him.
+But had she not herself uttered the decisive word? She burst into
+self-accusing tears. Her distress may have been increased by finding
+that her statesmen no longer showed her the old devotion, the earlier
+absolute obedience. When they, as we know, had framed a formal theory
+for themselves, that they might act against an express command of the
+Queen, on the assumption of her general intention being directed to
+the public good, could the sharp-sighted, suspicious, sovereign fail
+to perceive it? Could she fail to remark the agitation as to her
+successor, which occupied all men's minds, while the reins were
+slipping from her hands? The people, on whose devotion she had from
+the first moment laid so much stress, and partly based her government,
+seemed after Essex' death to have become cold towards her.
+
+In every great life there comes a moment when the soul feels that it
+no longer lives in the present world, and draws back from it.
+
+Once more Elizabeth had the English Liturgy read in her room: there
+she sat afterwards day and night on the cushions with which it was
+covered, in deep silence, her finger on her mouth: she rejected physic
+with disdain.[294] Most said and believed she did not care to recover
+or to live any longer, that she wished to die. When she was at last
+got to bed, and had a moment left of consciousness and interest in the
+world, she had the members of her Privy Council summoned: she then
+either said to them directly that she held the King of Scotland to be
+her lawful and deserving successor, or she designated him in a way
+that left no doubt.[295]
+
+Amidst the prayers of the Archbishop of Canterbury, who was kneeling
+by her bed, she breathed her last.
+
+It is not merely the business of History to point out how far great
+personages have attained the ideals which float before the mind of
+man, or how far they have remained below them. It is almost more
+important for it to ascertain how far the universal interests, in the
+midst of which eminent characters appear, have been advanced by them,
+whether their inborn force was a match for the opposing elements,
+whether it allowed itself to be conquered by them or not. There never
+was a sovereign who maintained a conflict of world-wide importance
+amidst greater dangers and with greater success than Queen Elizabeth.
+Her grandfather had begun a political emancipation from the ruling
+influences of the continent, her father an ecclesiastical one:
+Elizabeth took up their task and accomplished it victoriously against
+Rome and against Spain, while her people had an ever-increasing part
+in public affairs, and thus entered into a new stage of development.
+Her memory is inseparably connected with the independence and power of
+England.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[274] Elizabeth to James VI, August 1588, in Rymer and Bruce 53.
+
+[275] Molino: 'Fu prudentissima nel governare diligente nel
+consultare, perche voleva assistere a tutti li negotii,
+perspicasissima nel provedere le cose ed accuratissima perche le
+deliberationi fatte fossero eseguite.'
+
+[276] One of her expressions was: 'He that placed her in that seat
+would preserve her in it.' Contemporary notice in Ellis, Letters ii.
+iii. 194.
+
+[277] Hentzner, Itinerarium 137.
+
+[278] De Maisse, in Prevost-Paradol, Memoire sur Elizabeth et Henri
+IV. Seances et travaux de l'academie des sciences morales, tom. 34.
+
+[279] Ockland, in Strype iii. 2, 237: 'Somni perparcus, parce vinique
+cibique in mensa sumens, semper gravis atque modestus.'
+
+[280] Letter to a friend, in Strype iii. 2, 379. Certain true general
+notes upon the actions of Lord Burleigh, in Strype iii. 2, 505. A
+letter from Leicester is in existence, in which he tries to prove that
+William Cecil had obligations to his father and not merely to the
+Protector.
+
+[281] Naunton, Fragmenta regalia.
+
+[282] Sir H. Nicolas, Life and Times of Christopher Hatton,
+communicates (p. 30) fragments of the Queen's letters, which lead him
+to remark that the supposition of an immoral relation (which he
+elsewhere adopts) is refuted by them. The Queen inquires for instance,
+What is friendship? 'The union of two minds bound to each other by
+virtue. He is no more a friend who desires more than the other can
+reasonably grant.'
+
+[283] Herrera, Historia del mundo iii. 754.
+
+[284] Device made by the Earl of Essex: Devereux, Lives and Letters of
+the Devereux, Earls of Essex, ii. App. F.
+
+[285] Herrera complains at first of the 'ministros infideles' of the
+Queen: among them he names Essex.
+
+[286] In Winwood, Memorials i.
+
+[287] Rowland Whyte to Sir Robert Sidney, Michaelmass Day 1599 (the
+day after the Earl's arrival). Sidney Papers ii. 127.
+
+[288] 'I could not but see and feel what misery was near unto my
+country by the great power of such as are known indeed to be atheists
+papists and pensioners of the mortal enemies of this kingdom.'
+Confession to Ashton, in Devereux ii. 165.
+
+[289] 'As foreseeing that the rebel will never suffer the King to live
+or reign, who might permit or take revenge of the treason and
+rebellion.' In Campbell, Lives of the Lord Chancellors ii. 199.
+
+[290] Dispaccio di Carlo Scaramelli 19 Feb. 1603 (Venetian Archives).
+
+[291] Memoirs of Robert Cary 116.
+
+[292] The first appears in Aubery's Memoires pour servir a l'histoire
+de Hollande 1687, 214; with another apocryphal tale about finding the
+bones of Edward IV's children as early as Elizabeth's time. Aubery
+asserts that he heard the history of the ring from his father's mouth,
+who had heard it from Prince Maurice of Orange, to whom it had been
+communicated by the English ambassador Carleton. According to him the
+Queen then took to her bed, dressed as she was, sprang from it a
+hundred times during the night, and starved herself to death. Who does
+not, in reading this, feel himself in a sphere of wild romance? Lady
+Spelman has tried to clear away the improbability involved in it, that
+Essex should have applied to the wife of one of his enemies, by making
+Essex give the ring to a boy passing by, who was to give it, not to
+the Countess of Nottingham, but to her sister, and then mistook the
+two ladies.
+
+[293] Scaramelli, 27 March: 'per occasione del perdono finalmente
+fatto al conte di Tirone cadde in una consideratione, che il conte di
+Esses gia tanto suo intimo di cuore fosse morto innocente.'
+
+[294] Letter of the French ambassador from London, 3rd April 1603.
+'C'est la verite que delors, qu'elle se sentit atteinte du mal, elle
+dit de vouloir mourir.' Villeroy, Memoires d'estat iii. 212. Cary:
+'The Queen grew worse and worse, because she would be so.' Compare
+Sloane MS. in Ellis iii. 194.
+
+[295] Scaramelli writes to his Signoria 7th April (New Style) what was
+said during those days: 'La regina nel fine della infirmita et della
+vita dopo haver dormito alcune poche hore ritornata di sana mente
+conoscendosi moribonda il primo di Aprile corr. fece chiamare i
+signori del regio consiglio--e commandava loro,--che la corona
+pervenisse al Piu meritevole ch'ella ha trovato sempre nel suo secreto
+esser il Re di Scotia cosi per il dritto della successione, che per
+esserne Piu degno che non e stata lei, poiche egli e nato re et ella
+privata--egli le portera un regno et ella non porta altro che se
+stessa donna.' Without quite accepting this, we must not pass it over.
+Winwood too writes to Tremouille: 'le jour avant son trespas elle
+declara pour son successeur le roy d'Escosse.' Memoires i. 461.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK IV.
+
+FOUNDATION OF THE KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN. FIRST DISTURBANCES UNDER
+THE STUARTS.
+
+
+Under no dynasty in the world have great national changes been so
+dependent on the personal aims of princes as in England under the
+Tudors. Just as all Henry VIII's subsequent proceedings were
+determined by the affair of the divorce, so also the policy of his
+three children was due to the relations into which they were thrown by
+their birth.
+
+No one however could derive the course of English history at this
+epoch from this cause alone. How could Henry VIII have even thought of
+detaching his kingdom from the Roman See, but for the ancient and
+deep-seated national opposition to its encroachments? But the nation
+had also for ages had manifold and deep sympathies with Rome; and Mary
+Tudor allied herself with these. Together with subjective personal
+agencies, national influences of universal prevalence were at work.
+The different leanings of the sovereigns appear as exponents of
+opposite tendencies already existing in the nation. The struggle
+between these was decided when, as in the reign of Elizabeth, the most
+vigorous nature combined with the most powerful interests and the most
+influential motives to gain the mastery, although others of a
+different character were still by no means suppressed.
+
+Now however the energetic race of the Tudors had disappeared from the
+throne. By the right of natural inheritance another family ascended
+it, which had its roots and associations in Scotland, the crown of
+which country it united with that of England. If a long time elapsed
+before the English commonwealth was as closely attached to the new
+dynasty as it had been to the old, under which it had developed; so
+it is also clear that the point of view from which this dynasty
+started could not be exactly the same as that which had hitherto
+prevailed. This could not be expected under a prince who had already
+reigned for a quarter of a century and had long ago taken up, in his
+native country, a firm position with regard to the great conflicts of
+the age. This position we must first of all endeavour to represent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+JAMES VI OF SCOTLAND: HIS ACCESSION TO THE THRONE OF ENGLAND.
+
+
+_Origin of fresh dissension in the Church._
+
+Our eyes again turn to the man to whom the last great religious and
+political change in Scotland is mainly due--John Knox.
+
+We find him, propped on his staff and supported on the other side by a
+helping arm, stepping homewards from the church where he had once more
+performed a religious service: the multitude of the faithful lined the
+road, and greeted him with reverence. He could no longer walk alone,
+or raise his voice as before; it was only in a more confined space
+that he used still to gather a little congregation round him, to whom
+on appointed days and at fixed hours he proclaimed the teaching of the
+Gospel with unabated fire. He lived to hear of the wildest outbursts
+of the struggle on the continent, and to pronounce his curse on the
+King of France, who had taken part in the massacre of St. Bartholomew;
+but, in one respect, he was more fortunate than Luther, who in his
+last days was threatened with mischief from hostile elements about him
+which he could not control; for around John Knox all was peace. He
+thanked God for having granted him grace, that by his means the Gospel
+was preached throughout Scotland in its simplicity and truth: he now
+desired nothing more than to depart out of this miserable life; and
+thus, without pain, in November 1572, after bearing the burden and
+heat of the day, he fell asleep.
+
+With him and his contemporaries the second generation of the reformers
+came to an end. They had fought out the battle against the papacy, and
+had established the foundations of a divergent system: now however a
+third generation arose, which had to encounter violent storms within
+the pale of the new confession itself.
+
+In Scotland the Regents Mar and Morton now thought it necessary, even
+for the sake of the constitution, in which the higher clergy formed an
+important element, to restore episcopacy, which had been laid low in
+the tumult of the times; and to fill the vacant offices with
+Protestant clergy, appointed however in the old way, by the election
+of the chapters on the recommendation of the Government: it was
+desired at the same time to invest them with the power of ordination
+and a certain jurisdiction. Knox was at least not hostile to this
+measure. The resolution to convene an assembly of the Church at Leith
+was formed while he was still alive, and was ratified by Parliament in
+January 1573.
+
+But in the Church, which had formed itself in perfect independence by
+means of free association, this project, which besides was spoiled by
+many blunders in the execution, necessarily provoked strong
+opposition. Andrew Melville may be regarded as Knox's successor in the
+exercise of the authority of leader; a man of wide learning, who had
+in his composition still more of the professor than of the preacher,
+and united convictions not less firm than those of Knox with an equal
+gift of eloquence. He however on principle excluded episcopacy in any
+form from the constitution, as, in his opinion, the Scriptures
+recognised only individual bishops: he especially disapproved of the
+connexion between the bishops and the crown. The spiritual and the
+temporal powers he considered to be distinct kinds of authority, of
+which the one was as much of divine right as the other. But he did not
+regard the clergy or ministry of preaching as alone charged with
+spiritual authority: he thought that the lay elders formed the basis
+of this authority: that, once elected, they were permanent, had
+themselves a spiritual rank, watched over the purity of doctrine, took
+the lead in the call of the preachers, and, together with these,
+formed assemblies by whose conclusions every member of the
+congregation was bound. A General Assembly erected on this basis had
+the legislative authority in the Church, with the right of visitation
+and of spiritual correction. It was incumbent on the King to protect
+them; but he was amenable to their sentence. Such is the discipline
+laid down in the Second Book, which was approved in the year 1578, in
+a General Assembly, of which Melville was Moderator.[296]
+
+With these opposite principles before his eyes, the young King grew
+up. He showed himself to be imbued with the reformed doctrine, but he
+was decidedly averse to this form of church government, which created
+a power in the nation intended to counterbalance and withstand that of
+the monarch. The political views of his teachers, highly popular as
+they were, awoke in him, as was natural, the inborn feelings of a
+king. He longed with all his soul for the restoration of episcopacy,
+which, according to his view, was of almost chief importance for both
+Crown and Church.
+
+This was indeed a different strife from the battle between Catholicism
+and Protestantism, which filled the rest of the world: but they had
+points of contact with one another, inasmuch as the reform of doctrine
+had almost everywhere put an end to episcopal government. And the
+larger conflict was constantly exercising fresh influence on the state
+of the question in Scotland.
+
+When the Catholic party was on the point of becoming master of the
+young King, the Protestant lords, as has been mentioned above, gained
+possession of his person by the Raid of Ruthven. They were the
+champions of Presbyterianism in the Church; but as they had been
+overthrown, and overthrown moreover in consequence of the support
+which the King received from an ambassador friendly to the Guises,
+that form of government could not survive their fall. In the
+Parliament of 1584, which obeyed the wishes of the ruling powers,
+enactments distinctly opposed to it were passed. By these the
+constitution of the Three Estates united in Parliament was ratified.
+They forbade any one to attack the Estates either collectively or
+singly, and therefore to attack the bishops. No meeting in which
+resolutions should be taken about temporal or even about spiritual
+affairs was to be held without the King's approval: no jurisdiction
+was to be exercised which was not acknowledged by the King and the
+Estates. The judicial power of the King over all subjects and in all
+causes, and therefore even in spiritual causes, was therein expressly
+confirmed.
+
+At that time however Jesuits and Seminarists effected an entrance into
+Scotland as well as into other countries, and produced a great effect:
+Father Gordon especially, who belonged to one of the most
+distinguished families in the country, that of the Earls of Huntly,
+was exceedingly active; and for two months the King allowed his
+presence at court. Who could guarantee that the young prince would not
+be entirely carried away by this current when his chief counsellor,
+with whom the final decision mainly rested, belonged to the party of
+the Guises?[297] A great reward was offered to him: he was to be
+married to an archduchess; and at some future day, after the victory
+had been won, he was to be raised to the throne of England and
+Scotland. When we take into consideration that Melville, who set
+himself to oppose this influence, had spent ten years at Geneva and
+among the Huguenots, we see plainly how the struggles which distracted
+the continent threatened to invade Scotland as well.
+
+
+_Alliance with England._
+
+In this danger Queen Elizabeth, who for her own sake did not venture
+to allow matters to go so far, resolved to interfere more actively in
+the affairs of Scotland than she had hitherto done. It is not
+perfectly clear what share her government had in the return of the
+exiled Protestant lords, whose attack had compelled King James to
+allow the conviction for high treason of his former minister and
+favourite, who fled to France in consequence. But their return was
+certainly welcome to her; and she advised the King not to alienate
+the great men of his kingdom, that is to say the returned lords, from
+his own side. In the instructions to her ambassador it is expressly
+said that he should aim at withholding the King from any alliance with
+the League in France, which was then growing powerful. She had just
+determined to make open war upon the King of Spain, who guided all the
+proceedings of the League; what could be more important for her than
+to retain the King of one division of the island on her own side? For
+that object she need not require him to support the Presbyterians; his
+point of view was the same which she contended for in the Netherlands
+and in France, and very closely akin to her own.
+
+She had besides a great reward to offer him. Distasteful as it was to
+her to speak of her successor, she then determined to give the King
+the assurance that nothing should be done which was prejudicial to his
+claim, and she agreed to a secret acknowledgment of it.[298] Her
+ambassador gave expression to these views in Scotland, and she herself
+spoke in similar terms to the Scottish ambassador in England.
+
+The acceptance of these overtures by King James was the decisive event
+of his life. He was not so blind as not to see that any promise on the
+part of England, although not binding in regular form, afforded a kind
+of certainty entirely different from all the assurances of the League,
+however comprehensive. The Queen moreover pledged herself to a subsidy
+that was very acceptable to the poverty of the Scots, while her
+protection served the King himself as a stay against his nobles, whom
+he dared not alienate, but on whom he could not allow himself to be
+dependent.
+
+Thus in July 1586 an offensive and defensive alliance was concluded at
+Berwick between the King and Queen in order to protect the religion
+adopted in their dominions, which, in the language of the Prayer-book,
+they termed the 'Catholic,' and to repel, not only every invasion, but
+every attempt on the person of their majesties or their subjects,
+without regard to any ties of blood or relationship. The King promised
+the Queen to come to her assistance with all his forces in the event
+of any attack on the Northern counties, and not to allow his subjects
+to support any hostile movements which might take place in Ireland.
+Every word shows how absolutely and entirely in the events that were
+at hand he identifies the interests of England with his own.[299]
+
+It was of more especial advantage to the Queen that James entirely
+renounced the cause of his mother. He had exerted himself in her
+behalf, but his intercession never went beyond the limits of friendly
+representation. Mary's secret resignation of her claims in favour of
+Philip II had certainly not been unknown to him; he complained on one
+occasion that she threatened him on his throne and was as little
+attached to him as to the Queen of England. He loudly condemned her
+conspiracies against Elizabeth and gave utterance to the unfeeling
+remark that she might drain the cup which she had mixed for herself.
+At the trial of his mother he was content with obtaining an assurance
+from the English Parliament, which was of great importance to him,
+that his rights should not be impaired by her condemnation. The claims
+to the English throne which brought Mary to destruction rather served
+to strengthen her son, as it threw him altogether on the side of the
+English system.[300]
+
+On the approach of the Spanish armada James at once placed his power
+and his person at the disposal of the Queen. He assured her that he
+would behave not as a foreign prince, but as if he were her son and a
+citizen of her realm. With unusual decision he put himself at the head
+of the Protestant nobles, and pursued the Catholic lords who gave ear
+to those Spanish overtures which he had resisted.
+
+He now sought for a wife in a Protestant family. With the concurrence,
+if not at the instigation, of the English ministers, he solicited the
+hand of a daughter of Frederick II, King of Denmark, whom Elizabeth
+had praised for adhering to the general interests of the Protestant
+world. In this enterprise James was influenced by the consideration
+that if any other state opposed his claims on England, Denmark with
+its naval power could afford him substantial assistance. A touch of
+romance is imparted to his youth by the circumstance that he set out
+in person to fetch home his bride, who was detained in Norway by
+contrary winds, and who had been promised to him by her mother after
+her father's death. Their marriage was celebrated at Opslo (Nov. 23,
+1589), but their homeward voyage was now attended with difficulty;
+James therefore took his wife over the snow-clad mountains and the
+Sound, back to her mother to Kronborg and Copenhagen, and spent a
+couple of months there. He had many conversations with the divines of
+the country, during which the idea of an union of both Protestant
+confessions was mooted. He also paid a visit to Tycho Brahe on the
+island of Hveen, which gave him indescribable pleasure: he believed
+that in his company he fathomed the marvels of the universe, and
+lauded the astronomer in spirited Latin verse as the friend of Urania,
+and as the master of the starry world.[301] And a general influence
+was exercised in Europe both by his alliance with the house of
+Oldenburg, and the connexion which he formed through it with many of
+the most distinguished families in Germany. His consort was niece of
+the Elector of Saxony, sister-in-law of the Elector of Brandenburg,
+and granddaughter of the German Nestor, Ulric of Mecklenburg. Her
+sister had just married Henry Julius Duke of Brunswick; at whose
+marriage, which was celebrated at Cronberg, a company of North German
+princes met together, which seemed like one single family. But the
+days of this assemblage were not occupied with banquets and
+festivities alone. To the impression which was then made on James may
+be traced the despatch of an embassy to the Temporal Electors of the
+Empire, which he deputed soon after his return to invite them to
+mediate between England and Spain. If the King of Spain were
+disinclined for peace, he thought that a powerful alliance should be
+formed against him for the maintenance of religion.
+
+For such an alliance as this, England and Scotland seemed to offer a
+centre. In an assemblage of the clergy, the King had once
+congratulated himself on living at a time when the light of the Gospel
+was shining; and in the same spirit his Chancellor gave Lord Burleigh
+to understand, that this British microcosm, severed from the rest of
+the world, but united internally by language, religion, and the
+friendship of its princes, could best oppose the bloodthirstiness of
+an anti-Christian League.[302]
+
+
+_Renewal of the Episcopal Constitution in Scotland._
+
+In Scotland, as well as elsewhere, the waves of the all-prevailing
+struggle kept raging.
+
+Embassies went backwards and forwards between Spain and the powerful
+lords, Huntly, Errol and Angus, who kept alive Catholicism in the
+Highlands; and a plan was formed to assemble a force of Scots and
+Spaniards in Scotland, which should first overthrow the forces of that
+country, and thence advance into England.[303] King James at least
+believed that he had gathered a definite statement to this effect from
+an examination of those who had been arrested. Philip the Second's
+design of getting the crown of France into his own family would have
+been powerfully seconded by this undertaking, by which it was designed
+to treat Great Britain in the same way. In the beginning of 1593 we
+find James at Aberdeen engaged on a campaign against the Highlands:
+the lesser nobles and the Protestants were on his side: the great
+earls were driven back into the most remote districts as far as
+Caithness, and the larger part of their domains fell into the hands of
+the King. But they were not yet entirely conquered, and the next
+Parliament showed that they had the greater part of the nobility on
+their side. No one wished to be too severe on them;[304] even the
+legal advisers of the crown recommended the King not to commence a
+suit against them, in which they might probably be acquitted. It is
+impossible to describe the displeasure which affected Elizabeth on
+this turn of affairs, which she ascribed to the pusillanimous and
+negligent government of James. Did he not know, she asked, that the
+religion of the rebels was only a cloak for treason? Would he trust
+men who had so often betrayed him? He could never expect them to keep
+their plighted faith in the future, if their great offences in the
+past were not even acknowledged: a lax government set all turbulent
+spirits in motion, and led to shipwreck. With this advice, and similar
+suggestions from the clergy, came the news of fresh commotion. Francis
+Stuart, who had been made Earl of Bothwell by James, but who after
+this had given great trouble by frequently changing sides, had now
+joined the Catholic lords; and a plan had been concerted between them
+to deal with James as they had formerly dealt with his mother, to make
+him prisoner, and to put the prince just born to him in his place. At
+last in September 1594 we find the King again in the field. The young
+Argyle, whom he sent before him as his lieutenant, was met by the
+earls in open fight, but they did not venture to encounter the King
+himself. He took Strathbogie, the splendid seat of the Earls of
+Huntly; Slaines, the principal castle of the Earls of Errol; some
+strongholds in Angus; Newton, a castle of the Gordons; and had most of
+them razed. Even in these districts he proceeded at last to erect a
+regular government in the name of the King. His superiority was so
+decided that the earls left Scotland in the spring of 1595; Father
+Gordon also followed them reluctantly, after he had once more said
+mass at Elgin. But even this was not such a defeat of the Catholic
+party as might have been followed by their annihilation. The earls
+felt the hardships of exile with double force from the loss of the
+consideration which they had enjoyed at home; and when they offered
+their submission to the King, and satisfaction to the Scottish Church,
+James and his Privy Council were quite ready to accede to their offer:
+for they thought that disunion with his most powerful lieges lessened
+the reputation of the crown, and might be very dangerous at some
+future time if the throne of England became vacant; as these important
+personages might then, like Coriolanus, side with the enemy.
+
+The only question now was, how the Presbyterian Church would regard
+this. James had come to a general understanding with the Church, when
+they made common cause against the League. In the year 1592 an
+agreement was arrived at, by which the King gave a general recognition
+to Presbyterianism, although he still left some grave questions
+undecided; for instance, that of the rights of the Crown, and the
+General Assemblies. But in proportion as he now gave intimation of a
+retrograde tendency in favour of the Catholic lords, he roused the
+prejudices of the Protestants against himself. They told him that the
+lords had been condemned to death according to the laws of God, and by
+the sentence of Parliament, the Great Assize of the kingdom: that the
+King had no right to show mercy in opposition to these. He had allowed
+their return into the country; the Church demanded the renewal of
+their exile: not till then would it be possible to deliberate upon the
+satisfaction offered by them. All the pulpits suddenly resounded with
+invectives against the King. The proud feeling of independent
+existence was roused in all its force in the breasts of the churchmen.
+Andrew Melville explicitly declared, that there were two kingdoms in
+Scotland, of which the Church formed one: in that kingdom the
+sovereign was in his turn a subject; those who had to govern this
+spiritual realm possessed a sufficient authorisation from God for the
+discharge of their functions. The Privy Council might be of opinion
+that the King must be served alike by Jews and heathens, Protestants
+and Catholics, and become powerful by their aid; but in wishing to
+retain both parties he would lose both. The King forced himself to ask
+support for his projects from Robert Bruce, at that time the most
+prominent of the preachers, who answered him, that he might make his
+choice, but that he could not have both the Earl of Huntly and Robert
+Bruce for his friends at the same time.[305]
+
+By dealing gently with the Catholic lords the King had intended not
+only to win them over to his side, but also in prospect of the English
+succession, which was constantly before his eyes, to give the English
+Catholics a proof of the moderation of his intentions. Even in
+Scotland he wished not to appear the sovereign of the Presbyterian
+party alone. It was absolutely repugnant to him to adopt the ideas of
+the Church entirely as his own. But the leaders of the Church were
+bent on shutting him within a narrow circle in accordance with their
+own ideas, from which there should be no escape. In his clemency to
+Catholic rebels they saw a leaning to that Catholicism which fought
+against God and threatened themselves with destruction. The efforts
+which had been necessary to overpower these adversaries, and the
+obligations under which they had laid the King himself during the
+struggle, inspired them with resolution to bind him to their system by
+every means in their power.
+
+But as the King also adhered to his own views, a conflict now broke
+out between them which holds a very important place in the history of
+the State as well as of the Church of Scotland.
+
+The King ordered the Commissioners of the Church, who made demands so
+distasteful to him, to leave the capital. The preachers then turned to
+the people. From the pulpit Robert Bruce set before an already excited
+congregation the danger into which the ecclesiastical commonwealth had
+fallen owing to the return of the Catholic lords and the indulgence
+vouchsafed to them; and invited those present to pledge themselves by
+holding up their hands to the defence of their religion on its present
+footing. They not only gave him their assent, but went so far as to
+make a tumultuous rush for the council-house in which the King was
+sitting with some members of the Privy Council and the Lords of
+Session. With difficulty was the tumult so far quieted as to allow
+James to retire to Holyrood.[306] Here a demand was laid before him to
+remove his councillors, to allow the commissioners to resume their
+functions, and to banish the lords again from the country. It was
+intended that religious profession should supply a rule for the
+guidance of the State.
+
+But in political conflicts nothing is more dangerous than to overstep
+the law by any act of violence. It was the violence attempted by the
+leaders of the Presbyterians against the King, their attack on the
+rights of his crown, that procured him the means of resistance. He
+betook himself with his court to Linlithgow and there collected the
+nobles, who for the most part stood by him, the borderers, whose
+leaders the Humes and Kerrs took up arms for him, and bodies of
+Highlanders, a force to which the magistrates succumbed, not wishing
+their city to be destroyed; so that even the ministers thought it
+advisable to leave. On New-Year's Day 1597 James made his entry with a
+warlike retinue into Edinburgh, where a convention of the Estates met
+and passed decisive resolutions in his favour. Both the provost and
+baillies of the town were obliged to take a new oath of fealty by
+which they bound themselves to suffer no insults to the King and his
+councillors from the pulpit: and it was resolved that the citizens
+should henceforth submit the magistrates of their choice to the King
+for his approval. The right of deposing the ministers was assigned to
+the King, who was acknowledged sole judge of all offences, even of
+those committed in sermons and public worship.[307]
+
+The King had now the Temporal Estates on his side; for however popular
+the footing on which the Presbyterian Church might be constituted, no
+one wished to give it uncontrolled sway. King James was able to form
+plans for transforming its constitution in such a manner as to make
+it consistent with the authority of the crown.
+
+A series of questions which he dedicated to the consideration of the
+public was well calculated to further his end. He asked whether the
+external regimen of the Church might not be controlled both by King
+and clergy, and the legislative power be vested in them in common.
+Might not the King, as a religious and pious magistrate, have the
+power of summoning General Assemblies? Might he not annul unjust
+sentences of excommunication? Might he not interfere if the clergy
+neglected their duties, or if the bounds of the two jurisdictions
+became doubtful.
+
+At the next assembly of the Church at Perth (Feb. 1597) the current
+set in the opposite direction. 'Mine eyes,' so says one of the most
+zealous adherents of the Church, 'witnessed a new sight, preachers
+going into the King's palace sometimes by night, sometimes in the
+morning,--mine ears heard new sounds.' The greatest pains had been
+taken to secure the presence of a number of ministers from the
+northern provinces, who were still more anxious about the spread of
+their doctrines than about controversies touching the constitution of
+the Church; and who rather reproached the clergy of the southern
+counties with having taken on themselves the government of the Church.
+But even among the latter the King, who spared neither threats nor
+flatteries, won adherents. Moreover an opinion gained ground that
+concessions must be made to him, as far as conscience allowed, in
+order not to alienate him entirely from the Church or drive him to
+take the opposite side. The answers to his questions contained
+admissions. The right of taking the initiative in everything relating
+to the external government of the Church was conceded to him, together
+with a share in the nomination of ministers in the principal towns;
+properly speaking the patronage of the Church in these towns was made
+over to him. The Church itself made a most important concession in
+renouncing its right of using the pulpit to attack the crown.
+Henceforward no one was to venture to impugn the measures of the King,
+until an officer of the Church had made a remonstrance to him on the
+subject. And the same ideas prevailed also in the subsequent
+assemblies at Dundee and Perth. The former of these conceded to the
+King a share in all the business which the Church took in hand; it
+allowed him to stay the proceedings of the Presbyteries when they ran
+counter to the royal jurisdiction or to recognised rights. In Dundee
+the excommunicated lords were admitted to a reconciliation and
+acknowledged as true vassals of the King, after making a declaration
+by which they acknowledged the Scottish to be the true Church;
+although the stricter party would not even then forgive them. But the
+point of chief importance was that the King succeeded in getting a
+Commission formed to co-operate with him in maintaining peace and
+obedience in the kingdom. Invested with full powers by the Church but
+dependent on the King, this Commission procured him a preponderating
+influence in all ecclesiastical affairs. For the most part it
+consisted of men of moderate views.
+
+There is a contemporary narrative of the decay of the Church in
+Scotland which begins from this date. For here, it was thought, ended
+the period during which the word revealed from Sinai and Zion to the
+apostles and prophets was the only rule of doctrine and Church
+discipline without any mixture of Babylon or the City of the Seven
+Hills, or of policy of man's devising; when the Church was 'Beautiful
+as the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the sun, terrible as an
+army with banners.'
+
+James, who regarded all this as due merely to the opposition of
+enemies, went on his way without bestowing further consideration on
+the depth, strength, and inward significance of this spirit which was
+destined once more to agitate the world. He again took up in serious
+earnest the design of erecting a Protestant episcopacy which had been
+entertained by Mar and Morton. Not only was this necessary for the
+constitution but for the sake of the clergy also: as George Gladstaine
+explained before a large assembly at Dundee, it was desirable that
+they should take part in the exercise of the legislative power. A
+small majority, but still a majority, in this assembly decided in
+favour of the proposal. The King assured them that he wished neither
+for a Papistical nor for an English prelacy; he wished only that the
+best clergy should take cognizance of the affairs of the Church in the
+council of the nation. In order to unite both interests he desired
+that the General Assembly should propose to the King six candidates
+for each vacancy and should have the right of giving instructions to
+the King's nominee for his Parliamentary action, and of demanding an
+account from him of his execution of the same. The King esteemed it a
+great triumph when in the Parliament of 1600 he was able actually to
+introduce two bishops whom he had nominated with the concurrence of a
+Commission of the Synods.
+
+It appears a general result worth noticing that he had again brought
+both parties in the country into subjection to the crown, the one
+however by open battle, the other by compliance which had somewhat the
+air of inclination towards it.
+
+
+_Preparations for the Succession to the English Throne._
+
+That the former of these parties was properly speaking Protestant, and
+the latter in its sentiment Catholic, created a certain feeling of
+surprise. Queen Elizabeth, who had been attacked and insulted by the
+Presbyterians sometimes even from the pulpit, could not find fault
+with the crown for liberating itself from the ascendancy of the new
+Church as it had done from that of the old: on the contrary she had
+expressly approved of this policy; but she warned the King not to
+allow himself to be so blinded by personal preference as again to put
+confidence in any traitor, and not to separate himself from the flock
+which must fight for him if he wished to stand. In the case of
+Scotland, as well as in the case of her own dominions, she always kept
+before her eyes the contrast between the Catholic and the Protestant
+principle, in comparison with which all other differences appeared to
+her subordinate.
+
+In his own views less rigid and consistent, King James had on the
+contrary even made advances to the Papacy. He at one time found it
+advisable to enter into relations with Pope Clement VIII, whose
+behaviour about the absolution of Henry IV showed that he did not at
+least belong to the party of Spain and the zealots. A letter to the
+Pope was forwarded from the Scottish cabinet addressing him as Holy
+Father, with the signature of the King as his obedient son. A Scot, by
+profession a Catholic, afterwards made the statement that, at the time
+when Pope Clement was encamped before Ferrara, he had been sent to him
+in order to seek his friendship, and to promise him religious liberty
+for the Catholics if King James should ascend the English throne.[308]
+
+According to the account of King James himself Pope Clement invited
+him to return to the Catholic faith; to whom he made answer, that the
+prevailing controversies might be again submitted to a general
+council; and that to the decision of such a council he would submit
+himself unconditionally. Clement replied that he need not speak of a
+council, for at Rome no one would hear of it; that the King had better
+remain as he was. These transactions are still enveloped in doubt and
+obscurity: the announcements of pretended agents cannot be depended
+on. There were often men who did not fully share in the secret and who
+in consequence far outran their commission.[309] But it cannot be
+denied that there were attempts at an approximation. Among the English
+refugees after Mary's death two parties had arisen, one of which
+supported the Spanish claims, while the other was quite ready to
+acknowledge King James supposing that some concessions were made.
+Every day men who were inclined to Catholicism were seen rising into
+favour at the Scottish court. It was remarked that the Secretary of
+State, the Lord Justice, and the tutors of the royal children, were
+Catholics. Queen Anne of Scotland does not deny that many attempts
+were made to bring her back to the old religion: though she assures us
+that she did not hearken to them, it is notwithstanding undeniable
+that she felt a strong impulse in that direction. She received relics
+which were sent her from Rome, probably from superstition rather than
+from reverence for the saints, but at all events she received them.
+Her intimate friend, the Countess of Huntly, who often shared the same
+bed with the Queen, fostered these views in her. King James remained
+unaffected by them. He attended sermons three times a week; he was
+riveted to Protestantism by convictions which rest on learning: but
+how did it come to pass that he allowed these deviations from
+Protestantism about him? Was it from weakness and connivance, or was
+it from policy?
+
+With the English Catholics also he established a connexion. Offers and
+conditions with a view to his succession were put before him; and
+English Catholics presented themselves at his court in order to
+proceed with the business or to maintain the connexion.
+
+All this threw Queen Elizabeth into a state of great excitement. It
+was insufferable to her that any one should even speak of her death,
+or, as she said, celebrate her funeral beforehand. But now when James
+without her knowledge formed relations with her subjects, she regarded
+his conduct as an affront. Through her ambassador in Scotland she had
+an English agent named Ashfield arrested, and gained possession of his
+papers. Great irritation on both sides ensued, of which the
+above-mentioned correspondence between the King and Queen gives
+evidence. In angry letters the latter complained of the disparaging
+expressions which James had let fall in his Parliament. In respectful
+language but with unusual emphasis the King complained that the
+accusations of an adventurer charging him with a plot against the life
+of the Queen were not repressed in England with proper severity. A
+period followed during which James expected nothing but further acts
+of hostility from Elizabeth's ministers. He pretended to know that the
+claims to the throne advanced by his cousin the Lady Arabella,
+daughter of Charles Darnley, the younger brother of his father Henry,
+who had the advantage of not being a foreigner, supplied them with a
+motive for their proceedings. He even thought it possible that a book
+published by Parsons under the name of Doleman, which maintained the
+claims of Isabella daughter of King Philip, was inspired by the
+English ministers themselves in order to throw his rights into the
+background. He ascribed to them the intention of coming to an
+agreement with the Spaniards to his disadvantage, only in order to
+maintain their own power.
+
+So far the dislikes of King James and the Earl of Essex coincided.
+Although a formal understanding between them cannot be proved, they
+were nevertheless allies up to the point of regarding the Queen's
+ministers as their enemies.
+
+Very significant were the instructions which James gave to an embassy
+which he despatched to England after the downfall of the Earl. His
+ambassadors were directed to ascertain whether the popular discontent
+went so far as to contemplate the overthrow of the Queen and her
+ministers, in which case they were to take care that the people
+'invoked no other saint,' i.e. sought protection and support from no
+one else but him. Above all he wished to be assured with regard to the
+capital that it would acknowledge his right: he wished to form ties
+with the leading men in the civic and learned corporations; the
+greater and lesser nobles who inclined to him were to have early
+information what to do in certain contingencies, and to keep
+themselves under arms. As he had always thought it possible that he
+might require naval assistance from Denmark, so now he instigated a
+sort of free confederation of the magnates and barons of Scotland:
+they were to prepare their military retainers in order to enforce his
+rights. Not that he had formed any design against the Queen, but he
+believed that after her death he must give battle to her ministers in
+order to gain the crown, and he appeared determined not to decline the
+contest.
+
+In reality however this mode of action was foreign to his nature. How
+often he had said that a man must let fruit ripen before plucking it:
+and a foreign prince, to whose sayings he attached great value, had
+advised him to proceed by the safest path. This was the Grand Duke
+Ferdinand of Tuscany, who then played a certain part in Europe, as he
+had set on foot the alliance between Henry IV and the Pope in
+opposition to Spain: Mary de' Medici, Queen of France, was his niece.
+With the house of Stuart also he stood on the footing of a relation:
+his consort, like the mother of King James, was a scion of the house
+of Lorraine, and a marriage at some future day between the King's
+eldest son and the daughter of the Grand Duke was already talked of.
+This relationship, and Ferdinand's reputation for great political
+far-sightedness and prudence, caused his advice to exercise great
+influence on James's decisions, as James himself tells us. So long as
+victory wavered between Essex and his opponents, or, as he conceived,
+between the existing government and the people, James did not declare
+himself: when the issue was decided he gave his policy a different
+direction and made advances to the ruling ministers, whom up to this
+time he had regarded as his enemies.
+
+They were quite ready and willing to meet him. Robert Cecil asserted
+later that he had by this means best provided for the safety and
+repose of the Queen, for that by an alliance between the government
+and the heir to the crown the jealousy of the Queen was best appeased:
+yet still he observed the closest secrecy with regard to it. It is
+known that he dismissed a secretary because he feared that he might
+see through the scheme and then betray it. He thought that he was
+justified in keeping the Queen in ignorance of a connexion that could
+only be distasteful to her at her advanced age, which had deepened the
+suspicion natural to her disposition, although at the same time this
+connexion was indispensable for her repose. These ministers were
+tolerably independent in their general conduct of affairs. They had
+embarked on other negotiations also without the knowledge of the
+Queen; they thought such conduct quite permissible, if it conduced to
+the advantage of England. And was not Robert Cecil moreover bound to
+seize an opportunity of calming the prejudices of the King of Scotland
+against himself and his house, which dated from his father's
+participation in the fate of Queen Mary? This was the only way of
+enabling him to prolong his authority beyond the death of his
+mistress, with which it would otherwise have expired.
+
+The letters are extant which were exchanged in these secret
+transactions between Henry Howard, whom the Secretary of State
+employed as his instrument, and a minister of King James. They are not
+so instructive as might have been expected; for the Asiatic style of
+Howard, which serves him as a mask, throws a veil even over much which
+we should like to know. But they now and then open a view into the
+movements of parties, especially in reference to the opposition of
+Cecil and his friends to Raleigh and Cobham, which towards the close
+of the Queen's reign filled the court with suppressed uneasiness.
+
+The intercourse which had been opened certainly had the effect of once
+more putting England and Scotland on a friendly footing. One of his
+most trusty councillors, Ludovic Earl of Lennox, son of that Esme
+Stuart who at one time had stood so high in the King's esteem, was
+sent by James on a mission to the Queen, in order to convince her of
+his continued attachment;[310] and this ambassador in fact found
+favour with her. James declared himself ready to send his Highlanders
+to the assistance of the Queen in Ireland, and to enter as a third
+party into the alliance with France against Spain, if it were brought
+about. He did not hesitate to give her information of the advances
+which had been made by the other side, even by the Roman court. Among
+these he mentioned a mission of James Lindsay for the purpose of
+bringing him to promise toleration to the Catholics. It may be doubted
+whether it is altogether true, as he affirms, that he declined the
+proposal: but the Roman records attest that Lindsay in fact could get
+nothing from him but words.[311]
+
+It is enough to remark that on the whole the views of James were again
+brought into harmony with those of the Queen: but that does not mean
+that he had also broken off all relations with the other side. It
+would have been extremely dangerous for him if Pope Clement had
+pronounced against him the excommunication which was suspended over
+Elizabeth, and he was very grateful to the Pope for not going so far.
+And if he would not agree to treat the Catholics with genuine
+toleration, yet without doubt he let them hope that he would not
+persecute those who remained quiet.[312] It was probably not
+disagreeable to him if they looked for more. He was of opinion that he
+ought to have two strings to his bow.
+
+He had now formed connexions with all the leading men in England of
+whatever belief. There was no family in which he had not won over one
+member to the support of his cause.[313]
+
+
+_Accession to the Throne._
+
+Thus on different sides everything had been carefully prepared
+beforehand when the Queen died. Although it may be doubtful whether
+she had in so many words declared that James should be her successor,
+yet it is historically certain that she had for a long time consented
+to this arrangement. The people had not yet so entirely conquered all
+hesitation on the subject.
+
+At the moment of the Queen's decease the capital fell into a state of
+general commotion. Perhaps 40,000 decided Catholics might be counted
+in London, who had considered the government of the Queen an
+unauthorised usurpation. Were they now to submit themselves to a King
+who like her was a schismatic? Or were there grounds for entertaining
+the hope held out to them that the new prince would grant them freedom
+in the exercise of their religion. People pretended to find Jesuits in
+their ranks who were accused of stimulating the excitement of their
+feelings: and the government thought it necessary to arrest or keep an
+eye upon a number of men who were regarded as leaders of the Catholic
+party.
+
+The trained bands of the town were called out to meet the danger, and
+they consisted entirely of Protestants. But they also were agitated by
+uncertainty about the intentions of their new sovereign. What the
+Catholics wished and demanded, the free exercise of their religion,
+the Protestants just as strongly held to be inadmissible and
+dangerous.
+
+Meanwhile the Privy Council had met at Richmond, where they were
+joined by the lords who were in town. Some points of great importance
+were mooted--whether the Privy Council had still any authority, even
+after the death of the sovereign from whom their commission
+proceeded--whether this authority was not entirely transferred to the
+lords as the hereditary councillors of the crown. The question was
+probably raised whether conditions should not be prescribed beforehand
+to the King of Scotland with regard to his government. But the
+prevailing ferment did not allow time for the discussion of these
+questions. On the same day (March 24) the heralds proclaimed James
+king under the combined titles of King of England, Scotland, France,
+and Ireland.
+
+It could not be perceived that the pomp of this proclamation produced
+any extraordinary impression. No mourning for the death of the Queen
+was exhibited; still less joy at the accession of James: all other
+interests were absorbed by the anticipation of coming events. The tone
+of feeling first became decided some days afterwards, when a
+declaration from the new King was published, wherein he promised the
+maintenance of religion on its present footing, and the exclusion of
+every other form of it.[314] On this the Protestants were quieted; the
+Catholics shewed themselves discouraged and exasperated. Yet the heads
+of the party who were held in custody were released on bail, and
+assured by the King's agents, that if even they were not permitted to
+worship in public, they should not have to fear either compulsion or
+persecution.
+
+No movement was made against the acknowledgment of King James,
+although this was contrary to the old arrangements recognised by
+Parliament. But no one was forthcoming who could have enforced rights
+based upon these. The aged Hertford came forward to sign the
+proclamation of the lords both for himself, and in the name of his son
+who represented the Suffolks. The Lady Arabella made a declaration
+that she desired no other position than that which the present King
+might allow her. The Privy Council besought King James,--according to
+its own expression 'falling at his feet with deep humility,'--to come
+and breathe new life into the kingdom of England that had been
+bereaved of its head.
+
+We must not stay to discuss incidental questions, e.g. how the first
+news reached James, and how he received it. He remained quiet until he
+had obtained sure intelligence, and then without delay prepared to
+take possession of the throne, to which his mother's ambition and his
+own had for so many years been directed. Once more he addressed the
+people of Edinburgh assembled in the great church after the sermon. He
+would not admit the statement which had occurred in the discourse,
+that Scotland would mourn for his departure; for he was going, as he
+said, only from one part of the island to the other: from Edinburgh it
+was hardly further to London than to Inverness. He intended to return
+often; to remove pernicious abuses in both countries; to provide for
+peace and prosperity; to unite the two countries to one another. One
+of them had wealth, the other had a superabundance of men: the one
+country could help the other. He added in conclusion that he had
+expected to need their weapons: that he now required only their
+hearts.
+
+What filled his soul with pride and the consciousness of a high
+calling, was the thought that he would now carry into effect what the
+Romans, and in later times the Anglo-Saxon and Plantagenet kings, and
+last of all the Tudors, had sought to achieve by force of arms or by
+policy, but ever in vain--the union of the whole island under one
+rule, like that which native legendary lore ascribed to the mythical
+Arthur. When he came to Berwick, around which town the two nations had
+engaged in so many bloody frays, he gave utterance, so it is said, to
+his intention of being King not of the one or of the other country but
+of both united, and of assuming the name of King of Great
+Britain.[315]
+
+At York he met his predecessor's Secretary of State, Robert Cecil. As
+no one knew the relations into which he had already entered with
+Cecil, every one was astonished at the kind reception which he
+accorded to him. That did not prevent him however from being just to
+the other side as well. He greeted the youthful Essex as the son of
+the most renowned cavalier whom the realm of England had possessed; he
+appointed him to be the companion of the Prince of Wales, and made him
+carry the bared sword before him at his entrance into some of the
+towns. Southampton and Neville were received into favour; the Earl of
+Westmoreland was placed in the Privy Council. He gave it to be
+understood that he would again raise to their former station the great
+men of the kingdom, who up to this time, as he said, had not been
+treated according to their merits.
+
+In order to begin the work of union at once in the highest place, he
+added some Scottish members to the Privy Council, and placed Scots
+side by side with the Secretary of State and Treasurer of England. The
+Keeper of the Privy Seal was raised to the Lord Chancellorship, but
+obliged to resign the post of Master of the Rolls, which fell to the
+share of a Scot, who however contented himself with drawing the income
+without discharging the duties of the office. The main feature of the
+condition of affairs which now grew up was the understanding between
+Cecil and those Scots who were most influential with the King. These
+were the leaders of the two parties, one of which hitherto had rather
+inclined to Spain and the other to France, Lennox and Mar, and
+especially the most active, perhaps the cleverest man of all, George
+Hume. These were consulted on affairs of importance. The Scots had
+the advantage, to which custom almost gave them a right, of seeing the
+King as often as they wished: but Cecil and his English friends, in
+consequence of their knowledge and practice in business, had the chief
+management of affairs in their hands.
+
+The times were gloomy owing to the prevalence of an infectious
+disease; still extraordinary numbers of the English nobility thronged
+to London, in order to see the King, who took up his residence at
+Greenwich. It is computed that there were 10,000 people at court.
+James felt infinitely happy amidst the homage which clergy and laity
+vied with one another in rendering him.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[296] M'Crie, Life of Andrew Melville, ch. iii.
+
+[297] In a memoir in the Barberini Library, 'De praesenti Scotiae
+statu in iis quae ad religionem spectant brevissima narratio,' it is
+said, 'supra hominum opinionem auctus est Catholicorum numerus.'
+
+[298] Abstract of Randolph's instructions, from his own pen (Strype,
+Annals iii. i. 442): 'Nothing shall be done prejudicial to the King's
+title, but the same to pass by private assurance from Her Majesty to
+the King.'
+
+[299] Tractatus foederis et arctioris amicitiae. Rymer vi. 4. Randolph
+says, 'Three were the causes (of the alliance), viz. the noblemen, the
+money, and the assurance.' Strype iii. i. 568.
+
+[300] Courcelles, in Tytler vii. 333.
+
+[301] Slangen, Geschichte Christians iv. i. 117. Chytraeus, Saxonia
+864, 870. Cp. Melvil, Memoires, 175.
+
+[302] Thirlstane to Burleigh, Aug. 13, 1590. In Tytler ix. 49.
+
+[303] Lord Burleigh's speech in the House of Lords, Strype, Annals iv.
+192. According to the 'Narratio de rebus Scoticis,' the Scottish
+magnates were the first movers.
+
+[304] James to Elizabeth. 'The sayde rebellis hadd so travelled by
+indirect means with everie nobleman, as quhen I feld thaier
+myndis--thay plainlie--refusid to yeild to any forfaiture.' 19 Sept.
+1593. In Bruce, Letters of Queen Elizabeth and King James VI of
+Scotland, 87.
+
+[305] Calderwood, v. 440. 'As to the wisdom of your counsell, which I
+call devilish and pernicious, it is this: that yee must be served with
+all sorts of men to come to your purpose and grandour Jew and Gentile,
+Papist and Protestant. And becaus the ministers and protestants in
+Scotland are over strong and controll the king they must be weakenned
+and brought low.'
+
+[306] The tumult in Edinburgh, in Calderwood v. 511.
+
+[307] In James Melville's Diary (p. 383) an act is mentioned with the
+date of January 1597, 'discharging the ministers stipends that wald
+not subscryve a Band acknawlaging the king to be only judge in matters
+of treassone or uther civill and criminall causses committed be
+preatching, prayer or what way so ever--Thair was keipit a frequent
+convention of esteates wharin war maid manie strange and seveire
+actes.'
+
+[308] So Crichton informs the Venetian secretary, Scaramelli, July 10,
+1603.
+
+[309] With regard to the offers brought by Ogilvy to Spain this has
+been undeniably proved on the evidence of another Jesuit. Winwood i.
+
+[310] He expressed to her an 'humble desire that I would banish from
+mynde any evill opinion or doupt of your sincerity to me.' (Dec. 2,
+1601, in Bruce.)
+
+[311] 'Breve relazione di quanto si e trattato tra S. Sta ed il re
+d'Inghilterra.' MS. Rom. From no other quarter moreover is any direct
+proof adduced of a promise of toleration properly so called.
+
+[312] The abbot of Kinloss told the Venetian secretary, 'che il re si
+trova obligatissimo col pontefice, chiamandolo veramente Clemente,
+perche per istanze che sono state piu volte fatte a S. Bene da
+principi, non ha voluto mai dishonorarlo con divenire ad
+escommunicatione di sua persona, e che percio S. M. desirera di
+corresponderle, aggiungendo che i catolici mentre staranno quieti et
+honestamente occulti non saranno cercati ne perseguitati.'
+(Scaramelli, 8 Maggio, 1603.)
+
+[313] Scaramelli, from the lips of one of the King's agents, March 27.
+
+[314] Scaramelli (April 12) alludes to a declaration from the King,
+'Per la conservatione della religione in che vive essa citta e regno.
+Questo aviso,' he proceeds, 'ha reso sicuri gli heretici.' In
+Halliwell, Letters of the Kings of England ii. 97, there is a letter
+from the King to the same effect addressed to his agent Hambleton, the
+contents of which were probably divulged at the moment.
+
+[315] Scaramelli, April 17, 'Dicendosi che lasciando i nomi di uno e
+l'altro regno habbia qualche intentione di chiamarsi re della Gran
+Bretagna per abbracciar con un solo nome ad imitatione di quel antico
+e famoso re Arturo tutto quello che gira il spatio di 1700 miglia
+unito.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+FIRST MEASURES OF THE NEW REIGN.
+
+
+How often in former times, when England was in the midst of great and
+glorious undertakings, had the Scots, who feared lest they themselves
+should be subjected to the power of their neighbours, taken the side
+of the enemy and obstructed the victory! Even the last wars might have
+taken quite a different course had Scotland made common cause with
+Spain. It was this connexion between the two kingdoms which made union
+with Scotland a political necessity for England. Ralegh describes this
+union under the present circumstances as no less fortunate for England
+than the blending of the Red and White Rose had been, as the most
+advantageous of all the means of growth which were open to her.
+
+The kingdom of Scotland, like that of England, had extended the
+supremacy of the Teutonic over the Keltic races, for these two
+elements formed the main constituents of both kingdoms. The German in
+conflict with the Keltic race had developed its character and energy.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1603.]
+
+The Orkney Islands, to which Scotland asserted its claim even against
+the kindred race of the Norwegians, and the Hebrides, which were
+reputed the home of warriors of extraordinary bravery, were now united
+in one kingdom with the Channel Islands, which still remained in the
+possession of England from the days of the old connexion between the
+Normans of Normandy and that country. The Gael of Scotland, the
+Gwythel of Erin--and the Irish still appear in most records as
+savages--the Cymry of Wales and their Cornish kinsmen, who still spoke
+their old language, now appeared as subjects of the same sceptre. The
+accession of James to the throne exercised an immediate influence on
+Ireland. Tyrone, the O'Neil, threw aside the agreement which the
+Queen's ministers had concluded with him against their will, thinking
+that he no longer required it, since the right heir had ascended the
+throne. The people seemed willing to espouse the cause of the new King
+as that of the native head of their race, and a genealogy was
+concocted in which his descent was traced to the old Milesian kings.
+The whole circuit of the British Isles was united under the name of
+Stuart. As a hundred years before the last great province of France
+had been gradually united to the French crown, and even within human
+memory Portugal, like the other provinces of the Spanish peninsula,
+had been added to the crown of Spain, so now a united Britain was
+formed side by side with these two great powers. James himself noticed
+the resemblance, and a proud feeling of self-confidence filled his
+breast, when he reflected that the change had been made without the
+help of arms, as if by the force of the internal necessity of things.
+Just as formerly the claim to universal supremacy together with the
+spread of the Church had greatly increased the importance of the
+Papacy, so now the claim to hereditary right possessed by James seemed
+to him of immeasurable value, for by it he had won so great and
+coveted a prize: it appeared to him the expression of the will of God.
+
+Surprise might be felt that France, which for several centuries had
+exercised a ruling influence on Scotland, and which in this union of
+the two crowns might have seen a disadvantage if not a danger for
+herself, allowed it to take place without obstruction. This conduct
+may be explained principally by the violent opposition which existed
+between Henry IV and Spain even after the peace of Vervins, and by the
+hostile influence incessantly exercised by that power upon the
+internal relations of his kingdom, in the pacification of which he was
+still engaged. It would have been dangerous for Henry himself to
+revive the hatred between England and Scotland, which could only have
+redounded to the advantage of his foes.
+
+James I however did not intend, and could not be expected to occupy
+exactly the same position as his predecessor. If he had adopted her
+views, yet this was a compliance exacted from him by a regard to the
+succession: he had felt that it was wrung from him. It is
+intelligible, and he did not attempt to disguise the fact, that he
+felt the death of Elizabeth to be in some sense his emancipation. He
+avoided appearing at her obsequies; every word showed that he did not
+love to recall her memory. In London people thought to please him by
+getting rid of the likenesses of the glorious Queen, and replacing
+them by those of his mother. The first matter which was submitted to
+him whilst still in Scotland, and which engaged him on the journey and
+immediately after his arrival, was the question whether he should
+proceed with the war which Elizabeth had planned; whether in fact he
+should continue her general policy. Henry IV sent without delay one of
+his most distinguished statesmen, who was moreover a Protestant,
+Maximilian de Bethune, Duke of Sully, as Ambassador Extraordinary; and
+Sully did not neglect to explain to the King the plan of an alliance
+between the States of Europe under the lead of France, that should be
+able to cope with the Austro-Spanish power, a plan which Sully had
+entertained all his life. James gave the ambassador, as he wished, a
+private audience in a retired chamber of his palace at Greenwich,
+asked many questions, and listened with attention, for he loved
+far-reaching schemes; but he was far from intending to embark on them.
+As he had reached the throne without arms, so he wished to maintain
+himself there by peaceful means.[316] It was natural that the Queen,
+who had been excommunicated by the Pope, and had carried on a war for
+life and death with the Spanish crown, should have intended to renew
+the struggle with all her might: such designs suited her personal
+position; but his own was different. Deeply penetrated by the idea of
+legitimacy, he even hesitated whether he should support the
+Netherlanders, who after all, in his judgment, were only rebels. To
+the remark that it would be a loss for England herself if the taking
+of Ostend, then besieged by the Spaniards, were not prevented, he
+replied by asking unconcernedly whether this place had not belonged
+in former times to the Spanish crown, and whether the English trade
+had not flourished there for all that. In these first moments of his
+reign however the difficulties of his government were already brought
+into view, together with the opposition between different tendencies
+latent in it. If he was unwilling to continue the policy of his
+predecessor, yet he could not absolutely renounce it: there were
+pledges which he could not break, interests which he could not
+neglect. In order to meet his objections the argument employed by
+Elizabeth was adduced, that she supported the Provinces only because
+the agreements, in virtue of which they had submitted themselves to
+the house of Burgundy, had been first broken by the other side.[317]
+The King's tone of mind was such that this argument may well have had
+an effect upon him. At last he consented to bestow further assistance,
+although only indirectly. He conceded that one half of the sum which
+Henry IV paid to the States General should be subtracted from the
+demands which England had against France, and should be employed by
+the Netherlanders in recruiting in the English dominions. By this
+expedient he intended to satisfy the terms of the old alliance between
+England and the Provinces, and yet not be prevented from coming to an
+agreement with Spain.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1604.]
+
+The ambassador of the Archduke and the Infanta, the Duke of Aremberg,
+was already in the country, but he was afflicted with gout and
+somewhat averse to transact business in writing; and nothing more than
+general assurances of friendship were exchanged. In October 1603 one
+of the Spanish envoys, Don Juan de Tassis, Count of Mediana, made his
+appearance. Astonishment was created when, on his entrance into the
+hall where the assembled Court awaited him, he advanced into the
+middle of the room before he uncovered his head. He spoke Spanish; the
+King answered in English: an interpreter was required between them,
+although they were both masters of French. But however imperfect
+their communications were, they yet came to an understanding. The King
+and the ambassador agreed in holding that all grounds for hostility
+between Spain and England had disappeared with the death of Queen
+Elizabeth.
+
+After a fresh and long delay--for the Spaniards would have preferred
+to transfer the conference to some town on the continent--negotiations
+were first seriously undertaken in May 1604, and then after all in
+England. The affairs of the Netherlands formed the principal subject
+of discussion.
+
+The King of Spain demanded that the King of England should abstain
+from assisting his rebellious subjects. The English explained the
+reason why the United Netherlanders were not considered rebels. The
+Spaniards demanded that the fortresses at least, which the Provinces
+had formerly surrendered to the Queen as a security for the repayment
+of the loan made by her, should be restored to their lawful owner the
+King, who would not fail to repay the money advanced. King James
+answered that he was tied by the pledges of the Queen, and that he
+must maintain his word and honour.[318] The Spaniards on this started
+the proposal that the English on their part should break off their
+traffic with the United Provinces. The English replied that this would
+be most injurious to themselves. In these transactions James was
+mainly guided by the consideration that, if he decidedly threw off the
+Provinces, he would be giving them over into the hands of France, to
+the most serious injury of England, and without advantage to Spain. On
+this account principally he thought that he was obliged to maintain
+his previous relations with them. The English found a very
+characteristic reason for peace with Spain in the wish to restore
+their old commercial connexion with that country. The Spaniards were
+ready to make this concession, but only within the ancient limits,
+from which the trade with both the Indies was excluded. They argued
+that their government did not allow this even to all its own subjects;
+how then could foreigners be admitted to a share in it? Cecil on this
+remarked that England by its insular position was adapted for trading
+with the whole world, and could not possibly allow these regions to be
+closed against her; that she already had relations with countries on
+which no Spaniard had ever set foot, and that a wide field for further
+discoveries was still open. At no price would he allow his countrymen
+to be again excluded from America or the East Indies, to which
+countries they had just begun to extend their voyages.[319]
+
+The peace which was at length brought about is remarkable for its
+indefiniteness. The English promised that they would not support the
+rebellious subjects and enemies of the King of Spain; and it was
+arranged that an unrestricted trade should again be opened with all
+countries, with which it had been carried on before the war. At the
+first glance this looked as if any further alliance with Holland, as
+well as the navigation to the Indies, was rendered impossible. The
+Venetian envoy once spoke with King James on the subject, who answered
+that it would soon be shown that this opinion was erroneous. In fact,
+as soon as the first ships returned from the East Indies, preparations
+were at once made for a second expedition. The States General were not
+interfered with in the enlistment which they had been allowed to
+begin; for it was maintained that they could not be included under the
+term rebellious subjects. The only difference made was that similar
+leave to enlist in the English dominions was granted to the Spaniards
+also, who for that purpose resorted especially to Ireland. In this way
+the peace exactly expressed the relations into which England was
+thrown by the change of government. James, who for his own part would
+have wished simply to renew the friendly relations which had formerly
+existed, found himself compelled to stipulate for exceptions owing to
+the form which the interests of England had now assumed. The Spaniards
+allowed them, because even on these terms the termination of the war
+was of the greatest advantage to them, and they did not surrender the
+hope of changing the peace into a full alliance later on, although
+their proposals to that effect were in the first instance declined.
+
+And notwithstanding any ambiguity which might arise as to the scope of
+the treaty with regard to individual questions, the conclusion of
+peace was in itself of great importance: it implied a change of policy
+which created the greatest stir. It affected the United Provinces and
+filled them with anxiety, for in their judgment not only was the
+action of Spain against them no longer fettered, but the Spanish
+ambassador in England was sure in time by means of gold and intrigues
+to acquire an influence which must be fatal to them.
+
+The King thought that he had achieved a great success. His intention
+was to be as fully acknowledged by the Catholic powers as by the
+Protestant; to occupy a neutral position between those who were
+favourable, and those who were opposed, to Spain, and to live in peace
+with all, without however losing sight of the interests of England.
+Men could not be blind to the correspondence between this policy and
+the general tendency of these times. From the epoch of the Absolution
+of Henry IV and the overthrow of the League, the separation between
+religious and political interests had begun. Men on either side no
+longer regarded the ascendancy of Spain as a support or as a danger to
+religion. The Spanish government itself under the guidance of the Duke
+of Lerma acquired a peaceful character. Thus King James was made happy
+by seeing embassies from the Catholic states arrive in England. Not
+until he stood between the two parties did he feel himself to be in
+truth a king, and to surpass his predecessor.
+
+This sovereign assumed a similar attitude towards the Catholics of
+England as well. He could not vouchsafe to them a real toleration; but
+a few months after his arrival in England he actually carried out what
+he had already promised, an alleviation of those burdens which weighed
+most heavily on them. The most grievous was the fine collected every
+month from those who refused to take part in the Protestant service.
+James declared to an assemblage of leading Catholics, that he would
+not enforce this fine so long as they behaved quietly, and did not
+show contempt towards himself and the State. The Catholics reminded
+him that their absence from the service of the Church might be
+interpreted as contempt. He assured them that he would not regard it
+in this light. The fines, which in late years had amounted to more
+than L10,000, decreased in the year 1603 to L300, and in 1604 to L200.
+The King, like his predecessor, would not tolerate Jesuits and
+Seminarists, but he was content with their banishment; it would have
+been contrary to his temper to have had them executed. He sought to
+avoid all the consequences that must have been provoked by the
+hostility of this element which was still so powerful in the world at
+large and among his own subjects.
+
+But even within the domain of Protestantism he was now encountered by
+a similar problem.
+
+The investigation of the influence which the Scots and English have
+exercised on one another in the last few centuries would be a task of
+essential importance for the history of intellectual life; for in the
+development of the prevailing spirit of the nation the Scots as well
+as the English have had a large share. Even under Elizabeth these
+relations had begun to exist. The growth of English Puritanism
+especially, which had already given the Queen much trouble, must be
+regarded as but the dissemination of the forms and ideas that had
+arisen in the Church of Scotland. But how much stronger must the
+action of this cause have become now that a Scottish king had ascended
+the English throne! The union between two populations which so nearly
+resembled one another in their original composition, and in the
+direction taken by their religious development, could not be a merely
+territorial union: it must lead to the closest relation between the
+spirit of the two peoples.
+
+It was natural from the state of the case, that on the accession of a
+Scottish king in England the English clergy who leaned to the Scottish
+system should embrace the hope of being emancipated to some extent
+from that strict subordination to their bishops which they endured
+with reluctance. On the first arrival of James, whilst he was still on
+his way to London, they laid before him an address signed by eight
+hundred of the clergy, in which they besought him, in accordance with
+God's word, to lighten the rigour of this jurisdiction and of their
+condition in general, and in the first place to allow them to set
+before him the feasibility of the alteration. They had nourished the
+hope that the King might be prevailed on to reduce the English
+episcopate to the level of the Scottish, in the shape in which he had
+just restored it.[320]
+
+But the tendencies which the King brought with him out of Scotland ran
+in an altogether different direction. He had often been personally
+affronted by the Presbyterians: he hated their system; for in his
+opinion equality in the Church necessarily led to equality in the
+State. His intention was rather by degrees to develop further on the
+English model those beginnings of episcopacy which he had introduced
+into Scotland. In December 1603 he convened, as the Puritans wished,
+an assembly of the Church at Hampton Court, to which he also invited
+the leading men among the opponents of uniformity. But he opened the
+conference at once with a thanksgiving to Almighty God 'for bringing
+him into the promised land where religion was purely professed, where
+he sat among grave, learned, and reverend men, not, as before,
+elsewhere, a king without state, without honour, without order, where
+beardless boys would brave him to his face.' He declared that the
+government of the English Church had been approved by manifold
+blessings from God himself; and he said that he had not called this
+assembly in order to make innovations in the same, but in order to
+strengthen it by the removal of some abuses. In the conference which
+he opened he held the office of moderator himself. Certainly the
+suggestions of the Puritans were not altogether without result. When
+they expressed the wish to see the Sunday more strictly observed, to
+have a trustworthy and faithful translation of the Bible provided, and
+to have the Apocrypha excluded from the canonical scriptures, they met
+with a favourable reception; but the King would neither allow the
+confessions of faith to be tampered with, nor the ceremonies which had
+been brought under discussion to undergo the least diminution. He
+thought that they were older than the Papacy, that the decision of
+deeper questions of doctrine ought to be left to the discussion of the
+Universities, and that the articles of the faith would only be
+encumbered by them. And every limitation of episcopal authority he
+entirely refused to discuss. The bishops themselves were amazed at the
+zeal with which the King espoused the cause of ecclesiastical
+jurisdiction, and allowed their justification of it even on a point of
+great importance for the constitution, the imposition of the oath _ex
+officio_.[321] They even exclaimed that God had bestowed on them a
+king, the like of whom had not been seen from the beginning of the
+world. It had been the intention and custom of other princes to limit
+the jurisdiction of the clergy, and to diminish their possessions. How
+much had they suffered from this even under Elizabeth! On the contrary
+it was one of the first endeavours of James I to put an end for ever
+to these attacks. For as in Scotland the abolition of bishoprics had
+been attended with a diminution of the authority of the crown, he had
+reason to be deeply convinced of the identity of episcopal and
+monarchical interests. In the heat of the conference at Hampton Court
+he laid down as his principle, 'No bishop no king.'
+
+But in all this did King James fall in with the spirit of the English
+constitution? Did he not rather at this point intrude into it the
+sharpness of his Scottish prejudices? The old statesmen of England had
+acknowledged the services of the English Puritans in saving the
+Protestant confession in the struggle with Catholicism. The Puritans
+only wished not to be oppressed. He confounded them altogether with
+their Scottish co-religionists with whom he had had to contend for
+the sovereignty of the realm.
+
+In less than two months from the Hampton Court Conference the Book of
+Common Prayer was re-issued with some few alterations, with regard to
+which the King expressly stated that they were the only alterations
+which were to be expected; for that the safety of states consisted in
+clinging fast to what had been ordained after good consideration. This
+was soon followed by a new collection of ecclesiastical laws, in the
+shape which they had taken under the deliberations of Convocation. In
+them the royal supremacy was insisted on in the strongest terms, and
+that over the whole kingdom, Scotland included. The same competence
+with regard to the Church was therein assigned to the King which had
+belonged to the pious kings of Judah and to the earliest Christian
+emperors: their authority was declared to be second only to that of
+Heaven. Henceforward no one was to be ordained without promising to
+observe the Book of Common Prayer and to acknowledge the
+supremacy.[322] And this statute had a retrospective application, even
+to those who were already in possession of an ecclesiastical benefice.
+The King and Archbishop Bancroft ordered that a short respite should
+be given to those who were inclined to acquiesce; but that those who
+made a decided resistance should without further ceremony be deprived
+of their benefices.
+
+On this the whole body of Puritans necessarily became agitated. A
+number of clergymen sought out the King at Royston in December 1604.
+While they announced to him their decision rather to resign their
+benefices than to submit to these ordinances, they called his
+attention to the danger to which the souls of the faithful would be
+subjected by this severity. In February a petition in favour of those
+ministers who refused to subscribe was presented to the King by some
+of the gentry of Northamptonshire. He expressed himself about this
+with great vehemence at a sitting of the Privy Council. He said that
+he had from his cradle suffered at the hands of these Puritans a
+persecution which would follow him to his grave. But in England the
+tribunals were quite ready to come to his assistance. In the Star
+Chamber it was declared a proceeding of seditious tendency to assail
+the King with joint petitions in a matter of religion.
+
+Towards the end of February 1605 the bishops cited the clergy of
+Puritan views to appear at St. Paul's in London in order to take the
+oath. There were some members of this party who held it lawful to
+conform to the Anglican Church because it at least acknowledged the
+true doctrine. These had time for reflection given them; the rest who
+persevered in an opposition of principle were deprived of their
+offices without delay.
+
+These proceedings for the first time recalled most vividly to men's
+minds the memory of the late Queen. People said that, though she
+disliked the Puritans, she had never consented to persecute them on
+religious grounds, for that she well knew how much she owed to them in
+every other respect. They saw a proof of the King's incapacity in his
+departure from her example and pattern. They thought him to blame for
+remitting in favour of Catholic recusants the execution of the penal
+laws enrolled among the statutes of the realm. And the foreign policy
+of the King awakened no less disapproval. It was felt as an injury,
+that he had put an end by the peace to the hostilities against Spain,
+which had now become even popular. Even the severe edicts issued
+against the piracy, which had found support in different quarters,
+produced in many places an unfavourable impression. The King was
+obliged to compensate the admiral for the losses which he affirmed
+that he had suffered in consequence.[323] And how much greater were
+the apprehensions for the future which were connected with this
+policy! It was remarked that he sacrificed the interests of religion
+and of the country to those of the Catholics and the Catholic powers.
+
+But there was now an organ of political opposition in the country in
+which all these hostile feelings found their expression. The
+resentment of injured interests, the resistance of the Puritans, and
+the excitement of the capital, impressed themselves on the Parliament.
+
+All previous governments had exercised a systematic influence upon the
+election of members of the Lower House, and had encroached on their
+freedom. When the first elections under King James were about to be
+held he declared himself against the exercise of any such influence.
+He ordered that the elections should be conducted with freedom and
+impartiality, without regard to the bidding of any one and without the
+interference of strangers; and that the electors should be allowed to
+return the most deserving candidates in each county. He thought that,
+as he avoided unpopular measures, men would voluntarily meet his
+wishes. It appeared to him sufficient, if, in issuing the writs, he
+coupled with them the admonition to avoid all party spirit, and
+especially to abstain from electing such as from blind superstition on
+the one hand, or from fickleness or restlessness on the other, wished
+to disturb the uniformity of religion.[324] But in politics personal
+gratitude is only a feeble motive. The elections followed the current
+of opinion which had been set in motion by the Hampton Court
+Conference. In the very first Parliament of King James many Puritans
+obtained entrance into the House: the new line which this Parliament
+struck out influenced the whole subsequent period.
+
+The speech with which King James opened the session on the 19th of
+March 1604, immediately before the conclusion of the first year of his
+reign, has been often and often reproduced. It is full of the ideas
+with which his mind was principally occupied, of the union of both
+kingdoms in one great whole, and of the establishment of religious
+uniformity. He thought that in neither of the two kingdoms ought the
+memory of their special privileges to be kept alive, for they were
+pure monarchies from the first: no privilege could separate them from
+their head. He explicitly called the Puritans an ochlocratic sect.
+
+It is extraordinary that, while he sought to win men's affections, it
+was his fortune to use expressions which were sure to provoke the
+strongest religious and political antipathies.
+
+Parliament acknowledged his succession to be rightful and lawful, and
+granted to him, as to his predecessors, tonnage and poundage, i.e. the
+right of levying customs, for his life: it arranged according to his
+wishes for the withdrawal of many sentences which had been pronounced
+against his interest; but in other matters it offered him from the
+very first persistent opposition. Contrary to what might have been
+expected, the first point concerned the validity of the elections.
+
+In Buckinghamshire the King's officers had annulled an election on the
+ground of illegality, and had held a second. The Lower House found
+that this was improper, on the ground that the right of deciding in
+matters concerning the election of representatives belonged from
+ancient times to the House of Commons alone. They declined to confer
+on this subject with the Privy Council, or with the Upper House.
+Ill-will and jealousy were excited against those of higher rank who
+had wished to bring one of their own party into the House of Commons,
+and the tempers of the members seemed to be becoming no little
+inflamed. At last, by the personal mediation of the King,[325] the
+Lower House was induced to allow both of the elected candidates to be
+unseated, and a third to be elected in their place. Even this it
+agreed to reluctantly; but it was at least its own resolution, and not
+the result of official influence: and the Speaker issued his writ for
+a new election. One of the foremost principles of parliamentary life,
+that the scrutiny of elections belonged to the Parliament alone, was
+in this manner indubitably established afresh.
+
+Even his ideas on the union of the two kingdoms, which were nearest to
+his heart, were shared by few members of the Lower House; and he was
+obliged to raise the question by a new and urgent address. A
+commission of both Houses was indeed nominated to deliberate together
+with the Scots on the execution of the plan. The commission however
+was so numerous, and so large a number was required to be actually
+present for the transaction of business, that it was evident
+beforehand that no result would be achieved; especially as it was
+confidently to be expected that the Scots would appoint just as
+numerous a commission on their side.[326] And the King was already
+aware that the opposition against him was not confined to the Lower
+House, but in this matter at least was most widely diffused. The
+proclamation was already drawn up by which he intended to declare
+himself King of Great Britain. The judges were consulted by the Upper
+House, but their sentence favoured the view that this alteration could
+not take place without disadvantage to the State.
+
+The grant of a subsidy was most urgently needed by the King, whose
+purse had been emptied by the expenses of taking possession and by his
+prodigality; but the tone of feeling was so unfavourable that he
+forbore to apply for it, as he would not expose himself to a refusal
+which was certain beforehand.
+
+A petition in favour of some indulgence for the Puritans was drawn up
+in complete opposition to the King's views, although it seems not to
+have been carried through or sent in. A rigorous bill against the
+Jesuits and recusants on the other hand actually passed through the
+House. Lord Montague, who spoke against it, was brought before the
+House of Lords to answer for some expressions which he used on that
+occasion, and which savoured of Catholic principles.
+
+It is quite clear that the very first Parliament of King James set
+itself systematically in opposition to him. He desired union,
+clemency to the Catholics, and punishment of the Puritans; and he
+required subsidies: on all these subjects an opposite view prevailed
+in Parliament. And the divergence was not confined to single points.
+The maintenance of that extended prerogative which had been once
+established, had been endured under a sovereign who was a native of
+the country, had deserved well of her subjects, and was thoroughly
+English in her sentiments. But similar pretensions appeared
+insufferable in a king of foreign birth, who pursued ideas that were
+British rather than English, or rather who had combined for himself a
+number of tendencies arising out of the position in which, grand as it
+was, he stood alone among English sovereigns. We perceive that by this
+time the notion had been definitely formed of reviving the rights of
+Parliament which had fallen into abeyance in the late reigns.[327]
+Even under the Tudors Parliament had exercised a very considerable
+influence, but had more or less submitted to the ruling powers. Under
+the new government it thought of winning back the authority which it
+had wrung from more than one Plantagenet, and had possessed under the
+house of Lancaster. Already members were heard to assert that the
+legislative power lay in their hands; and that, if the King refused to
+approve the laws for which they demanded his sanction, they would
+refuse him the subsidies which he needed.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1605.]
+
+And this resolution was strengthened by the ill-feeling which the
+treatment of the Puritan ministers excited. The Parliament had been
+adjourned from August 1604 until February 1605: but the King feared
+that these clergymen, who had been assailed just at that time, might
+apply to the Lower House in which so many Puritans had seats.[328] He
+therefore prorogued it afresh in the hope of getting rid of certain
+persons who were especially hostile, or of bringing them over to his
+own side.
+
+Instead of this, new grievances were constantly accumulating. In the
+absence of regular subsidies the King helped himself to money by a
+voluntary loan, which gave great offence, and in this matter also led
+people to contrast the late Queen's conduct with that of James. She
+had, so people said, conducted the war in Spain, afforded help to the
+Netherlands, and maintained garrisons on the Scottish border, three
+measures which had cost her millions; of all this there was no mention
+under the present King. On the contrary he had additional revenues
+from Scotland; for what reason did he require extraordinary
+subsidies?[329] Men complained of his movements to and fro in the
+country, and of the harshness with which the right of the court to
+transport and cheap entertainment on these occasions was enforced; of
+his hunting, by which the tillage was injured; most of all, of his
+intended advancement of the Customs Duties, for this would damage
+trade and certainly would benefit only the great men who were
+interested in the farming of the Customs. The King had once thought of
+dissolving Parliament, but afterwards renounced the idea. As it was,
+when Parliament was summoned for November 1605, a stormy session lay
+before it, owing to the attack made by the Parliamentary and Puritan
+party upon the behaviour of the King in ecclesiastical and political
+questions, as well as upon the financial disorder which was gaining
+ground.
+
+An event intervened which gave an entirely different direction to the
+course of affairs.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[316] Economies royales v. 23.
+
+[317] Molino, Giugno 9, 1604: 'Se ben e vero, ch'erano suddite del re
+di Spagna, e anco verissimo, che quei popoli si erano soggettati alla
+casa di Borgogna--con quelle conditioni e capitoli, che si sa: i quali
+se fossero stati osservati dalli ministri di Spagna, senza dubio quei
+popoli non se sariano ribellati. Da queste parole restarono li
+Spagnoli offesi.'
+
+[318] Cecil to Winwood, June 13. 'That he is tied by former contracts
+of his predecessors, which he must observe.
+
+[319] From the reports of the French ambassador, in Siri, Memorie
+recondite i. 278.
+
+[320] Letter from the South (Winchester) to Berwick, in Calderwood vi.
+235. 'I would the scotish presbytereis would be petitioners that our
+bishops might be like theirs in autoritie though they keep their
+livings. The King is resolved to have a preaching ministry.'
+
+[321] The High Commission was compared with the Inquisition: 'men are
+urged to subscribe more than law requireth and by the oath _ex
+officio_ forced to accuse themselves.' The archbishop answered that
+this was a mistake: 'if the article touch the party for life, liberty,
+or scandall, he may refuse to answer.' State Trials ii. 86. The
+account in Wilkins iv. 374 is more unsatisfactory than the character
+of the book would lead us to expect.
+
+[322] Art. 36: 'Neminem nisi praevia trium articulorum subscriptione
+ordinandum'.
+
+[323] Duodo relates (Dec. 6, 1603) that the King said to him: 'Che
+dubita, che li suoi capitani di mare siano alquanti interessati che
+anzi, e mostro di dirlo in gran confidenza era stato necessitato
+assegnar non so che provisione del suo proprio denaro all'Amiraglio;
+perche si doleva di non poterse sostentare per esserli mancato alcun
+utile di questa natura.'
+
+[324] 'The choice to be made freely and indifferentlye without respect
+of any commaunde sute prayer or other meanes to the contrary.' From a
+memorandum of the Lord Chancellor Egerton, Egerton Papers 385. Molino,
+May 12, 1604: 'Stimo il re che il concedere la liberta alle provincie
+di poter far elettione degli huomini per mandar al parlamento conforme
+agli antichi privilegi del regno et il non haver voluto osservare li
+molti tratti delli precessori suoi che non avrebbero permesso che la
+elettione cadesse in altre persone che in suoi confidenti e
+dipendenti, dovesse disponer gli animi di ogn'uno a sodisfarlo e
+compiacerlo.'
+
+[325] Molino: 'Havendo voluto troncar l'occasione di qualche maggior
+scandalo; perche di gia li sangui si andavano riscaldando molto.'
+
+[326] Molino (Dispaccio 19 Maggio) states this reason.
+
+[327] Molino: 'Parlando molto liberamente della liberta e della
+autorita del parlamento in vista pero sempre degli antichi privilegi,
+quali erano andati in desuetudine e se saranno reassonti--senza dubio
+sera un detrimento dell'autorita e potesta regia.' (12 Maggio.)
+
+[328] Molino: 'Dubitando che quando li capi di questa setta facessero
+qualche moto al parlamento, dove ne sono tanti di questa professione,
+potesse nascer qualche inconveniente.'(20 Oct. 1604.)
+
+[329] Molino: 'Queste cose vanno spargendo quelli che han poco volunta
+di sodisfar alli desideri di S. M. che per se ne sta molto dubiosa.'
+(3 Nov. 1605.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE GUNPOWDER PLOT AND ITS CONSEQUENCES.
+
+
+James I was welcomed, if one may say so, by a conspiracy on his
+entrance into England.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1603.]
+
+Two men of rank, Markham and Brook, who had before held communications
+with him, and had cherished bright expectations, but found themselves
+passed over in the composition of the new government, now imagined
+that they might rise to the highest offices if they could succeed in
+detaching the King from those who surrounded him, and in getting him
+into their own hands, perhaps within the walls of the Tower or even in
+Dover Castle. They conspired for this object with some Catholic
+priests, who could not forgive the King for having deceived their
+expectations of a declaration of toleration at the commencement of his
+reign. They intended to call out so great a number of Catholics ready
+for action, that there could be no doubt of the successful issue of a
+coup-de-main. A priest was then to receive the Great Seal and above
+all things to issue an edict of toleration. We are reminded of the
+combination under Essex, when even some Puritans offered their
+assistance in an undertaking directed against the government. One of
+their leaders, Lord Grey de Wilton, a young man of high spirit and
+hope, was now induced to join the plot. But on this occasion the
+Catholics were the predominant element. The priests thought that the
+pretence of the necessity of supporting the King against the effect of
+a Puritan rising would best contribute to set the zealous Catholics in
+motion; and it is undeniable that other persons of high rank were also
+connected with these intrigues. The principal opponents of Cecil and
+his friends, whose hostile influence on Elizabeth had at an earlier
+period been feared by the minister, were Lord Cobham, the brother of
+Brook, and Sir Walter Ralegh. Cobham, who like most others had looked
+for the overthrow of Cecil on the accession of the King, fell into an
+ungovernable fit of disappointed ambition when Cecil was more strongly
+confirmed in his position; and his anger was directed against the King
+himself, from whom he now had nothing to expect, and who had brought
+with him a family which made the hope of any further alteration appear
+impossible. He had let fall the expression in public that the fox and
+his cubs must be destroyed at one blow. Negotiations, aiming at the
+renewal of the Lady Arabella's claims, had been opened with the
+ambassador of the Archduke, who then perhaps felt anxiety lest King
+James, under the influence of Cecil, should adhere to the policy of
+his predecessor. In order to effect a revolution, Cobham launched into
+extravagant schemes which embraced all Europe.
+
+The affair might have been dangerous, if a man of the activity,
+weight, and intelligence of Walter Ralegh had taken part in it. Ralegh
+does not deny that Cobham had spoken to him on the subject, but he
+affirms that he had not heeded the idle words, and had even forgotten
+them again:[330] and in fact nothing has been brought to light which
+proves his complicity, or even his remote participation, in this plot.
+Still without doubt he was among the opponents of the government. If
+it is true, as people say, that he made an attempt by means of a
+letter to the King to procure the fall of Cecil, it is easily
+conceivable that the latter and his friends availed themselves of
+every opportunity to involve him in the accusation. Ralegh defended
+himself with so much courage and vigour, that the listeners who had
+come wishing to see him condemned went away with a tenfold stronger
+desire that he might be acquitted. He himself did not deny that he
+might be condemned by the cruel laws of England: he reminded the King
+however of a passage in the old statutes, in which for that very
+reason mercy and pity were recommended to him. The accused were all
+condemned. Brook and the priests paid the penalty of death: Markham,
+Cobham, and Grey were reprieved when they were already standing on the
+scaffold--reprieved moreover by an autograph mandate of James, which
+was entirely due to an unexpected resolution of the King, who wished
+to shine by showing mercy as well as by severity. The first of these
+lived henceforward in exile: the second continued to live in England,
+but weighed down by his disgrace: Grey and Walter Ralegh were
+imprisoned in the Tower. We shall meet with Ralegh once more: he never
+lost sight of the world, nor the world of him.
+
+This conspiracy which, although wrongly as we have seen, bears the
+name of Ralegh, was an attempt to put an end in some way or other to
+the government, in the shape in which it had been erected by the union
+of English statesmen with the Scottish King. Its movers wished to
+effect this object by getting rid either of the statesmen, or even of
+the King himself. But on the contrary they only succeeded in
+establishing the government so much the more firmly; and it then under
+the joint influence of both its components entered on the course which
+we have described. But if it was so seriously endangered at its
+commencement, its progress also could not be free from hostile
+attacks. The Puritans threw themselves into the ranks of the
+Parliamentary Opposition. The Catholics were brought into a most
+singular position.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1604.]
+
+In public they found themselves far better off under James than they
+had been under Elizabeth. Far greater scope was allowed to the local
+influence of Catholic magnates in protecting their co-religionists.
+The penal laws, which as regards pecuniary payments were virtually
+abolished, were moreover no longer vigorously enforced in any other
+respect. Not only were the chapels of the Catholic ambassadors in the
+capital numerously attended, but in some provinces, especially in
+Wales, Catholic sermons were known to be delivered in the open air,
+and attended by thousands of hearers.[331] At times the opinion
+revived that the King was inclined to go over to Catholicism. He
+repudiated the supposition with some show of indignation. But, as we
+stated, the Queen incontestably sympathised with the Papacy. She even
+refrained from attending the Anglican service, and formed relations
+with the Nuncio in Paris, from whom she received communications and
+presents. Though Pope Clement on a former occasion had issued breves
+which made the obedience of Catholics to a new government dependent on
+the profession of Catholicism by the sovereign, yet these were
+virtually recalled by a later issue. When the English ambassador in
+Paris complained to the Nuncio there of the above-mentioned
+participation of Catholic priests in a conspiracy against the King,
+the Nuncio laid before him a letter of the Pope's nephew, Cardinal
+Aldobrandini, in which he declared it to be the Pope's pleasure that
+the Catholics in England should be obedient to their king, and should
+pray for him.[332] Thus it exactly fell in with the King's views to be
+a Protestant, as was absolutely necessary for his authority in England
+and Scotland, and yet at the same time not to have the Catholics
+against him, and to be able to reckon the Pope of Rome among his
+friends.
+
+It is evident that this state of affairs, as it was inconsistent with
+the laws of England, could not be permanently maintained. Even men of
+moderate views in other respects disapproved the middle course taken
+by the King: for they thought it necessary to concede nothing to the
+adherents of the Papacy, if they were to be saved from the necessity
+of conceding everything. The Catholics desired a public declaration of
+toleration. But this could only have emanated from Parliament: the
+King had not the courage, and his ministers had not the wish, to make
+a serious proposal to that effect. On the contrary, when the
+Protestant spirit of the capital displayed itself so unmistakably in
+consequence of the severities with which the Puritans were threatened,
+the King and his Privy Council, while affirming that they were merely
+executing the laws, announced their intention of introducing a like
+severity in the treatment of the Catholics. James I appeared to feel
+himself insulted if any one threw a doubt on his wish to allow the
+laws to operate in both directions. And as the Parliament which was so
+zealously Protestant was expected to reassemble in the autumn of 1605,
+the laws against the Catholics began to be applied without
+forbearance. A renewed persecution was first set on foot against the
+priests, who it is true were not punished with death, at least in the
+vicinity of the Court, but were thrown into prison, where they not
+infrequently succumbed to the rough treatment which they had
+undergone. But even the laity daily suffered more and more from the
+violence of the spies who forced their way into their houses. They
+complained loudly and bitterly of the insecurity of their position,
+which had already gone so far that often no tenants could be found for
+their farms; and they considered that the least evil, for to-day they
+lost their possessions, to-morrow they would lose their freedom, and
+the day after their life.[333] There had now for a long time been two
+parties among them, one of which submitted to what was inevitable,
+while the other offered a violent resistance. With the fresh increase
+of oppression, the latter party obtained the upper hand. They mocked
+at the hope, in which men indulged themselves, of a change of religion
+on the part of the King, who on the contrary was in their view an
+irreclaimable Protestant, and assumed an air of clemency to the
+Catholics, only to draw the rein tighter hereafter. A brief from the
+Pope exhorted them to acquiesce: but even the Pope could not persuade
+them to allow themselves to be sacrificed without further ceremony.
+Some of the most resolute once more applied to the Spanish court at
+this time as they had done before. But in that quarter not only had
+peace been concluded, but the hope of effecting a close alliance with
+England had been conceived. A deaf ear was turned to all their
+applications.
+
+While they were thus hard pressed and desperate, the thought of
+helping themselves had, if not originated, at least ripened, in the
+breast of one or two of the boldest of them. They conceived a plan
+which in savage recklessness surpassed anything which was devised in
+this epoch so full of conspiracies.
+
+Among the families which sheltered the mission-priests on their
+arrival in England, and who were moved by them to throw off their
+reserve in the profession of Catholicism, the Treshams and Catesbys
+were especially prominent in Northamptonshire. They belonged to the
+wealthiest and most important families in that county; and the penal
+laws had borne upon them with especial severity. The Winters of
+Huddington, who also were very zealous Catholics, were related to
+them. It is easy to understand, how the young men who were growing up
+in this family, such as Thomas Winter and Robert Catesby,
+acknowledging no duty to the Protestant government, retorted the
+oppression which they experienced from it with bold resistance and
+schemes of violence. In these they were joined by two brothers of the
+same way of thinking, John and Christopher Wright, stout and
+soldier-like men, belonging to a family which came originally from
+York. They all participated in the attempt of the Earl of Essex, for
+above all things they were eager for the overthrow of the existing
+government: and Robert Catesby was set at liberty only on payment of a
+heavy fine, which he could hardly raise by the sale of one of the most
+productive of the family estates. They were among those who, when
+Queen Elizabeth lay on her death-bed, proclaimed most loudly their
+desire for a thorough change, and were arrested in consequence.[334]
+They had expected toleration at least from the new government: as this
+was not granted them they set to work at once on new schemes of
+insurrection. Christopher Wright was one of those who had invited
+Philip III to support the Catholics. When the Constable of Castile
+came to Flanders to negotiate the peace, Thomas Winter visited him in
+order to lay their wish before him. Though they met with a refusal
+from him as well as from his master they found nevertheless a support
+which was independent of the approval of individuals. In the archducal
+Netherlands a combination of a peculiar kind, favourable to their
+views, had been formed, in consequence of the permission to recruit in
+the British dominions, which by the terms of the peace had been
+granted to Spain as well as to the Netherlands. An English regiment,
+about fifteen hundred strong, had been raised, in which the chaplains
+were all Jesuit fathers; and no officers were admitted but those who
+were entirely devoted to them. An English Jesuit named Baldwin, and a
+soldier of the same opinions, Owen by name, were the leading spirits
+among them. There was here, so to speak, a school of soldiers side by
+side with a school of priests, in which every act of the English
+government provoked slander, malediction, and schemes of opposition.
+Pope Clement was blamed for not threatening James with excommunication
+as Elizabeth had formerly been threatened; and the necessity for
+violent means of redress was canvassed without disguise. These views
+were repeated in congenial circles in Paris and reacted also upon
+their friends in England. Robert Catesby had been most active in the
+enlistment of the regiment. Christopher Wright on his journey to Spain
+was attended by one of the most resolute officers of this regiment,
+Guy Fawkes. The latter returned with Winter to England, and was
+pointed out by Owen as a man admirably qualified to conduct the
+horrible undertaking which was being prepared for execution. It must
+remain a question in whose head the thought of proceeding to it at
+this moment originated: we only know that Catesby first communicated
+it to another, and then with the aid of this comrade to the rest of
+the band. To this another member had been added, who was connected, if
+only in a remote degree, with one of the most distinguished families
+among the English nobility. I refer to Thomas Percy, a kinsman of the
+Earl of Northumberland, who through his influence had once received a
+place in the court establishment of King James of Scotland, and had
+then been the medium for forming a connexion between this prince and
+the Catholics. He was enraged because the assurances which he then
+thought that he might make to the Catholics in the name of the King,
+had not been fulfilled by the latter. In the spring of 1604, just at
+the time when the peace between England and Spain was concluded, by
+which no stipulations were made for the Catholics, they met one day in
+a lonely house near S. Clement's Inn, and bound themselves by a sacred
+and solemn oath to inviolable secrecy. It had been their intention
+once more to submit to the assembled Parliament an urgent petition in
+the name of the Catholics: but the resolutions of the House had
+sufficed to convince them that nothing could be gained by this step.
+Quite the contrary: it was apparent that the next session would impose
+far heavier conditions on them. An attack on the person of the King,
+or of his ministers, in the shape in which it had so often been
+resolved upon, could not do much even if it were successful: for the
+Parliament was always in reserve with its Protestant majority to
+establish anti-Catholic statutes, and the judges to execute them.
+Catesby now disclosed a plan which comprehended all their opponents at
+once. The King himself and his eldest son, the officers of state and
+of the court, the lords spiritual and temporal, the members of the
+House of Commons, one and all at the moment when they were collected
+to reopen Parliament, were to be blown into the air with gunpowder in
+the hall where they assembled--there where they issued the detested
+laws were they to be annihilated; vengeance was to be taken on them at
+the same time that room was to be made for another order of things in
+Church and State.
+
+This project was not altogether new. Already under Elizabeth there had
+been a talk of doing again to her what Bothwell had done or attempted
+to do to Henry Darnley: but men had perceived even at that time that
+this would not conduce to their purpose, and had hit upon a plan of
+blowing the Queen and her Parliament into the air together. Henry
+Garnet, the superior of the Jesuits, had been consulted on the
+subject; and he had declared the enterprise lawful, and had only
+advised them to spare as many of the innocent as possible in its
+execution.[335] The scheme which had been started under Elizabeth was
+resumed under King James, when men saw that his accession to the
+throne did not produce the hoped-for change. On this occasion also
+scruples were felt on the ground that many a Catholic would perish at
+the same time. To a question on the subject submitted to him without
+closer description of the case Garnet answered in the spirit of a
+mufti delivering his fettah, that if an end were indubitably a good
+one, and could be accomplished in no other way, it was lawful to
+destroy even some of the innocent with the guilty.[336] Catesby had no
+compassion even for the innocent: he regarded the lords generally as
+only poltroons and atheists, whose place would be better filled by
+vigorous men.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1605.]
+
+Without delay, before the end of December 1604, the conspirators
+proceeded to make their preparations. Percy, who was still numbered
+among the retainers of the court, hired a house which adjoined the
+Houses of Parliament. They were attempting to carry a mine through the
+foundation walls of that building--a design that says more for their
+zeal than for their intelligence, and one which could hardly have been
+effected--when a vault immediately under the House of Lords happened
+to fall vacant, and, as they were able to hire it, offered them a far
+better opportunity for the execution of their scheme. They filled it
+with a number of powder-barrels which are said to have contained the
+enormous quantity of 9,000 pounds of powder, and they confidently
+expected to bring about the great catastrophe with all its horrors on
+November 5, 1605, the day which after many changes had been appointed
+for the opening of Parliament. Their intention was, as soon as the
+King and the Prince of Wales had perished, to gain possession of the
+younger prince or of the princess, and to place one or other on the
+throne, with a regency under a protector during their minority.[337]
+All preparations had been made for bringing an effective force into
+the field; and its principal leaders were to assemble at Dunchurch in
+Warwickshire under pretence of hunting. The English regiment in
+Flanders was to be brought over and was to serve as the nucleus of a
+new force. There is no doubt that Owen was thoroughly conversant with
+their plans. Many other trustworthy people were admitted into the
+secret, and supported the project with their money. One of these was
+sent to Rome in order to convince the Pope of the necessity of the
+undertaking and to move him to resolutions in support of it. On All
+Saints' Day Father Garnet interrupted his prayer with a hymn of praise
+for the deliverance of the inheritance of the faithful from the
+generation of the ungodly.
+
+But warnings had already come to the government, especially from
+Paris, where the priests of the Jesuit party ventured to express
+themselves still more plainly than in London. The warning was conveyed
+with the express intimation that 'somewhat is at present in hand among
+these desperate hypocrites.'[338] What an impression must now have
+been produced when one of the Catholic lords, who at an earlier period
+had followed this party, but had for some time withdrawn from it, Lord
+Mounteagle, communicated to the first minister a letter in which he
+was admonished in mysterious language to hold aloof from the opening
+of Parliament. It may be that the King, as he himself relates, in
+deciphering the sense of a word hit upon the supposition that a fate
+similar to that of his father was being prepared for him; or it may be
+that the ministers had, as they affirm, come upon the traces of the
+matter; but however this may have been, on the evening before the
+opening of Parliament the vaults were examined, when not only were the
+powder-barrels found among wood and faggots, but also one of the
+conspirators, Guy Fawkes, who was busy with the last preparations for
+the execution of the plot. With a smiling countenance he confessed his
+purpose, which he seemed to regard as the fulfilment of a religious
+duty. The pedantic monarch thought himself in the presence of a
+fanatical Mutius Scaevola.
+
+The rest of the conspirators who were in London, alarmed by the
+discovery, hastened to the appointed rendezvous at Dunchurch; but the
+news which they brought with them caused general discouragement. With
+a band of about one hundred men, they set off to make their escape to
+Wales, the home of most of the Catholics, hoping to receive the
+promised reinforcements and the support of the population on their
+way. They once actually attempted to assure themselves of the latter;
+but on declaring that they were for God and the country, they received
+the answer that they ought also to be for the King. No one joined
+them, and many of their comrades had already dispersed when they were
+overtaken at Holbeach by the armed bands of Worcestershire under the
+Sheriff. Percy and Catesby, as they stood back to back, were shot dead
+by two balls from the same musket; the two Wrights were killed, and
+Thomas Winter taken prisoner.[339]
+
+The authority of government triumphed over this most frantic attempt
+to break through it, as it had triumphed in every similar case since
+the time of Henry VII.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1606.]
+
+It was perhaps the most remarkable feature in this last, that it was
+directed especially against the Parliament. During the Wars of the
+Roses, it had only been necessary to drive the then reigning prince
+out of the field, or to chase him away, in order to create a new
+parliamentary rule. The attempts against Queen Elizabeth rested on the
+hope of producing a similar result by her death: but it was apparent
+in her last years that her death would be useless, and the
+comparatively free elections after that event returned a Parliament of
+the same character as the preceding. Even under the new reign the
+Protestant party secured their ascendancy in the elections; and the
+only possibility of an alteration for the future was to be found in
+the annihilation of the Parliament, not so much of the institution--at
+least this was not mooted--but of the men who composed it and gave it
+its character. The violent attempt on the Parliament is a proof of its
+power. The Gunpowder Plot was directed against the King, not in his
+personal capacity as monarch, but as head of the legislative
+authority. It was felt that this power itself with all its component
+parts must be destroyed without scruple or mercy, if an order of
+things in the State corresponding to the views of the hierarchical
+party was ever again to obtain a footing.
+
+The necessary and inevitable result of the conspiracy was that
+Parliament, which did not enter on the session until January 1606,
+still further increased the existing severity of its laws. The great
+body of Catholics had not in any way participated in the plot; but
+yet, as it had originated among them, and was intended for the redress
+of their common grievances, they were all affected by the reaction
+which it produced. The Catholic recusants were to be subjected to the
+former penalties: they were sentenced to exclusion from the palace and
+from the capital; they were forbidden to hold any appointment in the
+public service either in the administration of justice, or as
+government officials, or even as physicians; they were obliged to open
+their houses at any moment for examination; the solemnisation of their
+marriages and the baptism of their children were henceforth to be
+legal only if performed by Protestant clergymen. It is evident that
+the Papal See would have preferred to restrain the agitation of the
+Catholics at this juncture; but as the latter appealed to the
+principle which had been impressed on them by their missionaries, that
+men had no duties to a king who was a heretic, the Parliament thought
+it necessary to impose on them an oath which concerned the authority
+of their Church as well as that of the State. Not only were they to be
+compelled to acknowledge the King as their legitimate prince, to
+defend him against every conspiracy and every attack, even when made
+under the pretext of religion, and to promise to reveal any such to
+him; they must also renounce the doctrine that the authority of the
+Church gave the Pope the right of deposing a king, and absolving his
+subjects from their oath of allegiance; and they must condemn as
+impious and heretical the doctrine that princes excommunicated by the
+Pope could be dethroned or put to death by their subjects.[340]
+Attention was directed to the English regiment in the service of the
+Archduke; and it was thought dangerous that so many malcontents should
+be assembled there, and should practise the use of arms, in order
+perhaps to turn them some day against their country. It was enacted
+that the Oath of Supremacy should be imposed on every one who took
+service abroad before his departure, with a pledge that he would not
+be reconciled to the Papacy: even securities for the observance of the
+oath were to be exacted.
+
+In the spring of the year 1605 the whole state of England still showed
+a tendency to clemency and conciliation. In the early part of 1606 the
+opposite tendency had completely obtained the upper hand.
+
+But this state of affairs necessarily reacted on Catholic countries
+and governments. In Spain, where it was easiest to rouse the
+susceptibilities of Catholicism, the severe measures of the Parliament
+of themselves created a feeling of bitterness: but besides this, Irish
+refugees resorted thither who gave an agitating account of the way in
+which these measures were carried out in Ireland:[341] so that the
+nation felt itself affronted in the persons of its co-religionists.
+Both governments, that of Spain and that of the Netherlands, refused
+to hand over to the English government men like Baldwin and Owen, who
+were taxed with participating in the plot, or to banish others whom
+the English government considered dangerous. The pious were reminded
+of the will of Queen Mary, in which she had transferred her
+hereditary right over England, France, Ireland and Scotland, to the
+House of Spain in case her son should not be converted to the Church.
+
+And how deeply must the Court of Rome have felt itself injured by the
+imposition of the Oath of Supremacy. A Pope of the Borghese family had
+just been elected, Paul V, who was as deeply convinced of the truth of
+the Papal principles, and as firmly resolved to enforce them, as any
+of his predecessors; and who was surrounded by learned men and
+statesmen who looked upon the maintenance of these principles as the
+salvation of the world. Their religious pride was galled to the quick
+by the imposition of such an oath as that exacted in England, by which
+principles at that time zealously taught in Catholic schools were
+described not only as objectionable but as heretical. They thought it
+possible that the temporal power might prevail on the English
+Catholics to accept this oath, as in fact the archpriest Blackwell who
+had been appointed by Clement VIII took it, and advised others to do
+the same. But by this act the supremacy of the King would be
+practically acknowledged, and the connexion of the English Catholics
+with the Papacy dissolved. Moved by these considerations, Paul V, in a
+brief of September 1, 1606, declared that the oath contained much that
+was contrary to the faith, and could not be taken by any one without
+damage to his salvation. He expressed his anticipation that the
+English Catholics, whose constancy had been tested like gold in the
+fire of the persecutions, would show their firmness on this occasion
+also, and that they would rather undergo all tortures, even death
+itself, than insult the Divine Majesty. At first the archpriest and
+the moderate Catholics, who did not consider that the political claims
+referred to in the oath were the true principles of the Papacy,
+declared that the brief was spurious; but after some time it was
+confirmed in all due form, and an address appeared from the pen of the
+most eminent apologist of the See of Rome, Cardinal Bellarmin, in
+which he reminded the archpriest that the general apostolical
+authority of the Pope could not be impugned even in a single iota of
+the subtleties of dogma: how much less then in this instance, where
+the question was simply whether men should look for the head of the
+Church in the successor of Henry VIII, or in the successor of S.
+Peter.
+
+These statements however greatly irritated the King, both as a man of
+learning and as a temporal potentate. He took pen in hand himself in
+order to defend the oath, in the wording of which he had a large
+share. He expressed his astonishment that so distinguished a scholar
+as Bellarmin should confound the Oath of Supremacy with the Oath of
+Allegiance, in which no word occurred affecting any article of faith,
+and which was only intended to distinguish the champions of an attempt
+like the Gunpowder Plot from his quiet subjects of the Catholic
+religion. He said that nothing more disastrous to these could have
+happened than that the Pope should condemn the oath, and thereby the
+original relation of obedience which bound them to their sovereign;
+for he was requiring them to repudiate this obedience and to abjure
+again the oath which had already been taken by many, after the example
+of the archpriest. James I took much trouble to justify the form of
+oath by the decrees of the old councils.[342]
+
+Criminal attempts, even when they fail, have at times the most
+extensive political consequences. James I had started with the idea of
+linking his subjects of every persuasion to himself in the bonds of a
+free and uniform obedience, and of creating harmonious relations
+between the rival powers of the world and his own realm of Great
+Britain. Then intervened this murderous attempt; and the measures to
+which he had recourse in order to secure his person and his country
+against the repetition of criminal attacks like this last, rekindled
+the national and religious animosities which he desired to lull, and
+fanned them into a bright flame.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[330] Letter to the King. Works viii, 647; cf. i. 671.
+
+[331] Discursus status religionis, 1605: 'Ipsi magnates non verentur
+se profiteri catholicos et plerique alii ex nobilitate, praecipue in
+principatu Walliae et in provinciis septentrionalibus,--ubi numerus
+eorum non ita pridem crevit in immensum.
+
+[332] 'S. Sta vole e comanda, che li Catolici siano obedienti al re
+d'Inghilterra, come a loro signore e re naturale. Vra Sria attenda
+con ogni diligenza e vigilanza a questi negotii d'Inghilterra
+procurando che conforme alla volonta di N. Sra obedischino al suo re
+e non s'intrighino in congiure tumulti ed altre cose, per le quali
+possino dispiacere a quella Ma.'
+
+[333] The Venetian Ambassador in his reports mentions 'doglienze e
+querelle accompagnate di lacrime di sangue.' The Roman reports are to
+the same effect. De vero Statu Angliae. La vera relatione dello stato.
+Agosto 1605. The persecution of the Catholics had begun on July 26.
+
+[334] Camden in writing to Cotton names Bainham, Catesby, Tresham, and
+the two Wrights. He calls them 'gentlemen hunger-starved for
+innovation.' Camdeni Epistolae 347.
+
+[335] Garnet says, in his conference with Hall, which was overheard,
+that he was accused of giving 'some advice in Queen Elizabeth's time
+of the blowing up of the parliament house with gunpowder; I told them
+it was lawful' Jardine, Gunpowder Plot 202.
+
+[336] From his examination: Jardine 206.
+
+[337] Lingard ix. 52. From Greenway's memoranda.
+
+[338] From a letter of Parry to Sir T. Edmondes, Paris, October 10,
+1605; in Birch's Negotiations 234.
+
+[339] Molino just at the time reports this, as the King also relates
+it in his 'Conjuratio sulphurea.' Cf. Barclay, Series patefacti
+parricidii 569.
+
+[340] 'Juro quod ex corde abhorreo detestor et abjuro tanquam impiam
+et haereticam hanc damnabilem doctrinam et propositionem quod
+principes per papam excommunicati vel deprivati possint per suos
+subditos vel alios quoscunque deponi aut occidi'. The form originally
+drawn up had asserted that the Pope generally had no right to
+excommunicate kings. But King James, in his fondness for weighing
+every side of the question, did not wish to go so far as this.
+
+[341] June 1606. Winwood, Memorials ii. 224. Cornwallis to Salisbury:
+'Such an apprehension of despair here they have of late received to
+make any conjunction or further amitie with us, by reason of the
+extreame lawes and bitter persecution, as they terme it, against those
+of their religion both in England and especially in Ireland.' June 20,
+229. 'They repair to the Jesuits, priests, fryars, and fugitives; the
+first three joyne with the last children of lost hope, who having
+given a farewell to all laws of nature--dispose themselves to become
+the executioneris of the--inventions of the others.'
+
+[342] Apologia pro juramento fidelitatis, opposita duobus brevibus ...
+et literis Bellarmini ad Blackwellum Archipresbyterum. Opera Jacobi
+Regis, p. 237. Lond. 1619.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+FOREIGN POLICY OF THE NEXT TEN YEARS.
+
+
+What had already taken place before James ascended the throne,
+occurred again under these circumstances. Although belonging to one of
+the two religious parties which divided the world between them, he had
+sought to form relations with the other, when circumstances which were
+beyond all calculation caused and almost compelled him to return to
+his original position.
+
+The Republic of Venice enjoyed his full sympathies in the quarrel in
+which at this time it became involved with the Papacy. The laws which
+it had made for limiting the influence of the clergy appeared to him
+in the highest degree just and wise. He thought that Europe would be
+happy if other princes as well would open their eyes, for they would
+not then experience so many usurpations on the part of the See of
+Rome; and he showed himself ready to form an alliance with the
+Republic. The Venetians always affirmed that the lively interest of
+the King of England in their cause had already, by provoking the
+jealousy of the French, strengthened their resolution to arrange these
+disputes in conjunction with Spain.[343] When the Republic, although
+compelled to make some concessions, yet came out of this contest
+without losing its independence, it continued to believe that for this
+result also it was indebted to King James.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1609.]
+
+In the same way, there can be no serious doubt that the refusal of the
+alliance, which the Spaniards had more than once proposed to the King
+of England, impelled the former to turn their thoughts to a peaceful
+adjustment of their differences with the Netherlands. They had made
+similar overtures to France also, but these had been shipwrecked by
+the firmness and mistrust of Henry IV. They were convinced however
+that, without winning over at least one of these two powers, they
+would never even by their strongest efforts again become masters of
+the Netherlands. In spite of some advantages which they had obtained
+on the mainland, they were so hard pressed by the superiority of the
+Dutch fleet, that they at last came forward with more acceptable
+proposals than they had before made. The English government advised
+the States-General to show compliance on all other points if their
+independence were acknowledged: not to stand out even if this were
+recognised only for a while through a truce, for in that case they
+would obtain better conditions on the other points: and that in regard
+to these England would protect them.[344] By their conduct to both
+sides, by standing aloof from the one and by bestowing good advice on
+the other, the English thus promoted the conclusion of the twelve
+years truce, and thereby procured for the United Provinces an
+independent position which they did not allow to be wrested from them
+again. The Spaniards attributed the result not so much to the
+Provinces themselves as to the two Powers allied with them: they
+thought that the articles of the treaty had been drawn up by the
+former, but devised and dictated by the latter. It was their serious
+intention that this agreement should be only temporary; they reckoned
+upon the speedy death of the King of France, and upon future troubles
+in England, for an opportunity of resuming the war.[345] But whatever
+the future might bring to pass, England, as well as France, derived an
+incalculable advantage at the time from the erection of an independent
+state under their protection, which could not but ally itself with
+them against the still dominant power of Spain.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1610.]
+
+On the whole the general understanding which King James maintained
+with Henry IV secured a support for his State, and imparted to himself
+a political courage which was otherwise foreign to his nature. The two
+sovereigns also made common cause in the Cleves-Juliers question. Two
+Protestant princes with the consent of the Estates had taken
+possession of it on the strength of their hereditary title. When an
+Archduke laid hands on the principal fortress in the country, a
+general feeling of jealousy was roused: and even in England it was
+thought that the point at issue here was not the possession of a small
+principality, but the confirmation of the House of Austria and the
+Papacy in their already tottering dominion over these provinces of the
+Lower Rhine, which might exercise such an important influence on the
+State of Europe.[346] When Henry IV joined the German Union and the
+Dutch for the protection of the two princes and for the conquest of
+Juliers, James also decided to bestow his aid. He took into his own
+pay 4000 of the troops who were still in the service of the Republic,
+sent them a general, and despatched them to the contested dominions to
+take part in the struggle.
+
+It does not appear that any one in England was aware of the great
+designs which Henry IV connected with this enterprise. When, on the
+eve of its execution, he was struck down in the centre of his capital
+by the dagger of a fanatic, friends and foes alike were thrilled with
+the feeling that the event affected them all, and would have an
+immeasurable influence on the world. In England also it was felt as a
+domestic calamity. Robert Cecil, now Earl of Salisbury, said in
+Parliament that Henry IV had been as it were their advanced guard
+against conspiracies of which he had always given the first
+information: that the first warning of the Gunpowder Plot must have
+come from him; that he had as it were stood in the breach, and that
+now he had been the first victim. The crimes of Ravaillac and of
+Catesby had sprung from the same source.
+
+The enterprise against Juliers was not hindered by this event. The
+forces of the Union under the Prince of Anhalt, and the Dutch and
+English troops under Maurice of Orange and Edward Cecil, with the
+addition of a number of volunteers from such leading families in
+England as those of Winchester, Somerset, Rich, Herbert, had already
+made considerable progress in the siege when, at last, at the orders
+of the widowed Queen, the French also arrived, but in the worst plight
+and suffering severely from illness, so that they could not carry out
+the intention, with which they came, of sequestrating the place in the
+interests of France. When the fortress had been taken it was delivered
+to the two princes, who now possessed the whole country. This was an
+event of general historical importance, for by this means Brandenburg
+first planted its foot on the Rhine, and came into greater prominence
+in Europe on this side also. It took place, like the foundation of the
+Republic of the Netherlands, with the concurrence of England and
+France, and in opposition to Austria and Spain, but at the same time
+by the help of the Republic itself and of those members of the Estates
+of the German empire who professed the same creed.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1611.]
+
+The times had gone by when the Spaniards had taken arms as if for the
+conquest of the world; but their pretensions remained the same. It was
+still their intention, in virtue of the privileges assigned them by
+the Pope, to exclude all others from the colonisation of America and
+from commerce with the East Indies. They laid claim to Northern Africa
+because it had been tributary to the crown of Aragon, to Athens and
+Neopatras because they had belonged to the Catalans, to Jerusalem
+because it had belonged to the King of Naples, and even to
+Constantinople because it had passed by will to Ferdinand II of Aragon
+from the last of the Palaeologi. On the strength of the claims made by
+the old dukes of Milan they deemed themselves to have a right to the
+towns of the Venetian mainland, and to Liguria. Philip III was in
+their eyes the true heir of the Maximilian branch of the German house
+of Austria: according to their view the succession in Bohemia and
+Hungary fell to him. The progress of the Catholic revival afforded
+them an opportunity of exercising a profound influence on the German
+empire, while the same cause extended their influence over Poland;
+they obtained through their commercial relations even the friendship
+of Protestant princes and towns in the North. Their intention was now
+to associate the two antagonistic powers of the West with their policy
+by means of alliances with the reigning families. The first
+considerable step in this direction was made after the death of Henry
+IV, when they succeeded in concerting with his widow a double
+marriage, between the young King of France and an Infanta of Spain,
+and between the future King of Spain and a French princess. It was
+thought certain beforehand that they would get the conduct of French
+policy into their hands during the minority of Louis XIII. But they
+were already seeking to draw the house of Stuart also into this
+alliance in spite of the difference of religion. In August 1611 the
+Spanish ambassador, whose overtures had hitherto been fruitless, came
+forward to announce that an alliance between the Prince of Wales and a
+Spanish infanta would meet with no obstacle on the part of Spain, if
+it should be desired on the part of England. It was thought that the
+Queen, who found a satisfaction of her ambition in this brilliant
+alliance, and the old Spanish and Catholic party, who were still very
+numerous in the highest ranks and among the people, might employ their
+whole influence in its favour.
+
+But there was still at the head of affairs a man who was resolved to
+oppose this design, Robert Cecil, to whom it is generally owing that
+the tendencies of Elizabeth's policy lasted on so long into the time
+of the Stuarts as they did. I do not know whether the two Cecils can
+be reckoned among the great men of England: they would almost seem to
+have lacked that independent attitude and that soaring and brilliant
+genius which would be requisite for such an eminence; but without
+doubt few have had so much influence on its history. Robert Cecil
+inherited the employments, the experiences, and the personal
+connexions of his father William. He knew how to rid himself of all
+rivals that rose to the surface[347] by counteracting their
+proceedings in secret or openly, justifiably or not: enmity and
+friendship he reciprocated with equal warmth. He made no change in the
+method of transacting business which was conducted by the whole Privy
+Council; but his natural superiority and the importance that he
+gradually acquired always brought the decision into accordance with
+his views. The King himself gave intimations that he did not look upon
+his predominance as altogether proper. In one of his letters he jests
+over the supremacy calmly exercised by his minister at the centre of
+affairs, while he, the King, so soon as his minister summoned him,
+must hasten in, and yet at last could do nothing but accept the
+resolutions which he put into his hands. A small deformed man, to whom
+James, as was his wont, gave a jesting nickname on this account, he
+yet impressed men by the intelligence which flashed from his
+countenance and from every word he spoke; and even his outward bearing
+had a certain dignity. His independence was increased by his enormous
+wealth, acquired mainly by investments in the Dutch funds, which at
+that time returned an extraordinarily high interest. Surrounded by
+many who accepted presents, he showed himself inaccessible to such
+seductions and incorruptible. At this time he was the oracle of
+England.[348]
+
+Among the English youth the wish was constantly reviving that the war
+with Spain, in which success was expected without any doubt, might be
+renewed with all vigour. Robert Cecil was as little in favour of this
+as his father formerly had been. Peaceful relations with Spain were
+rendered especially necessary by the condition of Ireland, where
+Tyrone, not less dissatisfied with James than he had been with
+Elizabeth, had again thrown off his allegiance, and had at last gone
+abroad to procure foreign aid for his discontented countrymen. But if
+Cecil could not break with Spain, yet he would not allow that power
+to strengthen itself or to obtain influence over England herself. In
+regard to the proposal of marriage that was made he had said that the
+gallant Prince of Wales could find blooming roses everywhere and did
+not need to search for an olive.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1612.]
+
+The notion continued to prevail that James I, even if he did not take
+arms, ought to put himself at the head of the anti-Spanish party in
+Europe, now that Henry IV was no more.
+
+The King and his ministers thought that for maintaining in the first
+place the state of affairs established in Cleves and Juliers, an
+alliance of the countries which had co-operated in producing it was
+the only appropriate means. In March 1612 we find the English
+ambassador at the Hague, Sir Ralph Winwood, at Wesel, where a
+defensive alliance that had long been mooted between James I and the
+princes of the Union, including those of the Palatinate, Brandenburg,
+Hesse, Wurtemberg, Baden, and Anhalt, was actually concluded. Both
+contracting parties promised one another mutual support against all
+who should attack them on account of the Union or of the aid they had
+given in settling and maintaining the tenure of Cleves and Juliers.
+The King was accordingly pledged to bring 4000 men into the field, and
+the Princes 2000 as their contingent, or to pay a sum of money fixed
+by rule at the choice of the country which should be attacked.[349]
+The agreement was concluded for six years, the period for which it was
+also agreed that the Union should still continue. The idea was
+started, I do not know whether by King James or rather by the leading
+English statesmen, of making this alliance the basis of a general
+European coalition against the encroachments of the Spaniards.[350]
+The German princes invited the Queen-Regent of France to join it, and
+to bring the Republic of the United Provinces into it. Mary de'
+Medici refused, on the ground that this was unnecessary, as the
+Republic was sufficiently secured by the defensive alliance previously
+concluded; but her ministers at that time still lent their assistance
+for the object immediately in view. The Spaniards had conceived the
+intention of raising the Archduke Albert to the imperial throne after
+the death of the Emperor Rudolph. A portion of the Electors, among
+others the Elector of Saxony, which had been prejudiced by the
+settlement of Juliers, was in his favour. He possessed the sympathies
+of all zealous Catholics; but England and France saw in the union of
+the imperial power with the possession of the Spanish Netherlands a
+danger for themselves and for the republic founded under their
+auspices. They plainly declared to the Spaniards that they would not
+permit it, but would set themselves against it with their allies, that
+is to say, of course, with the Republic and the Union.[351]
+
+Little seems to have been heard in Germany of the protest of the
+powers in regard to the imperial succession: but it was effectual. The
+imperial throne was ascended not by Albert but by Matthias, who had
+far more sympathy with the efforts of the Protestants and approved of
+the Union. Indeed the Spaniards too, under the guidance of the pacific
+Lerma, were not inclined to drive matters to extremities.
+
+In the youthful republic of the Netherlands an estrangement, involving
+also a difference of opinion on religious questions, arose at that
+time between the Stadtholder and the magistrates of the aristocracy.
+The party of the Stadtholder clung to the strict Calvinistic
+doctrines; the aristocratic party were in favour of milder and more
+conciliatory views, which besides allotted to the temporal power no
+small influence over the clergy, as Arminius had maintained in his
+lectures at Leyden. After his death a German professor, Conrad
+Vorstius, had been invited to Holland, who added to the opinions of
+his predecessor others which deviated still more widely from
+Calvinism, and inclined to Socinianism. The world has always felt
+astonished that King James took a side in this controversy, wrote a
+book against Vorstius, and did not rest till he had been ejected from
+his office. In fact learned rivalry was not the only motive which
+induced him to take pen in hand: we perceive that the adherents of
+Arminius, the supporters of Vorstius, were obnoxious to him on
+political grounds also. The leaders of the burgher aristocracy showed
+a marked coldness to the interests of England after the conclusion of
+the truce, and a leaning to those of France. The King moreover was of
+opinion that positive orthodoxy was necessary for maintaining the
+conflict with Catholicism, and for upholding a state founded on
+religion: and he sent an invitation to the Prince of Orange to unite
+with him in this cause. The strict Calvinism of the prince was at the
+same time an act of homage to England.
+
+While religious and political affairs were in this state of
+perplexity, which extended to the French Reformed Church as well, a
+marriage was settled between the Princess Elizabeth of England and the
+Elector Palatine, Frederick V.
+
+This young prince, who at that time was still a ward, had the prospect
+of succeeding at an unusually early age to a position in which he
+could exert an influence on the German empire. By the mother's side he
+was grandson of the founder of Dutch independence, William of Orange;
+his uncles were the Stadtholder Maurice and the Duke of Bouillon, who
+might be considered the head of the Reformed Communion in France, and
+who had married another daughter of William. Frederick had spent some
+years with the Duke at Sedan. The Duke of Bouillon, like Maurice, took
+an active part in various ways in the European politics of that age:
+these two men stood at the head of that party on the continent which
+most zealously opposed the Papacy and the house of Austria. Bouillon
+had first directed the attention of James to the young Frederick, and
+had painted to him his good qualities and his great prospects, and,
+although not without reserve, had pronounced a match between him and
+the Princess Elizabeth desirable,[352] as it would form a dynastic
+tie between the Protestantism of England and that of the continent.
+The brother of the Duke of Wurtemberg, Louis Frederick, who then
+resided in England on behalf of the Union, still more decidedly
+advocated the match. He told the King that he would have in the young
+count not so much a son-in-law, as a servant who depended on his nod;
+and that he would pledge all the German princes to his interest by
+this means.[353] After the conclusion of the alliance at Wesel the
+Count of Hanau, who was likewise married to a daughter of William,
+visited London with two privy councillors of the Palatinate, in order
+to bring the matter to an issue: they were to meet there with the Duke
+of Bouillon, to whose advice they had been expressly referred. Another
+suit for the hand of the Princess was then before the English court.
+The Duke of Savoy had made proposals for a double marriage between his
+two children and the English prince and princess. There appeared to be
+almost a match between Catholic and Protestant princes to decide which
+party should bear off 'this pearl,' the Princess of England. Without
+doubt religious considerations mainly carried the day in favour of the
+German suitor. The Princess displayed great zeal in behalf of
+Protestantism; and James said that he would not allow his daughter to
+be restricted in the exercise of her religion, not even if she were to
+be Queen of the world.[354] On the 16th of May the members of the
+Privy Council signed the contract in which the marriage was agreed
+upon between 'My Lady Elizabeth,' only daughter of the King, and the
+Grand-Master of the Household and Elector of the Holy Roman Empire,
+Frederick Count Palatine, and the necessary provisions were made as to
+dower and settlements. This may be regarded as the last work of Robert
+Cecil: he died a few days after. The pulpits had attacked the marriage
+of the princess with a Catholic, and had exhorted the people to pray
+for her marriage with a Protestant. The common feeling of Protestants
+was gratified when this result came to pass.
+
+The question of the future marriage of Henry Frederick Prince of Wales
+was treated in a kindred spirit though not exactly in the same way.
+
+All eyes were already directed to this young prince and his future
+prospects. He was serious and reserved; a man of few words, sound
+judgment, and lofty ideas; and he gave signs of an ambitious desire to
+rival his most famous predecessors on the throne.[355] He understood
+the calling of sovereign in a different sense from his father. On one
+occasion when his father set his younger brother before him as a model
+of industry in the pursuit of science, he replied that he would make a
+very good archbishop of Canterbury. For one who was to wear the crown
+skill in arms and knowledge of seamanship seemed to him indispensable;
+he made it his most zealous study to acquire both the one and the
+other. His intention undoubtedly was to make every provision for the
+great war against the Spanish monarchy which was anticipated. He
+wished to escort his sister to Germany in order to form a personal
+acquaintance with the princes of the Union, whom he regarded as his
+natural allies. These views could not have been thwarted if the
+proposal of the Duke of Savoy, which had been rejected in behalf of
+the Princess, had been accepted in behalf of the Prince.[356] For
+every day the Duke separated himself more and more from the policy of
+Spain: he had even wished at one time to be admitted into the Union.
+He offered a large portion with the hand of his daughter, and was
+ready to agree to those restrictions in the exercise of her religion
+which it might be thought necessary to prescribe. Meanwhile, however,
+another project came up. The grandees of France wished to bring a
+prince of such high endowments and decided views into the closest
+relations with the house of Bourbon, in order to oppose the action of
+Spain on the French court by another influence. They made proposals
+for a marriage between the Prince of Wales and the second daughter of
+Henry IV, the Lady Christine of France. They found the most cordial
+reception for this scheme among the English who favoured
+Protestantism, and understood the course of the world. It was thought
+that the new League, for this was the designation given to the
+increasing preponderance of Spanish and Catholic views in France,
+would by this means be thrown into confusion in its own camp; the
+French government would be brought back to its old attitude of
+hostility towards Spain, and would only thus be completely sure of the
+States General, which could never separate themselves both from
+England and France at the same time. The Prince embraced the notion
+that the Princess must immediately be brought to England to be
+instructed in the Protestant faith, and perhaps to be converted to it.
+As she was still very young his notion was so far reasonable, although
+in other respects her age was a considerable obstacle. While he
+referred the decision to his father, he yet made a remark which shows
+his own leanings, that this marriage would certainly be most
+acceptable to all his brother Protestants.[357] What a prospect would
+have dawned on these if a young and energetic king of England,
+confederate with Germany and Holland, and looked up to in France for a
+double reason, both on account of the old and still unforgotten
+claims,[358] and on account of his marriage, had taken the Huguenots
+under his protection or actually appealed to them in his own behalf!
+
+The 5th of November 1612 was fixed as the day on which the question
+was to be decided by a commission expressly appointed for this
+purpose. King James, who is represented as favourable to the connexion
+with France, went from Theobald's to the meeting: the Prince had drawn
+out for himself the arguments by which he thought to refute the
+objections of opponents. On the very same day he was taken ill, and
+was obliged to ask for an adjournment; but from day to day and hour to
+hour his illness became more dangerous. He exhibited a composed and,
+when addressed on religious questions, a devout frame of mind, but he
+did not wish to die. When some one said to him that God only could
+heal him, he replied that perhaps the physicians also might do
+something. On the 17th of November, two hours after midnight, he
+died--'the flower of his house,' as men said, 'the palladium of the
+country, the terror of his foes.' They even went so far as to put him
+at this early age on a level with Henry IV, who had been proved by a
+life full of struggles and vicissitudes. The comparison rested on the
+circumstance that the young and highly-gifted prince was forced to
+succumb to an unexpected misfortune while preparing for great
+undertakings which, like those of Henry IV, were to be directed
+against Spain.
+
+It is very probable that this prince, if he had lived to ascend the
+English throne, would have attempted to give to affairs a turn
+suitable to the vigorous designs which engrossed his thoughts.
+According to all appearance he would not have trodden in the footsteps
+of his father. He appeared quite capable of reviving the old plans of
+conquest entertained by the house of Lancaster: he would have united
+outspoken Protestant tendencies with the monarchical views of Edward
+VI, or rather of Elizabeth. With the men who then held the chief power
+in England he had no points of agreement, and they already feared
+him.[359] They were even accused of having caused his premature death.
+
+Yet the course which had been struck out with the co-operation of the
+young prince was not abandoned at his death.
+
+The Elector Palatine had already arrived in London. His demeanour and
+behaviour quieted the doubts of one party and put to shame the
+predictions of the other: he appeared manly, firm, bent on high aims,
+and dignified: he knew how to win over even the Queen who at first was
+unfavourable to him. Letters exchanged at that time are full of the
+joy with which the marriage was welcomed by the Protestants. But it
+was just as decidedly unwelcome to the other party. An expression
+which was then reported in Brussels shewed how lively the hatred was,
+and how widely and how far into the future political combinations
+extended. It was said that this marriage was designed to wrest the
+Imperial throne from the house of Austria; but it was added, with
+haughty reliance on the strength of Catholic Europe, that this design
+should never succeed.[360]
+
+Another collision seemed at times to be immediately impending. In the
+year 1613 the English government sent to ask the districts most
+exposed to a Spanish invasion, how many troops they could severally
+oppose to it, and had appointed the fire signals which were to
+announce the coming danger. It is indeed not wonderful that under such
+circumstances it continued the policy which was calculated to promote
+a general European opposition to the Spaniards.
+
+When the French grandees though fit to contest the Spanish marriages
+which Mary de' Medici made up, they had King James on their side, who
+regarded it as the natural right of princes of the blood to undertake
+the charge of public affairs during a minority. At the meeting of the
+Estates in 1614, it was their intention to get the government into
+their hands, and then to bring it back again to the line of policy of
+Henry IV. The English ambassador, Edmonds, showed that he concurred
+with them.
+
+Soon afterwards the differences between the Duke of Savoy and the
+Spanish governor in Milan terminated in an open rupture. The French
+grandees, though they had not carried their point in the
+States-General, yet showed themselves independent and strong enough to
+follow their own wishes in interfering in this matter. While the
+Queen-Regent supported the Spaniards, they came to the assistance of
+the Duke. In this struggle King James also came forward on his side in
+concert with the Republic of Venice, which was still able to throw a
+considerable weight into the scale on an Italian question.
+
+The cause of Savoy appeared the common cause of opposition to Spain.
+James deemed himself happy in being able to do something further for
+that object by removing the misunderstanding which existed between
+Protestant Switzerland and the Duke. On his own side he carefully
+upheld the old connexion between England and the Cantons. He gave out
+that in this manner the territories of his allies would extend to the
+very borders of Italy, for Protestant Switzerland formed the
+connecting link between his friends in that country and the German
+Union which, in turn, bordered on the Netherlands.
+
+With the same view, in order that his allies might not have their
+hands tied elsewhere, he laboured to remove the dissensions between
+Saxony and Brandenburg, and between the States-General and Denmark. At
+the repeated request of certain German princes, he made it his
+business to put an end, by his intervention, to the war that had
+broken out between Sweden and Denmark. By the mediation of his
+ambassadors the agreement of Knarod was arrived at, which regulated
+the relations between the Northern kingdoms for a considerable time.
+James saw his name at the head of an agreement which settled the
+rights of sovereignty in the extreme North 'from Tittisfiord to
+Weranger,' and had the satisfaction of finding that the ratification
+of this agreement by his own hand was deemed necessary.[361] A general
+union of the Protestant kingdoms and states was contemplated in this
+arrangement.
+
+In connexion with this, the commercial relations that had been long
+ago concluded with Russia assumed a political character. During the
+quarrels about the succession to the throne, when Moscow was in danger
+of falling under the dominion of Poland, which in this matter was
+supported by Catholic Europe, the Russians sought the help of Germany,
+of the Netherlands, and especially of England. We learn that the house
+of Romanoff offered to put itself in a position of inferiority to King
+James, who appeared as the supreme head of the Protestant world, if he
+would free Russia from the invasion of the Poles.
+
+Already in the time of Elizabeth the opposition to the Spanish
+monarchy had caused the English government to make advances to the
+Turks.
+
+Just at the period when the fiercest struggle was preparing, at the
+time when Philip II was making preparations for annexing Portugal, the
+Queen determined to shut her eyes to the scruples which hitherto had
+generally deterred Christian princes from entering into an alliance
+with unbelievers. It is worth noticing that from the beginning East
+Indian interests were the means of drawing these powers nearer to one
+another. Elizabeth directed the attention of the Turks to the serious
+obstacles that would be thrown in their way, if the Portuguese
+colonies in that quarter were conquered by the far more powerful
+Spaniards.[362] The commercial relations between the two kingdoms
+themselves presented another obvious consideration. England seized the
+first opportunity for throwing off the protection of the French flag,
+which had hitherto sheltered her, and in a short time was much rather
+able to protect the Dutch who were still closely allied with her. The
+Turks greatly desired to form a connexion with a naval power
+independent of the religious impulses which threatened to bring the
+neighbouring powers of the West into the field against them. They knew
+that the English would never co-operate against them with Spaniards
+and French. Political and commercial interests were thus intertwined
+with one another. A Levant company was founded, at the proposal of
+which the ambassadors were nominated, both of whom enjoyed a
+considerable influence under James I.
+
+As in these transactions attention was principally directed to the
+commerce in the products of the East Indies carried on through the
+medium of Turkish harbours, was it not to be expected that an attempt
+should be made to open direct communication with that country? The
+Dutch had already anticipated the English in that quarter; but
+Elizabeth was for a long time withheld by anxiety lest the
+negotiations for peace with Spain, which were just about to be opened,
+should be interrupted by such an enterprise. Yet under her government
+the company was formed for trading with the East Indies, to which,
+among other exceptional privileges, the right of acquiring territory
+was granted. It was only bound to hold aloof from those provinces
+which were in the possession of Christian sovereigns. We have seen how
+carefully in the peace which James I concluded with Spain everything
+was avoided which could have interrupted this commerce. James
+confirmed this company by a charter which was not limited to any
+particular time. And in the very first contracts which this company
+concluded with the great Mogul, Jehangir, they had the right bestowed
+on them of fortifying the principal factories which were made over to
+them. The native powers regarded the English as their allies against
+the Spaniards and Portuguese.
+
+In the year 1612 Shirley, a former friend of Essex, who had been
+induced by the Earl himself to go to the East, and who had there
+formed a close alliance with Shah Abbas, returned to England, where he
+appeared wearing a turban and accompanied by a Persian wife. He
+entrusted the child of this marriage to the guardianship of the Queen,
+when he again set off for Persia, in order to open up the commerce of
+England in the Persian Gulf.
+
+But it was a still more important matter that the attempts which had
+been made under the Queen to set foot permanently on the other
+hemisphere could now be brought to a successful issue under King
+James. It may perhaps be affirmed that, so long as the countries were
+at open war, these attempts could not have been made, unless Spain had
+first been completely conquered. England could not resume her old
+designs until a peace had been concluded, which, if it did not
+expressly allow new settlements, yet did not expressly forbid them,
+but rather perhaps tacitly reserved the right of forming them. Under
+the impulse which the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot gave, I will not
+say to war, but certainly to continued opposition to Spain, the King
+bestowed on the companies formed for that purpose the charters on
+which the colonisation of North America was founded. The settlement of
+Virginia was again undertaken, and, although in constant danger of
+destruction from the opposition of warlike natives and the dissensions
+of its founders, yet at last by the union of strict law and personal
+energy it was quickened into life, and kindled the jealousy of the
+Spaniards. They feared especially that it would throw obstacles in the
+way of the homeward and outward voyages of their fleets.[363] Their
+hands, however, were tied by the peace: and we learn that when they
+made overtures for the marriage of the Prince of Wales with a Spanish
+Infanta, they proposed at the same time that this colony should be
+given up. But the Prince of Wales from the interest which he took in
+all maritime enterprises was just the man to exert himself most warmly
+in its behalf. Under his auspices a new expedition was equipped, which
+did not sail till after his death, and then materially contributed to
+secure the colony. Not without good reason have the colonists
+commemorated his name.
+
+How immensely important at least for England have her relations with
+the Spanish monarchy been shown to be! She had been formerly its ally,
+its attacks she had then withstood, and now resisted it at every turn.
+Only in rivalry with this power, and in opposition to it, was the
+great Island of the West brought into relations, for which it was
+suited by its geographical position, with every part of the known
+world.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[343] Contarini, Relatione 1610: 'Pareva che nelli moti passati col
+papa havesse la republica aggradito Piu l'offerte dei Inglesi che gli
+offizii et interpositioni di Franza e da quelle pia che da questi
+riconosciuto l'accommodamento: il che per tutta la Franza si e potuto
+comprendere.'
+
+[344] The Lords of the Privy Council to Sir Richard Spencer and Sir
+Ralph Winwood. Aug. 1, 1608. In Winwood ii. 429.
+
+[345] This is affirmed by Bentivoglio, who as Nuncio at Brussels was
+closely acquainted with these transactions. Historia della guerra di
+Fiandra iii. 490.
+
+[346] Winwood to Salisbury, October 7, 1609. Memorials iii. 78.
+
+[347] Molino: 'E huomo astuto sagace e persecutore acerrimo de' suoi
+nemici ... ne a avuto multi et tutti egli a fatto precipitare.'
+
+[348] Ibid.: 'L'autorita del quale e cosi assoluta, che con verita si
+puo dire essere egli il re e governatore di quella monarchia'
+
+[349] Alligantia inter regem et electores Germaniae, in Rymer vii. ii.
+178.
+
+[350] Francesco Contarini visited him in September 1610 in the
+country, and joined him in the chase, on which occasion James touched
+on various topics in conversation: 'De' pensieri di Spagnoli con poca
+loro laude ... non mostro far alcun conto del Duca di Sassonia suo
+cognato ni della investitura data li dall'imperatore nel ducato di
+Cleves.'
+
+[351] Beaulieu to Trumbull, Paris, June 29, 1612: 'Both from this
+state (France) and the state of England it hath been plainly enough
+intimated unto them (the Spaniards) that if they would go about to
+make the Archduke Albert Emperor or king of the Romans, both these
+states with their allies would set the rest to hinder it.'
+
+[352] Green, Princesses of England v. 180; De la Boderie ii. 248.
+
+[353] This is the report of A. Foscarini, Jan. 20, 1612.
+
+[354] Winwood to Trumbull, Memorials iii. 357.
+
+[355] Correro 1609, May 20: 'Non solo riesce esquisitamente in tutti
+gli esercitii del corpo, ma si dimostra nelle attioni sue molto
+giudicioso e prudente.'--Ant. Foscarini 1612: 'Amplissimi erano i suoi
+concetti; di natura grave severa ritenuta di pochissime parole.'
+
+[356] W. Ralegh: On a marriage between Prince Henry and a daughter of
+Savoy. Works viii. 237.
+
+[357] Given in French by Levassor, Histoire de Louis XIII, i. 2, 347.
+So far as I know, the original has not yet been brought to light,
+although its genuineness cannot be doubted, as Levassor was acquainted
+with Robert Carr's letter to the Prince, which was first printed by
+Ellis ii. iii. 229.
+
+[358] Foscarini, to whom we are indebted for information on many of
+these points: 'teneva mal animo contra Spagna e pretension in
+Francia.'
+
+[359] It was affirmed that Henry Howard (Earl of Northampton) had been
+heard to say that 'the prince if ever he came to reign would prove a
+tyrant.' Bacon: Somerset's Business and Charge. Works vi. 100.
+
+[360] Trumbull to Winwood, March 2, 1613. 'These men are enraged,
+fearing that we do aim at the wresting of the empire out of the
+Austrians hand which they say shall never be effected so long as the
+conjoyned forces of all the Catholiques in Christendom shall be able
+to maintain them in that right.' Winwood, Mem. iii. 439.
+
+[361] Dispaccio di Antonio Foscarini, 5 Luglio 1612: 'Si aplica il re
+assai il pensiero a metter in pace li due re di Suecia e Danimarca et
+hieri fu qui di ritorno uno de' gentilhuomini inviati per tal
+fine:--poi si camineva immediatamente a stringere unione con tutti li
+principi di religione riformata.'
+
+[362] A letter of Germigny in Charriere, Negociations de la France
+dans le Levant iii. 885 n, mentions the representations of the first
+agent. 'Cet Anglais avait remontre l'importance de l'agrandissement du
+roy d'Espagne mesmes ou il s'impatroniroit de Portugal et des terres
+despendantes du dit royaume voisines a ce Seigneur au Levant.'
+
+[363] A. Foscarini 1612, 9 Ag.: 'Preme grandemente a Spagnoli veder
+sempre Piu stabilirsi la colonia in Virginia non perche stimino quel
+paese nel quale non e abondanza ne minera d'oro--ma perche
+fermandovisi Inglesi con li vascelli loro, correndo quel mare
+impedirebbono la flotte.' 1613 Marzo 8: 'Le navi destinate per
+Virginia al numero di tre sono passate a quella volta e se ne
+allestiranno anco altre degli interessati in quella popolatione.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+PARLIAMENTS OF 1610 AND 1614.
+
+
+For the full occupation of this position in the world, and for
+maintaining and extending it, nothing was more necessary than internal
+harmony in Great Britain, not only between the two kingdoms, but also
+in each of them at home. While Robert Cecil procured full recognition
+for considerations of foreign policy, he conceived the further design
+of bringing about such an unity above all things in England itself,
+as, if successful, would have procured for the power of the King an
+authority paramount to all the other elements of the constitution.
+
+The greatest standing evil from which the existing government
+suffered, was the inequality between income and expenditure; and if
+the lavish profusion of the King was partly responsible for this, yet
+there were also many other reasons for it. The late Queen had left
+behind no inconsiderable weight of debt, occasioned by the cost of the
+Irish war: to this were added the expenses of her obsequies, of the
+coronation, and of the first arrangements under the new reign. Visits
+of foreign princes, the reception and the despatch of great embassies,
+had caused still further extraordinary outlay; and the separate
+court-establishments of the King, the Queen, and the Prince, made a
+constant deficit inevitable. Perpetual embarrassment was the result.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1610.]
+
+James I expresses himself with a sort of naive ingenuousness in a
+letter to the Lords of Council of the year 1607. In this letter he
+exhorts them not to present to him any 'sute wherof none of yourselves
+can guess what the vallew may prove,' but rather to help him to cut
+off superfluous expenses, as far as was consistent with the honour of
+the kingdom, and to assist him to new lawful sources of revenue,
+without throwing an unjust burden upon the people. 'The only disease
+and consumption which I can ever apprehend as likeliest to endanger
+me, is this eating canker of want, which being removed I could think
+myself as happy in all other respects as any other king or monarch
+that ever was since the birth of Christ: in this disease I am the
+patient, and yee have promised to be the physicians, and to use the
+best care uppon me that your witte, faithfulnes and diligence can
+reach unto.'[364]
+
+As Lord Treasurer, Robert Cecil had the task of taking in hand the
+conduct of this affair also. He had refused to make disbursements
+which he thought improper, but to which the King had notwithstanding
+allowed himself to be led away: he would not hear of increasing the
+revenue by such means as the sale of offices, a custom which seemed to
+be at that time transplanting itself from France into England. He
+sought to add to the revenue in the first place by further taxation of
+the largely increasing commerce of the country. And as tonnage and
+poundage had been once for all granted to the King, he thought it
+appropriate and permissible to raise the custom-house duties as an
+administrative measure. Soon after the new government had come into
+power it had undertaken the rearrangement of the tariff to suit the
+circumstances of the time. Cecil, who was confirmed in his purpose by
+a decision of the judges to the effect that his conduct was perfectly
+legal, conferred with the principal members of the commercial class on
+the amount and nature of the increase of duty.[365] The plan which
+they embraced in accordance with the views prevalent at the time
+contemplated that the burden should principally fall upon foreigners.
+
+The advantages which were obtained by this means were not
+inconsiderable. The Custom-House receipts were gradually increased
+under King James by one-half; but yet this was a slow process and
+could not meet the wants that likewise kept growing. The Lord
+Treasurer decided to submit a comprehensive scheme to Parliament, in
+order to effect a radical cure of the evil. The importance of the
+matter will be our excuse for examining it in detail.
+
+He explained to them that a considerable increase of income (which he
+put down at L82,000) was required to cover the regular expenditure,
+but that a still greater sum was needed for casual expenses, for which
+in the state, as in every household, certainly a quarter of the sum
+reached by the regular expenditure was required. He therefore proposed
+that L600,000 should be at once granted him for paying off the debt,
+and that in future years the royal income should be raised by
+L200,000.
+
+This request was so comprehensive and so far beyond all precedent,
+that it could never have been made without a corresponding offer of
+concessions on a large scale. The Earl of Salisbury in his proposal
+formally invited the Parliament to adduce the grievances which it had,
+and promised in the King's name to redress all such so far as lay in
+his power. It is affirmed that his clear-sighted and vigorous speech
+made a favourable impression. Parliament in turn acceded to the
+proposal, and alleged its most important grievances. They affected
+both ecclesiastical and financial interests: among the latter class
+that which concerned the Court of Wards is the most important
+historically.
+
+Of the institutions by which the Normans and Plantagenets held their
+feudal state together, none perhaps was more effectual than the right
+of guardianship over minors, whose property the kings managed for
+their own advantage. They stepped as it were into the rights of
+fathers; even the marriage of wards depended on their pleasure. From
+the time of Henry VIII a court for the exercise of this jurisdiction
+and for feudal tenures generally had existed, which instituted
+enquiries into the neglect of prescriptive custom, and punished it.
+One of the most important offices was that of President of the Court,
+which was very lucrative, and conferred personal influence in various
+ways. It had been long filled by Robert Cecil himself.
+
+The Lower House now proposed in the first place that this right and
+the machinery created to enforce it, which gave birth to various acts
+of despotism, should be abolished. How often had the property of wards
+been ruined by those to whom the rights of the state were transferred.
+The debts which were chargeable against them were never paid.[366] The
+Lower House desired that not only the royal prerogatives, but also
+that the kindred rights of the great men of the kingdom over their
+vassals should cease, and especially that property held on feudal
+tenures should be made allodial.
+
+It is evident what great interests were involved in this scheme, which
+was thoroughly monarchical, and at the same time was opposed to
+feudalism. Its execution would have put an end to the feudal tie which
+now had no more vitality, and appeared nothing more than a burden; but
+at the same time the crown would have been provided with a regular and
+sufficient income, and, what is more, would have been tolerably
+independent of the grants of Parliament, so soon as an orderly
+domestic system was introduced. We can understand that in bringing
+this matter to an issue a minister of monarchical views might see an
+appropriate conclusion to a life or rather two lives, his father's and
+his own, dedicated to the service of the sovereign. And it appeared
+that he might well hope to succeed, as a considerable alleviation was
+offered at the same time to the King's subjects as well.
+
+The King reminded them that the feudal prerogative formed one of the
+fairest jewels of his crown, that it was an heirloom from his
+forefathers which he could not surrender; honour, conscience, and
+interest, equally forbade it. The Lower House replied that it would
+not dispute about honour and conscience, but as to interest, that
+might be arranged. They were ready by formal contract to indemnify the
+crown for the loss which it would suffer.[367]
+
+The crown demanded L100,000 as a compensation for the loss it would
+suffer; and besides this, the L200,000 before mentioned which it
+required for restoring the balance between income and expenditure. We
+need not here reproduce the repulsive spectacle presented by the
+abatement of demands on the one side, and the increase of offers on
+the other. At last the Lord Treasurer adhered to the demand for
+L200,000 everything included. He declared that if this was refused the
+King would never again make a similar offer. On this at last the
+Parliament declared itself ready to grant the sum; but, even then, set
+up further conditions about which they could not come to an immediate
+agreement, so that their mutual claims were not yet definitively
+adjusted.
+
+On the contrary these negotiations had by degrees assumed a tone of
+some irritation. Parliament found that the Earl of Salisbury had acted
+unconstitutionally in proposing to raise the scale of duties without
+its consent, and would not be content with his reference to the
+decision of the judges mentioned above, and to the conferences with
+the merchants. He endeavoured at a private interview with some of the
+leading members to bring round the opinion to his side: but the House
+was angry with those who had been present at it, and their good
+intentions were called in question.[368]
+
+The speeches also, with which the King twice interrupted the
+proceedings, produced an undesirable effect. He was inclined to meet
+the general wishes, without surrendering however any part of his
+prerogatives. But at the same time he expressed himself about these in
+the exaggerated manner peculiar to him, which was exactly calculated
+to arouse contradiction.[369] Whilst he was comparing the royal power
+to the divine, he found that the House on one pretext or another
+refused even to open a letter which he had addressed to them about the
+speech of some member which had displeased him: on the contrary he was
+obliged to receive back into favour the very member who had affronted
+him. Parliament regarded liberty of speech as the Palladium of its
+efficiency; foreigners were astonished at the recklessness with which
+members expressed themselves about the government.
+
+As a rule the investigation of relative rights has an unfavourable
+result for those who are in actual possession of authority. The
+prerogative which the King exalted so highly presented itself to the
+Parliament in an obnoxious aspect. In the debates on the contract the
+question was raised, how Sampson's hands could be bound, that is to
+say, how the King's prerogative could be so far restricted as to
+prevent him from breaking or overstepping the agreement.
+
+During a dispute with the House of Lords the sentiment was uttered,
+that the members of the Lower House as representing the Commons ranked
+higher than the Lords, each of whom represented only himself.[370] It
+is easy to see how far this principle might lead.
+
+Even his darling project of combining England and Scotland into a
+single kingdom could not be carried out by the King in the successive
+sessions of Parliament. One of the leading spirits of the age, Francis
+Bacon, was on his side in this matter as in others. When it was
+objected that it was no advantage to the English to take the
+poverty-stricken Scots into partnership, as for example in commercial
+affairs, he returned answer, that merchants might reckon in this way,
+but no one who rose to great views: united with Scotland, England
+would become one of the greatest monarchies that the world had ever
+seen; but who did not perceive that a complete fusion of both elements
+was needed for this? Security against the recurrence of the old
+divisions could not be obtained until this was effected. Owing to the
+influence of Bacon, who at that time had become Solicitor-General, the
+question of the naturalisation of all those born in Scotland after
+James had ascended the English throne, was decided with but slight
+opposition, in a sense favourable to the union of the two kingdoms, by
+the Lord Chancellor and the Judges. The decision however was not
+accepted by Parliament. And when the question was now raised how far
+the assent of Parliament was necessary in a case like this, the
+adverse declaration of the Lord Chancellor was exactly calculated to
+provoke a contest of principle in this matter also.[371] With the
+advice of the Lord Chancellor and the Council James had declared
+himself King of Great Britain, and had expressed the wish that the
+names of England and Scotland might be henceforth obliterated; but his
+Proclamation was not considered sufficient without the assent of
+Parliament; and in this case the judges took the side of the
+Parliament. The dynastic ideas with which James had commenced his
+reign could not but serve to resuscitate the claim of Parliament to
+the possession of the legislative power. At other times the precedents
+adduced by the Lord Chancellor in the debate on the 'post-nati' might
+have controlled their decision: at the present time they no longer
+made any impression. The opposition of political ideas came to the
+surface in this matter as in others. The King held the strongly
+monarchical view that the populations of both countries were united
+with one another by the mere fact of their being both subject to him.
+To this the Parliament opposed the doctrine that the two crowns were
+distinct sovereignties, and that the legislation of the two countries
+could not be united. They wished to fetter the King to the old legal
+position which they were far more anxious to contract than to expand.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1613.]
+
+The consequences must have been incalculable, if the Earl of Salisbury
+and the Lord Chancellor had succeeded in carrying out their
+intentions. A common government of the two countries would have held
+in all important questions a position independent of the two
+Parliaments, and the person of the sovereign would have been the
+ruling centre of this government. If besides an adequate income had
+been definitely assigned to the crown independent of the regularly
+recurring assent of Parliament, what would have become of the rights
+of that body? Not only would Elizabeth's mode of government have been
+continued, but the monarchical element which could appeal to various
+precedents in its own favour would probably have obtained a complete
+ascendancy.
+
+But for that very reason these efforts were met by a most decided
+opposition. It is plain that these rival pretensions, and the motive
+from which they sprang, paved the way for controversies of the most
+extensive kind.
+
+The scheme of the contract was as little successful as that of the
+union of the two kingdoms. The parties were contented with merely
+removing the occasion for an immediate rupture; and after some short
+prorogations Parliament was finally dissolved.
+
+The King, who felt himself aggrieved by its whole attitude as well as
+by many single expressions, was reluctant to call another. In order to
+meet his extraordinary necessities recourse was had to various old
+devices and to some new ones; for instance, the creation of a great
+number of baronets in 1612, on payment of considerable sums: but
+notwithstanding all this, in the year 1613 matters had gone so far,
+that neither the ambassadors to foreign courts, nor even the troops
+which were maintained could be paid. In the garrison of Brill a mutiny
+had arisen on this account; the strongholds on the coast and the
+fortifications on the adjacent islands went to ruin. For this as well
+as for other reasons the death of the Earl of Salisbury was a
+misfortune. The man on whom James I next bestowed his principal
+confidence, Robert Carr, then Lord Rochester, later Earl of Somerset,
+was already condemned by the popular voice because he was a Scot, who
+moreover had no other merit than a pleasing person, which procured him
+the favour of the King. The authority enjoyed by the Howards had
+already provoked dissatisfaction. The Prince of Wales had been their
+decided adversary, and this enmity was kept up by all his friends.
+Robert Carr, however, thought it advisable to win over to his side
+this powerful family to which he had at first found himself in
+opposition. Whether from personal ambition or from a temper that
+really mocked at all law and morality he married Frances Howard, whose
+union with the Earl of Essex had to be dissolved for this
+object.[372] The old enemies of the Howards, the adherents of the
+house of Essex, many of whom had inherited this enmity, now became the
+opponents of the favourite and his government. When at last urgent
+financial necessities allowed no other alternative, and absolutely
+compelled the issue of a summons for a new parliament, the contending
+parties seized the opportunity of confronting one another. The
+creatures of the government neglected no means of controlling the
+elections by their influence; but they were everywhere encountered by
+the other party, who were favoured by the increasing dissatisfaction
+of the people.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1614.]
+
+At the opening of Parliament in April 1614, and on two occasions
+afterwards, the King addressed the Lower House. Among all the
+scholastic distinctions, complaints of the past, and assurances for
+the future, in which after his usual fashion he indulges, we can still
+perceive the fundamental idea, that if even the subsidies which he
+required and asked were granted him, he would notwithstanding agree to
+no conditions on his side, and take upon himself no distinct pledges.
+He was resolved no longer to play the game of making concessions in
+order to ask for something in return, as he had done some years
+before; he found that far beneath his dignity. Still less could he
+consent that all the grievances that might have arisen should be
+heaped up and presented to him, for that would be injurious to the
+honour of the government. Each one, he said, might lay before him the
+grievances which he experienced in his own town or in his own county;
+he would then attend to their redress one by one. In the same way he
+would deal with each House separately. If he is reproached with
+endeavouring to extend his prerogatives he denies the charge; but he
+affirms that he cannot allow them to be abridged, but that, in
+exercising them, he would behave as well as the best prince England
+ever had.[373] He has no conception of a relation based on mutual
+rights; he acknowledges only a relation of confidence and affection.
+In return for liberal concessions he promises liberal favour.
+
+This was a view of things resting upon a patriarchal conception of
+kingly power, in favour of which analogies might no doubt have been
+found in the early state of the kingdoms of the West, but which was
+now becoming more and more obsolete. What had still been possible
+under Elizabeth, when the sovereign and her Parliament formed one
+party, was no longer so now; especially as a man who had attracted
+universal hatred stood at the head of affairs. Besides this a dispute
+was already going on which we cannot pass over in silence.
+
+It arose upon the same matter which had caused such grave
+embarrassment to the Earl of Salisbury, the unlimited exercise of the
+right of levying tonnage and poundage entirely at the discretion of
+the government. It was affirmed that the Custom-House receipts had
+increased more than twentyfold since the commencement of James's
+reign, and that a great part of the increased returns was enjoyed by
+favoured private individuals. The Lower House demanded first of all an
+examination into the right of the government, and declared that
+without it they would not proceed to vote any grant.[374]
+
+In the Lower House itself on one occasion a lively debate arose on the
+subject. The opinion was advanced on the part of the friends of the
+government that, in this respect as in others, a difference existed
+between hereditary and elective monarchies, that in the first class,
+which included England, the prerogative was far more extensive than in
+the latter. Henry Wotton, and Winwood, who had been long employed on
+foreign embassies, explained what a great advantage in regard to their
+collective revenues other states derived from indirect taxes and
+customs. But by this statement they awakened redoubled opposition.
+They were told that the raising of these imposts in France had not
+been approved by the Estates and was in fact illegal; that the King
+of Spain had been forced to atone for the attempt to introduce them
+into the Netherlands by the loss of the greater part of the provinces.
+Thomas Wentworth especially broke out into violent invectives against
+the neighbouring sovereigns, which even called forth remonstrances
+from the embassies. He warned the King of England that in his case
+also similar measures would lead to his complete ruin.[375] It was not
+only urged that England ought not to take example by any foreign
+country, but the very distinction drawn between elective and
+hereditary monarchies suggested a question whether England after all
+was so entirely a hereditary monarchy as was asserted. It was asked if
+it might not rather be said that James I, who was one of a number of
+claimants who had all equally good rights, owed his accession to a
+voluntary preference on the part of the nation, which might be
+regarded as a sort of election. These were ideas of unlimited range,
+and flatly contradicted those which James had formed on the rights of
+birth and inheritance. He felt himself outraged by their expression in
+the Lower House.
+
+In order to give the force of a general resolution to their assertion,
+that in England the prerogative did not include the fixing of the
+amount of taxes and customs without the consent of Parliament, the
+Commons had made proposals for a conference with the Upper House. But
+hereupon the higher clergy declared themselves hostile, not only to
+their opinion, but even to the bare project of a conference. Neil,
+Bishop of Lincoln, affirmed that the oath taken to the King in itself
+forbade them to participate in such a conference; that the matter
+affected not so much a branch of the royal prerogative as its very
+root; that the Lords moreover would have to listen to seditious
+speeches, the aim and intention of which could only be to bring about
+a division between the King and his subjects. The Lord Chancellor had
+asked the judges for their opinion; but they had declined to give any.
+The result was that the Upper House did not accede to the proposal of
+a conference.
+
+The Commons were greatly irritated at the resistance which was offered
+to their first step. They too in conferences which related to other
+matters disdained to enter into the subjects brought before them. They
+complained loudly of the insulting expressions of the bishop which had
+been repeated to them. An exculpatory statement of the Upper House did
+not content them; they demanded full satisfaction as in an affair of
+honour, and until this had been furnished them they declared
+themselves determined to make no progress with any other matter.
+
+The King however on his side now lost patience at this. He considered
+that an attack was made on the highest power when the general progress
+of business was hindered for the sake of a single question, and he
+appointed a day on which this affair of the subsidy must be disposed
+of. He said that, if it were not settled, he would dissolve
+Parliament.
+
+One would not expect such a declaration to change the temper of the
+Lower House. Speeches were heard still more violent than those
+previously made. The Scots, to whose influence every untoward
+occurrence was imputed, were threatened with a repetition of the
+Sicilian Vespers. There were other members however who counselled
+moderation; for it almost appeared as if the dissolution of this
+Parliament might be the dissolution of all parliaments. Commissioners
+were once more sent to the King in order to give another turn to the
+negotiations. The King declared that he knew full well how far his
+rights extended, and that he could not allow his prerogatives to be
+called in question.[376]
+
+These passionate ebullitions of feeling against the Scots, although
+they referred to matters of a more alarming, but happily of an
+entirely different nature, made the King anxious lest the destruction
+of his favourites, or even his own ruin, might be required to content
+his adversaries. On the 7th of June he dissolved Parliament. He
+thought himself entitled to bring up for punishment the loudest and
+most reckless speakers, as well as some other noted men from whom
+these speakers had received their impulse, for instance Cornwallis,
+the former ambassador in Spain. He considered that they had intended
+to upset the government: not only had they failed, but they themselves
+must atone for the attempt.[377]
+
+The estrangement was not too great to allow the hope of a
+reconciliation. It had been represented to the King that he ought not
+to be ready to regard financial concessions as a compliance unbecoming
+to the crown, for that in these matters he was at no disadvantage as
+compared with any person or any foreign power; that on the contrary
+the decision always proceeded from himself; that he was the head who
+cared for the welfare of the members. It was said that he need by no
+means fear that men would make use of his wants to lay fetters on him;
+that bonds laid by subjects on their sovereigns were merely cobwebs
+which he might tear asunder at any moment. Even Walter Ralegh had
+stated this.[378] But the King had no inclination, after the
+Parliament had repelled his overtures with rude opposition, to expose
+himself by summoning a new one to new attacks on his prerogatives as
+he understood them. By the voluntary or forced contributions of
+different corporations, especially of the clergy and of the great men
+of the kingdom, he was placed in a condition to carry on his
+government in the ordinary way. Every measure which would have
+necessitated a great outlay was avoided.
+
+It is plain however into what a disagreeable position he was thus
+brought. His whole method of government was based upon the superiority
+of England. He had at that time brought the system of the Church in
+Scotland nearer to the English model. The bishops in that country had
+even received their consecration from the English. But he had not
+effected this without violent acts of usurpation. He had been obliged
+to remove his most active opponents out of the country; but even in
+their absence they kept up the excitement of men's feelings by their
+writings. The Presbyterians saw in everything which he succeeded in
+doing, the work of cunning on the one side and treachery on the other,
+and gave vent to the deepest displeasure at his deviation from their
+solemn Covenant with God.
+
+Relying on the right of England, but for the first time inviting
+immigrants from Scotland, James undertook the systematic establishment
+of colonies in Ireland. The additional strength however which by this
+means accrued to the Protestant and Teutonic element entirely
+annihilated all leanings which had been shown in his favour at his
+accession to the crown, and aroused against him the strongest national
+and religious antipathies of the native population in that country.
+
+He then met with this opposition in Parliament which hampered all his
+movements. It was foreign to his natural disposition to think of
+effecting a radical removal of the misunderstanding that had arisen.
+On the contrary he kept adding fresh fuel to it on account of the
+deficiencies of his government, which began to impair his former
+importance. The immediate consequence was that in foreign affairs he
+was no longer able to maintain the position which he had taken up as
+vigorously as might have been wished. His allies pressed him
+incessantly to bestow help on them: but if even he had wished it, this
+was no longer in his power. It was not that Parliament in withholding
+his supplies had disapproved of the object which they were intended to
+serve. On the contrary the Parliament lamented that this object was
+not pursued with sufficient earnestness; but it wished above all to
+extend its right of sanction over the whole domain of the public
+revenues. But the King was not inclined to treat with Parliament for
+the supplies of money required; he feared to incur the necessity of
+repaying its grants by concessions which would abridge the ancient
+rights of his crown. The centre of gravity of public affairs must lie
+somewhere or other. The question was already raised in England whether
+for the future it was to be in the power of the King and his
+ministers, or in the authority of Parliament.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[364] Letter to the Lords, anno 1607: in Strype, Annals iv. 560.
+
+[365] Antonio Correro, 25 Giugno 1608: 'Con l'autorita ch'egli tiene
+con li mercanti di questa piazza li ha indutti a sottoporsi ad una
+nova gravezza posta sopra le merci che vengono e vanno da questo
+regno.'
+
+[366] Molino: 'La gabella dei pupilli porge materia grande a sudditi
+di dolorsene e d'esclamare sino al celo studiando ogn'uno di liberasi
+da simili bene.--Se uno aveva due campi di questa ragione e cento
+d'altra natura, i due hanno questa forza, di sottomettere i cento alla
+medesima gravezza.'
+
+[367] Beaulieu to Trumbull. Winwood, Memorials iii. 123.
+
+[368] Carleton to Edmonds: Court and Times of James I, i. 12, 123.
+
+[369] Chamberlain to Winwood. Mem. iii. 175. 'Yf the practise should
+follow the positions, we should not leave to our successor that
+freedome we received from our forefathers.'
+
+[370] Tommaso Contarini, 23 Giugno 1610: 'Che le loro persone, come
+representanti le communita, siano di maggior qualita che li signori
+titolati quali representano le loro sole persone, il che diede
+grandissimo fastidio al re.'
+
+[371] Campbell, Lives of the Lord Chancellors ii. 225.
+
+[372] Lorking, writing to Puckering (The Court and Times of James the
+First i. 254), remarks as early as July 1613 on the first mention of
+the marriage, that its design was 'to reconcile him (Lord Rochester)
+and the house of Howard together, who are now far enough asunder.'
+
+[373] The King's second speech. Parliamentary History v. 285.
+
+[374] A. Foscarini 1614, 20 Giugno. 'Il re ha sempre avuto seco (on
+his side) la camera superiore e parte dell'inferiore: il rimanente ha
+mostrato di voler contribuir ogni quantita di sussidio ma a conditione
+che si vedesse prima qual fosse l'autorita del re, sull'impor
+gravezze.'
+
+[375] Chamberlain to Carleton, May 28. Court and Times of James I, i.
+312.
+
+[376] According to a report furnished by A. Foscarini: 'Elessero 40
+d'essi a quali diede Lunedi audienza S. M.--dissero che la
+supplicavano per tanto lasciar per ultima da risolvere la materia di
+danari.' Unfortunately we have only very scanty information about this
+Parliament.
+
+[377] Extract from a letter of Winwood to Carleton, June 16. Green,
+Calendar of State Papers, James I, vol. ii. 237.
+
+[378] The Prerogative of Parliaments. Works viii. 154.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+SURVEY OF THE LITERATURE OF THE EPOCH.
+
+
+The times in which great political struggles are actually going on are
+not the most favourable for production in the fields of literature and
+art. These flourish best in the preceding or following ages, during
+which the impulse attending those movements begins or continues to be
+felt. Just such an epoch was the period of thirty or forty years
+between the defeat of the Armada and the outbreak of the Parliamentary
+troubles, a period comprising the later years of Queen Elizabeth and
+the earlier years of King James I. This was the epoch in which the
+English nation attained to a position of influence on the world at
+large, and in which at the same time those far-reaching differences
+about the most important questions of the inner life of the nation
+arose. The antagonism of ideas which stirred men's minds generally
+could not but reproduce itself in literature. But we also see other
+grand products of the age far transcending the limits of the present
+struggle. Our survey of the history will gain in completeness if we
+cast even but a transient glance, first at the former and then at the
+latter class of these products.
+
+In Scotland the studies connected with classical antiquity were
+prosecuted with as much zeal as anywhere else in Europe; not however
+in order to imitate its forms in the native idiom, which no one at
+that time even in Germany thought of doing, but in order to use it in
+learned theological controversies, and to maintain connexion with
+brother Protestants of other tongues. S. Andrew's was at one time a
+centre for Protestant learning: Poles and Danes, Germans and French
+visited this university in order to study under Melville. Even Latin
+verse was written with a certain elegance. A fit monument of these
+studies and their direction is to be found in Buchanan's History of
+Scotland, a work without value for the earlier period, and full of
+party spirit in describing his own, as Buchanan is one of the most
+violent accusers of Mary Stuart, but pervaded by that warmth and
+decision which carry the reader along with it: at that time it was
+read all over the world. Buchanan and Melville were among the
+champions of popular ideas on the constitution of states and the
+relations between sovereign and people. It cannot be affirmed that
+classical studies were without influence upon their views, but the
+doctrine to which they adhered grew out of a different root. It rests
+historically upon the doctrine of the superiority of the Church, and
+the councils representing the Church, over the Papacy, as it was put
+forth in the fifteenth century at Paris. A Scottish student there,
+John Major, made this doctrine his own, and after his return to his
+native country, when he himself had obtained a professorship, he
+applied it to temporal relations. The positions of the advocates of
+the councils affirmed that the Pope, it was true, received his
+authority from God, but that he might be again deprived of it in cases
+of urgent necessity by the Church, which virtually included the sum of
+all authority in itself. In the same way John Major taught that an
+original power transmitted from father to son pertained to kings, but
+that the fundamental authority resided in the people; so that a king
+mischievous to the commonwealth, who showed himself incorrigible,
+might be deposed again. His scholars, who took so large a part in the
+first disturbances in Scotland, and their scholars in turn, firmly
+maintained this doctrine. They differed from their contemporaries the
+Jesuits, who considered the monarchy to be an institution set up by
+the national will, in ascribing to it a divine right, but they urged
+that a king existed for the sake of the people, and that as he was
+bound by the laws agreed on by common consent, resistance to him was
+not only allowed, but under certain circumstances might even be a
+duty. We must also remark the opposite view, which was developed in
+contradiction to this, but yet rested on the same foundation. It was
+admitted that the king, if the people were considered as a whole,
+existed for their sake, and not the people for his; but the king, it
+was said, was at the same time the head of the people; he possessed
+superiority over all individuals: there was no one who could say in
+any case that the contract between king and people had been broken: no
+such general contract existed at all; there could be no question at
+all of resistance, much less of deposition, for how could the members
+rebel against the head? King James maintained that the legislative
+power belonged to the king by divine and human right, that he
+exercised it with the participation of his subjects, and always
+remained superior to the laws. His position rests on these views, in
+the development of which he himself had certainly a great share; he,
+like his opponents, had his political and ecclesiastical adherents. In
+the Scottish literature of the time both tendencies are embodied in
+important historical works; the latter principally in Spottiswood's
+Church History, which represents the royalist views and is not without
+merit in point of form, so that even at the present day it can be read
+with pleasure; the former in contemporary notices of passing events
+which were composed in the language and even in the dialect of the
+country, and which in many places are the foundation even of
+Buchanan's history. They are the most direct expression of national
+and religious views, as they found vent in the assemblies of preachers
+and elders; in them we feel the life-breath of Presbyterianism.
+Calderwood and the younger Melville, who collected everything which
+came to hand, espoused the popular ideas; for information on facts and
+their causes they are invaluable, although in respect of form they do
+not rival Spottiswood, who, like them, employs the language of the
+country.
+
+It might perhaps be said that it was in Scotland that the two systems
+arose which since that time, although in various shapes, have divided
+Britain and Europe. In the historians just mentioned we might see the
+types of two schools, whose opposite conceptions of universal and
+especially of English history, set forth by writers of brilliant
+ability, have exercised the greatest influence upon prevailing ideas.
+
+
+In England these ideas certainly gained admission, but they did not
+make way at that time. When Richard Hooker expresses the popular ideas
+as to the primitive free development of society, this is done
+principally in order to point out the extensive authority of the
+legislative power even over the clergy, and to defend the
+ecclesiastical supremacy of the English crown, which had been
+established by the enactments of that very power. The question was
+mooted how far the sovereign was above the laws. Many wished to derive
+these prerogatives from the laws; others rejected them. Among those
+who maintained them unconditionally Walter Ralegh appears, in whose
+works we find a peculiar deduction of them in the statement that the
+sovereign, according to Justinian's phrase, was the living law: he
+derives the royal authority from the Divine Will, which the will of
+man could only acknowledge. He says in one place that the sovereign
+stands in the same relation to the law, as a living man to a dead
+body.
+
+What a remarkable work would it have been, had Walter Ralegh himself
+recorded the history of his time. But the opposition between parties
+was not so outspoken in England as in Scotland; it had not to justify
+itself by general principles, to which men could give their adhesion;
+it contained too much personal ill-feeling and hatred for any one who
+was involved in the strife to have been able to find satisfaction in
+expressing himself on this head. The history of the world which Walter
+Ralegh had leisure to write in his prison, is an endeavour to put
+together the materials of Universal History as they lay before him
+from ancient times, and so make them more intelligible. He touches on
+the events of his age only in allusions, which excited attention at
+the time, but remain obscure to posterity.
+
+In direct opposition to the Scots, especially to Buchanan, Camden, who
+wrote in Latin like the former, composed his Annals of the Reign of
+Queen Elizabeth. His contemporary, De Thou, borrowed much from
+Buchanan. Camden reproaches him with this, partly because in Scotland
+men preached atrocious principles with regard to the authority of the
+people and their right of keeping their kings in order. The elder
+Cecil had invited him to write the history of the Queen, and had
+communicated to him numerous documents for this purpose, which were
+either in his own possession or belonged to the national archives.
+Camden set cautiously to work, and went slowly on. He has himself
+depicted the trouble it cost him to decipher the historical contents
+of these scattered and dusty papers. He has certainly not surmounted
+all the difficulties which stand in the way of composing a
+contemporary history. Here and there we find even in his pages a
+regard paid to the living, especially to King James himself, which we
+would rather see away. But such passages are rare. Camden's Annals
+take a high rank among histories of contemporary transactions. They
+are of such authenticity in regard to facts, and show so intimate an
+acquaintance with causes gathered from trustworthy information, that
+we can follow the author, even where we do not possess the documents
+to which he refers. His judgments are moderate and at the same time in
+all important questions they are decided.
+
+When we read Camden's letters we become acquainted with a circle of
+scholars engaged in the severest studies. In his Britannia, which
+gives a more complete and instructive picture of the country than any
+other work, they all took a lively interest. Their works are clumsy
+and old-fashioned, but they breathe a spirit of thoroughness and
+breadth which does honour to the age. With what zeal were
+ecclesiastical antiquities studied in Cambridge, after Whitaker had
+pointed the way! Men sought to weed out what was spurious, and in what
+was genuine to set aside the part due to the accidental forms of the
+time, and to penetrate to the bottom of the sentiments, the belief,
+and activity of the writers. The constitution of the Church naturally
+led them to devote special study to the old provincial councils. For
+the history of the country they referred to the monuments of
+Anglo-Saxon times, and began even in treating of other subjects to
+bring the original sources to light. Everywhere men advanced beyond
+the old limits which had been drawn by the tradition of chroniclers
+and the lack of historical investigation hitherto shown.
+
+Francis Bacon was attracted by the task of depicting at length a
+modern epoch, the history of the Tudors, with the various changes
+which it presented and the great results it had introduced, in which
+he saw the unity of a connected series of events. Yet he has only
+treated the history of the first of that line. He furnishes one of the
+first examples of exact investigation of details combined with
+reflective treatment of history, and has exercised a controlling
+influence on the manner and style of writing English history,
+especially by the introduction of considerations of law, which play a
+great part in his work. The political points of view which are present
+to the author are almost more those of the beginning of the
+seventeenth than those of the beginning of the sixteenth century. But
+these epochs are closely connected with each other. For what Henry VII
+established is just what James I, who loved to connect himself
+immediately with the former monarch, wished to continue. Bacon was a
+staunch defender of the prerogative.
+
+The dispute which arose between Bacon as a lawyer and Edward Coke
+deserves notice.
+
+Coke also has a place in literature. His reports are, even at the
+present day, known without his name simply as 'The Reports,' and his
+'Institutes' is one of the most learned works which this age produced.
+It is rather a collection provided with notes, but is instructive and
+suggestive from the variety of and the contrast of its contents. Coke
+traced the English laws to the remotest antiquity; he considered them
+as the common production of the wisest men of earlier ages, and at the
+same time as the great inheritance of the English people, and its best
+protection against every kind of tyranny, spiritual or temporal. Even
+the old Norman French, in which they were to a great extent composed,
+he would not part with, for a peculiar meaning attached itself, in his
+view, to every word.
+
+On the other hand Bacon as Attorney-General formed the plan of
+comprising the common law in a code, by which a limit should be set to
+the caprice of the judges, and the private citizen be better assured
+of his rights. He thought of revising the Statute-Book, and wished to
+erase everything useless, to remove difficulties, and to bring what
+was contradictory into harmony.
+
+Bacon's purpose coincided with the idea of a general system of
+legislation entertained by the King: he would have preferred the Roman
+law to the statute law of England. Coke was a man devoted to the
+letter of the law, and was inclined to offer that resistance to the
+sovereign which was implied in a strict adherence to the law as it
+was. In the conflict that arose the judges, influenced by his example,
+appealed to the laws as they were laid down, according to the verbal
+meaning of which they thought themselves bound to decide. Bacon
+maintained that the Judges' oath was meant to include obedience to the
+King also, to whom application must be made in every matter affecting
+his prerogative. This is probably what Queen Elizabeth also thought,
+and it was the decided opinion of King James. He made the man who
+cherished similar views his Lord Chancellor, and dismissed Coke from
+his service. Bacon when in office was responsible for a catastrophe
+which, as we shall see, not only ruined himself, but reacted upon the
+monarchy. The English, contemporaries and posterity alike, have taken
+the side of Coke. Yet Bacon's industry in business is not therefore
+altogether to be despised. He urged the King, who was disposed to
+judge hastily, to take time and to weigh the reasons of both parties.
+He gave the judges who went on circuit through the country the most
+pertinent advice. The directions which he drew up for the Court of
+Chancery have laid the foundations of the practice of that court, and
+are still an authority for it. His scheme of collecting and reforming
+the English laws still, even at the present day, appears to statesmen
+learned in the law to be an unavoidable necessity; and the opinion is
+spreading that steps must be taken in this matter in the direction
+already pointed out by Bacon.
+
+Bacon was one of the last men who identified the welfare of England
+with the development of the monarchical element in the constitution,
+or at all events with the preponderance of the authority of the
+sovereign within constitutional limits. The union of the three
+kingdoms under the ruling authority of the King appeared to him to
+contain the foundation of the future greatness of Britain. With the
+assertion of the authority of the sovereign he connected the hope of a
+reform of the laws of England, of the establishment of a comprehensive
+system of colonisation in Ireland, and of the assimilation of the
+ecclesiastical and judicial constitution of Scotland to English
+customs. He loved the monarchy because he expected great things from
+it.
+
+But it cannot be denied that he brought his ideas into a connexion
+with his interests, which was fatal to the acceptance of the former.
+His is just a case in which we feel relieved when we turn from the
+disputes of the day to the free domain of scientific activity, in
+which his true life was spent. He has indeed said himself that he was
+better fitted to hold a book in his hands than to shine upon the stage
+of the world. In his studies he had only science itself and the whole
+of the world before his eyes.
+
+The scholastic system founded on Aristotle, the inheritance of
+centuries of ecclesiastical supremacy, had been assailed some time
+before he took up the subject; and the inductive method which he
+opposed to that system was not anything quite new. But the idea of
+Bacon had the most comprehensive tendency: it tended to free the
+thoughts and enquiries of men of science from the assumptions of a
+speculative theology which regulated their spiritual horizon. The most
+renowned adversaries of scholasticism he had to encounter in turn,
+because they covered things with a new web of words and theories which
+he could not accept. He thought to free men from the deceptive notions
+by which their minds are prepossessed, from the fascination of words
+which throw a veil over things, and of tradition consecrated by great
+names, and to open to them the sphere of the certain knowledge of
+experience. Nature is in his eyes God's book, which man must study
+directly for His glory and for the relief of man's estate; he thought
+that men must start from sense and experience, in order that by
+intercourse with things they might discover the cause of phenomena.
+He would have preferred for his own part to have been the architect of
+an universal science, an outline of which he had already composed; but
+he possessed the self-restraint to hold back from this in the first
+instance, to work at details, and to make experiments, or, as he once
+says, to contribute the bricks and stones which might serve for the
+great work in the future. He only wanted more complete devotion and
+more adequate knowledge for his task. His method is imperfect, his
+results are untrustworthy in points of detail; but his object is
+grand. He designates the insight for which he labours by the
+Heraclitean name of dry light, that is, a light which is obscured by
+no partiality and no subordinate aim. He would place the man who
+possesses it as it were upon the mountain top, at the foot of which
+errors chase one another like clouds. And in his eyes the satisfaction
+of the mind is not the only interest at stake, but such discoveries as
+rouse the activity of men and promote their welfare. Nature is at the
+same time the great storehouse of God: the dominion over nature which
+men originally possessed must be restored to them.
+
+In these speculations the philosopher became aware that there was a
+risk lest men should imagine that by this means they could also
+discover the nature of God. Bacon lays down a complete separation of
+these two provinces; for he thinks that men can only attain to second
+causes, not to the first cause, which is God; and that the human mind
+can only cope with natural things; that divine things on the contrary
+confuse it. He will not even investigate the nature of the human soul,
+for it does not owe its origin to the productive powers of nature, but
+to the breath of God.
+
+It had been from the beginning the tendency of those schools of
+philosophy erected on the basis of ancient systems, in which Latin and
+Teutonic elements were blended, to transfuse faith with scientific
+knowledge; but Bacon renounces this attempt from the beginning. He
+puts forward with almost repulsive abruptness the paradoxes which the
+Christian must believe: he declares it an Icarian flight to wish to
+penetrate these secrets: but so much stronger is the impulse he seeks
+to give the human mind in the direction of enquiry into natural
+objects.[379]
+
+Among these he ranks the state of human society, to which all his life
+long he devoted a careful and searching observation. His Essays are
+not at all sceptical, like the French essays, from which he may have
+borrowed this appellation: they are thoroughly dogmatic. They consist
+of remarks on the relations of life as they then presented themselves,
+especially upon the points of contact between private and public life,
+and of counsels drawn from the perception of the conflicting qualities
+of things. They are extremely instructive for the internal relations
+of English society. They show wide observation and calm wisdom, and,
+like his philosophical works, are a treasure for the English nation,
+whose views of life have been built upon them.
+
+What better legacy can one generation leave to another than the sum of
+its experiences which have an importance extending beyond the fleeting
+moment, when they are couched in a form which makes them useful for
+all time? Herein consists the earthly immortality of the soul.
+
+But another possession of still richer contents and of incomparable
+value was secured to the English nation by the development of the
+drama, which falls just within this epoch.
+
+In former times there had been theatrical representations in the
+palaces of the kings and of great men, in the universities, and among
+judicial and civic societies. They formed part of the enjoyments of
+the Carnival or contributed to the brilliancy of other festivities;
+but they did not come into full existence until Elizabeth allowed them
+to the people by a general permission. In earlier times the scholars
+of the higher schools or the members of learned fraternities, the
+artisans in the towns, and the members of the household of great men
+and princes, had themselves conducted the representation. Actors by
+profession now arose, who received pay and performed the whole year
+round.[380] A number of small theatres grew up which, as they charged
+but low entrance-fees, attracted the crowd, and while they influenced
+it, were influenced by it in turn. The government could not object to
+the theatre, as the principal opposition which it had to fear, that of
+the Puritans, shut itself out from exercising any influence over the
+drama, owing to the aversion of their party to it. The theatres vied
+with one another: each sought to bring out something new, and then to
+keep it to itself. The authors, among whom men of distinguished talent
+were found, were not unfrequently players as well. All materials from
+fable and from history, from the whole range of literature, which had
+been widely extended by native productions and by appropriation from
+foreign sources, were seized, and by constant elaboration adapted for
+an appreciative public.
+
+While the town theatres and their productions were thus struggling to
+rise in mutual rivalry, the genius of William Shakspeare developed
+itself: at that time he was lost among the crowd of rivals, but his
+fame has increased from age to age among posterity.
+
+It especially concerns us to notice that he brought on the stage a
+number of events taken from English history itself. In the praise
+which has been lavishly bestowed on him, of having rendered them with
+historical truth, we cannot entirely agree. For who could affirm that
+his King John and Henry VIII, his Gloucester and Winchester, or even
+his Maid of Orleans, resemble the originals whose names they bear? The
+author forms his own conception of the great questions at issue. While
+he follows the chronicle as closely as possible, and adopts its
+characteristic traits, he yet assigns to each of the personages a part
+corresponding to the peculiar view he adopts: he gives life to the
+action by introducing motives which the historian cannot find or
+accept: characters which stand close together in tradition, as they
+probably did in fact, are set apart in his pages, each of them in a
+separately developed homogeneous existence of its own: natural human
+motives, which elsewhere appear only in private life, break the
+continuity of the political action, and thus obtain a twofold dramatic
+influence. But if deviations from fact are found in individual points,
+yet the choice of events to be brought upon the stage shows a deep
+sense of what is historically great. These are almost always
+situations and entanglements of the most important character: the
+interference of the spiritual power in an intestine political quarrel
+in King John: the sudden fall of a firmly seated monarchy as soon as
+ever it departs from the strict path of right in Richard III: the
+opposition which a usurping prince, Henry IV, meets with at the hands
+of the great vassals who have placed him on the throne, and which
+brings him by incessant anxiety and mental labour to a premature
+grave: the happy issue of a successful foreign enterprise, the course
+of which we follow from the determination to prepare for it, to the
+risk of battle and to final victory; and then again in Henry V and
+Henry VI, the unhappy position into which a prince not formed by
+nature to be a ruler falls between violent contending parties, until
+he envies the homely swain who tends his flocks and lets the years run
+by in peace: lastly the path of horrible crime which a king's son not
+destined for the throne has to tread in order to ascend it: all these
+are great elements in the history of states, and are not only
+important for England, but are symbolic for all people and their
+sovereigns. The poet touches on parliamentary or religions questions
+extremely seldom; and it may be observed that in King John the great
+movements which led to Magna Charta are as good as left out of sight;
+on the contrary he lives and moves among the personal contrasts
+offered by the feudal system, and its mutual rights and duties.
+Bolingbroke's feeling that though his cousin is King of England yet he
+is Duke of Lancaster reveals the conception of these rights in the
+middle ages. The speech which Shakspeare puts into the mouth of the
+Bishop of Carlisle is applicable to all times. The crown that secures
+the highest independence appears to the poet the most desirable of all
+possessions, but the honoured gold consumes him who wears it by the
+restless care which it brings with it.
+
+Shakspeare depicts the popular storms which are wont to accompany a
+free constitution in the plots of some of his Roman dramas: of these
+Plutarch instead of Holinshed furnishes the basis. He is right in
+taking them from a foreign country: for events nearer to his audience
+would have roused an interest of a different kind, and yet would not
+have had so universal a meaning. What could be more dramatic, for
+example, and at the same time more widely applicable than the contrast
+between the two speeches, by the first of which Caesar's murder is
+justified, while by the second the memory of his services is revived?
+The conception of freedom which the first brings to life is set in
+opposition to the thought of the virtues and services of the possessor
+of absolute power, and thrust by them into the background; but these
+same feelings are the deepest and most active in all ages and among
+all nations.
+
+But the attested traditions of ancient and modern times do not satisfy
+the poet in his wish to lay bare the depths of human existence. He
+takes us into the cloudy regions of British and Northern antiquity
+only known to fable, in which other contrasts between persons and in
+public affairs make their appearance. A king comes on the stage who in
+the plenitude of enjoyment and power is brought by overhasty
+confidence in his nearest kin to the extremest wretchedness into which
+men can fall. We see the heir to a throne who, dispossessed of his
+rights by his own mother and his father's murderer, is directed by
+mysterious influences to take revenge. We have before us a great
+nobleman, who by atrocious murders has gained possession of the
+throne, and is slain in fighting for it: the poet brings us into
+immediate proximity with the crime, its execution, and its recoil: it
+seems like an inspiration of hell and of its deceitful prophecies: we
+wander on the confines of the visible world and of that other world
+which lies on the other side, but extends over into this, where it
+forms the border-land between conscious sense and unconscious madness:
+the abysses of the human breast are opened to view, in which men are
+chained down and brought to destruction by powers of nature that dwell
+there unknown to them: all questions about existence and
+non-existence; about heaven, hell, and earth; about freedom and
+necessity, are raised in these struggles for the crown. Even the
+tenderest feelings that rivet human souls to one another he loves to
+display upon a background of political life. Then we follow him from
+the cloudy North into sunny Italy. Shakspeare is one of the
+intellectual powers of nature; he takes away the veil by which the
+inward springs of action are hidden from the vulgar eye. The extension
+of the range of human vision over the mysterious being of things which
+his works offer constitutes them a great historical fact.
+
+We do not here enter upon a discussion of Shakspeare's art and
+characteristics, of their merits and defects: they were no doubt of a
+piece with the needs, habits, and mode of thought of his audience; for
+in what case could there be a stronger reciprocal action between an
+author and his public, than in that of a young stage depending upon
+voluntary support? The very absence of conventional rule made it
+easier to put on the stage a drama by which all that is grandest and
+mightiest is brought before the eyes as if actually present in that
+medley of great and small things which is characteristic of human
+life. Genius is an independent gift of God: whether it is allowed to
+expand or not depends on the receptivity and taste of its
+contemporaries.
+
+It is certainly no unimportant circumstance that Shakspeare brought
+out King Lear soon after the accession of James I, who, like his
+predecessor, loved the theatre; and that Francis Bacon dedicated to
+the King his work on the Advancement of Learning in the same year
+1605.
+
+Of these two great minds the first bodied forth in imperishable forms
+the tradition, the poetry, and the view of the world that belonged to
+the past: the second banished from the domain of science the analogies
+which they offered, and made a new path for the activity displayed by
+succeeding centuries in the conquest of nature, and for a new view of
+the world.
+
+Many others laboured side by side with them. The investigation of
+nature had already entered on the path indicated by Bacon, and was
+welcomed with lively interest, especially among the upper classes.
+Together with Shakspeare the less distinguished poets of the time
+have always been remembered. In many other departments works of solid
+value were written which laid a foundation for subsequent studies.
+Their characteristic feature is the union of the knowledge of
+particulars, which are grasped in their individuality, with a
+scientific effort directed towards the universal.
+
+These were the days of calm between the storms; halcyon days, as they
+have well been named, in which genius had sufficient freedom in
+determining its own direction to devote itself with all its strength
+to great creations.
+
+As the German spirit at the epoch of the Reformation, so the English
+spirit at the beginning of the seventeenth century, took its place
+among the rival nationalities which stood apart from one another on
+the domain of Western Christendom, and on whose exertions the advance
+of the human race depends.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[379] In a letter to Casaubon he says 'vitam et res humanas et medias
+earum turbas per contemplationes sanas et veras instructiores esse
+volo.' (Works vi. 51).
+
+[380] Sam. Cox in Nicolas' Memoirs of Hatton, App. XXX.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK V.
+
+DISPUTES WITH PARLIAMENT DURING THE LATER YEARS OF THE REIGN OF JAMES
+I AND THE EARLIER YEARS OF THE REIGN OF CHARLES I.
+
+
+It has been my wish hitherto in my narrative to suppress myself as it
+were, and only to let the events speak and the mighty forces be seen
+which, arising out of and strengthened by each other's action in the
+course of centuries, now stood up against one another, and became
+involved in a stormy contest, which discharged itself in bloody and
+terrible outbursts, and at the same time was fraught with the decision
+of questions most important for the European world.
+
+The British islands, which in ancient times had been the extreme
+border-land, or even beyond the extreme border-land of civilisation,
+had now become one of its most important centres, and, owing to the
+union just effected, had taken a grand position among the powers of
+the world. But it is nevertheless clear at first sight that the
+constituent elements of the population were far from being completely
+fused. In many places in the two great islands the old Celtic stock
+still existed with its original character unaltered. The Germanic
+race, which certainly had an indubitable preponderance and was
+sovereign over the other, was split into two different kingdoms,
+which, despite the union of the two crowns, still remained distinct.
+The hostility of the two races was increased by a difference of
+religion, which was closely connected with this hostility though it
+was not merged in it. As a general rule the men of Celtic extraction
+remained true to the Roman Catholic faith, while the Germanic race was
+penetrated by Protestant convictions. Yet there were Protestants among
+the former, and we know how numerous and how powerful the Catholics
+were among the latter. Besides this, moreover, opposite tendencies
+with regard to ecclesiastical forms struck root in the two kingdoms.
+It was now the principal aim of the family by whose hereditary claim
+the two kingdoms and the islands had been united, not only to avert
+the strife of hostile elements, but also to reconcile them with one
+another, and to unite them in a single commonwealth under its
+authority, which all acknowledged and which it was desired to extend
+by such an union. This was a scheme which opened a great prospect, but
+at the same time involved no inconsiderable danger. Each of the two
+kingdoms watched jealously over its separate independence. They would
+not allow the dynasty to bring about a common government, which would
+thus have set itself up above them, and would have established a new
+kind of sovereignty over them. While the crown sought to enforce
+prerogatives which were contested, it had to encounter in both
+kingdoms the claims advanced by the holders of power in the nation,
+whom in turn it endeavoured to repress. The quarrel was complicated by
+a conception of the relations of the crown to foreign powers answering
+to its new position, and running counter to the national view. At the
+same time very perceptible analogies to this state of things were
+offered by the religious wars, which began to convulse the continent
+more violently than ever, and aroused corresponding feelings in the
+British isles. The dynasty which tried to appease the prevailing
+opposition of principles might find that, on the contrary, it rather
+fomented the strife, and was itself drawn into it. This in fact took
+place. Springs of action of the most opposite nature and antagonisms
+growing out of nationality, religion, and politics, which could not be
+understood apart from one another, co-operated in giving rise to
+events which do not form a single continuous course of action, but
+rather present a varied and changing result, due to elements which
+were grand and full of life, but still waited for their final
+settlement. It is clear how much this depended on the character and
+discernment of the king.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+JAMES I AND HIS ADMINISTRATION OF DOMESTIC GOVERNMENT.
+
+
+At one period of his youth James I had been accustomed to vary his
+application to his lessons with bodily exercises. At that age he had
+divided his days between learned studies and the chase of the smaller
+game in Stirling Park, accompanied in both pursuits by friends and
+comrades of the same age; and he retained during all his life the
+habits he had then formed.[381] He spent only a couple of months in
+the year in London, or at Greenwich: he preferred Theobald's, and
+still more distant country seats like Royston and Newmarket, where he
+could give himself up to hunting. Even before sunrise he was in
+motion, surrounded by a small number of companions practised in the
+chase and selected for that object, amongst whom he was himself one of
+the most skilful. He thought that he might vie with Henry IV even in
+field sports; but he was not hindered by his fondness for these
+amusements from continuing his studies with unwearied application. He
+was impelled to these not, strictly speaking, by thirst for general
+knowledge, although he was not deficient in this, but principally by
+interest in the theological controversies which engaged the attention
+of the world. He more than once went through the voluminous works of
+Bellarmin; and, in order to verify the citations, he had the old
+editions of the Fathers and of the Decrees of the Councils sent him
+from Cambridge. In this task a learned bishop stood at his side to
+assist him. He endeavoured with many a work of his own to thrust
+himself forward in the conflict of opinions. He had the vanity of
+wishing to be regarded as the most learned man in the two kingdoms,
+but he could only succeed in passing for a storehouse of all sorts of
+knowledge; for a man who overestimates himself is commonly punished by
+disregard even of his real merits. These may not meet with recognition
+until later times. The writings of James I wore the pedantic dress of
+the age; but in the midst of scholastic argumentation we yet stumble
+upon apt thoughts and allusions. The images which he frequently
+employs have not that delicacy of literary feeling which avoids what
+is ungraceful, but they are original and sometimes striking in their
+simplicity. Naturally thorough and acute, he labours not without
+success to prove to his adversaries the untenableness of the grounds
+on which they proceed, or the logical fallacy of their conclusions.
+Here and there we catch the elevated tone of a consciousness that
+rests upon firm conviction. Even in conversation he sought to turn
+away from particulars as soon as they came under discussion, and to
+pass to general considerations, a province in which he felt most at
+home. In his incidental utterances which have been taken down, he
+displays sound sense and knowledge of mankind. It is especially worth
+noticing how he considers virtue and religion to be immediately
+connected with knowledge--the confusions in the world appear to him
+for the most part to arise from mediocrity of knowledge[382]--and how
+highly moreover he estimates a sense for truth. He finds the most
+material difference between virtue and vice in the greater inward
+truthfulness of the former. King James delivers many other
+well-weighed principles of calm wisdom: it is only extraordinary how
+little his own practice corresponded with them.[383] When in one of
+his earlier writings we mark the seriousness with which he speaks of
+the duty incumbent on a king of testing men of talent, of measuring
+their capacity, and of appointing his servants not according to
+inclination but according to merit, we should expect to find him in
+this respect a careful and conscientious ruler. Instead of this we
+find that he always has favourites, whose merits no one can discover;
+to whom he stands in the extraordinarily compound relation of father,
+teacher, and friend, and to whom he allows a share in the power which
+he possesses. He could never free himself from a ruinous prodigality
+towards those about him, in spite of resolutions of amendment. How
+soon were the costly objects flung away which Elizabeth had collected
+and left behind at her death![384] How many possessions or sources of
+revenue accruing to the crown did he allow to pass into private hands!
+Any regulation of his household expenditure was as little to be
+expected from him in England as in Scotland. Like the princes of the
+thirteenth century he considered that the royal power assigned him
+privileges and advantages in which he had a full right to allow his
+favourites and servants to share. Not seldom the most scandalous
+abuses were connected with these: for instance, when the court was to
+be provided with the common necessaries of life during its journeys,
+it was required that they should be delivered to it at low prices: the
+servants exacted more supplies than were wanted, and then sold the
+surplus for their own profit. In grotesque contrast with the
+disgraceful cupidity of his attendants is the exaggerated conception
+which James had formed for himself of the ideal importance of the
+royal authority, which at that time some persons attempted with
+metaphysical acuteness to lay down almost in the same terms as the
+attributes of the Deity. He had similar notions about his dignity and
+the unconditional obligation of his subjects. Even in his
+Parliamentary speeches he did not refrain from expressing them. He
+made no secret of them in his life in the country, where he met with
+unbounded veneration from every one. It was remarked as a point of
+contrast between him and Elizabeth, that while she had always spoken
+of the love of her subjects, James on the contrary was always talking
+of the obedience which they owed him on the ground of divine and human
+right. And people recognised many other points of contrast between
+them besides this.[385] When the Queen had formed a resolution, she
+had never shrunk from the trouble of directing her attention to its
+execution even in the minutest details. King James did not possess
+this ardour; for he could not descend from the world of studies and
+general views in which he lived, to take a searching interest in the
+business of the government or of justice. He had indeed been known to
+say that it was annoying to him to hear the arguments on both sides
+quietly discussed in a question of right submitted to him; for that in
+that case he was unable to come to any conclusion. The Queen loved
+gallant men and characters distinguished for boldness: the King was
+without any sense of military merit, and felt uncomfortable in the
+presence of men of enterprising spirit. He thought that he could only
+trust those whom he had chained to himself by favours, presents, and
+benefits. The Queen served as a pattern of everything which was proper
+and becoming. James, who restricted himself to the intercourse of a
+few intimate friends, formed attachments which he thought were to
+serve as the rule of life. He himself was slovenly; in England, as
+formerly in Scotland, he neglected his appearance, and indulged in
+eccentricities which appeared repulsive to others, and were taken
+amiss from him. Even at that time there was a common feeling in
+England in favour of what is becoming in good society; and although
+the feeling was for a long time less deeply engraved on men's minds,
+and less sensitive to every outrage than it became at a later period,
+men did not pardon the King for coming into collision with it.
+
+Hence this sovereign appeared in complete contradiction with himself.
+Careless, petty, and at the same time most unusually proud; a lover of
+pomp and ceremony, yet fond of solitude and retirement; fiery and at
+the same time lax; a man of genius and yet pedantic; eager to acquire
+and reckless in giving away; confidential and imperious; even in
+little matters of daily life not master of himself, he often did what
+he would afterwards rather have left undone. With all his knowledge
+and acuteness, the high flight of his thoughts was often allied to a
+moral weakness which among all circles did serious injury to that
+reverence which had hitherto been reserved for those who held the
+highest authority, and which was partly bestowed even on him. It could
+not seem likely that such a man should be able to exercise great
+influence on the fortunes of Britain.
+
+He did however exercise such an influence. He gave the tone to the
+policy of the Stuart dynasty, and introduced the complication in which
+the destiny of his descendants was involved.
+
+In the first years of his reign in England, so long as Robert Cecil
+was alive, King James exercised no deep influence. The Privy Council
+possessed to the full the authority which belonged to it by old
+custom. James used simply to confirm the resolutions which were
+adopted in the bosom of the Council under the influence of the
+Treasurer: he appears in the reports of ambassadors as a phantom-king,
+and the minister as the real ruler of the country.[386] After the
+death of Cecil all this was changed. The King knew the party-divisions
+which prevailed in the Council: he let its members have their own way,
+and even connived at the relations they formed with foreign powers for
+their own interest; but he knew how to hold the balance between them,
+and in the midst of their divisions to carry out his own views. In
+those country seats, where no one seemed to take thought for anything
+except the pleasures of the chase and learned pursuits, the business
+of the state also was carried on in course of time with
+ever-increasing ardour.[387] The secretaries about the King were
+incessantly busy, while the secretaries' chambers in London were
+idle. Great affairs were generally transacted between the King and the
+favourite in the ascendant at the time, in conferences to which only a
+few others were admitted, and sometimes not even these. The King
+himself decided; and the resolutions which were taken were
+communicated to the Privy Council, which gradually became accustomed
+to do nothing more than invest them with the customary forms. If it be
+asked what the object of the King's efforts was, the answer must be
+that it was to set the exercise of the supreme power free from the
+controlling influence of the men of high rank to whom the King had
+deferred on his first accession. This was generally the aim of the
+great rulers of that century. This had been the principal end of the
+policy of Philip II of Spain during his long political life: however
+the Kings and Queens of France may have differed on other points, they
+were all, both Henry III and Henry IV, Mary de' Medici while she was
+regent, and Lewis XIII so soon as he succeeded to the exercise of
+power, at one in this endeavour. James, who was a new sovereign in one
+of his kingdoms, and almost always absent from the other, had more
+difficulties in his way than other monarchs. Wherever it was possible
+he proceeded with energy and rigour. People were astonished when they
+reckoned up the number of considerable men who served him in high
+offices, and were then deprived of them. He laboured incessantly to
+make way for the impartial exercise of justice in the King's name
+throughout Scotland, in spite of the privileges of the great Scottish
+nobles as its administrators. In his ecclesiastical arrangements in
+that country, he was fond of insisting on his personal wishes: in
+cases of emergency indeed he made known that all the treasures of
+India were not of so much value in his eyes as the observance of his
+ordinances; and he threatened the opponents of the royal will with the
+King's anger, to which he then gave unbridled indulgence.[388] As he
+looked upon the Church of England as the best bulwark against the
+influence of the Jesuits which he feared on the one side, and that of
+the Puritans which he hated on the other, it was naturally his
+foremost endeavour to fortify his power, and to unite the two kingdoms
+with one another by the promotion and spread of the forms of that
+Church. The essential motive of his system of colonisation in Ireland
+was the wish to establish the Church, by the aid of which he designed
+to subjugate or to suppress hostile elements. In England he imparted
+to it a character still more clerical and removed from Presbyterianism
+than that which had previously distinguished it: he wished it to be as
+much withdrawn as possible from the action of civil legislation. But
+in proportion as he supported himself on the Church he fell out with
+the Parliament, in which aristocratic tendencies and sympathies with
+popular rights and with Puritanism were blended with a feeling of
+independence that was hateful to him. He once said that five hundred
+kings were assembled there, and he thought that he was fulfilling a
+duty in resisting them. The most momentous questions affecting
+constitutional rights in regard to the freedom of elections, freedom
+of speech, the limits of legislative power, and above all the right of
+granting taxes, were brought forward under King James. And on every
+other side he saw himself involved in a struggle with hostile
+privileges and proud independent powers, from whose ascendancy both in
+Church and State he was careful to keep himself free, while at the
+same time he did not proceed to extremities or come to an absolute
+rupture. He was naturally disposed, and was moreover led by
+circumstances, to make it a leading rule of conduct, to adhere
+immovably to principles which he had once espoused, and never to lose
+sight of them; but, having done this, to appear vacillating and
+irresolute in matters of detail. His position abroad involved the same
+apparent contradiction. Placed in the midst of great rival powers, and
+never completely certain of the obedience of his subjects, he sought
+to ensure the future for himself by crafty and hesitating conduct. All
+the world complained that they could not depend on him; each party
+thought that he was blinded by the other. Those however who knew him
+more intimately assure us that we must not suppose that he did not
+apprehend the snares which were laid for him; that if only he were
+willing to use his eyes, he was as clear-sighted as Argus; that there
+was no prince in the world who had more insight into affairs or more
+cleverness in transacting them. They say that if he appeared to lack
+decision, this arose from his fine perception of the difficulties
+arising from the nature of things and their necessary consequences;
+that he was just as slow and circumspect in the execution as he was
+lively and expeditious in the discussion of measures; that he knew how
+to moderate his choleric temperament by an intentional reserve,[389]
+and that even his absence from the capital and his residence in the
+country were made to second this systematic hesitation; that, if a
+disputed point awaited decision, instead of attending a meeting with
+the Privy Councillors who were with him, he would take advantage of a
+fine day to fly his falcons, for he thought that something might
+happen in the meanwhile, or some news be brought in, and that the
+delay of an hour had often ere now been found profitable.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1613.]
+
+It was then through no mere weakness on King James's part that he
+conceded power to a favourite. In a letter to Robert Carr he describes
+what he thought he had found in him, viz. a man who did not allow
+himself to be diverted a hair's-breadth from his service,[390] who
+never betrayed a secret, and who had nothing before his eyes but the
+advantage and good name of his sovereign. The greater share that he
+secured for such a man in the management of affairs the greater the
+power which he believed that he himself exercised in them. The
+favourite who depended entirely on the will of the king and knew his
+secrets, he supposed would be both feared and powerful as a first
+minister, and would pave the way by his influence upon the state for
+the carrying out of the views of the sovereign. He thought that he
+could combine the government of the state and the advance of
+monarchical ideas, with the comfort of a domestic friendship with an
+inferior.
+
+James himself brought about the alliance, which we noticed, between
+Robert Carr, whom he raised to the earldom of Somerset, and the house
+of Howard. By the union of the hereditary importance of an old family
+that had almost always held the highest and most influential offices,
+with the favour of the King which carried with it the fullest
+authority, a power was in fact consolidated which for a while governed
+England. Henry Howard, Earl of Northampton, the Lord Treasurer Thomas
+Howard, Earl of Suffolk, and Robert Carr were considered the triumvirs
+of England.[391] In the midst of this combination appears Lady Frances
+Howard, the daughter of the Earl of Suffolk, whose divorce from Essex
+and marriage with Somerset had sealed the political alliance between
+the two families. She was young and beautiful, with an expression of
+modesty and gentleness, but at the same time stately and brilliant, a
+fit creature to move in a society that revelled in the enjoyment of
+life, in the culture of the century, and in the possession of high
+rank. But what an abyss of dark impulses and unbridled passion
+sometimes lies hid under such a shining exterior! The Lady Frances had
+once sought to draw Prince Henry into her net. Many said that she had
+employed magic for this purpose; indeed they assumed that the early
+death of the Prince had been brought on partly by this means.[392] Her
+marriage with the king's favourite was, if this be true, only a
+secondary satisfaction of her ambition, but yet a satisfaction which
+she could not forego. Somerset had an intimate friend, whose advice
+and services at a former period had been very useful to him, but who
+opposed this marriage and fell out with him on account of it--his name
+was Overbury.[393] Lady Frances swore to effect his death. We are
+revolted at the licence which personal hate enjoyed of misusing the
+power of the state, when we read that Overbury was first brought to
+the Tower, and then had creatures who could be relied on set about him
+there, with whose help the victim was removed out of the way by means
+of poison. Lady Frances was not the only female poisoner among the
+higher classes of society. This mode of assassination had spread in
+England as it had done in Italy and at times in France. In these
+transactions the most abandoned profligacy allied itself with the
+brilliancy and the advantages of a high position, but they foreboded a
+speedy ruin. The authority of Somerset awakened discontent and secret
+counterplots. He was naturally turbulent, obstinate, and insolent, and
+had the presumption to behave in his usual manner even to the King
+whom he set right with an air of intellectual superiority which
+revived in the King's breast bitter recollection of the years of his
+childhood. James put up with this conduct for a while; he then,
+against the will of the favourite, set his hand to raise to a level
+with him another young man, for whom he entertained a personal liking:
+at last the misunderstanding came to an open rupture. And at the same
+time an accident brought to light the circumstances of Overbury's
+death.[394] All Somerset's old enemies raised their heads again, and
+proceedings were instituted against him and his wife which terminated
+in their condemnation.[395] The King pardoned them, to the extent of
+allowing them to lead a life secluded from the world; they resided
+afterwards in the same house, but, as far as is known, in complete
+separation without even seeing one another.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1615.]
+
+Shortly before this event Henry Howard had died. Thomas Howard, whose
+wife was accused of exercising a pernicious and corrupt influence upon
+affairs, lost his office of High Treasurer. The place of Carr was
+occupied by the young man above referred to, whom Carr's adversaries
+had combined to push forward, George Villiers, a native of
+Leicestershire, where his family had lived upon their own ancestral
+property from the time of the Conquest. After the early death of his
+father, his mother, a Beaumont by birth, a lady still young and full
+of ambition and knowledge of the world, had educated him not only in
+the training of English schools but in French ways and manners, and
+had then brought him to court. He differed from Carr in being
+naturally good-tempered, and of a courteous obliging disposition,
+which won the heart of every one.[396] Although no one doubted that he
+would be spoilt by a higher position, yet people thought that he could
+never become malicious like Somerset. Lord Pembroke and Archbishop
+Abbot both gave him a helping hand in his rise: the latter moved the
+Queen also, although she was not without scruples, to aid in it.
+Villiers was a man after the King's own heart, well-formed, capable of
+intellectual cultivation, devoted: in consequence of the favour and
+confidence of the King the youth, who after a time was created Duke of
+Buckingham, acquired a ruling position in the English state. The old
+Admiral Effingham, Earl of Nottingham, resigned his office in order to
+make room for him: some other high officials were appointed under his
+influence and according to his views; in a short time the white wands
+of the royal household and the under-secretaryships and subordinate
+offices had been transferred to the hands of his adherents and
+friends.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1617.]
+
+But foreign as well as domestic relations were affected by this
+change. Somerset had stood in the most confidential relations with the
+Spanish ambassador: he was accused of having betrayed to him the
+secrets of the state from his office.[397] His wife, if not himself,
+was thought to have drawn money from Spain. Probably the intelligence
+of this behaviour, which came to the King's ears, contributed most to
+the downfall of Somerset. This event did not in itself involve a
+change of policy. In the advice which was given to the young favourite
+from a well-informed source, it is presupposed that the good
+understanding with Spain would continue: but it was now possible for
+the adversaries of this power to bestir themselves again. Some of the
+most conspicuous men of the other party, such as Winwood, the
+Secretary of State, would even have been glad if open war with Spain
+had immediately broken out.
+
+The mutual opposition between these powerful tendencies, and the men
+who made them their own, brought the career of Walter Ralegh to a
+close.
+
+Somerset was Ralegh's personal enemy, and had gained possession of his
+best estate. After his fall Ralegh was liberated from the Tower. He
+still lay under the weight of a sentence which had been pronounced
+against him on the occasion of the plot which bears his name. He might
+have purchased its removal; but he was assured by the most influential
+voices that he had nothing more to fear from it; and he thought that
+he could apply the money more profitably to the execution of the great
+design which he had long ago formed, and which he had never for an
+instant lost sight of during his captivity. A story was then afloat
+that after the destruction of the kingdom of Peru the descendants of
+the Incas had founded another kingdom between the Amazon and the
+Orinoco, the Dorado of the Spaniards. It was Ralegh's ambition to open
+to his countrymen this region which would be easily accessible from
+the coasts, of which he had formerly taken possession in the name of
+England. The old reputation of Ralegh's name procured him sufficient
+support for his expedition, not only from the merchants, but also from
+wealthy private individuals; and the King gave him a patent which
+empowered him to sail to the ports of America still in possession of
+the heathen, in order to open commercial intercourse with them, and to
+spread the Christian, especially the Reformed, faith among them.[398]
+In July 1617 Ralegh set sail from Plymouth harbour for this object,
+with seven ships of war and a number of small transports carrying
+about 700 men.
+
+It was presupposed that in such an enterprise all hostilities against
+the Spaniards would be avoided. When the Spanish ambassador complained
+of this expedition undertaken by a man who had already on one occasion
+been very troublesome to the Spanish colonies, the Privy Council
+answered that Ralegh was pledged by his instructions to do no damage
+to the Spaniards; and that 'if he violated them his head was there to
+pay for it.'[399] The King himself repeated this answer to him.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1618.]
+
+Ralegh in fact guarded against any collision with the Spaniards on his
+voyage. He was said not to have taken a single Spanish vessel, and he
+directed his course without stopping to Guiana, the goal which he had
+set before himself. But the Spaniards had become powerful there,
+although not until after his former visit. From Caraccas they had
+conquered the natives, who were engaged in internal wars, and had
+firmly established themselves at a short distance from the coast.
+What was likely to happen if they opposed the forces which Ralegh
+landed to search for the gold mines which he had formerly seen there?
+Ralegh remembered full well what a danger he ran if he engaged in a
+struggle and fought with them: he knew that he was thereby forfeiting
+his life. But on the other side, was he to return without fulfilling
+his purpose, and to burden himself with the reproach of not having
+told the truth? Worst of all, was he to fail in effecting the object
+which he had entertained all his life long, and not to achieve the
+discovery on which he staked the future glory of his name? It was
+perhaps the greatest moment in a life that almost always lifts itself
+above the ordinary level, when the thirst for discovery gained the
+victory over considerations of legality and the danger involved in
+discarding them. And well might he have hoped that not only pardon but
+praise would have been accorded him, if he had actually obtained
+possession of the gold mines, by whatever means. He commanded his men
+when they advanced inland to behave to the Spaniards as the Spaniards
+behaved to them. A collision was thus unavoidable. It took place at S.
+Thomas, which was destroyed, but the Spaniards nevertheless had
+completely the superiority: Ralegh's only son was killed; and the
+captain who had the charge of the expedition was so disheartened that
+he committed suicide. These disasters involved the utter failure of
+the expedition. His crews, who were naturally insubordinate,
+quarrelled among themselves, and on the voyage home the fleet
+dispersed. Ralegh came back to England without an ounce of gold, and
+without having effected any result whatever: he appeared in the light
+of an adventurer who had wantonly desired to break the peace with
+Spain. And when the ambassador of this power asked for full and signal
+satisfaction, in order to restore the good understanding which
+Ralegh's enterprise had at once interrupted, was it to be expected
+that the King should take under his protection the man who had not
+complied with the conditions prescribed to him, and whom for other
+reasons he did not love? And moreover the pulse of free generosity
+which befits a sovereign did not beat in the breast of King James. He
+consented that the old sentence of condemnation, for fifteen years
+suspended over Ralegh's head, should now be enforced against him. It
+had been pronounced against him for entering into a secret alliance
+with Spain; an attack on Spain led to its execution. Ralegh and the
+King exhibit a contrast between ambition that scorns danger on the one
+side, and caution that supports itself by the forms of law on the
+other, such as even in England has hardly ever been so sharply drawn.
+The King could not possibly get any good by his conduct. The position
+of England in the world depended upon the resistance that she offered
+to the preponderance of Spain in both the Indies and in Europe. The
+King detached himself from one of the chief interests of the nation
+when he allowed a felon's death to be inflicted on the man of lofty
+genius, who had undertaken, by an ill-advised attempt it is true, to
+give effect in America to this feeling of world-wide opposition. James
+thought that his welfare lay in maintaining the peace with Spain. But
+we know that at an earlier date he had entered on a course adverse to
+Spain, and that even now he had not entirely renounced it. What
+confusion must eventually follow from this divided policy!
+
+NOTES:
+
+[381] Ant. Foscarini, Relatione 1618: 'Il re ritiene questa sorte di
+vita nella quale fu habituato, e spende tutto il tempo che puo nella
+caccia e ne studj.'
+
+[382] 'Crums fallen from King James' Table, or his Table Talk.' MS. in
+the British Museum.
+
+[383] Wilson, James I, 289: 'He had pure notions in conception, but
+could bring few of them into action, though they tended to his own
+preservation.' Wilson, Weldon, and the notices in Balfour, are
+certainly all of them deeply tinged with party feeling. The elder
+Disraeli is quite right in rejecting them: but his own conception is
+very unsatisfactory. Gardiner (1863) avoids unauthenticated
+statements; but the views of James' character which have grown up and
+established themselves owing to the commonplace repetition of such
+statements, control his representation of it.
+
+[384] Foscarini: 'A due sorti di persone dona particolarmente, a
+grandi et a quelli che gli assistono che sono quasi tutti Scocesi, e
+non vaca cosa alcuna della quale possino cavar utile, che non la
+demandino e nello stesso momento obtengono.'
+
+[385] Harrington: Nugae Antiquae i.
+
+[386] Niccolo Molino, Relatione 1607: 'A abandonato e messo dietro le
+spalle tutti gli affari li quali lascia al suo consiglio ed a suoi
+ministri, onde si puo dire con verita ch'egli sia principe di nome e
+Piu tosto d'apparenza che d'effetto.'
+
+[387] A. Foscarini 1618: 'In campagna gli viene di giorno in giorno
+dal consiglio che risiede per ordinario in Londra dato conto di quanto
+passa et inviatigli spacci e corrieri: tratta e risolve molte cose con
+il consiglio solo de suoi favoriti.--Risolve per ordinario in momenti
+et havendo seco segretarii per gli affari d'Inghilterra, per quelli di
+Scotia e Ibernia comanda ciascuno di essi, quanto occorre e vuol che
+si faccia in tutti i suoi regni.'
+
+[388] Calderwood, vii. 311, 434, &c.
+
+[389] Girolamo Lando, Relatione 1622: '(S. M. e) inclinata
+all'ambiguita et alla dimora non gia per naturale complessione
+impastata di foco, colerico et molto ardente, ma perche vuol darsi a
+credere di cavare della protrattione del tempo cio, che
+desidera--conli scemi dell'ira tenendo pure quelli della
+mansuetudine.'
+
+[390] 'Unmoveable in one hair that might concern me against the whole
+world.' James to Somerset, in Halliwell ii. 127; certainly one of the
+most important documents in this collection.
+
+[391] Narrative of Abbot in Rushworth i. 460.
+
+[392] A. Foscarini, 1615 Nov. 13. 'Si mantiene viva la voce e sospetto
+del principe defonto.' Nov. 20, 'Avanthieri parti il re, che per
+questo accidente e per le gravi dissensioni ed odii che regna in corte
+si mostra molto addolorato.'
+
+[393] The personal motive of the estrangement might have lain in
+Overbury's speech to Somerset, mentioned by Payton during the trial:
+'"I will leave you free to yourself to stand on your own legs." My
+lord of Somerset answered his legs were strong enough to bear
+himself.' (State Trials ii. 978.) He wished to show that he could
+dispense with Overbury.
+
+[394] According to Wilson, Ralph Winwood was informed by a confession
+made at Vliessingen. From a letter of Winwood extracted by Gardiner
+(History of England ii. 216) we only learn that Winwood received the
+first intimation: he reckons it as a proof of the justice of the King
+of England that he allowed the investigation to be made.
+
+[395] Somerset intimated that he possessed secrets the disclosure of
+which would compromise the King: and there is nothing, however
+conjectural or infamous, which has not seemed to some among posterity
+to be probable on this ground. James I says, 'God knows it is only a
+trick of his idle brain, hoping thereby to shift his trial. I cannot
+hear a private message from him without laying an aspersion upon
+myself of being an accessory to his crime.' (Halliwell ii. 138.)
+
+[396] Girolamo Lando, Relatione 1622, praises him for 'apparenza di
+modestia, benignita e cortesia,--bellezza, gratia, leggiadria del
+corpo, a tutti gli esercitii mirabilmente disposto.'
+
+[397] 'Che le lettere Piu importanti del re sono passate in mano di
+Spagna.' Ant. Foscarini, Nov. 13, 1615. There is a letter of James I
+of October 20 which likewise supposes acts of treachery of this kind.
+What is true in this supposition we now learn from Digby's letter, in
+Gardiner, App. iii. 2.
+
+[398] 'To the south parts of America or elsewhere within America
+possessed and inhabited by heathen and savage people.' So run the
+words of the commission: it is therein said expressly 'Sir Walter
+Ralegh being under the peril of the law.'
+
+[399] Dispaccio Veneto Feb. 10, 1617: 'Che le cose erano concertate
+che S. M. cattolica non avrebbe occasione di riceverne disgusto--che
+era fermamente del re, che il Rale andasse al suo viaggio, nel quale
+se avesse contravenuto alle suoi instruttioni--haveva la testa con che
+pagherebbe la disubbidienza.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+COMPLICATIONS ARISING OUT OF THE AFFAIRS OF THE PALATINATE.
+
+
+During these years there had been persons at the helm of state in most
+countries, who either from natural disposition or from a calculation
+of present circumstances had cherished peaceful views. In spite of all
+the activity of Spanish policy, Philip III and his minister Lerma
+clung to the principle that the rest needed to restore the strength of
+the exhausted monarchy must be granted to it. The Emperor Matthias
+owed the crown he wore to his alliance with the Protestants: his first
+minister Klesel, although a cardinal, was a lukewarm Catholic, and a
+man of conciliatory views in general. The Regent of France, Mary de'
+Medici, had surrendered the warlike designs of her husband when she
+entered on the exercise of sovereign power. Christian IV of Denmark
+held similar views. He declined the proposals of the Poles, which were
+aimed at a renewal of the war against Sweden: he preferred, with the
+approval of his council of state, to proceed with the building of
+towns and harbours in which he was engaged.
+
+Hence it was possible on the whole to carry out a policy such as that
+maintained by James I. It corresponded to the tone prevalent among the
+other powers.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1617.]
+
+From time to time it seemed probable that the opposing forces which
+were contending with one another in the depths of European life, would
+burst forth and shatter the peaceful state of affairs. For the
+advancing revival of Catholicism roused the hostile feelings of
+Protestants, while the union of the German and the independent feeling
+of the Italian princes resisted the extension of the alliances of
+Spain. In the year 1615, on the Netherland frontier, and in the year
+1616 on the boundaries between Austria and Venice, warlike movements
+began which threatened to prove the commencement of a general
+struggle: but these were disputes of an essentially local nature, and
+peaceful dispositions still maintained the upper hand.
+
+But in the year 1617 and 1618 a question arose which no longer allowed
+this state of things to continue. It concerned the imperial dignity of
+Germany, but it exercised so powerful a secondary influence upon
+affairs most thoroughly English that even in a history of England a
+short discussion must be devoted to it.
+
+The increasing weakness of the Emperor Matthias rendered his speedy
+end probable; and all preparations were already being made in the
+house of Austria to secure the succession of the Archduke Ferdinand of
+Styria to the imperial throne, as well as to his own hereditary
+kingdoms and provinces. No arrangement could in itself have been more
+suitable in the nature of things. Ferdinand was the most vigorous
+scion of his house; and both the German Archdukes laid their own
+well-founded claims at his feet. A resignation on the part of Philip
+III of the claims which he inherited from his mother was thought
+indispensable: but even this created no difficulty. It was merely
+stipulated that Ferdinand should indemnify him for resigning them; and
+this he was willing to do. It only remained that the crown of the
+German Empire should also be assured to him. The Archdukes were eager
+for an immediate negotiation on the subject, and were already certain
+of the support of the spiritual electors.
+
+It is clear however that the succession was not merely a change of
+persons. The place of the peaceable and moderate Matthias would be
+filled by one of the most devoted pupils of the Jesuits in the person
+of Ferdinand, who had made himself terrible to the Protestants by an
+unsparing restoration of Catholicism in his own country. Moreover the
+alliance between the German and Spanish line, which had been loosened
+in the last few years, was to be consolidated into a union resting on
+common interests: so that it seemed likely that Austria would enjoy a
+supremacy like that which had been established in the time of Charles
+V. The letters which passed between the members of that house, and
+which had accidentally been divulged, excited surprise by the note of
+general hostility which they struck, while the share of the Palatinate
+and of Brandenburg in the election was treated in them as a formality
+which could be dispensed with in case of necessity.[400]
+
+It is quite intelligible that the Protestants should be agitated by
+this discovery, and should entertain the idea of opposing the election
+of Ferdinand. Not that one of them thought of acquiring the throne for
+himself; they did not resist the election of a Catholic emperor as
+such, but they wished to guard against the resumption of the
+combination between the Austro-Spanish power and the prerogatives of
+the imperial crown. At first their eyes fell upon Duke Maximilian of
+Bavaria, whom they would by this means have for ever detached from
+that power. The Elector Frederick controlled the jealousy which, as
+Elector Palatine, he felt for a branch of the same house, and went to
+Munich in order to prevail on his cousin to consent to this
+arrangement; for, according to the plea advanced on grounds of
+imperial right, the imperial crown could not be allowed to become
+hereditary in the house of Austria. He hoped that the Archbishop
+Ferdinand of Cologne, the brother of the Duke of Bavaria, would
+support him, and that his influence would win over the other spiritual
+electors also. The Union and the League would then have combined to
+oppose the house of Austria.
+
+But meanwhile open resistance to the claims of this family had already
+broken out in its own provinces. While the Emperor Matthias was still
+alive, the Archduke Ferdinand, through the combination, as prescribed
+by Bohemian usage, of an election with the recognition of his
+hereditary claims, had been acknowledged future King of Bohemia, and
+had been already crowned, on condition that he would not mix in public
+affairs before the death of his predecessor. But immediately after the
+coronation people thought that they could discover his hand in every
+act of the government. Cardinal Klesel, the man in whom the greatest
+confidence was reposed, especially by the Protestant portion of the
+Estates, had been overthrown owing to the influence of the Spanish
+ambassador. In opposition to the influence thus exercised, 'against
+the practices and snares of the Jesuits,' as the phrase ran, the
+zealous Protestants who, when Ferdinand was accepted as King, had been
+thrust into the background or had retired, now obtained the upper hand
+in the country, and proceeded to open insurrection while the Emperor
+Matthias was still alive. This Prince was the first who was overturned
+by the collision of the two parties, whose enmity was again reviving,
+and between whom he had thought of mediating. He was bitterly
+disappointed by his failure. After his death the Bohemians thought
+themselves justified in refusing any longer to acknowledge Ferdinand
+as their King, and in seeking on the contrary for a worthier successor
+to the throne, on the ground that in Ferdinand's election the
+traditional forms had not been accurately observed, and that he was
+undermining all religious and political freedom. Their eyes had even
+fallen on Catholic princes; but as the motive which prompted their
+resistance was certainly the religious one, their attention was still
+more drawn to the most eminent Protestant prince in their vicinity,
+Frederick Elector Palatine, who as head of the Union was himself the
+principal opponent of the election of Ferdinand as Emperor.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1618.]
+
+On the very first steps taken in this matter, the King of England was
+affected by these movements. We learn that, on the occasion of the
+overtures made by Frederick, Maximilian of Bavaria had been moved to
+write to James I, and to express to him his satisfaction at the family
+connexion which had sprung up between them. The interest of the
+Palatinate and of England seemed one and the same, especially as the
+King was still considered a member and protector of the Union. The
+presumption that the son-in-law of the King of England would find
+support from his power, contributed greatly to the importance which
+the Elector at this moment enjoyed.
+
+But at the same time it was evident in what an embarrassing position
+James I was now placed, and that not only on account of the danger
+threatening the continuance of peace, which he thought no price too
+high to secure: his hands were tied not merely by this general
+consideration, but by another special reason as well. He was at that
+moment seriously engaged in a treaty for the marriage of his son with
+a Spanish infanta, which was to carry out the long-talked-of alliance
+between his family and the Austro-Spanish line.
+
+The first overtures in regard to the present Prince of Wales had been
+made by the Duke of Lerma to the English envoy, Digby, to whom he
+opened a proposal for the marriage of Prince Charles with Mary,
+daughter of Philip III. The Spanish ambassador, Gondomar, had then
+taken the management of the affair in hand. We should do him wrong by
+supposing that he wished to deceive the King. Gondomar rather belonged
+to the party who looked for the welfare of the Spanish monarchy in the
+maintenance of peace, especially with England. The scheme of the
+marriage was part of the system of powerful alliances by which it was
+sought to prop the greatness of Spain. Even the uncertain rumour of
+this scheme, which was instantly propagated, sufficed to agitate the
+Protestant party in Europe and in England itself. The King declared
+that he moved only with leaden foot towards the proposal which had
+been made to him; and that, if it were seen that the alliance was
+dangerous to religion or to existing agreements, it should never take
+effect. But even the Secretary of State, Ralph Winwood, who repeated
+this declaration, disapproved of the scheme, as did also the whole
+school of Robert Cecil. They had wished to marry the Prince to the
+daughter of a German line, perhaps to a Brandenburg princess; and the
+States General offered their money and their services in order to win
+the consent of any such princess, and to convey her to England. Many
+would have preferred even a domestic alliance after the old fashion.
+Opposition was also offered on the part of the Church of England.
+Archbishop Abbot only delayed to urge it until the conditions of the
+marriage should come under discussion. But the King likewise had the
+approval of influential voices on his side. It was considered possible
+to conclude the marriage, and yet to preserve the other alliances of
+the country. People thought that England would in that case be only
+the more courted by both parties, and that the peace of the world
+would rest on the shoulders of the King.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1619.]
+
+But what a contradiction was involved in the ascendancy which these
+ideas obtained? The hereditary right to the crown of Bohemia, which
+the estates of that country would no longer acknowledge, belonged to
+the house of Spain. It was intended that the Elector Palatine should
+step into its place by election; and this prince was son-in-law to the
+King. After James had married his daughter to the head of the
+Protestants in Germany, he conceived the thought of marrying his son
+to the member of a family which had made the patronage and protection
+of Catholicism its special calling. It seemed as if he was purposely
+introducing into his own family the disunion which rent Europe in
+twain.
+
+The negotiations in Germany after a time resulted in the victory of
+the house of Austria, which in spite of all opposition carried the day
+in the election of the Emperor. The Elector Palatine acknowledged
+Ferdinand II without hesitation. But almost at the same moment he
+received the news that he had himself been elected king by the Estates
+of Bohemia. It cannot be proved that he was privy to this beforehand:
+even the rumour that his wife urged him to accept the crown because
+she was a king's daughter meets with no confirmation. They were not so
+blind as not to perceive the enormous danger in which the acceptance
+of this offer would involve them. In reply to a question of the
+Elector, his wife answered that she regarded the election as a divine
+dispensation, that if he determined to accept it, which she left
+entirely to his consideration, she for her part was resolved to
+undergo everything that might follow from it. We must not regard as
+hypocrisy the prominence which the prince and the princess alike gave
+to religious considerations. Such was the fashion of the times
+generally, and especially of the party to which they belonged.
+
+The Elector Frederick however did not yet declare his decision. The
+question of the acceptance of the crown of Bohemia was debated from
+every point of view by the very councillors who had just been present
+at the election of the Emperor. Their decision was in favour of the
+prince inviting first of all the advice of his friends in the empire,
+of the States-General, but especially of the King of England, and
+making sure of their support.[401] The Bohemian envoys, who most
+urgently requested an immediate answer, were put off with the reply
+that the Elector must first of all be certain of the consent of the
+father of his consort. Count Christopher Dohna was sent to England to
+persuade King James to give it. He was commissioned to deliver to him
+a letter from the Princess-Electress in which she most urgently
+entreated her father to support her husband and to prove his paternal
+love to them both.
+
+King James came now face to face with the greatest question of his
+life, which summed up and brought to light, so to speak, all the cross
+purposes and conflicting political aims among which he had long moved.
+A word from him was now of the greater consequence, as the
+States-General declared that they would act as he did. But what was
+his decision to be? He was not unmoved by the thought that the
+prospect of possessing a crown was opened to his son-in-law and
+grandchildren. On the other hand he was greatly impressed by a
+representation which the King of Spain forwarded to him, that his
+right to the crown of Bohemia was indisputable--as in fact the Spanish
+line had a contingent claim to the succession--and that he would
+contend for it with all his strength: on which King James said that he
+also as a great sovereign had an interest in seeing that no one was
+deprived of his own. The theories of James I about the hereditary
+rights of princes, the electoral rights of the Estates, and the
+influence of religious profession in these matters, presented
+themselves to his mind together with his wishes on the question of the
+aggrandisement of his dynasty. He remarked that it could not be
+allowed that subjects should presume to fall away from their sovereign
+on a question of religion; he even feared that this doctrine might
+react to his own prejudice on England. In these considerations the
+balance evidently was in favour of a refusal. James would have
+deserved well of the world if he had given utterance to that refusal,
+and had decisively dissuaded his son-in-law from accepting the crown.
+And from his oft-repeated assertions at a later period, to the effect
+that the Elector had proceeded on his own responsibility, we might
+think that he had expressed himself in definite terms in favour of a
+different course.
+
+In reality however this is not the case. He condemned the revolt of
+the Bohemians against Matthias: in regard to Ferdinand it was his
+opinion that they should prove from the old capitulations their right
+to declare his election and coronation invalid, and to proceed to a
+new election, in which case he would himself support them.[402] He
+expressed himself in such a manner, that even members of the Privy
+Council received the impression that he would approve of and even
+support the acceptance of the crown when once it had taken place.
+Christopher Dohna relates that in the negotiations at that time he one
+day declared that his master, the Elector, was ready to refuse the
+crown if the King required him to do so; and that James replied, 'I do
+not say that.'[403]
+
+Monarchs are set in authority in order that they may pronounce
+definitive decisions according to the best of their own judgment. It
+is sometimes their duty to take a decided line. James, who hitherto
+had always stood between different parties, could not nerve himself at
+this eventful moment for a firm and straightforward resolve. In the
+monstrous dilemma in which the various questions at issue were
+becoming involved he could not come to any decision. The kindest thing
+that can be said of him is that at this moment his nature was not
+equal to the requirements of the situation.
+
+Count Dohna, following the example of James's councillors, concluded
+from his expressions that he was not only not opposed to the
+acceptance of the crown, but that he would allow himself to be
+enlisted in its favour, and would support it. And there is no doubt
+that this view exercised a decisive influence upon the final
+resolution of the Elector Frederick. He certainly was already strongly
+inclined to accept the crown in opposition to his more clear-sighted
+and sagacious mother, but in agreement with his ardent wife: but he
+had not yet uttered the final words when Dohna's report came in.[404]
+When he learned from this that the King was not decidedly
+unfavourable, the Elector thought that he recognised a dispensation of
+God which he would not decline to carry out. In the presence of his
+councillors at the castle of Heidelberg he declared to the Bohemian
+ambassadors that he accepted the crown; and soon afterwards he set out
+for Bohemia. In October 1619 (Oct. 25/Nov. 4) he was crowned at
+Prague.
+
+What unforeseen consequences however for himself and his friends, for
+Germany and for England, were destined to spring out of this
+undertaking!
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1620.]
+
+In London, where the popular party had already from the first fixed
+their eyes on the Princess, this step was welcomed with the most
+joyous approval. It was represented to the King that the most
+brilliant prospect was thus opened to his family; that on the next
+vacancy his son-in-law, who already himself held two votes in the
+electoral body, could not fail to be chosen Emperor; and that England
+would by this means acquire the greatest influence on the continent.
+It was expected that these feelings for his family, and the successful
+issue of events, would work together to detach him again from Spain.
+
+James on one occasion, on receiving the news of the confinement of his
+daughter, drank a bowl of wine 'to the health of the King and Queen of
+Bohemia.' He went so far as this, and people thought it worth while to
+record the event; but he could not be brought to acknowledge Frederick
+openly. He was not satisfied with the proof of their right advanced by
+the Bohemians: in conversation he advocated the right of Austria.
+
+Spain and the League, as was inevitable, joined forces with Austria.
+In the first instance the Palatinate itself was the object of their
+joint attack. How could men have helped thinking that King James would
+resolutely take the inheritance of his grandsons under his protection?
+The Union invited him to do so, reminding him of the obligation
+imposed on him by his connexion with them mentioned above: they said
+it was no favour, but justice which they demanded of him. But James
+replied that he had pledged himself only to repel open and
+unjustifiable attacks, but that in the present case the Palatinate was
+the attacking party, and that Austria stood on the defensive. The
+Union presently saw itself compelled to conclude a treaty with the
+League, which left that power free to act against Bohemia. The
+Palatinate however was not secured thereby against the Spaniards.[405]
+To effect this, it would have been deemed advisable to make an attack
+from Holland on the Spanish Netherlands; for if a single fortified
+place had been occupied there, the Palatinate would have had nothing
+more to fear from Spain. But to this measure also James refused his
+consent: he thought that this would be equivalent to beginning war,
+which he did not wish.
+
+The general sympathy of the nation was strong enough at last to cause
+a large English regiment of 2500 men, under Horace Vere, to be sent on
+the continent, in order that the Palatinate, on which the Spaniards
+now advanced, might not become utterly a prey to them. The Earls of
+Essex and Oxford, who had contributed most to raise the regiment,
+themselves took part in the campaign. They were joined by many other
+young men of leading families, who wished to learn the art of war. But
+they had received from the King positive commands to commit no act of
+hostility. The troops of the Union, who showed themselves quite ready
+to fight the Spaniards, were withheld by the threat that in that case
+the King would recall these troops instead of sending two more
+regiments to join them, the hope of which he held out to them in the
+event of their obedience. It was enough for the King that the English
+troops occupied the most important places. Vere held Mannheim, Herbert
+Heidelberg, Burrows Frankenthal; while the greater part of the country
+fell into the hands of the Spaniards.
+
+Europe had reason to be alarmed at the advantage which accrued to the
+Spanish monarchy from this affair. The Tyrol and Alsace were already
+promised them to form links between Lombardy and the Netherlands: the
+possession of the Lower Palatinate completed their chain of
+communication.
+
+The action of Spain and England presented a marked contrast. Spain,
+while it forsook Lerma's policy, held together all its friends--Germany,
+Austria, the League, the Pope, the Archducal Netherlands--and combined
+their forces for joint action on a large scale; while King James, in
+clinging to the policy of peace, let his allies fall asunder and
+crippled their activity.
+
+But if James so acted in the case of the Palatinate which he wished to
+save, what might be fully expected in the case of Bohemia, with regard
+to which he openly declared, after some hesitation, that he could take
+no further part in its affairs? The new King found no hearty obedience
+among the Bohemians, partly because they found themselves deceived in
+their expectation of being assisted with troops by the Union, and with
+money by England. But worse than all, the ill-disciplined soldiery
+being without pay, broke out in mutiny: they were almost more ready to
+help themselves to their arrears by an attack upon the capital than to
+defend their sovereign or their country. On the other hand the
+soldiers of Austria and of the League, well paid and well disciplined,
+were spurred on by zealous priests. On their first attack they
+scattered the troops of Frederick to the four winds (November 1620).
+It would not have been impossible for Frederick to wage a defensive
+war in Bohemia; but regard to the danger into which the Queen would
+have been thrown in consequence prevented the attempt. That one day
+cost them both crown and country.
+
+It is impossible to describe the impression which the news of this
+defeat produced in London. The King was held blameable because not a
+single soldier commissioned by him had been found beside his daughter
+to draw the sword in her defence. This was attributed either to
+culpable negligence of his own affairs, or to the influence of the
+Spanish ambassador. Not Gondomar himself, who was too shrewd to act
+thus, but certainly his friends and Catholics generally, let their joy
+at this event be known. The citizens responded with manifestations
+that were directed against the King himself. A placard was put up in
+which he was told that he would be made to feel the anger of the
+people, if in this affair he any longer followed a policy opposed to
+its views.
+
+James I could no longer put off the question what steps he was to
+take. The tidings reached him at Newmarket, where he was spending the
+cold and gloomy days in hunting. He broke off this amusement and
+hastened to Westminster, in order to attend council with his
+ministers.
+
+Towards the end of December a meeting was held, in which the secretary
+Naunton depicted the whole position of the foreign policy of England,
+and drew from it the conclusion that the King must above all arm, as
+in that case he could carry on war, or at least negotiate with
+firmness and some prospect of success. King James himself brought the
+affair of Bohemia under discussion. He complained, and seemed to feel
+it as an injury to his paternal authority, that the Elector Frederick
+even now continued to make the acknowledgment of his right to the
+crown of Bohemia a condition of his accepting the mediation offered by
+the King. Viscount Doncaster, who had just returned from a mission to
+Germany, fell on his knees before him, in order to remark to him that
+Frederick deserved no blame for clinging to a right which he supposed
+to be valid: that his refusal was not addressed to James as a father,
+but as King of England.[406] James I distinctly stated afresh that he
+could not and would not espouse the cause of his son-in-law in
+Bohemia. But by this time not only was Frederick's new crown as good
+as lost, but his whole existence was endangered; the greater part of
+his hereditary territory was in the enemy's hands. James declared with
+unusual decision that he would not allow the Palatinate, which would
+one day descend to his grandchildren, to be wrested from them; that he
+was resolved to send to the Continent in the next year an army
+sufficient to reconquer it. It might be asked if this measure also
+would not inevitably lead to a breach with Spain. King James did not
+think so. He thought that he could carry on a merely local quarrel,
+and yet at the same time avoid a war on the part of the one power
+against the other. He did not intend to attack the King of Spain's own
+dominion, so long as that sovereign did not meddle with his.
+
+But however that might be, whether he was to begin war, though only on
+a limited scale, or whether he wished to prosecute negotiations with
+success, in any case it was necessary for him to arm. But for this
+purpose he required other means besides those of which he could
+dispose at his own discretion.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[400] Memorial of the Archduke Maximilian of Feb. 1, 1616, in Lunig,
+Europaeische Staatsconsilia i. 918. It is clear from this that the
+anxiety of the members of the Union with regard to the Venetian war
+was not so groundless as it might otherwise appear. The Archduke lays
+before the Emperor the question whether 'in the event of the
+continuance of the Venetian disturbances he would use the opportunity
+to bring a numerous force into the field, and maintain it until the
+laudable work had been everywhere set in train, and had been
+prosecuted with the wished-for result.'
+
+[401] Reasons for hesitating advanced by the Privy Councillors of the
+Prince Elector, in Moser, who calls them prophetic, Patriotisches
+Archiv. vii. 118. The Palatinate 'will not well be able to decide
+anything certain and final: she has therefore made everything depend
+on England and the States-General, and has asked them, as well other
+her friends and potentates in the empire, for trusty counsel and
+declaration of what they will do in every case by her.'
+
+[402] 'Non approbare che in vita del imperatore li populi si
+sollevassero, ma che bene consigliava dopo morte dassero in luce le
+loro ragioni del jus eligendi sopra nullita dell'elettione di
+Ferdinando, con elegerne un altro, nel qual caso offeriva anche
+l'ajuto et il soccorso suo.'
+
+[403] 'S. M., se non assenti all accettare della corona, non disse ne
+anche mai all ora di dissentire: che anzi alla venuta di lui in questa
+corte offerendole al nome dell'istesso suo signore, che quando ella
+havesse voluto, l'averebbe anche lasciata, egli rispondesse: io non
+dico questo.' Girolamo Lando, Feb. 5, 1621.
+
+[404] Dohna mentioned that 'the leading English councillors held that,
+if the Prince Elector would but soon accept the crown, the King on his
+part would soon declare himself and give his approval, which
+accordingly threw almost the greatest weight into the scale.' Secret
+Report in Moser vii. 51.
+
+[405] From the documents relating to these proceedings, it is proved
+that Spinola had received instructions in June 1620 to gain possession
+of the Palatinate; that assurances however were given to King James
+even in August that nothing was really known of the object of his
+expedition. Senkenberg iii. 545 n.
+
+[406] Dispaccio Veneto, 8 Gennaio 1621.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+PARLIAMENT OF THE YEAR 1621.
+
+
+We already know the antipathy of James to the Parliament, which had
+become a power to which, as soon as it was manifested in a newly
+assembled House, the power of the King was obliged to bend. James had
+already often felt the ascendancy of Parliament. The schemes of union
+with Scotland, which filled his soul with ambition, had been shattered
+by the resistance of that body. The exclusively Protestant disposition
+which prevailed there had made it impossible for him to give a legal
+sanction to the favour which he entertained for the Catholics, and
+which his views of policy naturally disposed him to show. He had been
+obliged to desist from the attempt to secure financial independence by
+surrendering the feudal privileges of the crown. The Parliament raised
+claims which the King regarded as attacks on the prerogative of the
+crown: even his advances to it had been met by a stubborn resistance.
+In the ordinary course of things he would never again have summoned
+Parliament together.
+
+This complication in foreign affairs then arose. All parties,
+including even the King himself, were convinced that England must step
+forth armed among the contending powers of the world: and that, not in
+the fashion of the last expedition, so little in keeping with the
+situation, when private support and tacit sympathy found the means,
+but on a large scale, as the position of the kingdom among the great
+powers demanded. But without Parliamentary grants this was impossible.
+The summoning of a new Parliament was therefore an incontestable
+necessity.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1621.]
+
+But on the other hand there was not wanting reasons for hesitation,
+for it could not be disguised that concessions would be inevitable.
+King James saw that as plainly as any one, and declared himself
+beforehand ready to make them. In contradiction to his former
+assertions he gave out that he would this time allow grievances to be
+freely alleged, and would give his best assistance in removing them.
+He said that he wished to meet Parliament half way, and that it should
+find him an honourable man. From the investigation of abuses the less
+was feared because the late opposition was ascribed to a factious
+resistance to Somerset's administration. But that favourite had since
+fallen: and of the leaders of that opposition several had gone over to
+the government, and some had died.[407] The declared purpose of arming
+for the reconquest of the Palatinate was in accordance with the
+feelings of the nation and of the Protestants: no doubt was felt that
+it would win universal sympathy.
+
+This was in fact the case. The most favourable impression was produced
+when the King in his speech from the throne (January 30, 1621), which
+was principally taken up with this subject, declared his resolution to
+defend the hereditary claim of his grandchildren to the territories of
+the Palatine Electorate, and the free profession of Protestantism; to
+compel peace if it were necessary sword in hand; for which objects he
+claimed the assistance of the country. Parliament did not hesitate for
+an instant to express its concurrence with him in these designs. Two
+subsidies were granted on the spot, and the resolution was carried
+into effect during the continuance of the debates, a step which was
+altogether unprecedented. The King thanked the Parliament for this
+extraordinary readiness, which would, he said, increase his importance
+both at home and abroad.
+
+But this did not prevent Parliament on the other hand from bringing
+forward its claims with all possible energy. The power of granting
+money was the sinew of all its powers. The necessity of asking
+assistance from Parliament in urgent embarrassments, which the Tudors
+had avoided as far as possible, now appeared as pressing as ever. Was
+it not to be expected that demands should call forth counter-demands?
+And the opposition in the previous Parliament rested on a far wider
+basis than that of hostility to Somerset: at the present election also
+the candidates of the government were rejected in most of the counties
+and towns.[408]
+
+The commission appointed for the investigation of abuses did not deal
+only with those which were acknowledged to be such. The principal
+question rather concerned the competence of the crown to confer such
+privileges as those out of which the abuses originated. Under the lead
+of Edward Coke, the great lawyer, Parliament adopted a principle which
+secured for it a firm standing ground.
+
+Coke, who moreover did not think it necessary to ask the King's
+consent for liberty of speech, because this was, he thought, an
+independent right of Parliament, vindicated the position that no royal
+proclamation had validity if it contradicted an act of Parliament or
+an existing law. He took his stand on the times of the later
+Plantagenet and of the Lancastrian kings: and he considered that the
+form which the relation between the government and Parliament then
+assumed was the only legal form. But the government of James I had
+granted extraordinarily obnoxious privileges--for instance, the right
+of setting up taverns with a restriction on the entertainment of
+guests by private individuals, or by the old inns; and again the right
+of arresting acknowledged vagrants. But the most obnoxious grants were
+those of patents for the monopoly of some trade, which were annoying
+to the whole mercantile class, and brought profit only to a few
+favoured individuals. Coke argued that the patents were either in
+themselves illegal, or injurious in their enforcement, or both
+together. While he proved to Parliament its forgotten or disregarded
+rights, Coke won the full confidence of both Houses alike: the Upper
+and the Lower House made common cause. Thus the system of government
+as it had been developed under the Tudors and continued under the
+Stuarts was encountered face to face by another system, which rested
+upon other precedents and principles.
+
+And people were not content with merely declaring the patents invalid;
+they called those to account who had got possession of them, and even
+the high officials who had contributed to issue them. A general
+commotion ensued: every day fresh information came in and fresh
+complaints were drawn up.[409]
+
+The Lord Chancellor Bacon had been already brought into danger by this
+affair. He had assisted in introducing monopolies of different
+manufactures under the pretence that work would be found for the poor
+by means of them. It was well known that in matters of this sort he
+had for the most part followed the suggestions of the Prime Minister.
+While Bacon was defending the ideal mission of the monarchy, he had
+the weakness to identify himself too closely with the accidental form
+which authority just at that particular moment took. In return he
+found on the other hand that the attacks really aimed at the
+government recoiled in the first instance upon him. In reality they
+were directed principally against Buckingham. In order to save him
+from destruction, suggestions had been made to the King that he might
+prefer to dissolve Parliament, as it seemed plain that he had far more
+reason to expect harm from the attacks than advantage from the grants
+made by that body. Buckingham saved himself only by coming forward
+against the monopolies himself, in accordance with the advice of his
+ecclesiastical confidant, Dean Williams. Claims had been made against
+two of his brothers also on account of the monopolies. Far from taking
+them under his protection, he said on the contrary that his father had
+still a third son who was determined to root out abuses; and that not
+until the present proceedings had been taken had he recognised the
+advantages of parliamentary government. Upon this, the leading men
+with whom Williams had formed a connexion, desisted from attacking the
+First Minister. It even came about that a person of high rank,
+accused at the bar of the House of Lords, who had let fall an
+expression, comparing Buckingham to old favourites of hateful memory,
+was obliged to retract it with considerable ceremony. But a victim was
+required: one was found in the Lord Chancellor Bacon.
+
+Although condemned by law and morality, an evil practice still
+prevailed of receiving presents of money in official transactions. The
+sums were known and have been registered, by means of which Gondomar
+retained the services of a number of statesmen in the interest of
+Spain. How many similar abuses in the control of the Treasury had been
+brought to light only a short time before! Even the great philosopher,
+who in his writings is so zealous against bribes, contracted during
+his administration the stain of receiving them. That he might stand on
+an equality with the great lords, he incurred inordinate expenses,
+which these bribes assisted him to meet. Edward Coke was wholly in the
+right when he exclaimed that a corrupt judge was 'the grievance of
+grievances.'[410] Two-and-twenty cases were proved in which the
+supreme judge, the Lord Chancellor of England, had taken presents from
+the parties concerned. Lord Bacon made no attempt to justify his
+conduct; he only affirmed--and this appears in fact to have been the
+case--that in his decisions he never was influenced by the presents
+that had been made him. When he was called to account for them, he
+acquiesced himself in the justice of the proceeding, for he allowed
+that a reform was necessary, and only deemed himself unfortunate in
+being the person with whom it began. The Lords pronounced sentence
+upon him that he should never again fill an official position, nor be
+capable of sitting in Parliament, and that he should be banished from
+the precincts of the court.
+
+Apart from its importance as affecting individuals, this event is
+very important in the history of the constitution, which now returned
+to its former paths. That the Lower House again as in old times was
+able to procure the fall of one of the highest officials, is an
+evidence of its growing power. That the First Minister and favourite
+allowed his intimate friend to fall is a proof of the weakness of the
+highest authority, which moreover ought itself to have attacked abuses
+of this kind. Bacon justly remarked that reform would soon reach
+higher regions.
+
+But while Parliament, which the government had no inclination to
+withstand openly, thus obtained the ascendancy in domestic matters, it
+was also already turning its eyes in the direction of foreign affairs.
+These were times in which a warm religious sympathy was awakened by
+the advance which the counter-reformation was making in the hereditary
+dominions of Austria, as well as in France, and by the persecutions
+which befell the Protestants in both countries. The Spaniards were
+again engaging in war for the subjugation of the Netherlands. In
+Parliament, on the other hand, it was thought necessary to combine
+with the Republic, and to equip a fleet to assist the Huguenots, and
+even to attack Spain, in order thus to make a diversion in favour of
+the Palatinate. At the very time of the opening of Parliament the ban
+of the empire was pronounced against Frederick Elector Palatine amid
+the sound of trumpets and drums in the Palace at Vienna. This was
+regarded in the whole Protestant world as an injustice, for it was
+thought that Ferdinand II had been injured by Frederick only as King
+of Bohemia, and not as Emperor: and on the same grounds the English
+Parliament was of opinion that the execution of the ban ought to be
+hindered by force of arms; and it showed itself dissatisfied that the
+King sought to meet the evil only by demonstrations and embassies.
+
+We can easily understand that the attitude of Parliament aroused the
+anxiety of the King. He caused the debates on the war to be put a stop
+to, remarking that they infringed his prerogative, for which great
+affairs of this kind were exclusively reserved. And yet, so
+extraordinary was the complication of affairs that the declarations
+made in Parliament were not altogether displeasing to him. In June he
+adjourned Parliament, without formally proroguing it. What was the
+reason of this? Because Parliament had brought in a new bill
+containing the severest enactments against Jesuits and Catholic
+recusants. The King refused to accept it, as by this means the
+persecution of Protestants in Catholic countries would receive a new
+impulse. But he was also unwilling to express his refusal in a final
+shape, because he knew that the wish to hinder the adoption of harsh
+measures against the Catholics would exercise an influence upon the
+Spaniards in their negotiations with him.[411] If he had proceeded to
+a prorogation, he would have been obliged to reject the laws; and he
+preferred to keep the prospect of them still open, which he was able
+to do by resorting to the form of an adjournment. He made it a merit
+in the eyes of the Spaniards that, far from increasing the severity of
+the penal laws, he did not even enforce them in their existing form,
+when moreover, if enforced, they would bring him in a large sum. But
+he was glad to see that people feared that he might do at some future
+time what at present he had refrained from doing. When he promised the
+Parliament on his royal word, that he would call it together again
+without fail in the autumn, he was also influenced by the
+consideration that he intended the Spaniards to look forward with fear
+to the resolution which might then be taken. He was greatly pleased
+that Parliament before dispersing drew up an energetic remonstrance
+against the persecutions of the Protestants all over the world, and
+especially against the oppression of his children. Not that he wished
+to give effect to it: on the contrary he adhered to the policy of
+assisting his son-in-law only by means of diplomacy: but he desired
+that the Spaniards should fear a war with England, and he thought that
+anxiety on this point would induce them and their friends to show
+themselves conciliatory and respectful.
+
+Sir John Digby, who was commissioned with the negotiations at the
+Spanish court, was referred by that power to Brussels and Vienna; and
+in fact he received favourable answers, not only from the Infanta
+Isabella in the former, but even from the Emperor himself in the
+latter city. The Emperor held out to him the hope that the matter
+would be reconsidered at a future assembly of the Estates of the
+Empire, which he intended to convene at Ratisbon. But meanwhile
+warlike operations and the execution of the ban held their course
+undisturbed. In Bohemia the counter-reformation was carried through
+with extreme severity. Four-and-twenty Protestant nobles and leaders
+were executed, and their heads with hoary beards were seen exposed on
+the Bridge at Prague. Silesia hastened to make its peace with the
+Emperor: the Princes of the Union laid down their arms, but they did
+not yet make their peace by this means. Tilly took possession of the
+Upper Palatinate, and then turned with his victorious army to the
+Lower Palatinate in order to complete the subjugation of this
+province, notwithstanding all the protection of England. On the Lower
+Rhine the forces of the Spaniards and of the States General confronted
+each other in arms. Under these circumstances the Princes, who were
+invited, refused to appear at an Assembly of the Empire,[412] for none
+of them thought that he could leave his home without incurring evident
+danger. The Infanta Isabella too in Brussels declined to conclude the
+truce which Sir John Digby proposed.
+
+While affairs were in this position, Parliament resumed its
+interrupted sittings in November 1621. Dean Williams, who after
+Bacon's fall had received the Great Seal, opened the session with a
+request for the immediate grant of new subsidies, which he said would
+be required even before Christmas. He promised that in the coming
+February, when they resumed their sittings, the other affairs should
+be brought under discussion.[413]
+
+On this occasion as on a previous one, the King wished for nothing
+more than a renewed and stronger demonstration. Even now he lived and
+moved in a policy of compromise between opposite views. While his
+son-in-law was being robbed of his country in the interest of Spain,
+he adhered to the wish of marrying his son to a Spanish Infanta: he
+thought that he would bring about the restoration of the Palatinate
+most easily by the influence which this new alliance would confer. But
+he thought that his friendly advances should also be accompanied by
+threats, and he wished to be placed by the grants of Parliament in a
+position to arm more effectually than before. It would have been in
+accordance with his views, if Parliament had repeated its former
+declarations, according to which it was ready to put forth all its
+power in his behalf, in order to place him in a position to compel by
+force of arms what might be refused to his peaceful negotiations.
+
+It is worth noticing in all this that James not only met the wishes of
+Parliament because he required support, but that he also encouraged
+the disposition which it showed in favour of Protestantism, in order
+to avail himself of it: he thought that he would always be able to
+control it. But how often has a policy been shipwrecked, which has
+thought to avail itself of great interests and great passions for some
+end immediately in view!
+
+How could it be expected that while religious parties on the continent
+were meeting in a struggle for life and death, the English Parliament
+would approve of the wavering policy of James I, which aimed at
+compromise and had hitherto been without results?[414] Quite the
+contrary: starting with the view that England was the centre of
+Protestantism and must avert the dangers which assailed it, Parliament
+declared itself ready, it is true, to pay the King new subsidies, but
+not until the following year, and on the presumption that he should
+have accepted and ratified the bills for the welfare of the people
+which had passed the House.[415] They thought that the common danger
+to religion arising from the alliance between the Pope and the King of
+Spain had been brought upon England also by the indulgence hitherto
+shown to the recusants. Parliament invited the King to draw the sword
+without further circumlocution for the rescue of the foreign
+Protestants; in the first instance to break with the power whose army
+had carried on the war in the Palatinate, but above all to marry the
+Prince his successor to a lady of the Protestant faith.
+
+The King wished to avoid war because he was anxious lest he should be
+constantly compelled by Parliament, owing to his repeated want of
+subsidies, to make fresh concessions, which would affect and diminish
+the substance of his authority. The Parliament wished for war because
+it expected that such a proceeding would furnish it with great
+opportunities for establishing its power.
+
+As soon as the rival powers encountered each other on this ground, all
+agreement between them was at an end. Parliament interfered still more
+vigorously than before with the affairs which the King reserved for
+himself: it wished to induce him to adopt those very measures which he
+was resolved to avoid. He was expected to break with that power with
+which it was his principal ambition to become most closely connected.
+He was expected to take the sword in order to defend the common cause
+of Protestantism. He was expected to put an end to the indulgence
+which he had hitherto shown to his Catholic subjects; to do what ran
+counter to all the expectations which he had raised at Rome and
+Madrid; and what perhaps, considering the strength of the Catholic
+element in England, was not without danger to the maintenance of quiet
+at home. Meanwhile the payment of the subsidies, which he required at
+once in order to maintain his political position, was indefinitely
+deferred. Although it was not actually stated, yet it was quite clear
+that Parliament made the validity of its grants dependent on his
+compliance with its advice. And on what important matters was that
+advice offered! The King complained that his prerogative was openly
+infringed by it; that Parliament wished to decide on his alliances
+with other sovereigns, and to dictate to him how to conduct the war;
+that it brought under debate questions of religion and state, and the
+marriage of his son: what portion of the sovereign power, he asked,
+was left to him? On the competence which Parliament claimed as its
+hereditary right, he remarked that it had to thank the favour of his
+ancestors and himself for this: that he would protect Parliament, but
+only in proportion to the regard which it showed for the prerogative
+of his crown.
+
+If we had to specify the moment in which the quarrel between the
+Parliament and the Crown once more found its full expression, we
+should choose this.[416] The Parliament, which had dissolution in
+immediate prospect, employed its last moments in making a protest, in
+which it again affirmed that its liberties and privileges were a
+birthright and heirloom of the subjects of the English crown, that it
+certainly was within its power to bring under debate public matters
+affecting the King, the State, the Church, and the defence of the
+country; and that full liberty of speech without any subsequent
+molestation on that account must be secured to every member in the
+exercise of these rights.
+
+The King would not forego the satisfaction of punishing by arrest a
+number of members who were peculiarly hateful to him; he declared the
+protestation null and void, and struck it out of the clerks' book with
+his own hand. In a detailed exposition of his view of these
+transactions, in which he gives the assurance that he will still
+henceforth continue to summon Parliament, he emphatically repudiates
+this protestation, which he affirms to be drawn up in such terms that
+the inalienable rights of the crown are called in question by it,
+rights in the possession of which the crown had found itself in the
+times of Queen Elizabeth of glorious memory. He affirms that as King
+he cannot tolerate any such pretensions.
+
+Parliament demanded the policy of Queen Elizabeth; King James demanded
+her rights. The privileges accorded to the crown and the opposition to
+Spain had formerly gone together: the surrender of the latter under
+King James served to supply Parliament on its part with a motive for
+making an attack upon the former.
+
+The cause of Parliament was of great importance, even when it stood
+alone: deeper impulses and fresh life and vigour were first imparted
+to it by its combination with foreign policy and with religion.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[407] From a letter of Bacon to Buckingham.
+
+[408] Lando, Relatione: 'Se bene procuro S. M. di ristringere e
+captivare fino l'autorita, che hanno li communi d'eleggere li
+deputati, benche in qualche citta e provincia gli e riuscito,
+nell'universale non ha potuto, rifiutati i privati del favorito e dei
+consiglieri li lei.' Lando describes the Parliament as 'republica
+altretanto mal pratica, quanto molto pretendente.'
+
+[409] Chamberlain to Carleton, March 24: 'They find it more than
+Hercules' labour purgare hoc stabulum Augiae of monopolies, patents
+and the like.' (St. P. O.)
+
+[410] Chamberlain to Carleton: 'All men approve E. Coke, who upon
+discovery of those matters exclaimed that a corrupt judge is the
+grievance of grievances.' Chamberlain relates that an officer of the
+Court of Chancery, when accused on account of various irregularities,
+exclaimed 'that he would not sink alone, but draw others after him.'
+
+[411] Buckingham on one occasion very aptly characterises his policy
+and its danger: 'So long as you waver between the Spaniards and your
+subjects, to make your advantage of both, you are sure to do with
+neither.' Hardwicke Papers i. 466.
+
+[412] 'The princes denied their appearance.' (Digby, Recital of his
+Speech, Parl. Hist. v. 483.) So that the notice by Struv, rejected by
+Senkenberg (Fortsetzung Haeberlins xxv. Sec. 80) is nevertheless
+correct.
+
+[413] A gap in Williams' speech at this part, occurring in the
+Journals and in both Parliamentary Histories, is to a certain extent
+filled up by a letter of Chamberlain to Carleton of Nov. 24;
+'intimating that they should forbear needless and impertinent
+discourses, long and extravagant orations which the king would not
+indure.'
+
+[414] Lando, Relatione: 'Non potendosi accordare con spiriti
+discordanti dei proprii impressi di non lasciarsi levare un punto
+dell'autorita.'
+
+[415] John Locke to Carleton, Nov. 29: 'They have put up a petition,
+that this may be a session and laws enacted, that the laws made
+against recusants may be executed, so that the promise of the subsidy
+seemeth yet to be conditional.'
+
+[416] Chamberlain to Carleton on December 22. The Parliament, on
+receiving a message enjoining the speedy continuance of their
+business, answered the King two hours after it had been brought before
+them: 'but with all for fear of surprise gave order to the speaker and
+the whole house to meet at four o'clock: where they conceived sat down
+and entered this proposition enclosed which is nothing pleasing above
+and for preventing where of there came a commission next morning to
+adjourn the Parliament.' Cf. the Commons' protestation: Parl. Hist. v.
+513.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+NEGOTIATIONS FOR THE MARRIAGE OF THE PRINCE OF WALES WITH A SPANISH
+INFANTA.
+
+
+It is a general consequence of the dynastic constitution of the states
+of Europe that marriages between the reigning families are at the same
+time political transactions, and as a rule not only affect public
+interests, but also stir up the rivalry of parties: this effect
+however has hardly ever come more prominently into notice than when it
+was proposed to marry the heir to the throne of England with an
+Infanta of Spain.
+
+We have remarked that the scheme originated in Spain, had already been
+once rejected, and then had been mooted a second time by the leading
+minister of Philip III, the Duke of Lerma. It formed part of Lerma's
+characteristic idea of fortifying the greatness of the Spanish
+monarchy by a dynastic alliance with the two royal families which were
+able to threaten it with the greatest danger, those of France and
+England. This design brought him into contact with a current of policy
+and personal feeling in England which was favourable to him: but at
+the same time the great difficulty which the difference of religion
+presented, came at once into prominence. Not that it would have been
+difficult for King James to make the concessions requisite for
+obtaining the Papal dispensation; on the contrary he was personally
+inclined to do so: but he feared unpleasant embarrassments with his
+allies and with his subjects. Count Gondomar, the ambassador, assured
+the King that he should never be pressed to do anything which violated
+his conscience or his honour, or by which he might run a risk of
+losing the love of his people.[417]
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1622.]
+
+On this, negotiations which had already been opened for the marriage
+of the Prince with a French princess were broken off. Besides, the
+intermarriage with the house of Spain appeared to be far more
+deserving of preference, as being likely to pacify the feelings of
+English Catholics, who were accustomed to side principally with Spain,
+and even to promote the calm of the world, as Spain was a more
+prominent representative of the Catholic principle than France. It was
+thought advisable to leave the conditions of the dispensation to be
+arranged in the sense indicated by negotiation between the Papal see
+and the Spanish crown.
+
+But a new and serious hindrance now arose in consequence of the
+embarrassments caused by the affairs of the Palatinate, in which the
+interests of the two dynasties came into immediate collision with one
+another. It is clear that King James could not marry his son to an
+Infanta of Spain while a Spanish army was taking possession of his
+son-in-law's territory. He therefore made the restoration of the
+Palatinate a condition of the marriage. All his tortuous efforts were
+directed to combine the latter object with the former, and at the same
+time to avoid a disadvantageous reaction upon his domestic policy.
+
+While he invoked the Protestant sympathies of Parliament in order to
+give weight to his demands, he nevertheless checked them again as soon
+as he was in danger of being forced to make war, or even to resume the
+measures against the Catholics, which might displease the Spanish
+court. Whilst he made the Spaniards aware that if he were refused the
+consideration he required, he would throw himself entirely into the
+hands of his Parliament and proceed to extremities, he at the same
+time employed every means of effecting a peaceful accommodation, by
+which he would then at once be saved the necessity of making
+concessions to Parliament. The most active negotiations were opened
+in Brussels with the Infanta Isabella, upon whom the issue seemed most
+to depend. James I had sent thither Richard Weston, the man whom
+Gondomar himself declared to be the most appropriate instrument for
+this affair; and an agreement was concluded with the personal
+co-operation of the Infanta, which held out expectations of the
+restoration of the Elector. On the side of the Palatinate and England
+everything was done to promote the conclusion of this agreement, and
+to ensure its execution. The expelled Elector was induced to recall
+Mansfeld and Christian of Brunswick from the Upper Rhine, where they
+were then moving vigorously forward, lest the treaty should be
+obstructed by their operations.[418] He himself removed to Sedan, in
+order not to arouse the suspicions of the House of Austria by his
+residence in the Netherlands. In the summer of 1622 he had no other
+troops in the Palatinate but the English garrisons; and King James
+engaged that, if the treaty were concluded, he would take arms himself
+against the allies of his son-in-law. But while expectation was
+directed to the conclusion of the contract by which the Elector should
+be re-established in his country, the League advanced against those
+strongholds which the English held in his name. Neither Heidelberg nor
+Mannheim could hold out. The English troops were obliged to bend to
+necessity and to march out, although with the honours of war. Only in
+Frankenthal did they still maintain themselves for a while. When
+Weston at Brussels complained of this conduct he was actually told
+that the League must have everything in their hands first, in order to
+restore everything hereafter. He was astounded at this subterfuge, and
+asked for his recall.
+
+In England the friends of Spain fell into a sort of despair at the
+course of events. For what could follow from it but open war between
+the King of England and the Emperor? But on whose side would Spain
+then be found? Would that power pledge itself to fight to the end
+against every one, even against the Emperor, in behalf of the treaty
+when concluded? To prevent England from coming into closer alliance
+with France, the government of Spain had planned the marriage and
+opened direct negotiations: would it now, when its cause appeared to
+be advancing, withdraw in violation of its word of honour? Even the
+Privy Council represented to the King that he was bringing dishonour
+and danger on his country. The Duke of Buckingham, who also had
+himself been in close agreement with Gondomar, and was considered to
+be the man who held the threads of politics in his hand, regarded the
+increasing discontent as dangerous to his own position.[419]
+
+While affairs were in this situation and these impressions afloat, a
+plan for bringing this uncertainty to an end was embraced by the King,
+the Prince, and the Duke, in those private discussions in which the
+general course of affairs was decided. It was determined that the
+Prince, accompanied by Buckingham, should visit Spain himself, in
+order to bring about the marriage and arrange the conditions. None of
+the Privy Councillors, not even Williams, who on other occasions was
+in their intimate confidence, knew anything about this plan. It
+pleased the King's sense of the romantic, that as he himself had
+formerly brought home his newly married wife from the icy North, so
+now his son should in person win the hand of his bride in the distant
+South. But however much in earnest the King was in the matter, we
+learn that he still contemplated the possibility of failure. He once
+said to the Duke of Soubise, that if the marriage came to pass, he
+would take up the cause of the Huguenots in alliance with Spain: but
+that if he did not succeed in his design they might still reckon upon
+him, for that his son would contract a marriage with a French
+princess, which would procure him great influence at the French
+court.[420]
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1623.]
+
+On March 7, 1623, the Prince of Wales and the Duke of Buckingham
+arrived in Madrid, with an escort including Cottington and Endymion
+Porter, both of whom afterwards enjoyed great influence. Their arrival
+was not altogether welcome to the ambassador in residence there,
+Digby, now Lord Bristol, who would rather have retained this important
+business in his own hands: but the Spanish court and the nation itself
+found a certain satisfaction for their pride in the personal suit
+urged by the heir-apparent of one of the most powerful kingdoms for
+the hand of the younger Infanta.
+
+At first the Prince of Wales could only see the Infanta as she drove
+past along a sort of Corso in the Prado. He was then presented to her,
+but the words which she was to use to him were written down for her
+beforehand; for she was to receive him merely as a foreign prince
+without any reference whatsoever to his suit. Some surprise was
+created when the principal lady of the court one day condescended to
+say to the Prince that the Infanta in conversation gave signs of an
+inclination for him. In the country no doubt was felt that the
+marriage would come to pass, and the prospect was welcomed with joy.
+Often did a 'Viva' resound under the windows of the Prince. Lope de
+Vega dedicated some happily expressed stanzas to him; and splendid
+shows were given in his honour.[421] All that was now wanting was an
+agreement as to the conditions.
+
+This depended however in large part on the resolutions which might be
+arrived at in England. Conditions affecting religion were laid before
+King James, which he might certainly have hesitated to approve. It was
+not only that the Infanta was to be indulged in the free exercise of
+her religion--for how else could the consent of the Spanish clergy or
+a dispensation from the Pope have been hoped for?--nor even that the
+children born from this marriage were to be educated under her eyes
+for the first ten years of their life, for this seemed the natural
+privilege of a mother: but the presumption that the children might
+become Catholics involved wide consequences. It was stipulated that
+the laws against Catholics should not apply to such children, nor
+prejudice their succession. Still more displeasing however were some
+other articles of general import, which were carefully kept back from
+the knowledge of the public. They amounted to this:--that the laws
+against the Catholics should no longer be carried into execution, and
+that the Councillors of the sovereign should be pledged by an oath to
+abstain from enforcing them.[422] The King met with some opposition to
+these articles in the Privy Council. But he said that the question was
+not whether they were advisable, but whether they were not necessary
+at a time when part of the domain under dispute, and the Prince
+himself, were in the hands of the Spaniards. And moreover they did not
+amount to a complete concession to the wishes of the Catholics, for
+they spoke only of tolerating their worship in private, not in public:
+the articles were in harmony with the old ideas of the King. James
+solemnly swore to the first articles, on July 20, in the presence of
+the Spanish ambassador; and immediately after him the members of the
+Council took the same oath. The King alone then pledged himself to
+carry out the second set of articles.
+
+An extensive alteration had already taken place in the treatment of
+the Catholics. Priests and recusants had been discharged from prison
+and enjoyed full liberty. An injunction was issued to the preachers
+and to the Universities to abstain from all invectives against the
+Papacy. Men had to see individual preachers who transgressed these
+orders thrown into prisons which had been just emptied. The families
+which openly expressed their hitherto secret adherence to Catholicism
+were already counted by hundreds. Then came these transactions. What
+was learnt of the articles was enough to spread universal dismay
+among the Protestants, but they expected yet worse things. They
+thought they saw a pronounced Catholic tendency becoming ascendant in
+the conduct of affairs. An universal danger seemed to be hanging over
+the religion which they professed. Every one hastened to church to
+pray against it; the churches had never been more crowded. The second
+ecclesiastic in the country, the Archbishop of York, put the King in
+mind that by his project of toleration he was encouraging doctrines
+which he had himself proved in his writings to be superstitious and
+idolatrous. At this time moreover religious profession and political
+freedom were most closely connected: all these penal laws which the
+King was removing had been passed in Parliament, and were the work of
+the legislative power as a whole. The Archbishop reminded the King in
+conclusion that when he annulled the statutes of parliament by royal
+proclamation, he created an impression that he thought himself at
+liberty to trample on the laws of the land.[423]
+
+The wishes of the King did not lean so decidedly in that direction as
+people assumed. Buckingham and the Prince, who recommended him to take
+the oath, remarked to him, among other observations, that his promise
+that Parliament should repeal the penal laws against the Catholics
+within three years would be fulfilled, if he merely exerted himself to
+the extent of his strength for that object, even if it should prove
+impossible to attain it.[424] In general everything was merely
+preliminary, and depended on further agreement. The Prince entreated
+his father to transmit to him the ratification of the articles, that
+he might decline them or not according to circumstances. He even
+wished that, in order to put an end to the dilatoriness of the
+Spaniards, his father should make an express declaration that any
+longer delay would compel him again to enforce the penal laws against
+the Catholics.[425] All these announcements, which filled the
+Catholics with joy and hope, but the Protestants with dejection,
+mistrust, and anxiety, were however only political agencies, and were
+intended to serve a definite end. The object was in the first instance
+to put an end by this means to all delay in sending the Infanta to
+England.
+
+Although some religious scruples were still awake in the minds of the
+Spaniards yet they presented no further obstacle. The conditions for
+granting a dispensation which had been prescribed by the Pope to the
+Spanish Court, had been accepted; the Spanish ambassadors had been
+satisfied: the only question now was whether the Infanta should be
+conveyed to England at once with the Prince on his return, or in the
+following spring. As formerly the Tudors so now the Stuarts appeared
+to be taking their position as a dynasty in Europe in connexion with
+the Spanish monarchy.
+
+Only one difficulty remained, that connected with the Palatinate; but
+at the present moment it was more serious than ever.
+
+In his negotiations King James started with the supposition, that the
+Spanish court could control the Imperial, and bring it over to its own
+point of view. The inclusion of the German line in this dynastic
+combination was contemplated. A proposal was made that the eldest son
+of the expelled Frederick should contract a marriage with a daughter
+of the Emperor, which would make the task of reconciliation and
+restitution far easier.
+
+The Emperor however had to take other interests into consideration;
+not only those of the Duke of Bavaria, to whom he was so deeply
+pledged, but those of the whole Catholic party, which thought of
+seizing this occasion to establish for ever its ascendancy in the
+Empire. The Emperor, who was also instigated by Rome to this step,
+solemnly transferred the electoral dignity previously held by the
+Elector Palatine to Maximilian of Bavaria in February 1623, with the
+intention of satisfying him, and at the same time of obtaining a
+majority of Catholic votes in the electoral body. It has indeed been
+assumed, both then and at a later time, that Spain, only bent on
+deceiving England, had agreed to all these proceedings. But in fact
+the Spanish ambassador had opposed them most strenuously at Ratisbon
+in the name of his king, as well as in that of the Infanta
+Isabella.[426] He prophesied with accurate foresight new and
+inextricable embarrassments as the consequence. The Papal Nuncio
+complained that the resistance of the ambassador weakened the
+Catholics and emboldened the Protestants. But his remonstrance had no
+effect on the Emperor. After his previous experiences Ferdinand II had
+no more fear of his adversaries, least of all of King James, who would
+certainly not in his old age make his first appearance as a warrior
+and try the doubtful fortune of war. He thought besides that he always
+consulted his security best when he had nothing before his eyes but
+the advantage of the Catholic Church.
+
+The negotiation about these matters took place just at the time when
+the Prince of Wales was in Spain. There no one despaired of finding an
+arrangement with which the Prince could still be satisfied. It was
+thought that, when the Palsgrave Frederick had been reconciled with
+the Emperor, and admitted into his family, the electoral dignity might
+be enjoyed in turn by Bavaria and the Palatinate, or that a new
+electorship might be founded for Bavaria. The Imperial ambassador,
+Count Khevenhiller, however rejected these proposals, for no other
+reason than that King James was not the proper person to make
+arrangements for his grandson. He did not accept the supposition that
+the youth, whose education it was proposed to complete in Vienna,
+would join the Catholic faith, for he said that his mother would never
+allow that. He set aside the expectation that the Imperial court might
+send to Spain a full authorisation to negotiate for the marriage. He
+moreover affirmed that, if the Imperial court wished to secure its
+influence in Germany, it could not allow the opinion to gain ground
+that it depended on Spain and was guided by her.
+
+And in Spain also, after the fall of Lerma, which was brought on by
+this affair, the old aspirations after the supremacy of the world had
+again obtained the upper hand.
+
+It is true that at the moment a feeling prevailed in favour of
+maintaining peace on the very advantageous footing which had then been
+obtained. Cardinal Zapata, Don Pedro of Toledo, and above all Count
+Gondomar, who had at that time been made a member of the Council,
+declared before that body that Spain ought to have no higher political
+aim than to secure her union with England. These were men of
+experience in European affairs, who recollected the evils which had
+sprung from the policy of Philip II. But there were others who were
+again seized with the old ambition, so interwoven with Catholicism,
+and who would not separate themselves from the interests of the
+Emperor at any price--men like the Marquis de Aytona, Don Augustin
+Mexia. And Count Olivarez, under the influence of the Imperial
+ambassador, now espoused the same opinion, a man who, as favourite of
+the King and chief minister, filled the same position in Spain that
+Buckingham did in England. At the decisive meeting of the Council, he
+stated that the King of Spain would not venture to separate from the
+Emperor, even if he had been mortally affronted by him: if he could
+stand in friendly relations with the Emperor and the King of England
+at the same time, well and good; but if not, he must break with the
+King of England without any regard to the marriage: this step was
+demanded of him for the preservation of Christendom, of the Catholic
+religion, and of his family. He added that a marriage between the
+young Count Palatine and a daughter of the Emperor was only to be
+thought of, if the former became a Catholic: that the complete
+restoration of the father was by no means advisable; and that he ought
+to be dealt with as the Duke of Saxony had been dealt with by Charles
+V.[427] Olivarez carried the Council with him in favour of this
+policy. The strictly Catholic point of view, which had been asserted
+by the German line of the house of Austria, was again adopted as the
+rule of policy in Spain.
+
+This was a resolution that decided the destinies of Spain. That power
+again renounced the policy of compromise which it had observed for a
+quarter of a century. The young King Philip IV and his ambitious
+favourite revived the designs of Philip II, or, as the former once
+expressed it, of Charles V: to the restoration of Catholic ascendancy
+in Germany they sacrificed the friendship of King James, which was of
+inestimable advantage to the monarchy, inasmuch as it kept the coasts
+of Spain free from all danger of attack from the English forces.[428]
+Olivarez was too violent, too young, and too ill-informed to have any
+clear conception of the influence of these relations.
+
+But as in great transactions every step has consequences, it is clear
+that the Spanish predilections of King James, and the policy founded
+on them, were thus brought to an end. For maintaining these it was
+necessary not only that they should be advantageous to the Catholics
+in England, but that they should be equally serviceable to the
+Protestant interests in Germany, which in the present instance were
+his own: otherwise he would never have found rest again in his own
+country, or his own family, or perhaps even in his own breast. He had
+asked for the reinstatement of his son-in-law in the electorship as
+well as in the possession of his hereditary dominions, or at least for
+the hearty assistance of Spain in effecting this object.[429] And the
+Prince of Wales shared these views. He once said to Count Olivarez
+that, without the restoration of the Elector Palatine, the marriage
+was impossible, and the friendship of England could not be expected.
+The Spaniards did not think fit to impart to him the resolution which
+had been taken in the Council of State; but still this implied a new
+direction given to the course of affairs which could be followed
+although it was not talked of. The Spaniards contented themselves with
+dwelling on the necessity of sending the youthful Count Palatine to
+Vienna for education: as to his father, who was under the ban, they
+held out indeed a prospect of the restoration of his dominions but not
+of his electoral dignity. The Prince declared that it was not to be
+imagined that his brother-in-law would be content with that and would
+agree to it.[430] And how was even as much as this to be obtained from
+the court of Vienna? It was now certain that in the affair of the
+Palatinate Spain would not interfere with decision. But besides this,
+the resolutions which had been taken in the Spanish Council of State
+must lead to much wider consequences.
+
+The miscarriage of the negotiations has been ascribed to the
+misunderstanding between Olivarez and Buckingham; and it is no wonder
+that such a misunderstanding arose, for the latter was conceited and
+irritable, the former imperious and assuming. But these causes are
+only of a secondary character; the root of the failure lies in the
+political, or in the combination of the religious with the political
+relations of the two countries. While in England Protestantism was
+moving in a direction opposed to the intentions of King James, and
+could hardly be held down, it was met by the Catholic interest in
+Spain and Germany, which was fully conscious of its position. Now
+these were the powerful elements which divided the whole world: the
+strife between them could not be adjusted by political considerations.
+
+It is hardly necessary to state further how Buckingham, who regarded
+the somewhat unmeaning delays of the Spaniards as affronts, and who
+would have had reason to fear for his authority in England in the
+event of his prolonged absence, now urged the return of the Prince.
+Charles concurred with him: King James, who moreover was impatient, as
+he said, to see the two men whom he most loved about him again,
+commanded it; and the Spanish court could not object.
+
+Yet no estrangement arose in consequence, nor was the proposal for the
+marriage withdrawn. The Infanta was treated as Princess of Wales; and
+Philip IV in a letter once styled the Prince of Wales his
+brother-in-law. The Papal dispensation, for which they had long been
+kept waiting, at last arrived; and the marriage ceremony might have
+been performed any day. The other negotiations also still kept
+advancing. King James then once more demanded an express declaration
+with regard to the affair of the Palatinate. He wished to know what
+Spain thought of doing if the Emperor refused to accede to the
+agreement that was to be made between the two powers. The answer of
+the Spaniards was evasive: how could it have been otherwise? But the
+English would not advance further without better security. The Prince
+sent to request the ambassador not to use the full powers, which he
+already had in his hands, until he received fresh orders.[431] King
+James declared that the marriage could not be solemnised till the
+Spanish court consented to take upon itself obligations with regard to
+the Palatinate.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[417] Letter to Gondomar, as it appears, from Buckingham himself,
+Cabala 236. 'You promised that the King should be pressed to nothing
+that should not be agreeable to his conscience, to his honour, and the
+love of his people.'
+
+[418] So writes Richard Weston to Buckingham: 'The prince elector hath
+conformed himself to what was demanded, that the count Mansfelt and
+Duke of Brunswik, the pretended obstacles of the treatie, are now with
+all their forces removed.' Sept. 3, 1622. Cabala 201. How difficult
+this was for him we see from a letter of Nethersole to Carlisle, Oct.
+18, 1622. 'The slowness of resolution of this side may move H. Mai.
+[the King of Bohemia] to precipitate his before the time, which will
+be then to lose the fruits of two long years patience.'
+
+[419] Valaresso: 'Temendo di se stesso e di riuscir l'oggetto di tutta
+la colpa e forse della pena.'
+
+[420] Valaresso: Disp. 19 Luglio 1623.
+
+[421] A true relation of the arrival and entertainment given to the
+Prince Charles: in Somers' Tracts ii. 625.
+
+[422] Arcana quatuor capitula ad religionem pertinentia: in Dumont v.
+ii. 442. Their contents also appear in the Spanish reports.
+
+[423] 'That you now take unto yourself liberty to throw down the laws
+of the land at your pleasure.' Cabala 13.
+
+[424] The Duke and the Prince to the King, 6 June. Hardwicke Papers i.
+419.
+
+[425] Instructions received from His Highness June 7, 1623: in
+Clarendon State Papers I. xviii. App.
+
+[426] Protestation of the Conde Onate, in Khevenhiller, Ann. Ferd.
+viii. 66.
+
+[427] From Khevenhiller's letter, Ann. Ferd. x. 95.
+
+[428] In a Letter of Pope Urban to Olivarez, this passage occurs:
+'Diceris in Britannico matrimonio differendo religionis dignitatem
+privatis omnibus rationibus praetulisse.'
+
+[429] 'We have expected the total restitution of the palatinate, and
+of the electorship.' James to Bristol, in Halliwell ii. 228.
+
+[430] Prince Charles and the Duke to James, Aug. 30, 1623. Hardwicke
+Papers i. 449.
+
+[431] Prince Charles to the Earl of Bristol. Halliwell 229.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE PARLIAMENT OF 1624. ALLIANCE WITH FRANCE.
+
+
+After the Prince had taken leave of his Spanish escort, and had gone
+on board an English fleet at Santander, whither it had put in to fetch
+him away, contrary winds, or, in the words of a contemporary
+narrative, 'the brothers Boreas and Eurus,' for a while delayed his
+departure. We are assured that people in England never regarded the
+weathercocks and the direction of the smoke and of the clouds with
+more painful anxiety than at that time. Even among the dependents of
+the royal house many almost gave up the Prince as lost; for who, they
+said, could trust the word of the Spaniards? The Protestant part of
+the population thought that he would at least be compelled to abjure
+his religion. At last the wind subsided. On October 5, after an
+absence of almost eight months, the Prince arrived in Portsmouth, and
+the day after in London. The universal joy with which he was received
+was indescribable: all business was at a standstill; the shops were
+shut; nothing was seen but waggons driving backwards and forwards,
+laden with the wood intended for the bonfires which blazed at evening
+in all the open squares, at all corners of the streets, even in the
+inner courts, but were most brilliant and costly at the
+Guildhall.[432] The joyful acclamations of the multitude mingled with
+the sound of the bells; people congratulated each other that the heir
+to the throne had returned as he had gone, and that without the
+Infanta; for this marriage had never been popular; but above all, that
+he returned rather confirmed than shaken in his religion. They
+praised God for his deliverance out of the land of Egypt. Even
+Buckingham, who was not loved at other times, enjoyed a moment of
+universal popularity.
+
+Nevertheless the effect which would have been most welcome to the
+majority, that of banishing all thoughts of an alliance with Catholic
+powers, and of causing a wife to be sought for the Prince among
+Protestants, was certainly not produced, for the King had long been
+revolving another plan. The combination with Spain, although it had
+best corresponded to his wishes and ideas, had nevertheless been only
+an experiment: when it miscarried, he was predisposed to return to the
+thought of an alliance with France. The Prince, on his way through
+France, had already seized the opportunity of seeing the Princess, his
+possible bride, while she was dancing, without being remarked by her;
+and the impression which she made upon him had been by no means
+unfavourable.
+
+Instantly on his return from Spain Buckingham opened communications
+with Mary de' Medici, Queen of France, and that through means of a
+Franciscan monk, who could not be suspected, and who presented himself
+to her while she was at dinner. Buckingham made secret overtures to
+her, intimating that he wished to resume the old negotiations for an
+alliance between the royal families of England and France, for that he
+was a Frenchman at heart.[433] As the Queen expressed herself
+favourably inclined, Henry Rich, who then bore the title of Lord
+Kensington, and afterwards that of Lord Holland, was sent before the
+end of the year 1623 on a secret mission to France in order to set the
+affair in motion. Rich was one of the most intimate friends of
+Buckingham, and to a certain extent resembled him in character.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1624.]
+
+In this affair Buckingham had two circumstances in his favour. It was
+the main ambition of the Queen-mother to see her daughter on the
+throne of the neighbouring kingdom. The preference accorded by the
+English court to an Infanta of Spain over a daughter of France had
+had a painful effect upon her: she was the more gratified when that
+court now resumed the negotiations which had been broken off.
+Nevertheless she did not embark on so delicate an affair, the failure
+of which was still possible, without the necessary reserve. The French
+court could not but ask for religious concessions in favour of the
+Princess, as Spain had for the Infanta: but on the very first approach
+to the subject it hinted that it would not urge the King to such
+strict pledges as had been demanded on the side of the Spaniards.[434]
+The second influence in Buckingham's favour was the political. The
+advance of the alliance, and of the power of the Spaniards, especially
+their establishment in the Palatinate, aroused the jealousy of the
+French. The opinion, which Cardinal Richelieu so often emphatically
+expressed, that France, everywhere enclosed by the power of the
+Spaniards, might some day be prostrated by it, was generally held. The
+interests of his country seemed to be deeply interested when England,
+from whose close connexion with Spain the greatest danger was to be
+apprehended, separated herself from that power, and showed a
+disposition to adopt a policy in harmony with that of France. Henry
+Rich assures us that so universal an agreement had never been known
+among Frenchmen as was shown at that time in the wish to ally
+themselves with England. Already agents of Mansfeld and Brunswick were
+seen at Court: an intended mission to Maximilian of Bavaria was given
+up on the representation of the English ambassador. Envoys from the
+expelled King of Bohemia also soon arrived, in order to gain the
+co-operation of the French in his restoration. The negotiations with
+England actually began: they were directed to an alliance and a
+marriage at the same time: in each case it was made a preliminary
+condition that England should openly and completely break with Spain.
+
+But this condition could not be fulfilled in England quite easily and
+without opposition.
+
+And how indeed could it have been expected that the members of the
+Privy Council, who had followed the King in the direction given to his
+policy in favour of Spain, if not without any reserve, yet with an
+ardour which might be turned to their reproach, would now, as it were,
+turn round, and follow the example of the favourite in entering on
+another path? A commission chosen from their body was appointed in
+order to take into consideration the complaints made by Buckingham
+about the behaviour of the Spanish court. But the report which
+Buckingham made was by no means so convincing as to win their
+concurrence. He rather depended on impressions, which had no doubt in
+his own eyes a certain truth, than on facts which might have served as
+evidence for others as well. The commission declared itself almost
+unanimously against him.[435] Its sentence was, that Philip IV had
+seriously intended to marry his sister to the Prince; and that in the
+affair of the Palatinate he had behaved, if not as a friend, yet at
+any rate not as an enemy. The first part is undoubtedly correct; with
+regard to the second however, neither the members of the Privy Council
+had any suspicion, nor had Buckingham himself any real information,
+that the Spaniards had made the interests of Austria in the Palatinate
+so decidedly their own. The Council was moreover in an ill humour with
+the favourite on account of the arbitrary authority which he arrogated
+to himself. When Lord Bristol came to England in the beginning of the
+year 1624, and then laid all the blame on Buckingham himself, a party
+was formed against the latter, which sought to overthrow him, and was
+even thought to have already secured a new favourite, with whom to
+replace Buckingham, just as he had formerly stepped into the place of
+Somerset. It was remarked that the friends and adherents of Somerset,
+who had always been on the side of Spain, came together and bestirred
+themselves. It was clear, and was generally said, that if relations
+with Spain were not broken off, the minister must fall. As people
+expressed it, 'either the marriage must break or Buckingham.'
+
+In this danger Buckingham resolved on a step of the greatest
+significance, in order to be able at once to attack the Spaniards, and
+to meet his rivals at home. He turned to those who had for many years
+demanded war with Spain on principle, the popular and zealous
+Protestant party. The King assented to his request for the summoning
+of a new Parliament, of which he had in fact for other reasons already
+given notice. As was to be expected from the connexion of affairs, the
+result of the elections corresponded with the views of the last
+Parliament. Men like Coke, who had been called to account for their
+attitude at that time, were re-elected two or three times over. The
+ruling minister now regarded them even as his allies.
+
+What an indescribable advantage however for the supporters of the
+claims of Parliament was this change! As the ill-success of the German
+policy of the King in the year 1621 had turned to their advantage, so
+now they profited by the failure of his negotiations with Spain. The
+political leanings of James I in favour of Spain, which they had
+originally opposed, had led to embarrassments in which the First
+Minister himself invoked their aid.
+
+But not only did party rivalries display themselves at this important
+moment, but a general opposition also arose on constitutional grounds.
+The Earl of Carlisle represented to the King that he had been visited
+by members of Parliament, no mere popular leaders or speakers, but
+quiet men and good patriots, who feared God and honoured the King:
+that he had learned from them that the agitation observed in the
+country had principally arisen because the last grants of Parliament
+had not been met by any favours on the part of the King, but on the
+contrary the expression of opinions displeasing to him on the part of
+certain members had been subsequently punished by their arrest.
+Carlisle reminded the King that nothing could be more hateful to his
+enemies, or more strengthening and encouraging to his friends, than
+the removal of these disagreements; that no king had ever had better
+subjects if he would but trust them; that if he would but show them
+that he relied on their counsel and support, he would win their hearts
+and command their fortunes; and that the people would then work with
+him for the welfare and honour of the State.[436]
+
+These views prevailed when Parliament was opened on the 19th of
+February, 1624. Hitherto it had been one of the principal grievances
+of the King that Parliament wished to have a voice in affairs that
+concerned his state and his family. The new Parliament was opened with
+a detailed account from Buckingham of his negotiations with Spain,
+which affected both these interests, and with a request that
+Parliament would report on the great questions awaiting
+settlement.[437]
+
+The answer of both Houses was, that it was contrary to the honour of
+the King, to the welfare of his people, to the interest of his
+children, and even to the terms of his former alliances, to continue
+the negotiations with Spain any longer: they prayed him to break off
+negotiations on both subjects, with regard to the Palatinate, as well
+as with regard to the marriage. It was hailed as a public blessing
+that the conditions accepted for the sake of the latter would not now
+be fulfilled.
+
+At this moment Buckingham's wishes were on the side of this policy;
+for otherwise he could not have advanced a step in his dealings with
+France. But the King had not so fully made up his mind. He had
+approved the overtures made to France: but when he was now asked to
+break with Spain, the power which he most feared, and whose friendship
+it was the first principle of his policy to cultivate, there was
+something in him which recoiled from the step. Buckingham acknowledged
+for the first time that he was not of the same mind with the King. He
+said that he wished to tread only in one path, whereas the King
+thought that he could walk in two different paths at once; but that
+the King must choose between the Spaniards and his own subjects. He
+asked him whether, supposing that sufficient subsidies of a definite
+amount were at once granted him, and the support of his subjects with
+their lives and fortunes were promised him for the future, so far as
+it might be necessary--whether in that case he would resolve to break
+off the matrimonial alliance with Spain. He asked for a
+straightforward and definite answer, that he might be able to give
+information on the subject beforehand to some members of Parliament.
+It is evident that this was no longer the attitude of a favourite, who
+has only to express the opinions and wishes of his prince. Buckingham
+came forward as a statesman, who opposes his own insight to the aims
+of his sovereign. He says that if he should concur with the King, he
+should be a flatterer; that if he should fail to express his own
+opinion, he should be a traitor. In this matter he could rely on the
+support of the Prince, who, without estranging himself from his
+father, still appeared to be less dependent on his will than
+before.[438] The result was that James I again gave way. He named the
+sum which he should require for the defence of his kingdom, for the
+support of his neighbours, and for the discharge of his own debts.
+Parliament, although it did not grant the whole amount demanded, yet
+granted a very considerable sum: it agreed to pay three full subsidies
+and three fifteenths within a year, if the negotiations were broken
+off. At the beginning of April Buckingham was able to announce to
+Parliament that the King, in consequence of the advice given to him,
+had finally broken off negotiations with Spain on both matters.
+
+Other and further concessions of the greatest extent were coupled with
+this announcement. The King promised that, if a war should break out,
+he would not entertain any proposals for peace without the advice of
+Parliament. It was of still more importance, for the moment at least,
+that he declared himself willing to allow Parliament itself to dispose
+of the sums it had granted. He said that he wished to have nothing to
+do with them: that Parliament itself might nominate a treasurer. These
+likewise were admissions which Buckingham had demanded from the
+King:[439] but it maybe supposed that he had a previous understanding
+on the subject with the leaders of the Parliament. He also
+represented to the King that the removal of the old grievances was an
+absolute necessity. The monopolies to which James had so long clung,
+and which he had so obstinately defended, he now in turn gave up;
+while the penal laws against the Catholics, to which he was averse,
+were revived.
+
+This was an intestine struggle between the different powers in the
+state, as well as a question of policy. Parliament and the favourite
+made common cause against the Privy Council, which was on the side of
+Spain.
+
+Among his opponents in the Privy Council, Buckingham hated none so
+much as the Lord Treasurer Cranfield, then Earl of Middlesex, for
+Cranfield, although raised from a humble station by Buckingham
+himself, had the courage to resist him on the Spanish question.[440]
+By his strict and successful management of business, Cranfield had won
+the favour of the King, who believed that he had found in him a second
+Sully. It seems that Cranfield himself had intended to effect the ruin
+of Buckingham: but Buckingham was too strong for him. Certain
+accusations, which were partly well founded, were made available in
+bringing him to trial by Parliamentary means, and in removing him from
+his office like Bacon; for he had incurred the enmity of many by his
+strictness and incorruptibility. The King professed to regard this
+case as even worse than the former, because Bacon had acknowledged his
+guilt, while Cranfield denied all guilt. The doctrine of the
+responsibility of ministers was by this means advanced still further,
+for it was now becoming more dangerous to fall out with Parliament
+than with the King.
+
+The authority of Parliament in general made important strides. It now
+threw paramount weight into those deliberations which concerned the
+general affairs of the kingdom, war and peace, and the royal family.
+What became of the principle on which the King had hitherto taken his
+stand, that the decision of these matters must be left exclusively to
+his discretion? Parliament again assumed the attitude which three
+years before had led to its dissolution.
+
+It was not possible that James I could look on all this without
+displeasure and uneasiness. Sometimes the thought occurred to him that
+Buckingham had not been the right man to conduct the negotiations with
+Spain. The words escaped him that, if he had sent the Lord Keeper
+Williams with his son instead of Buckingham, his honour would then
+have been saved, and his heart would now beat more lightly. He did not
+approve of the decided turn which was being given to foreign politics.
+He was once heard to say that he was a poor old man, who in former
+times had known something about politics, but who now knew nothing
+more about them.
+
+It seems indeed that he had fancied that he could still continue to
+hold the balance between parties: so at least those who knew James
+understood him. He had no intention of allowing Buckingham's fall, as
+the enemies of that nobleman wished, but he perhaps thought of finding
+a counterpoise for him: he did not wish to let him become lord and
+master of affairs. On the other hand Buckingham, by his connexion with
+the leading men of the Lower House, had already won an independent
+position, in which he was no longer at the mercy of the King. He may
+perhaps be set down as the first English minister who, supported by
+Parliament and by public opinion, induced or compelled the King to
+adopt a policy on which of his own accord he would not have resolved.
+In conjunction with his new friends Buckingham succeeded in breaking
+up the Spanish party, with which he now for the first time came into
+conflict: his adherents congratulated him on his success.[441] In
+court and state a kind of reaction against the previous importance of
+this party set in. The offices which were vacated by the fall of
+Cranfield were conferred on men of the other party, the kind of men
+who had formerly been displaced under the influence of Gondomar.
+Seamen were acquitted who had shown the same disregard for orders as
+Walter Ralegh had once done, and preparations were made to indemnify
+Ralegh's posterity for the loss of property which they had suffered.
+The Spanish ambassadors at court availed themselves of a moment of ill
+humour on the part of the King, to whom indeed they had again obtained
+access, to call his attention to the loss of authority which
+threatened him on account of Buckingham's combination with the leading
+men in the Parliament. But in what they said they mingled so much
+falsehood with the truth that they could be easily refuted; and
+Buckingham successfully resisted this attack also.
+
+People still perceived in the King his old indecision. He consented,
+it is true, that Mansfeld, whom he had formerly helped the Spaniards
+to expel from his strong position on the Upper Rhine, should now be
+supported by English as well as French money in a new campaign to
+recover the Palatinate. But nevertheless he wished at the same time to
+enjoin him as a condition to abstain from attacking any country which
+rightfully belonged to the Archduchess Isabella, or to the crown of
+Spain.[442] So far was he still from undertaking open war against
+Spain, as his subjects hoped and expected.
+
+And though he acceded to the negotiations with France, yet in this
+transaction the very circumstance which displeased the majority of his
+subjects--namely that he was hereby making an alliance with a Catholic
+power--was acceptable to him. For even then he would not have
+consented at any price to have interfered in the general religious
+quarrel merely on religious grounds. He felt no hesitation in
+promising the French, as he had the Spaniards, not only freedom of
+religion in behalf of the future queen, but even relief for his
+Catholic subjects in regard to the penal laws imposed by Parliament.
+Yet he could have wished that they had contented themselves with his
+simple promise. One of his envoys, Lord Nithisdale, was himself of
+this opinion. On the other side it was remarked that perhaps the
+Catholics, of whom he also was one, might be contented with a promise
+from their sovereign, on whom their whole welfare depended, but that
+the French government could not, as it must have a dispensation from
+the Pope, which could not be obtained without a written assurance.
+James I at first declared himself ready to give such a declaration in
+a letter to the king of France, and La Vieuville, who was minister at
+the time, expressed himself content with that. But after his fall and
+Richelieu's accession to power this arrangement was rejected. It was
+in vain that the King's ambassadors held out a prospect that the
+letter should be signed by the Prince and by the chief Secretary of
+State; the French insisted that the King should ratify not only the
+treaty, but also a special engagement which they themselves wished to
+frame and to lay before Urban VIII. The English plenipotentiaries at
+the French court, Holland and Carlisle, were still refusing to agree
+to this, when King James had already given way to the French
+ambassador in England.
+
+The agreement, in the form in which it was at last concluded, was in
+some points more advantageous for England than that with Spain had
+been. While the latter stipulated that the laws which had been passed,
+or might hereafter be passed, in England against the Catholics were
+not to be applied to the royal children, but that these on the
+contrary were still to be secured in their right to the succession, an
+agreement which, as was mentioned, opened a prospect of an alteration
+in the religion of the reigning family; this supposition was avoided
+in the contract with France. But it was agreed on the other hand that
+the future queen was to conduct the education of her children, not
+merely till their tenth year, as had been stipulated with Spain, but
+till their thirteenth. She herself and her household were also to
+enjoy a higher degree of ecclesiastical independence; the
+superintendence of a bishop was even allowed them. It was the ambition
+of the Pope to demand not much less from the French than his
+predecessor had demanded from the Spaniards as the price of bestowing
+a dispensation for the marriage of a Catholic princess with a
+Protestant prince; and it was the ambition of the French court to
+offer him, or at least to appear to offer him, no less. In the
+special assurance above mentioned James gave a promise that his
+Catholic subjects should look forward to the enjoyment of still
+greater freedom than that which would have been conferred on them by
+the agreement with Spain. They were not to be molested for the sake of
+religion, either in their persons or in their possessions, supposing
+that in other respects they conducted themselves as good and loyal
+subjects.[443]
+
+The English ambassadors took exception to single expressions: the King
+himself passed lightly over them. He was mainly induced to do so by
+the absence from the agreement with France of the most offensive and
+burdensome clauses which had been contained in the secret articles of
+the treaty with Spain. On December 12, 1624, the treaty was signed at
+Cambridge by the King, and the special assurance both by the King and
+by the Prince.
+
+James I wished to see his son married. At the Christmas immediately
+following he greeted him according to English fashion with the
+tenderest expressions: he said that he existed only for his sake; that
+he had rather live with him in banishment than lead a desolate life
+without him. He thought that the treaty of marriage which had just
+been concluded would establish his happiness for ever.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1625.]
+
+An alliance between France and England for the recovery of the
+Palatinate was now moreover in contemplation. From the first moment
+the French had acknowledged that this would be to their own interest,
+and had promised to assist in that object to the extent of their
+power. Nevertheless they hesitated to conclude an express agreement
+for this object; for what would the Pope say if they allied
+themselves with Protestants against Catholics? At last they submitted
+a declaration in writing, but this appeared to the English ambassadors
+so unsatisfactory, that they preferred to return it to them. The
+French said that this time they would perform more than they promised.
+Although exceptions of many kinds might be made to their performances,
+yet they were really seriously bent on doing as much as possible for
+the recovery of the Palatinate. Just at that time Richelieu had
+stepped into power, and he expressly directed the policy of France to
+the destruction of the position which the Spaniards had occupied on
+the Middle Rhine. In spite of the obstructive efforts of a party which
+had both ecclesiastical and political objects in view, he concluded
+the arrangements for the marriage of the Princess to the Prince of
+Wales without any delay, even without waiting for the last word of the
+Pope.
+
+By this means the connexion which the King had formed in earlier years
+seemed once more to be revived. The Duke of Savoy and the Republic of
+Venice supported Mansfeld's preparations with subsidies of money. The
+States General took the most lively interest in the warlike movements
+in Germany, on which the Elector of Brandenburg also set his hopes.
+The King of Denmark offered his help in the matter with a readiness
+which created astonishment. While the English ambassadors were busy in
+adjusting the disputes that were constantly springing up afresh
+between him and Sweden, he gathered the estates of Lower Saxony around
+him, in order to check the swift advance of the Catholic League.[444]
+Of the members of the old alliance the princes of Upper Germany alone
+were absent. It was hoped that the Union would be revived by the
+efforts of Lower Germany, and above all that its head, the Elector
+Palatine, would be restored to his country.
+
+Induced by the failure of peaceful negotiations for the restoration
+of his son-in-law, James allowed greater progress to be made in the
+direction of war than he had ever done before. He took an eager
+interest in the preliminaries and preparations for war, even for a
+naval war. But would he ever have proceeded to action? While preparing
+to attack the Emperor and the League did he intend to do anything more
+than make a demonstration against Spain? In truth it may be doubted.
+He never allowed his English troops to attempt anything for the relief
+of Breda, which at that time was still blockaded by the
+Spaniards.[445]
+
+And in his alliance with France he certainly still held fast to his
+original principles.
+
+The marriage of his son to a Catholic princess, and the indulgence
+towards the Catholics to which he thereby pledged himself, express the
+most characteristic tendencies of his policy. Notwithstanding all the
+concessions which he made to Parliament, he still refused to grant
+many of the demands which were addressed to him. The special agreement
+which he made with France corresponded to the conception which he had
+formed of his prerogative. By means of it he imported into relations
+controlled by the law of nations his claim to give by virtue of his
+royal power a dispensation even from laws that had been passed by
+Parliament.
+
+After, as well as before, this event his idea was to control and to
+combine into harmony the conflicting elements within his kingdom by
+his personal will; outside his kingdom, to guide or to regulate events
+by clever policy. This is the important feature in the position and in
+the pacific attitude of this sovereign. But the blame which attaches
+to him is also connected with it. He made each and everything, however
+important it might be in itself, merely secondary to his political
+calculation. His high-flying thoughts have something laboured and flat
+about them; they are almost too closely connected with a conscious,
+and at the same time personal, end; they want that free sweep which is
+necessary for enlisting the interest of contemporaries and of
+posterity. And could the policy of James ever have prevailed? Was it
+not in its own nature already a failure? A great crisis was hanging
+over England when King James died (March 1625). He had once more
+received the Lord's Supper after the Anglican use, with edifying
+expressions of contrition: a numerous assembly had been present, for
+he wished every one to know that he died holding the same views which
+he had professed, and had contended for in his writings during his
+lifetime.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[432] 'True mirth and gladness was in every face, and healths ran
+bravely round in every place.' John Taylor, Prince Charles his Welcome
+from Spaine: in Somers ii. 552.
+
+[433] Memoires de Richelieu. Ranke, Franzoesische Geschichte v. 133
+(Werke xii. 162).
+
+[434] Kensington to Buckingham: 'Neither will they strain us to any
+unreasonablenesse in conditions for our Catholics.' Cabala 275.
+
+[435] Hacket, Life of Williams 169. 'Scarce any in all the Consulto
+did vote to my Lords satisfaction.'
+
+[436] The Earl of Carlisle to His Majesty, Feb. 14, 1624. He signs
+himself 'Your Majesty's most humble, most obedient obliged creature
+subject and servant.'
+
+[437] Valaresso already observes this, March 8, 1624: 'Nell'ultimo
+parlamento si chiamava felonia di parlare di quello, che hora si
+transmette alla libera consultatione del presente.'
+
+[438] A. Valaresso, Dec. 15, 1623: 'Col re usa qualche minor rispetto;
+agli altri da maggior sodisfattione del solito. Parla con Piu liberta
+della Spagna.'
+
+[439] Of all Buckingham's letters to the King, without doubt the most
+remarkable. Hardwicke i. 466: 'Risolve constantly to run one way.'
+
+[440] Valaresso, April 26. 'La persona merita male perche certo fu
+d'affetto Spagnola.' He accuses him of a 'Somma scarsezza di pagare.'
+Chamberlain says of him at his appearance on the scene October 1621:
+'whom the King, in his piercing judgment, finds best able to do him
+service.'
+
+[441] Robert Philips to Buckingham, August 9, 1624. 'You have to your
+perpetual glory already dissolved and broken the Spanish party.'
+
+[442] 'Not to attempt any act of hostility upon any of the lawful
+dominions or possessions of the king of spain or the Archiduchess.' He
+then at any rate supposed certain cases in which this might take
+place. Hardwicke Papers i. 548.
+
+[443] Escrit particulier: 'qu'il permettra a tous ses subjects
+Catholiques Romains de jouir de plus de liberte et franchise en ce qui
+regarde leur religion qu'ils n'eussent fait en vertu d'articles
+quelconques accordes par le traite de mariage fait avec l'Espagne, ne
+voulant que ses subjects Catholiques puissent estre inquietes en leurs
+personnes et biens pour faire profession de la dite religion et vivre
+en Catholiques pourvu toutesfois qu'ils en usent modestement, et
+rendent l'obeissance que de bons et vrays subjects doivent a leur roy,
+qu'il par sa bonte ne les restreindra pas a aucun sentiment contraire
+a leur religion.' Hardwicke Papers i. 546. The English ambassadors
+complain that the word 'liberte' had been inserted by the French
+without first informing them.
+
+[444] Conway to Carlisle, Feb. 24, 1624-25: 'In contemplation of H.
+Majesty the king of Denmark hath come to the propositions--upon which
+H. M. upon good grounds hath made dispatche to the king of Denmark
+agreeing to the kings of Denmarks propositions.' Hardwicke Papers i.
+560.
+
+[445] Valaresso: 'Non e possibile di rimoverlo di contravenire alle
+tante promesse verso Spagnoli et alle sue prime dichiarationi.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+BEGINNING OF THE REIGN OF CHARLES I, AND HIS FIRST AND SECOND
+PARLIAMENT.
+
+
+The prince who now ascended the throne was in the bloom of life: he
+had just completed his twenty-fifth year. He had been weak and
+delicate in childhood: among the defects from which he suffered was
+that of stammering, which he did not get over throughout life; but he
+had grown up stronger in other ways than had been expected. He looked
+well on horseback: men saw him govern with safety horses that were
+hard to manage: he was expert in knightly exercises: he was a good
+shot with the cross-bow, as well as with the gun, and even learned how
+to load a cannon. He was hardly less unweariedly devoted to the chase
+than his father. He could not vie with him in intelligence and
+knowledge, nor with his deceased brother Henry in vivacious energy and
+in popularity of disposition; but he had learnt much from his father,
+at whose feet he loved to sit; and his brother's tastes for the arts
+and for the experimental sciences, especially the former, had passed
+to him. In moral qualities he was superior to both. He was one of
+those young men of whom it is said that they have no fault. His strict
+propriety of demeanour bordered on maiden bashfulness: a serious and
+temperate soul spoke from his calm eyes. He had a natural gift for
+apprehending even the most complicated questions, and he was a good
+writer. From his youth he shewed himself economical; not profuse, but
+at the same time not niggardly; in all matters precise. All the world
+had been wearied by the frequent proofs which his father had given of
+his untrustworthiness, and by the unfathomable mystery in which he
+enveloped his ever-wavering intentions: they expected from the son
+more openness, uprightness, and consistency. They asked if he would
+not also be more decidedly Protestant. He showed, at least at first,
+that he had a more sensitive feeling with regard to his princely
+honour.[446] He had expected that his personal suit for the hand of
+the Infanta would remove all difficulties on the part of the
+Spaniards, even those of a political character, which obstructed the
+marriage. They had paid him every attention suitable to his rank, but
+in the business which was under discussion they had not given way a
+hair's breadth: it rather appeared as if they wished to avail
+themselves of his presence to impose harder conditions upon him. He
+was deeply affronted at this. When he found himself again among his
+countrymen on board an English ship, he expressed his astonishment
+that he had not been detained after he had been so ill-treated.[447]
+Quiet and taciturn by nature, he knew while in Spain how to disguise
+his real feelings by appearing to feel differently: but we have seen
+how on his return his whole attitude with regard to affairs in
+general, both foreign and domestic, in matters which concerned his
+father and the Parliament alike, assumed an altered character which
+corresponded to the general feeling of the nation far more closely
+than the policy previously pursued.
+
+In the last days of James doubts had still been felt whether he would
+ever allow a marriage to take place between his son and a French
+princess, and large sums had been wagered on the issue. Charles I at
+once put an end to all hesitation. He did not allow himself to be
+induced to defer his marriage even by the death of his father, or by a
+pestilential sickness which then prevailed, or by the lack of the
+desirable preparations in the royal palaces. He wished to show the
+world that he adhered to his policy of opposition to Spain. He even
+allowed the privateering, which his father had formerly suppressed
+with so much zeal, to begin again. The royal navy, for the
+improvement of which Buckingham actively exerted himself, was put in a
+complete state of efficiency, and the money granted by Parliament was
+principally employed for this purpose.
+
+But to enable him to undertake war in earnest he required fresh
+grants. It was almost the first thought of the King after his
+accession to the throne to call a Parliament for this purpose, and
+that the same Parliament which had last sat in the reign of his
+father.[448] He bent, although unwillingly, to the necessity, imposed
+by the constitution, of ordering new elections to be proceeded with,
+for he would rather have avoided all delay: but he entertained no
+doubt that the Parliament, as it was composed after the elections,
+would give him its full support. After what had taken place he
+considered this almost a matter of course.
+
+On June 18/28, 1625, Charles I opened his first Parliament at
+Westminster. He reminded the members that his father had been induced
+by the advice of the Parliament, whose wishes he had himself
+represented to the King, to break off all further negotiations with
+Spain. He said that this was done in their interest: that on their
+instigation he had embarked on the affair as a young man joyfully and
+with good courage: that this had been his first undertaking: what a
+reproach would it be both for himself and for them if they now refused
+him the support which he necessarily required for bringing to a
+successful issue the quarrel which had already begun!
+
+And certainly if war with Spain had been the only question, he might
+have reckoned upon abundant grants: but the matter was not quite so
+simple. Parliament thought above all of its own designs, which it had
+not been possible to effect in the lifetime of James I, but which
+Charles had advocated in the last session. If the new King inferred
+the obligation of Parliament to furnish the money required for a
+foreign war from the share it had had in the counsels which had led
+to that war, Parliament also considered that he was no less bound on
+his part to fulfil the wishes that had been expressed in regard to
+internal policy. In the very first debate which preceded the election
+of the Speaker, this point of view was very distinctly put forward.
+The King was told that in the last session he had sought to remove all
+differences between Parliament and his father, and to induce the
+latter to grant the petitions of Parliament: that if he had not
+succeeded then, that result had been due only to his want of power;
+but now he had power as well as inclination: what he before had only
+been able to will, he now was enabled to effect, and everything
+depended solely on him.[449] It had been especially the execution of
+the Acts of Parliament directed against the Catholics which the
+Parliament demanded, and which the Prince in his ardour against Spain
+had then thought advisable. His father had refused to grant this: it
+was now expected that he should grant it himself. They expected this
+from him as much as he expected from them a subsidy sufficient for
+carrying on the war. It may be asked, however, whether it was possible
+for him to give ear to their wishes. The complication in his fortunes
+arose from his inability to comply.
+
+If Charles I, when Prince of Wales, had wished to identify his cause
+entirely with the aims of Parliament, he would have been obliged to
+marry the daughter of a Protestant prince. But this was prevented by
+the political danger which would then have arisen in the event of a
+breach with Spain. Neither James nor Charles I believed that they
+could withstand this great monarchy without an alliance with France.
+Political and dynastic interests had led to the marriage which had
+just been concluded. But by this a relation with the Catholic world
+had again been contracted which rendered impossible a purely
+Protestant system of government such as Queen Elizabeth desired to
+establish. A dispensation from Rome had been required which expressed
+even without any disguise the hope that the French princess would
+convert the King and his realm to the old faith.[450] The marriage
+could not have been concluded without entering into obligations which
+were in open contradiction to the Acts of Parliament. Those
+obligations were not yet fully known, but what was learnt of them
+caused great agitation. Charles was reminded of a promise, which he
+was said to have given at an earlier time, to agree to no conditions
+on his marriage which might be prejudicial to the Church existing in
+England. Men asked how that promise had been fulfilled; and why any
+secret was made of the compact which had been concluded. Would not the
+Queen's chapel, they asked, now serve to unite the Catholics of
+England; or would they be forbidden to hear mass there? In a forcible
+petition Parliament asked for the execution of the laws issued against
+Papists and recusants.[451]
+
+Charles I was not in a position to be able to regard it. It was not
+that he had any thought of curtailing the rights of the English Church
+or of entering on any other course in great questions of general
+policy than that which had been laid down in conjunction with
+Parliament. His marriage also was a preparation for the conflict with
+Spain; but if it was not so decidedly opposed to the common feeling of
+the country as a Spanish marriage, yet it was far from being in
+accordance with it. The pledges which had been given on that occasion
+prevented the King from adopting exclusively Protestant points of
+view, and from identifying himself completely with his people.
+
+But there was another reason for the King's adherence to his
+agreement. He was as little inclined as his father had been to allow
+the Parliament to exercise any influence on ecclesiastical affairs.
+Much unpleasant surprise was created at that time by the writings of
+Dr. Montague, in which he treated the Roman Church with forbearance,
+and Puritanism with scorn and hatred. Parliament wished to institute
+proceedings against the author. The King did not take him under his
+protection; but on the request of some dignitaries of the English
+Church he transferred the matter to his own tribunal. He regarded it
+moreover as an undoubted element of his prerogative to dispense with
+the statutes passed by Parliament, so that the concessions which were
+expressed in the marriage compact appeared to him quite justifiable.
+
+We see how closely this affected the most important question of
+English constitutional law. The universal competence of Parliament is
+here opposed to the authority of the King, strengthened by his
+ecclesiastical functions. And we understand how Parliament, in spite
+of the urgent need created by itself, hesitated to fulfil the
+expectations of the King.
+
+It could not absolutely refuse to make any grant: it offered him two
+subsidies, 'fruits of its love' as they were termed. But the King had
+expected a far stronger proof of devotion. What importance could be
+attached to such an insignificant sum in prospect of so tremendous an
+undertaking as a war against Spain? The grant itself implied a sort of
+refusal.
+
+But the Lower House also attempted to introduce a most extensive
+innovation in regard to finance. The customs formed one of the main
+sources of the revenue of the crown, without which it could not be
+supported. They had been increased by the last government on the
+ground of its right to tonnage and poundage, although, as we saw, not
+without opposition.[452] The constitutional question was whether the
+customs were properly to be regarded as a tax, and accordingly
+dependent on the grant of Parliament, or whether they were absolutely
+appropriated to the crown by right derived from long prescription: for
+since the time of Edward IV, tonnage and poundage had been granted to
+every king for the whole period of his reign. The controversies
+arising on the subject under James had brought to light the daily
+increasing importance conferred by the growth of commerce on this
+source of revenue, which certainly assured to the crown, if not for
+extraordinary undertakings, yet for the conduct of the ordinary
+business of the state, a certain independence of the grants of
+Parliament. The Lower House was now disinclined, both on principle and
+under the painful excitement of the moment, to renew the grant on
+these terms: it therefore conferred the right to tonnage and poundage
+on the King only for a year. But the import of this restriction was
+plain enough. The popular leaders were not satisfied with granting the
+King very inadequate support for the war, but they sought to make him
+dependent even in time of peace on the goodwill of the Lower House.
+The resolution was rejected by the Upper House, and it appeared to the
+King himself as an affront. For why should he be refused what had been
+secured to his predecessors during a century and a half? The granting
+of supplies for life he regarded as a mere form, which after such long
+prescription was not even necessary. He thought himself entitled, even
+without such a grant, to have the duties levied in his own name as
+before.
+
+These were differences of the most thoroughgoing character, which had
+descended to Charles I with the crown itself from the earlier kings
+and from his father. The change of government, and certain previous
+occurrences caused these differences to come into greater prominence
+than ever; but they received their peculiar character from something
+in his personal relations which had also been transmitted from the
+father to the son.
+
+Or rather, we may say, James I would certainly have been inclined to
+get rid of Buckingham as he had formerly got rid of Somerset: under
+Charles I this favourite occupied a still stronger position than he
+had held before.
+
+Between the two men personally there was a great contrast. In the
+favourite there was nothing of the precision, calmness, and moral
+behaviour of the King. Buckingham was dissolute, talkative, and vain.
+His appearance had made his fortune, and he endeavoured to add to it
+by a splendour of attire, which later times would have allowed only
+in women. Jewels were displayed in his ears, and precious stones
+served as buttons for his doublet. It was affirmed that on his journey
+to France, which preceded the marriage of the King, he had taken with
+him about thirty different suits, each more costly than the last. It
+was for him as much an affair of ambition as of sensual pleasure to
+make an impression upon women, and to achieve what are called
+conquests in the highest circles. He revelled in the enjoyment of
+successes in society. Moments of lassitude followed, when those who
+had to speak with him on business found him extended upon his couch,
+without giving them a sign of interest or attention, especially when
+their proposals were not altogether to his mind. Immediately
+afterwards however he would pass from this state to one of the most
+highly-strained activity, for which he by no means wanted ability: he
+then knew neither rest nor weariness. He was spurred on most of all by
+the necessity of making head alternately against such powerful and
+active rivals as the two ministers who at that time conducted the
+affairs of France and Spain. He was bound to Charles I by a common
+interest in one or two of those employments which fill up daily life,
+for instance by fondness for art and art collections, but principally
+by the companionship into which they had been thrown, first in the
+cabinet of James I, who weighed his conclusions by their assistance,
+and afterwards in their journey to Spain. The Spaniards, who were
+accustomed to treat persons of the highest rank with respect and
+reverence, were greatly scandalised to see how entirely Buckingham
+indulged his own humours in the presence of the Prince. He allowed
+himself to use playful nicknames, such as might have been often
+applied in the hunting-seats of James or in letters to him, but which
+at other times appeared very much out of place. He remained sitting
+when the Prince was standing: in his presence he had indeed the
+audacity to consult his ease by stretching his legs on another chair.
+The Prince appeared to find this quite proper: Buckingham was for him
+not so much a servant as an equal and intimate friend. It would have
+been impossible to say which of the two was the chief cause of the
+alienation which arose between them and the Spaniards. Rumour made the
+favourite responsible for this estrangement: better informed people
+traced it to the Prince himself. The intimacy formed during their
+previous association had been made still closer by the policy which
+they pursued since their return from Spain. Many persons hoped
+notwithstanding that, in spite of appearances to the contrary, an
+alteration would take place with the change of government. But on the
+first entry of Charles I into London, Buckingham was seen sitting by
+him in his carriage in the usual intimate proximity. His share in the
+marriage of the King increased their friendship: they both equally
+agreed even in the subsequent change of policy. Buckingham had allied
+himself most closely with the leaders of the Puritan opposition in
+Parliament: by their support principally he had broken up the party
+favourable to Spain. But in return for these services he had now not
+the least intention of doing justice to their claims. If it had
+depended on him, still greater concessions would afterwards have been
+granted in favour of the Catholics than in fact were made; for
+Catholic sympathies were very strongly represented in his family: he
+himself had far less feeling in favour of Anglican orthodoxy than the
+King. And when the rights of the prerogative were called in question,
+he again espoused them most zealously, seeing that his own power
+rested on their validity. He looked at the Parliamentary constitution
+from the point of view of a holder of power, who wishes to avail
+himself of it for the end before him without deeming himself bound by
+it, so soon as it becomes inconvenient to him. He cared only for
+success in his immediate object: all means of obtaining it seemed
+fair.
+
+The continuance of the session in London was at that time rendered
+impossible by the pestilential sickness already referred to, which
+every day increased in severity. Buckingham, who although pliant and
+adroit yet had no regard whatever for others, wished to keep
+Parliament sitting until it had made satisfactory grants. While the
+members, and even the Privy Council, wished for a prorogation, he
+urged with success that the sitting should only be transferred to
+Oxford. Thither the two Houses very unwillingly went, for there also
+symptoms of the plague were already showing themselves; and each
+member would have preferred to be at home with his family. And when
+Buckingham came before them at Oxford with his proposal for a further
+grant, the ill-humour of the assembly openly broke out. He was
+reproached with the illegality of his conduct in asking for a grant of
+subsidies more than once in a session; the members said that if this
+was the object of their meeting they might well have been at
+home.[453] But they were not content with rejecting the proposal: they
+said that if they must remain together, they would, according to
+former precedent, bring under debate the prevailing abuses and their
+removal.
+
+Buckingham had been warned that by now changing his demeanour he would
+run the risk of forfeiting those sympathies of Parliament, which he
+had won by his Protestant attitude. In the very first session at
+Oxford an event took place which set religious passions in agitation.
+
+Before the departure of the Parliament from London Lord Keeper
+Williams had promised in the King's name that the laws against
+Catholic priests should be observed. Immediately after the Speaker had
+taken his seat at Oxford, a complaint was made that an order for the
+pardon of six priests had been since issued. Williams had had no share
+in it; he had refused to seal it. It had been necessary to complete it
+in the presence of the King, who was induced at the urgent request of
+Buckingham to give his assent in pursuance of the conditions of the
+agreement executed with France. This conduct however, the failure to
+execute laws that had been ratified, especially after a renewed
+promise to the contrary, appeared to the Parliament an attack upon its
+rights and upon the constitution of the country. The ill-feeling was
+directed against Buckingham, whose exceptional position was now the
+general object of public and private hatred.
+
+This was a time in which the power of a first minister in France, who
+came forward as the representative of the monarchy, was winning its
+way amid the strife of factions, and above all in opposition to the
+claims of aristocratic independence. What Concini and Luynes had
+begun, Richelieu with a strong arm carried systematically into effect.
+Something similar seemed to be at hand in England also. It had been
+the fashion of James I to give effect to his will in the state by
+means of a minister, to whom he confided the most important affairs,
+and whom he wished to be dependent solely on the King himself; and
+Charles I, in this as in other matters, followed his father's example.
+Buckingham became more powerful under him than ever. At the meetings
+of the Privy Council the King hardly allowed any one else to speak:
+without taking the votes of the members he accepted Buckingham's
+opinion as conclusive. And yet it was apparent at the same time that
+this opinion did not deserve preference from any worth of its own. The
+public administration, so far as it was influenced by him, and his
+special department, the Admiralty, furnished much occasion for just
+censure; and the general policy on which he embarked appeared
+questionable and dangerous. He was coarsely compared to a mule which
+took its rider into a wrong road. Oxford suggested to men's minds the
+recollection of the opposition which the great nobles had once offered
+to Henry III. People said that they might perhaps have been to blame
+in form, but not in substance. It was wished that Charles I might also
+govern the state by the help of his wise and dignified councillors,
+and not with the aid of a single young man. Parliament, the great men
+of the country, and those who filled the highest offices, were almost
+unanimous against Buckingham. The Lord Keeper Williams told the King
+openly at a meeting of the Privy Council at Oxford, that nothing would
+quiet the apprehensions of his Parliament but an assurance 'that in
+actions of importance and in the disposition of what sums of money the
+people should bestow upon him, he would take the advice of a settled
+and constant council.'[454] The misconduct of the favourite in not
+applying the money granted to the objects for which it was voted, was
+exactly the ground of the complaint urged against him. Not only the
+real importance of the points in dispute, but also the intention of
+driving Buckingham from his position, led Parliament to reject all his
+proposals.
+
+The King's adherence to his resolution of supporting his minister
+greatly affected the state of affairs in England, which even at that
+time presupposed and required an agreement between the Crown and the
+Parliament.
+
+Buckingham attributed the rejection of his proposals in Parliament to
+personal enmity; and this he thought he could certainly overcome.
+Williams, who in the time of James I had been entirely in the
+confidence of the King, was after a time dismissed, not without
+harshness, and was replaced by Thomas Coventry. The post of Lord
+Keeper was again filled by a lawyer who troubled himself less about
+political affairs. Parliament was not prorogued, as the rest of the
+members of the Privy Council wished: the King agreed with Buckingham
+that it must be dissolved. The Duke hoped that new elections, held
+under his influence, would give better results. He did not doubt that
+another Parliament might be hurried away to make extensive grants
+under the pressure of the great interest opposed to Spain. But in
+order to effect this object it appeared to him necessary to exclude
+from the Lower House its most active members, who were his personal
+antagonists. He adopted the odious means of advancing them to offices
+which could not be held compatible with a seat in Parliament. In this
+way Edward Coke, who revived and found arguments for the
+constitutional claims of Parliament, was nominated sheriff of
+Buckinghamshire, and Thomas Wentworth High Sheriff of Yorkshire.
+Francis Seymour, Robert Phillips, and some others, had a similar
+fate.[455] When the lists were submitted as usual the King
+unexpectedly announced these nominations. Some peers, whose views
+inspired no confidence, were not summoned to attend the sittings of
+the Upper House.
+
+Perhaps too much weight has been attributed to the circumstance--but
+yet it proves the discontent which was widely spreading--that at the
+coronation of the King, which took place during these days, the
+traditional question addressed from four sides of the tribune to the
+surrounding multitude, asking whether they approved, was not answered
+from one side at least with the joyful readiness usually
+displayed.[456]
+
+On February 6, 1626, the new Parliament was opened at Westminster. It
+made no great objection to the exclusion of some of the former
+members, as the means by which this had been effected could not be
+regarded as exactly illegal. Among the members assembled an ambition
+was rather felt to prove that their opinions and resolutions were not
+dependent on the influence of some few men. For all Buckingham's
+efforts to prevent it, on this occasion also those opinions were in
+the ascendant which he wished to oppose. In the place of the members
+excluded others arose, and at times they were the very men from whom
+he feared nothing. A great impression was made when a personal friend
+of Buckingham, his vice-admiral in Devonshire, John Eliot, came
+forward as his decided political opponent. He first brought under
+discussion the mismanagement of the money granted, which was laid to
+the charge of the First Minister. With this was connected a
+transaction of great importance which affected the general relation
+between the Parliament and the Crown.
+
+In the year 1624 a council of war, consisting of seven members, had
+been nominated to manage the money then granted. They were now
+summoned to account for it. Although this measure appeared an
+innovation, yet the government could do nothing against it--it had
+even consented to it: but Parliament at the same time submitted to the
+members the invidious question, whether their advice for the
+attainment of the ends in view had always been followed. King James
+had said on a former occasion, that if Parliament granted him
+subsidies, he had to account to it for their disposal as little as to
+a merchant from whom he received money; for he loved to lay as much
+emphasis upon his prerogative as possible. How entirely opposed to the
+prerogative were the claims which Parliament now advanced! It is clear
+that if the members of the council should make the communications they
+were asked for, all freedom of action on the part of the minister and
+of the King himself would be called in question.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1626.]
+
+The members of the new council for war were thrown into great
+embarrassment. They answered that they must first consult the lawyers
+on the subject, and the King conveyed to them his approval of this
+declaration. He informed them that he had had the Act of Parliament
+laid before him: that they were bound to submit to questions only
+about the application of the money, but about nothing else: he even
+threatened them with his displeasure if they should go beyond this.
+The president of the council for war, George Carew, called his
+attention to the probability that the grant of the subsidies which he
+demanded from Parliament might be hindered by such an answer: it would
+be better, he said, that the Council should be sent to the Tower,--for
+it would come to this,--than that the good relations between the King
+and the Parliament should be impaired, and the payment of the
+subsidies hindered. Charles I said that it was not merely a question
+of money, and that gold might be bought too dear. He thanked them for
+the regard which they had shown to him; but he added that Parliament
+was aiming not at them but at himself.[457]
+
+The controversy about tonnage and poundage coincided with this
+quarrel. The grant, as has been mentioned, had been obtained only for
+a short period. Parliament was incensed, that after this had expired,
+the King had the customs levied just as before. 'How,' it was said,
+'did the King wish to raise taxes that had never been voted? Was not
+this altogether contrary to the form of government of the country?
+Whoever had counselled the King to this step, he was without doubt the
+sworn enemy of King and country.'
+
+Parliament declared to the King that if he insisted on those subsidies
+which were absolutely necessary, it would support him as fully as ever
+a prince had been supported by a Parliament, but in Parliamentary
+fashion, or, as they expressed it, 'via parlamentaria.'[458] The
+claims of Parliament included both the right of granting money in its
+widest extent, and the supervision of its application when granted.
+The King considered that a grant was not necessary in respect of every
+source of revenue--for instance, not in respect to tonnage and
+poundage, and was determined to keep the management entirely in his
+own hands, and to submit to no kind of control over it.
+
+Many other questions, in which wide interests were involved, were
+brought forward for discussion in Parliament, especially in regard to
+ecclesiastical matters: the proceedings of the High Commission were
+attacked again. But the question of the widest range of all was the
+decided attempt to alter the government and to overthrow the great
+minister, which gave perhaps the greatest employment to the
+assembly.[459] It was directed against the favourite personally, for
+he had now incurred universal hatred, but at bottom there also lay the
+definite intention of confirming the doctrine of ministerial
+responsibility by a new and signal example.
+
+How quickly was Buckingham overtaken by Nemesis; that is to say, in
+this, as in so many other instances, how soon was he visited by the
+consequences which in the nature of things attended his actions!
+First, owing to his influence the establishment of that council for
+war had been granted which now gave occasion to the demand for
+Parliamentary control: and next, he had allowed the fall of Bacon, and
+had most deliberately overthrown Cranfield by the help of Parliament.
+These were just the transactions which endangered his own existence by
+the consequences of the principles involved in both cases alike.
+
+The King was certainly moved by personal inclination to take the part
+of his minister; but he was also moved by anxiety about the
+application of these principles. He complained that without actually
+established facts forthcoming, on the strength of general rumour,
+people wished to attack the man on whom he bestowed his confidence:
+but Parliament, he said, was altogether overstepping its competence.
+It was wishing to inspect the books of the royal officers, to pass
+judgment upon the letters of his secretary of state, nay, even upon
+his own: it permitted and sheltered seditious speeches within its
+bosom. There never had been a king, he affirmed, who was more inclined
+to remove real abuses, and to observe a truly Parliamentary course;
+but also there had never been one who was more jealous of his royal
+honour. The more violently Buckingham was attacked, the more it
+appeared to the King a point of honour to take him under his
+protection against charges which he considered futile.
+
+The Lower House did not take up all the points in dispute which the
+King proposed for discussion. It excused some things which had
+occurred to the prejudice of the royal dignity, but in the principal
+matter it was immovable. It asserted, and adhered to its assertion,
+that it was the constant undoubted right of Parliament, exercised as
+well under the most glorious of former reigns as under the last, to
+hold all persons accountable, however high their rank, who should
+abuse the power transferred to them by their sovereign and oppress the
+commonwealth. They maintained that without this liberty no one would
+ever venture to say a word against influential men, and that the
+common-weal would be forced to languish under their violence.
+
+The impeachment was drawn up in regular form by eight members, among
+whom we find the names of Selden, Glanvil, Pym, and Eliot. On the 8th
+of May it was carried by 225 votes to 116 to send up to the Lords a
+proposal for the arrest of Buckingham.
+
+In the Upper House, the members of which were by no means more
+favourable to the Duke, and feared the nomination of a large number of
+peers, Lord Bristol independently brought an accusation against
+Buckingham relating to the failure of the Spanish marriage. The
+conduct of which he is accused may rather have shown ambition and
+foolish assumption than any real criminality; and Buckingham's defence
+is not without force. The Lower House, to whom it was communicated,
+nevertheless expressed their opinion that a formal prosecution must
+take place. It seemed that Buckingham must surely but sink under the
+combined weight of various complaints.
+
+But the King would not allow matters to go so far. Without paying any
+regard to the wish of the Lords to the contrary, he proceeded to
+dissolve this Parliament also (June 15, 1626). In the declaration
+which he issued on the subject, he said that he recognised Joab's hand
+in these estrangements: but in spite of them he would fulfil his duty
+as king of this great nation, and would himself redress their
+grievances and defend them with the sword against foreign enemies.
+
+The opposition between Parliament and the Crown did not develop by
+slow degrees. In its main principles at least it appears immediately
+after the accession of Charles I as a historical necessity.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[446] Lando, Relatione 1622: 'Tiene presenza veramente regia fronte,
+sopraciglio grave, negli occhi e nelli movimenti del corpo gratia
+notabile, indicante prudente temperanza--di pensieri maniere costumi
+commendabilissimi attrahenti la benevolenza et l'amore universale.'
+
+[447] Thus Kensington states to the Queen-mother in France: 'He was
+used ill, not in his entertainment, but in their frivolous delayes,
+and in the unreasonable conditions which they propounded and pressed
+upon the advantage they had of his princely person.' Cabala 289.
+
+[448] Consultation at St. James's on the day after he ascended the
+throne (March 28). 'That which was much insisted upon was a
+parliament, H. Majesty being so forward to have it sit that he did
+both propound and dispute it to have no writs go forth to call a new
+one.' Hacket, Life of Williams ii. 4.
+
+[449] Speech of Sir Thomas Edwards, St. P. O. (not mentioned in the
+Parliamentary Histories). It is there said 'He did not only become a
+continual advocate to his deceased father for the favourable graunting
+of our petitions, but also did interpose his mediation for the
+pacefying and removing of all misunderstandings. God having now added
+the posse to the velle, the kingly power to the willing mind, enabled
+him to execute what before he could but will.'
+
+[450] Letter from the Pope to the Princess, Dec. 28, 1624: 'Cogitans
+ad quorum triumphorum gloriam vadis, fruere interim expectatione tui.'
+
+[451] 'Some spare not to say that all goes backward since this
+connivance in religion came in, both in all wealth valour honour and
+reputation.' Letter of Chamberlain, June 25, 1625.
+
+[452] 'Tonnage, a duty upon all wines imported; poundage, a duty
+imposed ad valorem on all other merchandises whatsoever.' Blackstone,
+Commentaries i. 315.
+
+[453] 'Whosoever gave the counsel (of the meeting in Oxford) had the
+intention to set the king and his people at variance.' Nethersole to
+Carleton, Aug. 9, 1625: a circumstantial and very instructive document
+(St. P. O.).
+
+[454] Hacket ii. 20.
+
+[455] Arthur Ingram to Wentworth, Nov. 1625 (Strafford Papers, i. 29),
+names besides Guy Palmer, Edward Alford, and a seventh, who had not
+had a seat in the last Parliament, Sir W. Fleetwood.
+
+[456] Ewis in Ellis, i. 3, 217. The Dutch ambassador present in
+England, Joachimi, to whose letter I referred, does not seem to have
+mentioned it.
+
+[457] A memorial of what passed in speech from H. M. to the Earl of
+Totness, March 8, 1625-26; St. P. O. The King says 'Let them doe what
+they list: you shall not go to the Tower. It is not you that they aim
+at, but it is me, upon whom they make inquisition. And for subsidies
+that will not hinder it; gold may be bought too dear.'
+
+[458] Correro: 'Questo termino di via parlamentaria vuol dire libere
+concessioni secondo la loro dispositione e di haver cognitione in
+qualche maniera delli impieghi.'
+
+[459] 'Ils disent' (so it is said in Ruszdorf, Negotiations i. 596)
+'que tout alloit mal, que les deniers qu'ils ont contribue ont ete mal
+employes: il falloit toujours et avant toutes choses redresser et
+regler le gouvernement de l'etat.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE COURSE OF FOREIGN POLICY FROM 1625 TO 1627.
+
+
+In reviewing so important a conflict as that which had broken out at
+home, it almost requires an effort of will to bestow deep interest
+upon foreign affairs in turn. But not only is this necessary from the
+connexion between the two, but we should not be able to understand the
+history of England if we left out of consideration its relation to
+those great events of European importance which absorbed even the
+largest share of public attention.
+
+Charles I had undertaken to do what his father avoided to the end of
+his life,--to offer open opposition to the Spanish monarchy and its
+aims. Like Queen Elizabeth he took this step in alliance with France,
+Holland, and the Protestants of Germany and the North, but yet not in
+full agreement with his own people. This was due mainly to the
+circumstance that France had become far more Catholic under Mary de'
+Medici and Louis XIII than it had been under Henry IV. The offensive
+alliance between France and England now developed a character which
+rather irritated than quieted the religious feelings which prevailed
+in England.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1625.]
+
+On the first shocks sustained by the close alliance which had existed
+between the Catholic powers, the Huguenots in France rose in order to
+recover their former rights which had been curtailed. But the French
+government was not at all inclined to give fresh life to these
+powerful and dangerous movements: on the contrary it invoked the
+assistance of England and Holland to put them down. For the great
+strength of the Huguenots lay in their naval resources, and without
+the help of the maritime powers the French government would never
+have been able to overcome them. And so imperative seemed the
+necessity of internal peace in France,[460] if she was to be induced
+to take an active share in the war against Spain, that the English and
+Dutch were actually persuaded to put their crews and vessels at the
+disposal of the French government, which then used them with decisive
+results. The naval power of the Huguenots, which had formed so large
+an element of the fighting strength of the Protestants, was broken by
+the assistance of England and Holland. Queen Elizabeth, in the midst
+of her war with Philip II, would certainly never have been brought to
+this step, and even now it roused the bitterest dislike. It was found
+that the execution of the orders issued met with resistance even on
+board the ships themselves. A light is thrown upon the ill-feeling at
+home, when a member of the Privy Council, Lord Pembroke, tells a
+captain who resisted this mutinous spirit, that the news of the
+insubordination of his crew was the best which he had heard for a long
+time, and that it was welcome even to the King: that he must deal
+leniently with his men, and only see that he remained master of the
+ship.[461] But what an impression must doubtless have been produced on
+the population of England, which still stood in the closest relation
+to the French Reformed! Sermons were delivered from the pulpits
+against these proceedings of the government.
+
+But if the active alliance of France against Spain and Austria was
+secured by this immense sacrifice, what could have appeared more
+natural than to employ the whole strength of that country for the
+restoration of the Count Palatine, which the French saw to be
+advantageous to themselves, and for the support of German
+Protestantism? In pursuance of the stipulations which had been made
+the King of Denmark was already in the field: his troops had already
+fought hand to hand at Nienburg in the circle of Lower Saxony with
+the forces of the League which were pressing forward into that
+country. He was strong in cavalry but weak in infantry: the German
+envoys who were present in England insisted that gallant English
+troops should be sent to his assistance, and that the fleet which was
+ready for service should be ordered to the Weser; for that the support
+which the fleet would give to the King would encourage him to advance
+with good heart. And then, as they added with extravagant hopefulness,
+the King of Sweden, who had already offered his aid, would come
+forward actively, if only he had some security; the Elector of
+Brandenburg, who had just married his sister to the King of Sweden,
+would declare himself; the Prince of Transylvania, who was connected
+with the same family, would force his way into Bohemia: every one
+would withstand the League and compel it to restore the lands occupied
+by it to their former sovereigns, and to the religion hitherto
+professed in them.
+
+But Buckingham had as little sympathy with the German as with the
+French Protestants: his passionate ambition was to make the Spaniards
+directly feel the weight of his hatred. For this purpose he had just
+concluded an offensive and defensive alliance with the United
+Provinces; even the great maritime interests of England were
+themselves a reason for opposing Spain. At all events, in the autumn
+of 1625 he despatched the fleet, not to the Weser, which appeared to
+him almost unworthy of this great expedition, but against the coasts
+of the Spanish peninsula. Orders were given to it to enter the mouth
+of the Guadalquivir, and to alarm Seville, or else to take the town of
+Cadiz, for which object it had on board a considerable number of land
+troops; or, finally, to lie in wait for the Spanish fleet laden with
+silver, and to bring home the cargo as a lawful prize. Buckingham
+proceeded on the supposition that the foundation of the Spanish power
+and its influence would be undermined by the interruption of the
+Spanish trade with America, and that in the next year the Spaniards
+would be able to effect nothing. He did not perceive that this would
+have no decisive influence on that undertaking on which in the first
+instance everything depended, that of the King of Denmark, as
+meanwhile in Rome, Vienna, and Munich, native forces, independent of
+Spain, had been collected. But while he preferred the more distant to
+the more immediate end, it was his fate to achieve neither the one nor
+the other. In December 1625 the fleet returned without having effected
+anything at sea or on the Spanish coasts. On the contrary it had
+suffered the heaviest losses itself.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1626.]
+
+The discredit into which Buckingham fell with those whom he had
+desired to win over, and whose wishes were fixed on the struggle with
+Spain, is exhibited in a very extraordinary enterprise which sprung up
+at this time, and which had for its object the formation of what we
+may almost call a joint-stock war company. A wish was felt to form a
+company for making war on Spain, upon the basis, it is true, of a
+royal charter, but under the authority of Parliament, with the
+intention of sharing the booty and the conquests, as well as the costs
+among the members.[462]
+
+By the late enterprise moreover the means had been wasted which might
+have been used for supporting the German allies of England. Left
+without sufficient subsidies in his quarrel with Parliament, the King
+was unable to pay the arrears due both to the seamen who were
+returning from Spain, and to his troops in Holland. He could not
+repair his fleet; he could hardly defend his coasts: how could he be
+in a position to make any persevering effort for the conduct of the
+war in Germany? The King of Sweden asked for only L15,000 in order to
+set his forces in motion; but at that time this sum could not be
+raised. The King of Denmark was the more thrown on England, as the
+French also made their services depend on what the English would do:
+but Conway, the Secretary of State, declared himself unable to pay the
+stipulated sum. Could men feel astonished that the Danish war was not
+carried on with the energy which the cause seemed to demand?
+Christian IV had not troops enough, and could not pay even those which
+he had. The cavalry, which constituted his main strength, had on one
+occasion refused to fight, because they had not received their pay. He
+himself threw the chief blame on the English for the defeat which he
+now sustained at Lutter; and which was the more decisive, as meanwhile
+Mansfeld also, who wished to turn his steps to the hereditary
+dominions of Austria in order to combine with the Prince of
+Transylvania, had been not only defeated, but almost annihilated. The
+armies which were to have defended the Protestant cause disappeared
+from off the field. The forces of the Emperor and of the League now
+occupied North Germany also on both sides of the Elbe.
+
+To Germany the alliance with England had at that time brought no good.
+It may be doubted whether the Elector Palatine would have accepted the
+crown of Bohemia but for the support which he thought to find in
+England. This affair had a great part in bringing on the outbreak of
+the great religious conflict. But James I sought to retrieve the
+misfortune into which the Elector had fallen, not so much by employing
+his own power, as by developing his relations with the Spaniards; and
+thus he had himself given them the opportunity of establishing
+themselves in the Palatinate, and had caused the Catholic reaction to
+triumph in Upper Germany. Without the instigation of England, and the
+great combination of the powers in East and West hostile to the house
+of Austria, the King of Denmark would not have determined to begin
+war, nor would the circle of Lower Saxony have aided him. On this
+occasion as on others in England the interests of its own power
+outweighed consideration for the allies. The policy of the English had
+formerly been ruled by their friendly relations with Spain: it was now
+ruled by their hostile intentions towards that country. All available
+forces were employed for their purpose, and the movement in Germany
+was left to its fate.
+
+Meanwhile another consequence of the breach with Spain came to light,
+which King James had always feared. In order not to be forced to fight
+both great powers at once, Spain found it advisable to show a
+compliance hitherto unprecedented in the affairs of Italy, in which
+France had interested herself. After this the irritation against the
+ascendancy of the Spaniards evidently abated in France.
+
+For in alliances of great powers it is self-evident that their
+political points of view, if for a moment they coincide, must
+nevertheless in a short time be again opposed to one another. How
+should one power really seek the permanent advantage of another?
+
+At that time also, as on so many occasions, other relations arising
+out of the position of the leading statesmen as members of parties,
+produced an effect on politics. Cardinal Richelieu met with opposition
+from a zealously Catholic party, which gathered round the queen
+mother, and considered the influence of Spain to a certain degree
+necessary. This party seized the first favourable opportunity of
+setting on foot a preliminary treaty of peace, to which Richelieu,
+however long he hesitated, and however much he disliked it, could not
+help acceding.
+
+Quite in keeping with this understanding between the Catholic powers
+was the partial recoil of Protestantism in England from the advances
+which it had made to the Catholic party. The French who surrounded the
+Queen were so numerous, that a strong feeling of opposition on
+religious and national grounds was awakened in them by their contact
+with the English character. They saw in the English nothing but
+heretics and apostates; the Catholics who had formerly been executed
+at Tyburn as rebels they honoured as martyrs. The Queen herself, upon
+whom her priests laid all kinds of penance corresponding to her
+dignity, was once induced to take part in a procession to this place
+of execution. It is conceivable how deeply wounded and irritated the
+English must have felt at these odious demonstrations. To the King it
+seemed insufferable that the household of his consort should take up a
+position of open hostility to the ecclesiastical laws of the land.
+Personally also he felt injured and affronted. We hear complaints from
+him that he was robbed of his sleep at night by these demonstrations.
+He quickly and properly resolved to rid himself once for all of these
+refractory people, whatever might be the consequence. The Queen's
+court was then refusing to admit into it the English ladies whom he
+had appointed to attend on her. The King seized the opportunity: he
+invited his wife to dine with him, for they still had separate
+households; and after dinner he made her understand by degrees that he
+could no longer put up with this exhibition of feeling on the part of
+her retinue, but must send them all home again, priests and laymen,
+men and women alike.[463] This resolution was carried out in spite of
+all the resistance offered by those whom it affected. Only some few
+ladies and two priests of moderate views were left with the Queen; all
+the rest were shipped off to France. There they filled the court and
+the country with their complaints. Those about the Queen-mother
+assumed an air as if the most sacred agreements had been infringed,
+and any measure of retaliation was thought justifiable.
+
+Marshal Bassompierre indeed set out once more for England in order to
+bring about a reconciliation. Though ill received at first, he
+nevertheless won his way by his splendid appearance and by clever talk
+and moderation. In a preliminary agreement leave was given to the
+Queen to receive back a number of priests and some French ladies;[464]
+and Buckingham prepared to go to France to remove the obstacles still
+remaining. But meanwhile the feeling of estrangement at the French
+court had become still stronger. The agreement was not approved: and
+the court would not hear of a visit from Buckingham, as it was thought
+that he would be sure to use the opportunity afforded by his presence
+to stir up the Huguenots. Richelieu thought that the dispute with
+England had been provoked by his enemies in order to break up the
+friendly relations which he had established. But nevertheless he too
+did not wish to see Buckingham in France, for he feared that the
+English minister might side outright with his opponents.
+
+Personal considerations of many kinds co-operated in producing this
+result, but it was not due mainly to their influence. The religious
+sympathies and hatreds at work had incalculable effects. While the
+opposition between the two religions again awoke in all its strength,
+and a struggle for life and death was being fought out between them in
+Germany, an alliance could not well be maintained between two courts
+which professed opposite religious views. The current of the general
+tendencies of affairs has a power by which the best considered
+political combinations are swept into the background.
+
+The paramount importance of religious movements not only prevented a
+combination between France and England, but also brought both Catholic
+powers into closer agreement with one another, as soon as their
+immediate differences had been in some measure adjusted. Father
+Berulle had promoted the marriage of a French princess with the King
+of England in the hope of converting him; but now that he became
+conscious of his mistake, he lent his pen to a project for a common
+attack to be made by the Catholic powers upon England. The domestic
+dissensions in that country, which again aroused Catholic sympathies
+among a part of the population, appeared to favour such a project. An
+agreement on the subject was in treaty for some time. It was at last
+concluded and ratified in France in the form in which it was sent back
+from Spain.[465]
+
+Although it is not clear that people in England had authentic
+information of these negotiations, yet the advances made by the two
+courts to one another, which were visible to every one, could not but
+cause some anxiety in the third. The English were always anxiously
+considering what Philip IV might have in view for the next year; at
+times even in Charles' reign they feared another attack from the
+Belgian coast. What would happen if France lent her aid in such an
+enterprise? It was known at all events that the priests exhorted her
+to do so. That France and Spain should make a joint attack on England
+appeared to be most for the interest of the Catholic world.[466]
+
+Another ground for anxiety in England was from that resolution to
+revive the French naval power, which Richelieu had already taken in
+consequence of his late experiences. He bought ships of war, or had
+them built, and took foreign sailors into his service. Charles I
+perceived this with the greatest displeasure. He regarded it as a
+threat against England, for he thought that the French could have no
+other intention than that of robbing England of the supremacy that she
+had exercised from time immemorial over the sea which bears her name.
+He declared that he was resolved to prevent matters from going so far.
+
+A great effect was produced by a very definite misunderstanding which
+now arose between England and France, and affected naval interests as
+well as the question of religion.
+
+Of all the French Huguenots, who had been compelled by their last
+defeat to seek peace with the King, the citizens of Rochelle felt the
+blow most deeply. They had at that time been hemmed in on all sides,
+and were especially harassed by a fort erected in their neighbourhood.
+They had been assured that at the proper time they would be relieved
+of this annoyance. They had not an express and unequivocal promise;
+but the English ambassador, who had been invited to mediate, had
+guaranteed to them, after conference with the French ministry, such an
+interpretation of the expressions used as would secure the wished-for
+result.[467] But just the contrary took place: they were constantly
+being more closely shut in, and more seriously threatened with the
+loss of that measure of independence which they had hitherto enjoyed.
+They turned to Charles I. They would rather have acknowledged him as
+their sovereign than have submitted to such a loss, and he felt the
+full weight of his obligation to them. But, if he desired to grant
+them assistance, it could only be rendered by open war.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1627.]
+
+When the English resolved to undertake an expedition against the
+Island of Rhe, the prevention of the fall of Rochelle was not the
+only object in view. It was rather considered that nothing could be
+more desirable and advantageous than the command of this island in the
+event of a struggle with the two powers. For Biscay could be reached
+in a voyage of one night from thence, and the communication between
+the Netherlands and the harbours on the north-east coast of Spain
+could at any time be interrupted by the possessors of the island,
+which might be used at the same time for keeping up constant
+communication with the Huguenots, and for giving the French power
+employment at home.[468] The Huguenots had already taken up arms
+again, and Rochelle displayed the English banner on its walls. Charles
+I intended to use Rhe as a station for his fleet, but to cede the
+general sovereignty over it to Rochelle. A successful result here
+might serve to infuse new life into the Protestant cause.
+
+In order to achieve so great an end the King thought it admissible to
+levy a forced loan, and thus to collect those sums which Parliament
+had promised him by word of mouth, but had not yet formally granted.
+We shall have hereafter to consider the resistance which he
+encountered in this attempt, and the various arbitrary acts to which
+he resorted for its suppression; for they formed one of the turning
+points of his history. At first he actually succeeded so far, that a
+fleet of more than a hundred sail was able to put to sea for the
+attack of Rhe and the support of Rochelle. It was considered in
+raising this loan that a war with France had greater claims upon
+popular support than any other. In the present doubtful state of
+affairs a decided advantage gained in such a war might even now have
+exercised great influence upon the internal state of the kingdom.
+
+At this juncture Buckingham assumed a position of extraordinary
+importance. After the repeated failures of the Protestants, his
+undertaking aroused all their hopes. Directed against both the
+Catholic powers, it must, if successful, have directly benefited the
+French Protestants, and indirectly the German Protestants also by the
+effect which it would inevitably have produced. But it was besides one
+enterprise more undertaken by the sole power of the monarch: it was
+carried out independently of any Parliamentary grants properly so
+called. It represented the principle of a moderate monarchical
+Protestantism, combined with toleration for the native Catholics,
+among whom Buckingham endeavoured to find support. His was a position
+of which the occupant must either be a great man or perish.
+Buckingham, who had no equal in restless activity, and was by nature
+not devoid of adroitness and ability, nevertheless had not that
+persevering and comprehensive energy which is required for the
+performance of great actions. He had not gone through the school of
+those experiences in which minds ripen: and for the want of this
+training his native gifts were not sufficient to compensate. He was so
+far fortunate as to gain possession of the Island of Rhe; but Fort
+Martin, which had been erected there a short time before, and on which
+the possession of the island depended, defied his attacks, and he was
+not skilful enough to intercept the support which was thrown into the
+fort in the hour of its greatest danger. The defence of the French
+certainly showed greater perseverance than the attack of the English.
+Buckingham did not know how to awaken among his men that fiery
+devotion which shrinks from no obstacle, and which would have been
+necessary here. And the measures which were arranged at home were not
+so effective as to bring him at the right moment the reinforcement he
+needed. In November 1627 he returned to England without having
+effected his object. He left behind him the French Protestants, and
+Rochelle especially, in the greatest distress.
+
+Charles I had no intention of proving false to the promises which he
+had given them, any more than he wished to allow the King of Denmark
+to sink under his difficulties. But what means did he possess of
+bestowing help either on the former or on the latter?
+
+After the battle of Lutter he had told the Danish ambassador, that he
+would come to the assistance of his uncle, even if he should have to
+pawn his crown. How heavily his position weighed on him at that time!
+While he had undertaken the responsibility of contending for the
+greatest interests of the world, he was obliged to confess, and did so
+with tears in his eyes, that at present he hardly had at his disposal
+the means of defraying the necessary expenses of his daily life.
+
+The King of Denmark advised him to call Parliament together again, and
+make the needful concessions, in order to obtain such subsidies as
+would enable him to give vigorous support to his allies. Charles I in
+the first instance took umbrage at this, because it was good advice
+from an uncle and an elder, as if some blame were thereby cast on him:
+by degrees he became convinced of the necessity of this measure.
+
+It was quite evident from the events of the last few years that the
+King would not be able to maintain the position he had assumed,
+without active support from Parliament.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[460] Z. Pesaro, April 25, 1625: 'Che la conservatione della pace in
+Francia sara il fondamento del beneficio comune, che li rumori civili
+in quella natione sariano il solo remedio che Spagnoli procurano alli
+loro mali.'
+
+[461] 'That the King and all the rest were exceedingly glad of that
+relation which he made of the discontent and mutiny of his compagnie.'
+
+[462] M. A. Correro: 'Trattano di formar una compagnia per la quale
+possino con l'autorita del parlamente e privilegi reggi attaccare con
+una flotte il re di Spagna per dividere l'interesse della spesa e
+l'utile delli bottini e delli acquisti nelli compagni che ne averanno
+parte (27 Mayo 1626).'
+
+[463] Letter to Joseph Mead: Court and Times of Charles I, i. 134.
+
+[464] According to Ruszdorf, who was well acquainted with
+Bassompierre, the latter represented 'hoc facto regem obligatum nihil
+esse intermissurum, quod ad conservationem fortunae illius queat
+conducere.'
+
+[465] Siri, Memorie recondite vi. 261.
+
+[466] Letter to Joseph Mead, March 16, 1626: 'It still holds that both
+France and Spain make exceeding great preparations both for sea and
+land.--The priests of the Dunkirkers are said to preach that God had
+delivered us into their hands.' (Court and Times of Charles I, i.
+205).
+
+[467] I refer for the fuller explanation of these transactions to my
+History of the Popes and my French History. My meaning is very fully
+recognised in an essay in the Revue Germanique, Nov. 1859.
+
+[468] Beaulieu to Pickering. 'It lieth in the way to intercept the
+salt that cometh from Biscaje and serveth almost all France, and what
+so ever cometh out of the river of Bourdeaux: besides it commandeth
+the haven of Rochelle.' (Court and Times of Charles I, i. 257).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+PARLIAMENT OF 1628. PETITION OF RIGHT.
+
+
+In the heat of controversy about the supplies to be granted and the
+liberties to be confirmed by the King in return, it was once harshly
+said in the Lower House during this Parliament that it was better to
+be brought low by foreign enemies than to be obliged to suffer
+oppression at home. The King answered by saying no less abruptly that
+it was more honourable for the King to be straitened by the enemies of
+his country, than to be set at nought by his own subjects.
+
+So much more importance was attached by both sides to domestic than to
+foreign struggles. But after the last failure both parties had come to
+feel how much the honour of the country and religion itself suffered
+from their dissensions. Among the politicians of the time there was a
+school of learned men, who had studied the old constitution of the
+country, and wished for nothing more than its restoration. They were
+seriously bent on establishing an equilibrium between the royal
+prerogative and the rights of Parliament. Among them were found Edward
+Coke, John Selden, and John Glanvil; but Robert Cotton may be regarded
+as the most distinguished of them all, a man who had studied most
+deeply, and who combined with his studies an insight into the present
+that was unclouded by passion. To Cotton we owe a report presented by
+him to the Privy Council, in which he explains that the government
+should proceed on the old royal road of collecting taxes by grant of
+Parliament, and indeed should adopt no other method; while at the same
+time he expresses the conviction that Parliament would be satisfied,
+if its most pressing anxieties were dissipated. He says that he
+himself would not advise the King to sacrifice the First Minister, for
+that such a step had always had ruinous consequences: he thought
+moreover that the old passionate hostility against the Duke need not
+be feared, if he came forward himself as the man who had advised the
+King to reassemble Parliament.[469] We learn that the King did not
+determine to summon it, until the most prominent men had given him an
+assurance that Buckingham should not be attacked. Moderation in the
+attitude of Parliament, and security for the First Minister formed as
+it were the condition under which the Parliament of 1628 was
+summoned.[470]
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1628.]
+
+On March 22, five days after the beginning of the session, the
+deliberations of the Lower House were opened by the remark from the
+Speaker, that they must indeed grant subsidies to the King; but that
+at the same time they must maintain the undoubted rights of the
+country. Francis Seymour, who had now again been returned to
+Parliament, at once expressed himself to the same effect. While he
+acknowledged that every one must make sacrifices for king and country,
+he shewed at the same time that it was a sacred duty to cling to their
+ancestral laws. He proceeded to say that these laws had been
+transgressed, their liberties infringed, their own selves personally
+ill-treated, and their property, with which they might have supported
+the King, exhausted. He proposed therefore to secure the rights, laws,
+and liberties transmitted from their ancestors by means of a petition
+to the King.[471]
+
+Whatever be the tone of opposition which this language betrays, it
+fell far short of that adopted in the former Parliament. Men had come
+to an opinion that certainly no money should be granted unless
+securities could be obtained for their ancient liberties; but at the
+same time that the King should not be induced to grasp directly at
+absolute power, for that this would lead at once to a rebellion of
+uncertain issue.[472] Men were resolved to avoid questions which could
+rouse old passions. This time it was not insisted that the penal laws
+against the Catholics should be made more severe: Parliament waived
+its claim to alter the constitution of the Admiralty, and to appoint
+treasurers to manage the money granted to the King: it showed
+deference for the King, and said nothing of the Duke. But a commission
+was appointed to take into consideration the rights which subjects
+ought to have over their persons and property. Already on April 3
+resolutions were proposed to the House, by which it was intended that
+some of the most obnoxious grievances which had lately arisen should
+be made for ever impossible, such as the collection of taxes that had
+not been granted, and restraints imposed on personal liberty in
+consequence of refusal to pay.[473]
+
+Charles I also now took up this question. Through Coke his Secretary
+of State, who was also a member of the House, he issued an invitation
+to them not to allow themselves to be deterred by any anxiety about
+liberty or property from making those grants, on which, as he said,
+the welfare of Christendom depended; 'upon assurance,' Coke proceeds
+to add, 'that we shall enjoy our rights and liberties, with as much
+freedom and security in his time as in any age heretofore under the
+best of our kings; and whether you shall think fit to secure ourselves
+herein, by way of bill or otherwise, so as it be provided for with due
+respect to his honour and the publick good whereof he doubteth not
+that you will be careful, he promiseth and assureth you that he will
+give way to it.'
+
+This is indeed a very important message. The King approves of an
+inquiry into the violations of old English right and prescription,
+which had taken place in his reign. He consents that a bill to secure
+their observance should be drawn up, and gives hopes beforehand of its
+ratification. Charles I, like James, had constantly been anxious to
+prevent grants from being made dependent on conditions; but something
+very like this occurs when he backs his invitation to a speedy grant
+of subsidies by a promise to approve of the petition submitted to him
+for certain objects.
+
+On this five subsidies were without delay unanimously granted to the
+King, with the concurrence even of members like Pym, who
+systematically opposed him. It was now only necessary that both sides
+should agree on the enactments for doing away with the abuses which
+had been pointed out.
+
+The principal grievance arose from the conduct of the King, who in his
+embarrassments had imposed a forced loan at the rate fixed on the
+occasion of the last subsidies, and had sent commissioners into the
+counties in order to exact payment, just as if he had been armed with
+the authority of Parliament for this object. Many had submitted: but
+not a few others high and low had refused to pay, not from want of
+means but on principle. The King had thought this behaviour a proof of
+personal disaffection, and had had no hesitation in arresting those
+who refused: he had even taken steps to assert his right to do so as a
+matter of principle. Much notice was attracted at that time by a
+sermon preached by one Sibthorp, in which plenary legislative
+authority was ascribed to the King, and unconditional obedience was
+demanded for all his orders if they did not contradict the divine
+commands. Archbishop Abbot had steadfastly refused to allow the
+printing of this sermon, which he regarded as an attack upon the
+constitution: eighteen times in succession an intimate friend of the
+King went to him to urge him to give leave.[474] As the Archbishop
+refused to comply, he received orders to leave London, and was struck
+out of the High Commission: the sermon had been printed with the
+permission of another bishop. So earnestly bent was the King at that
+time on pressing his claim to override the necessity of a
+parliamentary grant in moments of emergency.
+
+He had now however retreated from this position. Abbot had obtained
+permission to resume his seat in the Upper House, and so had Lord
+Bristol. When, in consequence of the above-mentioned declaration in
+Parliament, a project was now decided on for securing the legal
+position of the subject, especially the rights of property and
+personal freedom, which had been infringed by the previous
+proceedings, the King expressed his agreement loudly, explicitly, and
+repeatedly; in general terms he gave up his claim ever to proceed
+again to a forced loan. No one was ever to be arrested again because
+he would not lend money; and in all other cases where arrest was
+necessary the customary forms were to be observed.
+
+At this point however another question arose touching the very essence
+of the supreme power. The Lower House was not yet content that an
+abuse like that which had occurred should be merely removed: it wished
+to destroy it at the root. It was not satisfied with the promise of
+the King that he would never in any case punish by arrest, unless he
+was convinced in his conscience of its necessity. They wished to put
+an end to this discretionary power itself, of which his ministers
+could avail themselves at pleasure. Parliament demanded that
+henceforth no one should be arrested without assignment of the reason
+and observance of the forms of law.
+
+This question led to a discussion of points of constitutional doctrine
+before the House of Lords, between the representatives of the Lower
+House and Sir Robert Heath, the Attorney General, in an argument which
+deserves our whole attention.
+
+The Lower House appealed to that article of Magna Charta, by which the
+arrest of free persons was forbidden except on the judgment of their
+peers, or according to the law of the land: and by the law of the land
+it understood the judicial process and its forms. Sir Robert Heath
+would not admit this interpretation. He thought that the expression in
+no way forbade the King to restrict the liberty of individuals in
+extraordinary cases for reasons of state; and that this restriction
+could not be avoided, when it was desired to trace out some conspiracy
+or treason. If the cause were to be assigned he thought that it must
+be the real cause, which could be proved before a tribunal; but how
+often cases arose of such a kind that arrest would have to be ordered
+under some other pretext, until the ring-leader could be laid hold of!
+It was very true, he said, that such a power might be seriously
+abused, but it was the same with all the rights of the prerogative:
+even the right of making war and peace, and the right of pardon might
+be abused, and yet no man wished to take these from the crown: it
+always was, and must always be presumed, that the King would not
+betray the confidence of God, who had placed him in his office.
+
+Not without good reason did Edward Coke call this the greatest
+question which had ever been argued in Westminster. It was proved to
+him that he himself as judge had followed the interpretation which he
+now condemned. He answered that he was not pope, and made no
+pretensions to infallibility. He now firmly maintained that the King
+had no such prerogative at all.
+
+We can see how opinion wavered from a speech of Sir Benjamin Rudyard,
+who maintains on the one hand that it is impossible to find laws
+beforehand for every case, but that a circle must be drawn within
+which the royal authority shall prevail; while on the other hand he
+lays emphasis also on the danger arising from the plea of mere reasons
+of state, which he said would only too easily come into conflict with
+the laws and with religion itself. The best arrangement according to
+him would be, if Parliament were held so often that the irregular
+power which could not be broken at once, might by degrees 'moulder
+away.' A copy of this speech with observations by Laud is extant in
+the archives. Laud calls attention to the contradiction which lies in
+first acknowledging the necessity of liberty of movement on the part
+of the government, and then notwithstanding considering it to be the
+destination of Parliament by degrees to absorb its power, as it was at
+present exercised.[475]
+
+And certainly it may have been the idea of the moderate members of
+the House of Commons, gradually to break up such a power as that
+exercised by the minister and favourite, by coming to a better
+understanding with the King, and at the same time by strictly limiting
+his arbitrary authority.
+
+The impression however gained ground that even the indispensable
+functions of the supreme authority would be restricted by the
+enactments proposed. The right of arresting persons dangerous and
+troublesome to the government was just then exercised in France to the
+widest extent; Cardinal Richelieu could never have maintained himself
+but for his quick and energetic use of it. In all other states, as
+well republican as monarchical, it was a weapon with which the
+government thought that it could not dispense. Was it to be dropped in
+England alone? And that too at a moment when the opposition of
+factions was constantly becoming more active? In fact the impression
+spread that Parliament, not content with full promises from the King,
+while it checked abuses, was impairing his authority.
+
+In the Upper House, where there was a strong party in favour of the
+King's prerogative, these and similar considerations influenced votes.
+Men were agreed that abuses like those which had occurred must be for
+ever put a stop to. Even the proposals introduced for securing
+individual freedom were not properly speaking rejected: but it was
+desired to limit them by a clause to the effect that the sovereign
+power with which the King was entrusted should remain in his hands
+undiminished for the protection of his people. The Lower House however
+would not accept any such addition: for the provisions of the Petition
+would thus be rendered useless. They foresaw that what those
+provisions forbade would pass as lawful in virtue of the plenitude of
+the sovereign power: yet the expression 'sovereign power' was unknown
+in the English Parliament: that body was familiar only with the
+prerogative of the King, which at the same time was embodied in the
+laws. The Upper House on this declared that it did not think of
+departing from the Oath by which each one of them was pledged to
+maintain the prerogative of the King. Even in the Lower House the
+members were reminded of this, and no one raised his voice against
+it; for who would have been willing to confess that he was
+withstanding the lawful prerogative of the King? The only question was
+as to its extent.
+
+This question now presented itself to the King himself. Was he to
+accept the proposal of the Commons, and to content himself with a
+general reservation of his prerogative? It is very instructive, and
+forms one of the most important steps in his career, that he thought
+it advisable to inform himself first of all what rights in this matter
+he really possessed.
+
+On the 26th of May, just when the heat of the quarrel was most
+intense, he summoned the two Chief Justices, Hyde and Richardson, to
+Whitehall, and submitted to them the question whether or not he had
+the right of ordering the arrest of his subjects without specifying
+the reason at the same time. On this the Judges were assembled by
+their two chiefs in the profoundest secrecy, to pronounce on the
+question. They decided that it certainly was the rule to specify the
+reasons; but that there might be cases in which the secrecy required
+made it necessary for some time to withhold them. A further question
+was then followed by a decision of the same import, that the judges in
+such a case were not bound to give up the prisoner even if a writ of
+habeas corpus were presented. Charles then proceeded to a third
+question, to which no doubt he attached the most importance. If he
+accepted the petition of the Commons, did he surrender for ever the
+right of ordering imprisonment without assigning a cause? The judges
+assembled again, and on the 31st of May, after deliberating together,
+they gave in their answer, signed with their names. Every law, they
+said, had its own interpretation; and so must this petition: and the
+answer must always depend upon the circumstances of the case in
+question, which could not be determined until the case arose; but the
+King certainly did not give up his right beforehand by granting the
+petition.[476]
+
+At a later time and in another epoch these questions were finally
+settled in a different way. The Judges of this time decided them in
+favour of the power of the time. If we might apply a parallel, though
+certainly one borrowed from a very different form of government, we
+might say that the fettah of men learned in the law, the sentence of
+the mufti, was in favour of the King. In this, as in other respects, a
+difference is found to exist between the constitutions of the East and
+those of the West: such a sentence in the West does not finally decide
+a case; but even here, nevertheless, it always carries great weight.
+Charles I felt that according to the existing state of the law, he did
+not exceed his rights by maintaining the prerogative which he had
+hitherto exercised. The last decision raised him even above the
+apprehension of losing it by acceding to a petition which was opposed
+to it.
+
+He could not however resolve on this step without further
+consideration.
+
+To accede to the petition, and at the same time to reserve in his own
+favour the declaration made by the Judges, was an act of duplicity,
+which he wished to escape by giving an assurance couched in general
+terms.
+
+On the 2nd of June he came down to the House in full assembly, and had
+his answer read. Its tenor was, that the laws should be observed and
+the statutes put in force, and his subjects freed from oppression;
+that he the King was as anxious for their true rights and liberties as
+for his own prerogative.
+
+But it is easily intelligible that these words satisfied no one. They
+appeared to one party as dark as the sentence of an oracle; to the
+other they appeared useless; for the King, they said, was already
+pledged to all this by his Coronation Oath: such long sittings and so
+much labour would not have been required to effect such a result as
+this. The answer however was not ascribed to the King, whose
+deliberations remained shrouded in the closest secrecy, and who on the
+contrary was thought to agree with the substance of the petition, but
+to the favourite, who was supposed to find such an agreement dangerous
+for himself.[477] It was remarked that two days before making this
+declaration the King had been at one of the country seats of the
+Duke, and had held confidential conversations with him. It was thought
+that there, under the influence of the Duke, the declaration had been
+drawn up, which contained nothing but words that might easily be
+explained in another sense, and which did not even make any mention of
+the petition at all. It was fancied that Buckingham even wished to
+hinder the King from coming to a genuine understanding with his
+Parliament, which might be disadvantageous to his interests.[478] His
+opponents thought that he was at the root of all previous misfortunes;
+and what might they not still expect from him? He was credited with
+wishing to alter the constitution of England, to excite a war with
+Scotland, and to betray Ireland to the Spaniards. In spite of all that
+the King might have originally expected, they determined to make a
+direct attack upon such a minister. Popular susceptibility knows no
+limits in its anxieties or hopes, in its likings or hatreds. Even
+thoughtful and serious men allowed themselves to entertain the opinion
+that the prosperity of England at home and abroad was as good as lost:
+the former was lost if people were content with the answer given, the
+latter if they refused to make the grants demanded, or even if they
+made them but left the administration in those untrustworthy hands in
+which it was at the present time. On one occasion these feelings gave
+rise to an unparalleled scene in Parliament. Those bearded and sedate
+men wept and cursed. They feared for their country, and each one
+feared for himself, if they did not get rid of the man who possessed
+power, while on the other hand it seemed to them impossible to do so.
+Some could not speak for tears: violent exclamations against the Duke
+prevented the continuance of the debate. But not only were complaints
+heard: the expression was also heard, that men had still hands and
+swords, and could get rid of the enemy of King and country by his
+death. They proceeded at last to deliberate on a protestation which
+was resolved on after that debate, and they had gone so far as to name
+the Duke, and to declare him a traitor, when the Speaker who had
+quitted the House came in again, and brought a message from the King,
+by which the sitting was adjourned to the following day.
+
+No course seemed to be left for Charles I but to dissolve this
+Parliament immediately as he had dissolved its predecessor. But what
+would then have become of the grant of money, which was every day more
+urgently needed? Like the Petition, it would have fallen to the
+ground.
+
+Before the end of the same day, June 5, a meeting of the Privy Council
+was held, in which it was resolved to calm the agitation by accepting
+the Petition of Right. We do not learn if on that occasion the
+scruples of the King were discussed or not; but as his questions to
+the judges already betrayed his inclination to such a course, so now
+he actually resolved to plunge into the contradiction which he had
+wished to avoid, and accept the Petition while at the same time, in
+accordance with the sentence of the Judges, he would reserve for
+himself the future exercise of the right therein denied.
+
+On June 7 the King appeared in the Upper House, where the Commons also
+were assembled. The Lords were in their robes, and the King sat upon
+his throne while the Petition of Right was read. It was directed
+against some temporary grievances, such as forced billeting and the
+application of martial law in time of peace, but principally against
+the exaction of forced loans, or taxes which had not been granted, and
+against the imprisonments which had been so much talked of. The King,
+as had been desired, uttered the formula of assent used by his Norman
+ancestors. His words were greeted with clapping of hands and
+acclamations. The King added that he had meant just as much by his
+first declaration; indeed he knew well that it was not the intention
+of Parliament, nor even in its power, to limit his prerogative: for
+that this would be strengthened by the liberties of the people, and
+consisted in defending those liberties.[479]
+
+The excitement of the House was taken up by the city. The bells were
+rung, and bonfires were kindled; and a rumour obtained credence that
+the Duke of Buckingham himself had fallen, and was expecting his
+reward on the scaffold. Of what an illusion were men the victims! The
+King clung to Buckingham as firmly as ever: in granting the Petition
+he did not mean to surrender a jot of his lawful prerogative. We have
+seen what he thought of his right to make arrests. In resigning his
+claim to levy taxes that had not been granted by Parliament he did not
+mean to be restricted in his claim to tonnage and poundage, for he
+thought that, unless these were collected, the administration of the
+State could not be carried on at all, and in the late controversies
+his right to them had not come under discussion. Some of the higher
+officials, the Recorder and the Solicitor General, confirmed the King
+in this view: and to many of his opponents in Parliament it was
+pointed out that they had previously entertained the same opinion.
+
+The Lower House on its part allowed the bill, by which the grant was
+made, to pass the last stage; but it could not be moved by advice or
+warning to desist from the great Remonstrance, in the composition of
+which the House had been interrupted. In this, mention was made of the
+Arminian opinions which were now making way in England, and which
+appeared to Parliament to involve a tendency in the direction of
+Romanism: but it complained principally of the connivance, which in
+spite of all ordinances was still constantly extended to the
+recusants, so that Catholicism, especially in Ireland, had the fullest
+scope. And the State, it was said, was in just the same plight as
+religion. The government was introducing foreign soldiers, especially
+German troopers, and was meditating the imposition of new taxes in
+order to pay them. In the midst of peace a general was commanding in
+the country. Trustworthy men were being dismissed from their offices;
+Parliament and its rights were contemned: was it intended to 'change
+the frame both of religion and government?'[480] But the source of all
+evil was the Duke of Buckingham. The remonstrants begged the King to
+consider whether it was advisable for himself and for his kingdom to
+allow him to continue in his high offices, and to keep him among his
+confidential advisers.[481]
+
+As we gather, the Lower House attached weight to the circumstance that
+it did not raise a complaint, nor even strictly speaking a protest,
+against the continuance of Buckingham's authority, but simply
+preferred a request that the position of affairs should be taken into
+consideration. But the King was greatly offended even at this. He
+replied that he had hitherto always believed that the members of the
+Lower House understood nothing about the affairs of State, and that he
+was now greatly strengthened in his opinion by the purport of this
+representation.[482] Buckingham prayed the King to cause unsparing
+investigation into the charges raised against him to be made, for that
+such a proceeding would bring his innocence to light. The King offered
+him his hand to kiss, and addressed to him some friendly expressions.
+But the Lower House was incensed afresh at the bad success of its
+representation, and proceeded to adopt an express remonstrance on the
+subject of tonnage and poundage. In order to save himself from again
+receiving such an address, the King declared Parliament to be
+prorogued on June 20.
+
+Although it was assumed just at that time that a genuine understanding
+between the Crown and the Parliament had been brought about in this
+session, yet this assumption is certainly a mistake. At the beginning
+of the session suspicious controversies were intentionally avoided. A
+basis was obtained upon which union between the two parties seamed
+possible: the great Petition of Right was drawn up, on the whole in
+concert with the government. When it was discussed however, a demand
+was set up affecting rights which the King would not forego. He
+surrendered them in his eagerness to obtain the proceeds of the grants
+made to him, but not without secretly reserving his rights in his own
+favour. Then other old differences also came to light again in their
+full strength. An open disagreement broke out: in haste and with
+tempers irritated the two parties separated.
+
+NOTES:
+
+[469] The Danger wherein the Kingdom now standeth and the Remedy,
+written by Sir Robert Cotton. Jan. 1627-8.
+
+[470] Aluise Contarini, Feb. 10, 1628: 'La deliberatione di convocare
+il parlamente e nata--dalle promesse, che hanno fatte molti grandi,
+che non si parlera del duca.'
+
+[471] 'Those rights, laws, and liberties, which our wise ancestors
+have left us.' So run the words in the draught of the speech contained
+in a memorandum in the St. P. O. under the title, 'Speeches of some in
+the Lower House, March 22, 1628.' In Rushworth and in both
+Parliamentary Histories two reports are given which differ from one
+another.
+
+[472] 'Assoluto dominio destruttivo dei parlamenti con azzardo di
+sollevatione.'
+
+[473] 'To draw the heads of our grievances into a petition, which we
+will humbly, soberly, and speedily address unto His Majesty whereby we
+may be secured.'
+
+[474] Abbot's Narration, in Rushworth i. 459.
+
+[475] 'The end is, to make the other power, which he calls irregular
+moulder away.' (St. P. O.) In Bruce's Calendar, 1628-9, p. 92, more
+particular reference is made to this document.
+
+[476] Memorandum of Nicholas Hyde, Chief Justice of the King's Bench,
+in Ellis's Letters, ii. iii. 250.
+
+[477] Nethersole writes to the Queen of Bohemia as early as in April:
+'the duke can neither subdue this parliament, neither by fear nor
+favour,--is almost out of his senses to find that it gained credit
+with His Majesty.' (St. P. O.)
+
+[478] Al. Contarini, 17 Giugno: 'Attribuendone la cagione al duca per
+i suoi interessi di voler il re padrone disgionto dai popoli unito
+solo con lui, et per le pratiche di Spagnoli guidati in generale da
+cattolici et in particolare da Gesuiti che praticano quella cosa.'
+
+[479] Parliamentary History viii. 202.
+
+[480] Parliamentary History viii. 227.
+
+[481] Ruszdorf ii. 547.
+
+[482] Al. Contarini: 'Che sempre suppose ne havessero poca cognitione,
+ma che adesso credeva, che non havessero niente affatto.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ASSASSINATION OF BUCKINGHAM. SESSION OF 1629.
+
+
+For some years nothing had surprised foreigners who came to England so
+much as the wide severance between the government and the nation. Upon
+the one side they saw the King, the favourite, and his adherents; upon
+the other every one else. The King had lost much of the popularity
+which he had enjoyed when he ascended the throne; but a genuine hatred
+was directed against the arbitrary government of the Duke. Although it
+had been repressed out of regard to the King, it had again broken
+loose: the less practical result it produced, the more it filled all
+hearts.
+
+Burdened with this hatred, and with the ground shaking under him,
+Buckingham was nevertheless revolving the largest enterprises in his
+brain. He repelled with scorn the charge of still keeping up an
+intercourse with Spain; that was contrary to his obligations to the
+Protestants. He himself, so he said, had concluded the alliances
+between England and Denmark and the States-General; and he wished also
+to abide by them. Without doubt overtures had been made on the part of
+Spain, and had been responded to on the part of England; but their
+relations had in fact been such as had led to no result. On the
+contrary, negotiations with France, which certainly offered some
+prospect of success, had been opened through the mediation of the
+Venetian ambassadors resident at the two courts. The English were
+ready to waive all other points at issue if the other side would
+resolve to show some indulgence, especially if they would conclude
+some tolerable arrangement with Rochelle. The forces of both powers
+would then undertake the war against the Spanish monarchy, and
+against the advance of the Emperor in Germany. The French army would
+turn its steps to Italy; the English fleet would go to the aid of the
+Danes: it was expected that these attacks would exert an enormous
+influence in all directions.[483] Buckingham was still engrossed with
+designs against Spain, in spite of secret but only pretended overtures
+to that power. He intended to attack the Spanish monarchy at the
+source of its greatness, in the West Indies; and by a combination of
+forces on the Continent to wrest the Palatinate from it, and thereby
+to destroy the position which it had won on the Middle Rhine. A
+strange ambition, although in keeping with the age and with his
+personal character, appears to have been connected with this design.
+It had entered into his head to marry his daughter to the Electoral
+Prince Palatine, and perhaps to give his daughter the appearance of a
+higher rank by getting himself declared independent prince of some
+West Indian conquest--Jamaica had attracted his ambition[484]:--a hope
+not altogether chimerical; for he was still all-powerful with Charles.
+Foreigners were astonished that he undertook the most extensive
+negotiations before he had given his sovereign notice of them. Not
+unlike James I he cherished the hope that the threatening attitude
+which he took up, even if he did not strike a blow, would dispose the
+French to make concessions and would restore the former understanding
+between them. If this were not the case, he was determined to
+undertake the relief of Rochelle with all his energies.
+
+The condition of the English navy was such that he might reasonably
+promise himself success. We have credible information according to
+which Buckingham had made it half as large again as it had been in the
+time of Elizabeth. He had increased it from 14,000 tons burden to
+22,000: he had put the dockyards and magazines at Chatham, Deptford,
+Woolwich, and Portsmouth into good repair; and a number of large
+vessels had been built under his orders. Already in May an English
+squadron had made an attempt to relieve Rochelle: but the commanders
+on that occasion would not undertake the responsibility of exposing
+the ships entrusted to them, to the great danger which threatened them
+if they made the attempt: they were apprehensive of being called to
+account. Buckingham was not fettered by considerations of this kind.
+He had had engines of extraordinary dimensions constructed, which it
+was expected would rend with irresistible power the mole in front of
+the harbour, by which Rochelle was cut off.[485] And who shall say
+that success would have been impossible?
+
+Buckingham felt the hatred which men entertained towards him, but
+thought that he should still turn it into admiration. He wished to
+atone for the faults of his youth, and, as he said, to enter on new
+paths traced on the lines of the ancient maxims and ancient policy of
+England, in order to bring back better days.[486] He had to a certain
+extent made himself the centre of Protestant interests. Every one
+expected that he would proceed without delay to the relief of
+Rochelle, for which all preparations had been made. The destinies of
+the world seemed to hang upon his resolutions. And he had just
+received better tidings from that town: no one had ever seen him
+fuller of strength and energy. At this culminating point of his life
+he was smitten by a sudden and horrible death. As he stepped out of
+the dressing-room in his lodging at Portsmouth, and was crossing the
+hall, in order to mount his carriage and drive to the King, he was
+murdered by a stroke from a dagger.
+
+The murderer might easily have escaped, for the house was full of men,
+among them many Frenchmen, on whom the first suspicion fell. While all
+were crying out for the villain who had murdered the Duke, the
+murderer said, 'No villain did it, but an honourable man. I am the
+man.' Men saw before them a lean man with red hair, and dark
+melancholy features. His name was Felton: he had served in the last
+maritime expeditions, and had formerly been passed over when there was
+a vacancy for promotion. He could not endure to be placed below men
+who had never borne arms, merely because they were in the Duke's
+favour. The strongest impression had been produced on him by the
+Remonstrance,[487] which censured similar transactions, and at the
+same time represented the Duke as the enemy of religion and his
+country. Felton was one of these men, who from the way in which they
+combine religious and political opinions are capable of anything. In
+this respect he may be compared with the assassins of William of
+Orange, Henry III, and Henry IV; except that he came forward in behalf
+of the opposite side, and in his case there is no mention of any
+participation of a minister of religion. A paper was found on him in
+which he pronounced that man cowardly and base who was not ready to
+sacrifice his life for the cause of his God, his king, and his
+country. In his lodging there was another, on which he had put down
+some principles, which he seemed to have drawn from one or two books,
+and which make his intentions somewhat clearer. It is there said that
+a man has no relations which place him under greater obligations than
+those which he has with his country; that the welfare of the people is
+the highest law, and that 'God himself has enacted this law, that
+whatsoever is for the profit or benefit of the commonwealth should be
+accounted to be lawful.'[488] He was believed, and rightly, when he
+affirmed that he had no accomplices: the slight put upon him, he said,
+had inspired him with the thought, the Remonstrance had strengthened
+him in it: 'On my soul,' he repeated, 'nothing but the Remonstrance.
+He thought that he might remove the man out of the way who obstructed
+the public welfare. And he looked with some feeling of sarcasm at
+those who testified their horror of him when he was led by: 'In your
+hearts,' he cried out, 'you rejoice in my deed.' There were some in
+fact who really displayed such a feeling: the crews, who had once
+already wished to mutiny, disguised their sentiments least; over their
+beer and pipes they gave the assassin a cheer. Others lamented most
+that an Englishman should have been capable of assassination. Felton
+himself was afterwards convinced that his principles were false. He
+was told that a man had other still nearer and deeper obligations to
+God, and to his own soul, than to his country; that no one should do
+the smallest evil for the sake of the greatest good,[489] much less
+then a monstrous crime like his in behalf of a cause which to his
+blinded eyes appeared good. He at last thanked his instructors for
+their lesson, and only asked in mercy to be allowed before his
+execution to do penance in sackcloth with ashes on his head, and a
+cord round his neck, in presence of all the world.
+
+In public King Charles never lost his calmness of demeanour for a
+moment. He appeared to accept the event as a dispensation of Heaven;
+but afterwards he shut himself up for two whole days, and gave way to
+his sorrow.
+
+The expedition against Rochelle now put to sea under the command of
+the Earl of Lindsay. But the captains did not properly obey their
+chief: orders which had been planned and issued remained unexecuted:
+the fire-ships, which were intended to break through the defences of
+the enemy, were ill-managed. The intention was then formed of waiting
+for a higher tide, in order to attempt another attack; but meanwhile
+the very last resources of the town were exhausted, and it found
+itself obliged to capitulate. England's position in the world was
+immeasurably lowered when Rochelle was conquered by Richelieu. What
+further schemes of maritime supremacy had Buckingham latterly
+connected with the maintenance of this town! The ideas of Buckingham
+vanished as completely as if they had never been: the ideas of
+Richelieu became the foundation of a new order in the world.
+
+[Sidenote: A.D. 1629.]
+
+Krempe also fell, which had hitherto been deemed impregnable, the spot
+which, with Gluckstadt, was still the principal stay of Danish
+independence, and to which Buckingham's attention had been constantly
+directed. It is thought that about 8000 men would have sufficed to
+relieve it, but as they were not forthcoming, the fortress fell into
+the hands of the enemy in November 1628.
+
+And Charles I, instead of placing himself in a position to repair
+these losses of his allies, embarked on a new domestic quarrel with
+the Parliament.
+
+As the customs had not been fixed by the advice of Parliament, and
+tonnage and poundage had not been regularly granted at all, some
+London merchants had refused to satisfy the Custom House. On this the
+Lords of the Treasury laid their property under seizure. Of course the
+persons affected declared this proceeding also illegal, and filled the
+country with their complaints. On this occasion it was not, as almost
+always hitherto, the want of an immediate subsidy, but the necessity
+of removing this constitutional difficulty, which caused Parliament to
+be assembled in January 1629. People might flatter themselves that
+after the death of Buckingham, who had been the object of the
+principal hostility of that body, an agreement would be more easily
+effected.
+
+The plan drawn up by the Privy Council was in the first instance of a
+conciliatory nature. The right of granting money in general was to be
+acknowledged, even in the case of tonnage and poundage: the levying of
+this tax up to the present time, however, was to be justified, on the
+ground that other kings had collected it before it had been granted.
+If Parliament, after this general acknowledgement of its right, should
+still persist in refusing the present King what former kings had
+enjoyed, he would be exculpated: not the government, but Parliament
+would in that case have to bear the blame of the breach which would
+arise in consequence.[490]
+
+This was the tenor of the King's speech at the opening of the
+discussion on January 23, 1629. He asked for tonnage and poundage,
+less on the strength of his hereditary right to it, than on the plea
+of custom and necessity. He would always consider it as a gift of his
+people; but after their scruples had been removed by this declaration,
+he expected that an end would be put to all difficulties by a grant
+such as had been made to his ancestors. It was offensive to him that
+any one contested his title to a tax, without which his state could
+not be kept up. In the assembled Privy Council he declared that a
+temporary grant was derogatory to his honour. He said that he would no
+longer live from hand to mouth: he had as little disposition to suffer
+from want, or to allow the privileges of his crown to be wrested from
+him, as he had had thought of infringing the liberties of his
+people.[491] Secretary Coke, a member of the House, brought in the
+requisite bill without delay, and proposed the first reading.
+
+The assembly, however, consisted of the very men who had thought that
+through the Petition of Right they had set up a fundamental law for
+ever, but had since then become conscious how little they had effected
+by that means.
+
+An unpleasant impression had already been made on them by the printing
+of the Petition of Right without the expression of simple approval,
+but with the restrictive declarations which the King had at first
+made.[492] But besides this it was seen how little the King intended
+to be bound to the literal meaning of his words, for arrests without
+definite assignment of the reason had again taken place. The Star
+Chamber, which was already regarded as a court of doubtful legality,
+had imposed harsh and arbitrary penalties which awakened loud murmurs.
+The political opinions of one or two clergymen had caused general
+agitation. A preacher named Roger Manwaring gave utterance to extreme
+Royalist views. He defended forced loans, and contested the
+unconditional right of Parliament to grant taxes. From some passages
+of Scripture he deduced the absolute power of the sovereign, so that
+properly speaking no contract at all could, in his opinion, be made
+between king and people.[493] Parliament had called him to account for
+this, and had punished him by fine and suspension; but the King
+remitted the sentence. Another clergyman of kindred views, Montague,
+whom we have already mentioned, had been advanced by the King to the
+bishopric of Chichester, though, as deserves to be noticed, not
+without encountering opposition. For at the elections the old forms
+were still observed. Before the commissary of the Archbishop confirmed
+the election, which had taken place at the King's commands, he invited
+those present, if they knew anything in the life and conduct of the
+bishop-elect which could hinder his confirmation, to declare it. What
+had never been done on any other occasion was done then. An objection
+against Montague was presented in writing on the ground that doctrines
+occurred in his books which were irreconcilable with the existing
+institutions of England. The matter was brought before a court of
+justice, which, however, dismissed the objection as proceeding from a
+man who did not belong to the diocese of Chichester. The royal
+confirmation had then followed.[494] But must it not have been
+irritating to Parliament that the very men were promoted about whom it
+had complained? Its complaints seemed rather to serve as a
+recommendation.
+
+Besides this a Jesuit institution had been discovered in the immediate
+neighbourhood of London, and had then not been prosecuted with all the
+severity which Parliament thought requisite. People complained that
+the number of Papists was increasing every day; that in the counties,
+where before there had been none, they were now reckoned by thousands.
+Mainly at the instigation of Sir John Eliot, the Lower House issued a
+declaration, that it desired to hold the Articles of the English
+Church in the sense in which they were understood by the writers,
+whose authority was recognised in that Church, and not in the sense of
+the Jesuits and Arminians, which was repudiated.
+
+The question of tonnage and poundage came before the House while it
+was labouring under the irritation kindled by this discussion. What
+the government desired, the establishment of this tax on a legal
+footing, was also the wish of Parliament; but Parliament wished the
+matter to be settled in a way different from that intended by the
+King. Parliament desired to make the right of granting taxes a genuine
+reality, and henceforward to fix the duties in detail. The first
+reading of the bill brought forward by the government was rejected, on
+the formal ground that tonnage and poundage were subsidies, for
+granting which a resolution must be taken before a bill on the subject
+could be brought in.[495] Parliament espoused the cause of the London
+merchants, who had certainly suffered in support of its claims, and
+demanded that the proceedings of the Treasury should be reversed. For
+they maintained that the collection of tonnage and poundage was as
+much a breach of the fundamental principles of the realm, as the
+raising of any other tax that had not been granted would be. Or could
+any one, they asked, grant what he did not possess? If tonnage and
+poundage already belonged to the King, he did not need to have it
+granted him. The arrangement proposed by the government was rejected
+altogether: and everything else which was inconsistent with the
+literal meaning of the petition was also declared illegal.
+
+The King was incensed at the political, as well as at the religious
+attitude of the Lower House. A treatise in his own handwriting is
+extant, in which he expresses himself on the latter subject. 'You take
+to yourselfs,' he says, 'the interpretation of articles of religion,
+the deciding of which in doctrinal points only appartaines to the
+clergy and convocation.'[496] He added that His Majesty--for he loved
+to speak of himself in the third person--had a short time before
+announced his intention of maintaining the integrity of the religion
+of the English Church, and its unity, and that after much reflection,
+in agreement with the Privy Council and with the bishops: that as the
+Commons had the same object in view, he was surprised that they were
+not content with this announcement, and that they did not at all
+events state wherein the King's declaration did not content them: for
+that the King was the supreme governor of the English Church after
+God.
+
+At this very time an order was issued to the Treasury, and to the
+collectors of customs at the ports that tonnage and poundage should be
+henceforth levied, just as it had been in the latter years of James I;
+and that every one who refused payment should be punished.
+
+In this way the King embarked afresh on a course of the most
+unequivocal hostility towards his Parliament. But that body did not
+intend to give way. It would not be deterred from drawing up a fresh
+remonstrance, in which it made use of the strongest expressions to
+give point to its claims. In this it was said, that whoever furthered
+Popery or Arminianism, whoever collected or helped to collect tonnage
+and poundage before it was granted, or who even paid it, the same was
+an enemy of the English realm and of English liberty. This was a
+strange combination of ecclesiastical and financial grievances and
+pretensions. But the course of the transactions had established an
+intimate relation between them. In regard to both the Commons again
+took up as hostile an attitude towards the ministers of that day, as
+they had formerly taken up towards the Duke of Buckingham. The Lord
+Treasurer Weston was the special object of their hatred on both
+accounts. For it was said that he was a rebellious Papist--nay even a
+Jesuit:--did not his nearest kinsmen belong to that order?--and that
+he was now giving the King pernicious advice, hostile to the rights of
+the country and the dignity of Parliament. Proceeding on the principle
+that the collection of tonnage and poundage was a breach of the
+constitution, preparations were made for calling to account the
+officers engaged in this process. Nor would men have been content to
+stop at the subordinates; they would have reached even the highest.
+
+In this session the moderation which had been for some time exhibited
+in the former dropped out of sight: the contempt shown to the Petition
+of Right had called forth a spirit of bitter, violent, and unbounded
+opposition. When the King, in order to prevent the formal passing of
+the Remonstrance, proceeded in the first instance to have the session
+adjourned, a scene of tumult and violence was witnessed, to which the
+annals of former Parliaments offered no parallel.
+
+The Speaker of the House, Sir John Finch, one of those men who had
+passed over from the side of the Commons to that of the King,
+announced to the assembled members after the opening of the sitting on
+the 2nd of March, that the King adjourned the House till the 10th. But
+this was the very hour when Sir John Eliot, who had drawn up the new
+Remonstrance had with his friends intended to carry it through
+Parliament. The House declared it illegal for the Speaker to make
+himself the mouthpiece of the royal will: and when he tried to
+withdraw, he was held on his chair by a couple of strong and resolute
+members. The Usher of the Black Rod, whose business it was to declare
+the House adjourned, had already appeared in the ante-room; but the
+doors of the hall were shut. In this tumult the Remonstrance had to be
+read and voted on. The Speaker refused to have anything to do with it,
+although it was declared 'to be his duty to put it to the vote. Sir
+John Eliot and Denzil Holles must have delivered the sense of the
+Remonstrance orally, rather than read it properly through: but even in
+this fashion the majority of the House made known their assent, and in
+this way the immediate object was attained, as well as the
+circumstances allowed. On a threat that the doors should be broken
+through, they were now opened, and the members left the chamber.[497]
+
+An extraordinary act of disobedience, considering that it was intended
+to be the means of securing the legal forms of Parliament! It was the
+last step in this stage of the proceedings. It involved an open breach
+between the two authorities.
+
+In later times the responsibility for this act has been thrown on the
+King. Contemporaries of moderate views, and who favoured the
+Parliament, were of opinion however that the responsibility rather lay
+with those fiery and crafty men who had possessed themselves of the
+control of Parliament. For they thought that the King had seriously
+striven to compose the quarrel: that people might well have accepted
+his first declaration, and that the greater part of the members had
+been inclined to do so; but that the seeming zeal of some few for the
+liberties of the country had, unfortunately for England, prevented
+them from yielding.[498] It is difficult to suppose that the strength
+and depth of the opposition would any longer have permitted an
+adjustment. It was now fully apparent at all events that the King and
+the Lower House could no longer work together.
+
+In the Privy Council the opinion was once more expressed, that
+Parliament should be treated with indulgence. This was the wish of the
+Lord Keeper Coventry: but the Treasurer recommended the strict
+enforcement of the prerogative, and the King sided with this view. Not
+only was the dissolution of Parliament pronounced, but just as Henry
+VIII and Elizabeth had done, Charles I proceeded to punish the members
+who had offended against his dignity in their speeches. He first of
+all decided not to call Parliament together again. He declared that he
+had now abundantly proved that he loved to rule by the help of
+Parliament; that he had been compelled against his wish by the last
+proceedings to desist from the attempt, and that he would not renew it
+until his people had learnt to know him better. He said that he should
+consider it presumption if any time were prescribed to him for
+reassembling Parliament; that Parliament ought to be summoned, held,
+and dissolved, solely at the discretion of the King.
+
+The great advantage of Parliament in this conflict consisted in its
+ability to appeal to legal precedents of past centuries in its favour.
+What had once rendered the continuance of the ascendancy of
+Parliament impossible, the danger into which it had plunged the common
+interests of the kingdom, was now forgotten. The laws of those times
+had not been repealed, but had only been modified and curtailed in its
+own favour by the sovereign power, which had grown strong since that
+time. Every position, new or unusual at the moment, which Parliament
+maintained was, if not laid down in former ordinances, yet at all
+events so logically inferred from them, that it appeared customary and
+in accordance with primitive law. If on the contrary Charles I
+maintained the prerogative which his father had exercised, and which
+Queen Elizabeth and the House of Tudor in general had possessed, he
+was placed in the awkward position of appearing to act without the
+countenance of the laws. He now resolved to govern, at least for a
+time, without the aid of Parliament. Many of his ancestors had done
+exactly the same; but since their time attachment to parliamentary
+government had become part of the national feeling. It now appeared
+not only to represent fully the liberties, but also especially the
+most popular religious tendencies of the country.
+
+Whether under these circumstances the King would have succeeded in
+giving effect to his ideas, even if more peaceful times had ensued,
+was from the beginning extremely doubtful.[499]
+
+NOTES:
+
+[483] Al. Contarini, Aug. 14, 1628. 'Carleton mi soggionse che
+certamente la flotta si volgerebbe in ajuto del re di Danimarca,
+quando Piu non fosse necessaria in Francia.'
+
+[484] The first intimation of this design occurs in an anonymous
+letter to the King, which probably belongs to the year 1623: Cabala
+223. In the correspondence of the ambassadors the project is assumed
+as certain.
+
+[485] Ruszdorf: 'Magnos apparatus instituit, quibus sperat structuram
+et molem rumpere'
+
+[486] From the letter of Dudley Viscount Dorchester, in Bruce's
+Calendar.
+
+[487] 'The remonstrance in the last Parliament and that the duke was
+the cause of the public grievances, it came into his mind that it
+would be a good service to God and the Commonwealth to take him away.'
+Relation of the Duke of Buckingham's death. (St. P. O.)
+
+[488] From the report of Duppa (St. P. O.), which admirably
+supplements that which is given in the State Trials iii. 370.
+
+[489] 'That the common good could no way be a pretense to a particular
+mischief.'
+
+[490] Rushworth i. 654: 'To avow a breach upon just cause given, not
+sought by the King.'
+
+[491] Fragmentary memoranda of a sitting of the Privy Council at the
+beginning of February 1628-29. (St P. O.)
+
+[492] Statement of the printer. Parliamentary History viii. 247.
+
+[493] His declaration before the Lords. Parliamentary History viii.
+208.
+
+[494] We learn this from a letter of Nethersole to the queen of
+Bohemia, Jan. 28. (St. P. O.)
+
+[495] Nethersole to the Queen of Bohemia: 'That what at the first
+propounding seemed a very reasonable motion--was at last upon this
+reason that the bill is in truth and is intituled a bill of subsidy.'
+
+[496] Holograph declaration of Charles I. (St. P. O.)
+
+[497] Information in Star Chamber. Rushworth i. 675.
+
+[498] Autobiography of Sir Symond d'Ewes i. 405: 'Being only misled by
+some Machiavellian politics who seemed zealous for the liberty of the
+common wealth.'
+
+[499] Observation of Contarini, March 16, 1629. 'Quello che importa e
+il parlamento si e conservato nell'intero possesso dei suoi privilegi,
+senza cader un tantino: il re per queste due volte ha ceduto sempre
+qualche cosa.'
+
+
+END OF VOL. I.
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcribers note:
+
+The section header 'The Conquest' in Book I Chapter II
+is missing from the original table of contents.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF ENGLAND PRINCIPALLY IN
+THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY, VOLUME I (OF 6)***
+
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