■"■^^^ ,-l°* c^ o. '*«Vo' ^O" ^ **-Tr, *^ a'^' 'o, .^" . ^. G^ '^ %^^^ ^ 1^ .fo, ^^ 4 o,. ' 0^ ^o, •V,;* A M e ^. .^ .^.^dfe^% v./ .^;^¥a^o ^^..^ />h\ U .^ : ,^ . . . A > ^'. -"^o ..■^* ''aVa' ^^ .** /: 9^j^eJ~.rJj^y^r ay?^//^^ THE LIFE AND TIMES OP THOMAS CRANMER. y^^t^* 9^ ii'^^^^my ^^< •uX ^. / O^ € THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THOMAS CRANMER. BY THE AUTHOR OF ''THREE EXPERIMENTS OF LIVING, "LIFE AND TIMES OF MARTIN LUTHER," &C. \p^W\j>g^Y BOSTON: MILLIARD, GRAY, AND COMPANY. 1841. ^ :% •■*• "% •; Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year eighteen hundred and forty, by Harrison Gray, in the Clerk's office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts. CAMBRIDGE : STEREOTYPED AND PRINTED BY FOLSOM, WELLS, AND THURSTON, PRINTERS TO THE UNIVERSITY. INSCRIBED TO THE Hon. DANIEL APPLETON WHITE, BY HIS FRIEND THE AUTHOR. ADVERTISEMENT. The object of the following biography is not to present any new views or new facts in the life of Cranmer. The path is a beat- en one, and so much has been said on this subject, that it may seem useless to add another volume to those which can already be collected. But who collects them, or who looks into the old books of Fox, or hunts out Strype's " Memorials " 7 Or who, we will yet venture to ask, is familiar with the events of Cranmer's life? The same hope, which animated the author of "Luther and his Times," has stimulated to this at- tempt, that others may be sufficiently inter- ested in these sketches to induce them to study for themselves the histories of the Ger- man and the English reformation. Artists, by taking different positions, give different Vlll ADVERTISEMENT. views of the same subject, and present us with a variety of pictures, equally true to nature. In leaving out all polemical con- troversy and abstruse doctrines, and mere- ly viewing Cranmer as connected with the men of his times, we have sought to draw a picture for those who have not leisure or inclination to compose one for themselves. As it is foreign to our plan to introduce the dull formality of notes, we mention here some of the books which have been con- sulted in the present work; viz. the old (black letter) books of Fox ; Strype's " Me- morials of Cranmer" ; Burnet's "History of the Reformation," with the documents ap- pended; Le Bas's "Life of Cranmer," and also Gilpin's ; Hume's, Smollet's, and Lin- gard's Histories of England. Other books on the subject have been at hand, and in- formation has been derived from miscella- neous publications. CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. CHAPTER I. Henry the Eighth ascended the throne in 1509, at the age of eighteen. His father, Henry the Seventh, had left him a well filled treasury, a kingdom at peace with all the world, loyal sub- jects, and experienced ministers. Henry united in himself the claims of Lan- caster and York. Nature had given him personal beauty, and he was educated in the learning of the times. Had that learning been such as the education of modern times presents to the youth- ful and ardent mind, a wholly different character might have been formed. But he was doomed to pass his early days in the study of abstruse the- ological questions, considering learning as the field of polemical debate, and early enlisting un- der the banners of Thomas Aquinas. This course of education could have but little favorable influence in forming his moral character, or in cultivating a taste for high and noble pursuits. 1 2 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. In manly exercises and in the accomplishments of the day, he was said to be well skilled ; but it is evident that the theory of self-education had never been inculcated upon the mind of the youthful King. There is not the distinction, which the thoughtless are apt to imagine, between the high-born and the low. All have a work to accomplish for themselves, which no earthly power can accomplish for them. The monarch may become the slave of his own vices, and the poorest subject a monarch over himself. The Universal Father does not give to one of his chil- dren bread J to another a stone j but he gives to all the power of being virtuous ; and this power he has placed in the soul. It is not far that we have to seek it, or long to wait for it ; it comes in the form of conscience and principle, and, cher- ished, springs into action. It has been common to ascribe the low pur- suits of Henry to the influence of Wolsey, whose age and experience undoubtedly gave him domin- ion over the mind of his royal master ; but it was his knowledge of character that unveiled to him the most effectual way of governing him, by feed- ing his vanity and administering to his love of pleasure. We turn with disgust from the mansion of Wolsey, the early resort of the King ; from its guests, its revelry, its low theatrical exhibitions. CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 3 its Syrens luring to destroy, and can with difficul- ty realize, that it was an ecclesiastic, a son of the church, who presided over all. It is well known how the subserviency of Wol- sey was rewarded. He rose from one degree of distinction to another, till he became prime min- ister. Leo, the Pope, was not slow in discover- ing that the minister ruled the king, and sought, by conferring honors, to secure the services of Wolsey for his own purposes. Wolsey's titles multiplied as fast as his am- bitious desires. He was made Archbishop of York, Bishop of Durham, Abbot of St. Albans, Lord Chancellor of England, a Legate for life, a Cardinal, and was caressed or feared by all the powers of Europe. Ambition is never satisfied, till it bestrides the globe. There was another ele- vation to which the Cardinal aspired ; and this was, to be the hero of the Vatican, the infallible head of the church, and to take charge of the keys of St. Peter. The Emperor of Germany had held out to him this last lure ; the only one that could still excite his satiated desires. One obstacle, how- ever, remained. Leo was as likely to live as himself ; and Leo's life was now the only obsta- cle. It was with no common degree of exultation, that Wolsey heard of the sudden death of the 4 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. Pope. The time had arrived, which he had so long anticipated. Hitherto, he had been content- ed with distinguishing himself by his flowing robes of silk and vestments of cloth of gold, by the su- perb housings of his horses, by having his cardi- nal's hat borne before him on a pillar of silver by a person of high rank, and placed on the altar at the King's chapel in a reverential manner. His two particular attendants were priests, selected for their great personal beauty. As the Cardinal ascended the steps of the altar, they prostrated themselves on each side, while the audience, with his fifty personal attendants, stood at a respectful distance, not feeling worthy to approach the au- gust prelate. It was observed, immediately after the news of Leo's death arrived, that he appeared with more pomp than usual on days of public ceremony. The ensigns of his several dignities as Chancellor and Legate were borne before him, he was sur- rounded by noblemen and prelates, and was fol- lowed by a long train of mules, bearing coffers on their backs, covered with gold and crimson cloth. This parade had begun to pall upon his senses, for he had already passed " many summers in a sea of glory " ; but now, he believed, he had reached the zenith of his ambition. His white hair was to be crowned by the jewelled tiara, CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 5 and kings and emperors were to acknowledge his supremacy. As suddenly as Leo's death, arrived the news of Adrian's appointment to the Holy See, and Wolsey saw himself excluded from the chair of St. Peter. Through the prosperous vicissitudes of Hen- ry's reign, Catharine of Aragon had been the partner of his throne. She had commanded his respect by her virtues, and borne with his faults with a patience and forbearance, that resulted from principle and conjugal affection, rather than from a gentle and indulgent character. To Wolsey she ascribed many of the wanderings of her hus- band, and spoke to him freely on the subject. Her accusations were severe, and were indignantly re- ceived ; she reproached him with ministering to the licentious pleasures of the King, and using an influence disgraceful to a prelate. The haughty and overbearing Cardinal could ill endure this language ; and, though he suppressed as far as possible his indignation, Catharine was conscious he had become her bitter enemy. Hitherto Henry had borne in his gay and jovial countenance the index of his character. But a change seemed to have come over him. His face was no longer clothed in smiles ; an expres- sion of care and anxiety clouded his brow ; sighs frequently arose ; his step became slow and meas- 6 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. ured. He had taken great delight in tournaments, which gratified his taste for magnificence and his prowess in arms. All were now forbidden ; and. he was usually seen poring over musty parch menis, with hose ungartered and head unkempt. Henry the Eighth had deviated from the aus terity of his father's court. He emulated the ro- mantic gallantry of Francis, the French monarch ; but it was uncongenial to him, and often his vio- lence and impetuosity broke forth, even in the presence of the fair ladies of his court, whom he most wished to please. This change from a gay and dissipated course of amusements excited much surprise and conjecture. At length he announced the cause, — deep- seated scruples of conscience were preying upon his health ; he had, after much investigation and study, fully convinced himself, that his union with Catharine, who had been betrothed to his brother Arthur, and whom he had married as the widow of that prince, was sinning against the laws of God. He had collected many passages of Scripture to prove the unholiness of the union, which he said was fully demonstrated by their having no male heir to the throne, the Princess Mary being their only surviving child. What must have been Catharine's sensations when these scruples were announced to her ; she who had been his wife for nearly twenty years ! CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 7 Her suspicions rested immediately on Wolsey, as the instigator of this new-born tenderness of con- science. Probably she accused him wrongfully, and might better have attributed the whole to the caprice of Henry's character. It must be ac- knowledged, that the subject had been discussed by learned prelates previously to the marriage. However little inclined Wolsey was to the Queen, there seems to have been no adequate motive for thus stirring up his master's conscience. About this time, or perhaps a little before it, Henry met with Anne Boleyn, the accomplished daughter of Sir Thomas Boleyn. She had been educated in France, and, on her return to Eng- land, became maid of honor to the Queen. The winning graces of this lady were heightened by the polish of a French education, which was al- together opposed to the Enghsh. Women in England of high rank were usually educated in nunneries. They were taught enough of reading for religious exercises, but confectionery, needle- work, and, what is somewhat surprising, physic and surgery, came under the head of female ac- complishments. * When removed from these seminaries to the houses of their parents, daugh- ters were placed standing at the table, where they ate their dinners like statues, and were not per- * This is proved by a tract written in the last century, in the " Antiq. Repertory." 8 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. milted to sit, though a cushion was usually placed before them, on which they were at liberty to kneel. It is said, that, even in Sully's time, this austerity was prevalent in France, and that he used to enjoy rural happiness on a bench in his garden, just large enough for himself, while his family stood uncovered, facing him.* Anne Boleyn's natural vivacity had broken through the restraints of the time. Henry, at- tracted by her beauty, approached and accosted her at a tournament, with visor down, and masked, and requested leave to wear her scarf of silver tissue. Being, or pretending to be, unconscious that the King addressed her, she playfully re- pHed ; " Nay, Sir Knight ; do not venture ; it was given me by a magician, and whoever wears it, becomes my slave for hfe." " That, I am, already ; " said the gallant mon- arch ; and, forgetting his assumed character, reached forth his hand to take it, with royal im- punity. Anne hastily retreated, saying; "Nay, Sir Knight ; were it the King himself, he takes it not by force." Henry, unable to restrain his impetuosity, drew off his mask. Anne, gently sinking on one knee, disengaged the silver tissue from her neck, and threw it over the arm of the King. * This stone bench is preserved at Rosny. CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 9 There is no doubt but his scruples of con- science were greatly increased by the charms of Anne, blooming in youthful beauty. Catharine had never been handsome or fascinating. Time had passed heavily over her countenance. She had nothing to plead but her faithful and untiring love, her loyal devotion to his interest. For nearly twenty years she had borne his wanderings without reproach ; she was the mother of his children, and her heart was bound up in the one that Heaven had still spared to them. For a time, she resisted the idea that he could separate him- self from her ; that he could attach a stigma to her name, and proclaim his child illegitimate. But the unwelcome truth was at last forced upon her. Henry now openly soHcited the opinions of the most eminent canonists and divines. He com- posed treatises himself on the subject, and contin- ued to make proselytes. With the nation at large his cause was unpopular. A queen is known to her subjects. The virtues of Catharine were calculated to awaken the interest of the people ; her cause was warmly espoused, and, as Wolsey in all other things had been the director of Hen- ry's conscience, it was naturally supposed he was so in this ; and their hatred towards the haughty and domineering Cardinal was greatly increased. It is said, however, that, when he first announced 10 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. his intention to Wolsey of marrying Anne Boleyn, the minister received the information with grief and dismay. " I beseech your Majesty," said he, falling upon his knees, " to remember the disparity of her birth. I confess to you, that I have given hopes, that, when the divorce is accomphshed, you will place the crown upon the head of a French princess, and thereby secure the King of France for a warm ally. Let this Syren retire from the court, and do not bring upon yourself the disgrace that will follow." "Ha! is it so?" exclaimed Henry; ''by my kingdom, the loons are right ; this man will be king." Wolsey, startled at the anger of his master, and aware that on this point he brooked no oppo- sition, changed his tone at once, and, as if over- come by sudden conviction, promised to afford all his aid to the royal cause. To prove his zeal, he suggested to Henry the propriety of giving a magnificent entertainment at Greenwich, nominal- ly in honor of foreign ambassadors, but in reahty to facilitate his suit with Anne. The Queen was splendidly dressed ; but her diamonds covered an aching heart. A spectator of the scene has left his testimony of the effect produced on himself by the females. " They seemed to all men to be rather celestial angels, descended from heaven, CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. H than flesh and bone. Surely to me, simple soul, it was inestimable." * Anne was dressed with great simphcity ; her beautiful hair braided and fastened with ribbands. She won many hearts, hitherto rebellious, by her modest deportment. Three hundred lances were broken before supper ; in the evening, the com- pany withdrew to the ball-room, where they were entertained with an oration and songs, a fight at barriers, and the dancing of maskers. About midnight, the King, with six others, retired and dressed themselves as Venetian noblemen, and returned and selected ladies for the dance. Anne Boleyn was Henry's partner. It may not be uninteresting to describe the dresses of the King and Queen Catharine, as giv- en by an historian of the day at their coronation. " His grace wared in his upperst apparels a robe of crimsyn velvet, furred with armyns ; his jacket or cote of raised gold ; the placard em- broidered with diamonds, rubies, emeraudes, greate pearles, and other riche stones ; a greate bauderike (collar) aboute his necke, of large bal- asses (rubies). " The Quene was appareled in white satyn embrodered ; her hair hangyng down to her backe, of a very greate lengthe, bewtefull and * Cavendish. 1\^ CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. goodly to behold, and on her hedde a coronall, set with many riche Orient stones." Alas ! poor Catharine ! she then little thought that the superb coronal was, during her lifetime, to be placed on the head of another. In the reign of Henry the Eighth, great pro- gress had been made in the fashion of dress. During the reign of Henry the Seventh, it was grotesque and fantastic, and is thus described by the same historian. " Over the breeches was worn a petticoat ; the doublet was laced like the stays of a woman, across a stomacher, and a gown or mantle with wide sleeves descended over the doublet and pet- ticoat down to the ancles. Commoners were satisfied, instead of a gown, with a frock or tunic, shaped like a shirt, gathered at the middle, and fastened round the loins by a girdle, from which a short dagger was generally suspended. But the petticoat was rejected after the accession of Hen- ry the Eighth, and trousers or tight garments that displayed the symmetry of the limbs, were re- vived, and the length of the doublet and mantle diminished. The fashions which the great have discarded are often retained by the lower orders, and the form of the tunic, or Saxon garment, may be still discovered in the wagoner's frock ; of the trause, and perhaps of the petticoat, in the different trousers that are worn by seamen. These CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 13 habits were again diversified by minute decora- tions and changes of fashion. From an opinion that corpulence contributes to dignity, the doublet was puckered and distended around the body ; and the sleeves were swelled into large ruffs. The doublet and breeches were sometimes slash- ed, and, with the addition of a short cloak and a stiffened cap, resembled the national dress of the Spaniards. Among gentlemen, long hair was fashionable, till Henry cut off his own, and or- dered his courtiers to 'poll their heads.' He al- so made sumptuary laws, to regulate the inordi- nate dress of his subjects. Cloth of gold or tis- sue was reserved for dukes and marquises ; if of a purple color, for the royal family. Silks and velvets were restricted to commoners of wealth and distinction ; but embroidery was interdicted from all beneath the degree of an earl. Instead of pockets, a loose pouch was worn at the gir- dle." 14 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. CHAPTER II. WoLSEY afterwards gave an entertainment to the ambassadors. " The company were sum- moned by a trumpet to supper, and the courses were announced by a prelude of music. The second course contained upwards of a hundred devices of subtilties ; castles, churches, animals, warriors jousting on foot and on horseback ; oth- ers dancing with ladies ; all as well counterfeited as the painter should have painted on a cloth or wall." Such entertainments were not of short dura- tion ; the dinner hour was eleven in the forenoon, the supper six in the evening ; but the dinner was often prolonged till supper, and that protracted till late at night. Breakfast consisted of brawn, jellies, sweetmeats, ale, brandy, and spiced wine. Wolsey dined with a state that even the nobility did not assume. His table was elevated fifteen steps at the upper end of the hall, and, in serving his dinner, the monks at every fifth step sung a hymn. He sat at the middle of the table, to the ends of which his guests of distinguished rank were admitted ; and the monks, after their CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 15 attendance was over, sat dovm to tables at the sides of the hall, and were served with similar respect by the novices. When we hear of kings and emperors, we natu- rally attach something of the luxury of the present times to our idea of their style of hving. If we go back, however, to ancient records, royalty is stripped of its pageantry. Margaret, on her marriage with James the Fourth, made her pubhc entry into Edinburgh, riding behind her consort on a pillion. Hampton Court, which was built by Wolsey, and presented to Henry the Eighth, af- fords no description of elegant furniture. Hen- ry's chamber would, in the present day, have strangely contrasted with our common sleeping- rooms. We do not read of any carpet. Prob- ably the floor was strewed with clean rushes ; and these were a luxury, if we take Erasmus's description of English habits. He says ; "Their floors are composed of clay, and covered with sand or rushes, foul and loathsome ; " and he even goes so far as to attribute the visitations of the plague to this cause. A bed, a cupboard, a joint-stool, a small mirror, and a large pair of andirons, were the only furniture of the regal apartment. When we are told of Henry's love of chivalry, of his jousts and tournaments, we must not asso- ciate with his habits or manners the romantic 16 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. gallantry of the troubadours, or even of his con- temporary Francis. The fair sex were not in- vested by his imagination with spiritual beauty. He considered them as born for his amusement and pleasure. Even when aiming at the char- acter of a preux chevalier^ he could not control the impetuosity of his temper. A slight opposi- tion to his royal wishes stripped him of his as- sumed disguise, and discovered at once that he considered the lady of his homage in no other light than the creature of his will. Who at this crisis does not tremble for Anne Boleyn. Edu- cated among a nation whose morals were essen- tially defective, full of natural gayety, conscious of her charms, and conceahng in her heart that ambition and that love of splendor which are fatal to the truth and tenderness of the female character, she had, however, one safeguard remaining. She was attached to Percy ; and it was necessary that the tyranny of the King should be exerted to prevent their intercourse. The parents were compelled to oppose the union ; and, when Percy married another, in compliance with his father's commands, Anne lost the security she had de- rived from virtuous affection. There cannot be a more melancholy picture to contemplate, than the history of this winning and thoughtless girl. Had Henry found no other agents for his cause than his fascinations, CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 17 either of mind or person, she would have trod the mazes of a court with a firm and dignified step ; but, in her own secret ambition, he discovered an effectual promoter of his wishes. When we find such encomiums as the following passed upon her by her advocates, we cannot but fear, that she at once understood and favored the suit of the King. ^'' He liked to try of what temper the regard of her honor was, which, he finding not any way to be tainted with those things his kingly majestie and means could bringe to the batterie, he in the end fell to win her by treaty of marriage ; and in this talk took from her a ring and that ware upon his littel finger ; yet al this with such a se- cresie was carried, and on her part so wisely, as none or verie few esteemed this other than an or- dinarie course of dalliance." Letters from the King, written in French, to Anne Boleyn, were stolen from her, and convey- ed to the Vatican at Rome. Copies of them were procured by Bishop Burnet afterwards, and have been translated and published.* Anne professed to be displeased with the atten- tions of the monarch. It was asserted, that " she stood stil upon her guard, and was not easily taken with all this aparance of happiness : where- of two things appeared to be the causes : the one, * Appendix to Burnet's "History of the Reformation." 2 18 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. the love she bore ever to the Queen, whom she served, that was also a personage of greate virtue ; the other, her conceit, that this was not that free- dom of conjunction with one that was her lord and king, as with one more agreeable to her." The rumor of Henry's intended divorce must have early reached her ear ; and, if she aspired to the throne, she must have been sensible, that she could only obtain it, by the total ruin of Catharine's happiness. To resist the royal suit, however, seems to have been beyond her moral strength. Nor can we be surprised, when we reflect that "images of splendor and greatness were the objects first presented to her infant eyes ; and it was one of the earliest lessons imprinted on her mind, that they could scarcely be obtained at too dear a price." Catharine soon perceived the secret intelligence between her husband and Anne. Her observa- tion, when she was playing at cards with the young beauty, has been recorded. It was a rule in the play to stop on turning up a king or queen. It came to Anne's luck often to stop at a king, upon which the Queen said, somewhat pointedly ; " My lady Anne, you have good luck to stop at a king ; but you are not like others ; you will have all or none.''^ The time soon arrived when the unhappy queen could no longer be ignorant or doubtful ; CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 19 yet she seems to have conducted towards her ri- val with gentleness and dignity. Wolsey was placed in a most perplexing dilem- ma. Ignorant, at first, of the King's desire to seat Anne upon the throne, and supposing the pleasure he tooii in her society was merely a light affair of dalliance, he prepared great banquets and high feasts, to entertain the King with her at his own house. Catharine could not but be inform- ed of the Cardinal's subserviency to his master's wishes, and her dislike towards him was greatly heightened by this conduct. Anne for a time seems to have considered him her warm friend ; and copies of her letters to him are still extant, in which such expressions as the following are fre- quently interspersed ; " And next unto the King's grace, of one thing I make you full promise to be assured to have it, and that is, my hearty love unfeignedly during my life." When the King first communicated his inten- tion of raising Anne to the throne, the Cardinal received the intelligence with evident dismay. Her disposition to favor the Lutheran cause was openly avowed. She had sometimes seriously, and sometimes playfully, argued with the King against the mother church. Wolsey's pride, too, was incensed at the idea of acknowledging for his royal mistress, one whom he considered as in an inferior station ; yet he too well knew 20 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. his master's humor to venture any open opposi- tion. By his activity in procuring the divorce, he had felt entitled to be consulted about another alliance. Henry was loo determined, or too wary, to trust him with his secret, and Wolsey found, that, while he had been promoting what he considered an affair of gallantry, he had, in reality, been ele- vating Anne to the throne. There is one circumstance which cannot be omitted, as it had a tendency to increase Wolsey 's aversion to the marriage. Anne was constantly in the habit of reading heretical books, which had been proscribed by Cardinal Wolsey, and she usu- ally marked those passages that most excited her admiration. These were generally opposed to the Catholic persuasion. A book, thus marked, was purloined from her apartment and carried to Wolsey. He, now believing the ruin of the young heretic certain, dehvered it in triumph to Henry. So far from expressing indignation, the King not only pardoned her, but consented to look over the book with her. The delay, which the Pope threw in the way of the divorce, is well known. When he could no longer protract his interference, he despatched Cardinal Campeggio to the English court, and at length the King and Queen were summoned, and the trial commenced. Part of the noble speech CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 21 of the Queen is faithfully given by the immortal bard, and too well known to need a repetition ; but she goes on to say ; *' The King, your father, was a man of such an excellent wit in his time, that he was recounted a second Solomon ; and the King of Spain, my father, Ferdinand, was taken for one of the wisest kings that reigned in Spain these many years. So they were both wise men and noble princes ; and it is no question but they had wise counsellors of either realm, as be now at this day, who thought not, at the marriage of you and me, to hear wdiat new devices are now invented against me, to stand to the order of this court. And I conceive you do me much wrong ; nay, you condemn me for not answering, having no counsel but such as you have assigned me ; you must consider that they cannot be indifferent on my part, being your own subjects, and such as you have made choice of out of your own Council, whereunto they are privy, and dare not disclose your pleasure." It is well known, that, after she had made her protest, she left the court ; and, though summoned to return, positively refused. The testimony Henry gave to her character, after her departure, seems to have been called forth by the dignity of her demeanor. " She hath been always a true and obedient wife." The appeal made by the King to the Pope 22 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. was highly embarrassing to him. Catharine was aunt to the Emperor, Charles the Fifth, whom he greatly feared to offend. Of Henry, too, who had obtained from Leo the title of " De- fender of the Faith," he stood almost equally in awe. His only resource was to procrastinate and place obstacles in the way. Cardinal Campeggio, after his arrival in England, used many arguments to persuade the King to re- nounce his intentions. At this attempt, Henry was greatly enraged, and said, it was evident that the Pope had sent him to confirm, rather than an- nul, his marriage. Campeggio then showed him a bull, in which the Pope had granted the divorce, if matters could not be brought to a friendly con- clusion. This bull, however, he acknowledged, v/as only to be shown to the King and Wolsey, and riot to be trusted out of his own hands. He entreated the King not to be precipitate in the affair, as great advantages might be taken from that, by the Queen's party ; that, therefore, it was fit to proceed slowly ; but he assured him, that the decision would finally be according to his wishes. At length, after many adjournments, the court sat to decide the matter, and Gardiner, who was the head of the King's Council, desired sentence might be given. Both the King and Anne Bo- leyn were sanguine, at this crisis, that no further obstacles would be made to their union ; and CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. . 23 Henry stationed himself in an adjoining room, where he could have the pleasure of hearing the sentence pronounced. What was his indignation, when Campeggio declared, that the court must be adjourned till October, (it was then July,) as no causes could be heard in vacation time, according to the rules of the Consistory of Rome. It soon became evident that Wolsey was losing confidence and favor with the King, who sus- pected that much of this delay arose from his ill offices. It does not appear that he had any cause for this suspicion ; but, unfortunately for the Car- dinal, with all the deception he had practised, he was not able to counterfeit upright and undevi- ating principle ; and neither the monarch nor the favorite could have had much confidence in, or respect for, the other. Seven months had passed since Campeggio's arrival, and Henry found him- self no nearer obtaining a divorce, than when he first arrived. Yet his passion for Anne did not decline on account of the obstacles placed in his path. He took the decisive step of dismissing Catharine to Greenwich, and sent for Anne to return to the Court. She had judiciously with- drawn to her father's house. It was said, that she returned with reluctance, and only yielded to the entreaties of her father. Henry gave her a splen- did establishment, and apartments richly furnished, and exacted the utmost deference towards her from his courtiers. 24 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. CHAPTER III. While not only England, but Europe, was agitated by this important question of the divorce, a minor affair took place in Jesus College, Cam- bridge, which excited some attention. Thomas Cranmer, a young man of ancient family, a fellow of the College, forfeited his fel- lowship by his marriage. Though only twenty- three, he had distinguished himself by his tal- ents, and was much esteemed for the virtues of his character. His separation from the College, which became necessary according to the reg- ulations, was greatly regretted by the friends of learning. The early education of Cranmer had inured him to discipline. The most approved school in the neighbourhood was held by the parish-clerk, whose manners naturally partook of the rudeness and barbarity of the age. To this the boy was sent. Though his disposition was mild, and his habits studious, he could not escape the tyrannical and domineering cruelty of the pedagogue. His father, however, did not confine him to the in- struction of the school-master, but had him edu- CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 25 cated in gentlemanly exercises, shooting, hunting, and hawking. He was also skilled in horseman- ship ; and, in mature life, when his dignities and honors crowded upon him, he still retained his fondness for shooting with the cross-bow, and his skill and fearlessness in managing the wildest horses. He lost his father early, and, at fourteen, his mother sent him to study at Cambridge, in the year 1503. In reading the history of distinguished men, maternal influence is often traced. A widowed mother, who consummates her early lessons by giving up her only son, her solace and her joy, for his advantage, and, perhaps, toils to supply the means for his education, unaided and alone, not only affords him the best example of disin- terestedness, but the strongest incitement to virtue and improvement. Cranmer appears to have determined to turn to their best uses the opportu- nities offered to him ; and, though he was imme- diately initiated in the " dark riddles " of the age, his own good sense led him at length to a differ- ent course of study. Erasmus was a resident in the University, and Cranmer soon became famil- iar with the works of this accomplished scholar. A new impulse was given to his mind. He en- tered the walks of ancient and classic literature, and made himself master of the Greek and He- brew languages. When Cranmer began to write. 26 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. he earnestly studied his books, and " bent himself to try out the truth herein." He read with his pen in hand, and constantly marked, or copied out, what particularly arrested his attention. The intellectual treasures, which he in this way ac- quired, were in after life an exhaustless mine of wealth. Such a young man could not fail of being es- teemed ; and, when his marriage, at the age of twenty-three, obliged him to relinquish his fellow- ship in the College, it was deeply regretted. He was solicited, however, to fill a humbler place in Buckingham College. Of his marriage, there is little recorded. The early death of his wife, the same year they were married, left him a widower, and, contrary to general usage, he was again elected a fellow of his College. When Wolsey was selecting men of talents and learning for his College at Oxford,* he offered Cranmer a fellowship ; but Cranmer declined it, and preferred remaining where he was. It was about this time that the King, seeking to beguile the weariness which arose from the postponement of his marriage with Anne Boleyn, made several excursions to the country-seats of his courtiers. At Mr. Cressy's, in Waltham, a town where the King rested, Cranmer was then residing with two of that gentleman's sons ; they * Wolsey founded Christ Church College. CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 27 were driven from the College by an infectious dis- order. Among Henry's attendants, were Fox, the royal almoner, and, subsequently, Bishop of Hereford, and Gardiner, afterwards Bishop of Winchester, who lodged at Mr. Cressy's. They, knowing Cranmer's fame for learning, requested his opinion of the divorce. He at once declared that he considered the marriage contrary to the laws of God. " The method," said Cranmer, " to be pursued, seems to me a simple one, and would bring the matter to an issue." They all eagerly inquired what he meant. " It is," rephed he, " to collect the opinions of all the universities in Europe on this one question ; ' Is it lawful to marry a brother's wife ? ' Their approbation of the mar- riage will satisfy the King's scruples ; or their dis- approbation will bring the Pope to a decision." When Henry was informed of Cranmer's opin- ion, he was struck with the proposal and exclaim- ed, as it is said Elizabeth did many years after- wards to one of the Spanish ambassadors ; " In truth, he 'has got the right sow by the ear.' " Cranmer was immediately summoned to the presence of the King, and, after a long conversa- tion, being well convinced that the learned doc- tor favored his views, he commanded him to put his sentiments in writing. " There is one simple question," said Cran- mer, " on which the whole rests. It is not, Sire, 28 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. whether the Pope's dispensation, which permitted you to marry the widow of your brother, was legal, or could give legality to the marriage, but simply whether such a marriage was not contrary to the divine commands." Henry resolved to adopt his plan, of consulting divines ; and, determining to retain him counsel- lor in his service, placed him in the family of Thomas Boleyn, Earl of Ormond and Wiltshire, the father of Anne. This was undoubtedly a stroke of pohcy in the monarch. He was aware, that Cranmer would be in the way of receiving impressions favorable to his cause, as the family of the Earl would be highly advanced by the King's marriage with Anne Boleyn. The Earl of Wiltshire ranked high in the esti- mation of his countrymen. Erasmus knew him well, and spoke of him as a philosopher, a scholar, and well read in the Scriptures. He thus wrote to him ; "I do the more congratulate your hap- piness, when I observe the sacred Scriptures to be so dear to a man, as you are, of power, one of the laity and a courtier, and that you have such a desire to that pearl of price." Between the Earl and Erasmus there was a strong friendship. " The world is beholden to this noble peer for some of the labors that pro- ceeded from the pen of that most learned man," particularly *' Directions how to prepare for Death." CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 29 During Cranmer's residence in this family, the powers of his mind and the social qualities of his disposition were fully called forth. With the Countess and Lady Anne he had a pleasant and easy intercourse ; with the Earl, serious and long conferences on im.portant matters. When the Earl was absent, they corresponded together. In a letter from Cranmer, dated at Hampton Court, in the month of June, 1530, he wrote to the Earl, that " The King's Grace, my Lady his wife, my Lady Anne his daughter, were in good health ; and that the King and my Lady Anne rode the day before to Windsor, from Hampton Court, and that night they were looked for again there ; praying God to be their guide." Can we judge Anne harshly when we find such a man as Cranmer promoting the unrighteous cause ? She had listened to him with reverence on rehgious subjects, and imbibed the spirit of the speaker. Probably if any twinges of con- science had hitherto admonished her when she thought of her gracious mistress and Queen, they were now silenced. Cranmer wrote his book, and was appointed to dispute with certain learned men on the subject of the divorce in both of the Universities. By his learning and authority he brought over many to his opinion, and Henry determined to send him on an embassy to Germany. To give the dignity 30 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. of high rank to this embassy, he united with him the Earl of Wiltshire. With some difficulty, an answer had been pro- cured from Oxford and Cambridge in favor of the divorce. The decisions of the Italian and French universities had also been obtained to the same effect. The opinion of Erasmus was, with his usual caution, withheld, and he would not commit himself by any written documents or pubHc avowal. The German reformers were ready to allow, that the Pope had no power to authorize a marriage contracted in opposition to the will of God, but they could not entirely agree that this marriage came within that description ; and Lu- ther, when applied to, boldly said, he '' would sooner allow a man two wives, than to repudiate one with whom he had lived in the holy bonds of matrimony for twenty years." In the year 15o0, Dr. Cranmer began his embassy in company with the Earl of Wilt- shire, a man well known abroad, and already doubly conspicuous as the father of Anne Boleyn, whose name was now often coupled with the King's. They first directed their course to Italy, and had several interviews with the Pope.* At * We cannot resist giving the following amusing ex- tract from Fox, in describing the admittance of the am- bassadors to the Pope. " And when the time came that they should come be- CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 31 Rome, Cranmer remained several months, while the Earl and others repaired to the Emperor Charles the Fifth. Though hitherto Cranmer had led the life of a schoolman, he seems to have had incipient quali- ties of a courtier. His deportment in his embas- sy was affable and dignified, nor did he neglect fore the Pope, he was sitting- on high, in his cloth of estate, and in his rich apparell, with his sandales on his feete, offering, as it were, his foote to be kissed of the ambassadors ; the Earle of Wiltshire, disdaining thereat, stood still, and made no countenance thereunto, so that all the rest kept themselves from that idolatrie. " Howbeit, one thing is not here to bee omitted as a prognosticate of our separation from the See of Rome, which then chanced, by a spaniell of the Earl of Wilt- shire, . . . . . When the sayd Bishop of Rome had advanced forth his foote to be kissed, now whether the spaniell perceived the Bishop's foote of another na- ture than it ought to be, and so taking it for some kinde of repast, or whether it was the will of God to show him some token by a dogge of his inordinate pride, that his feete were more mete to be bitten by dogges than kissed of Christian men ; the spaniell (I say) when the Bishop extended his foote to be kissed, the dogge straightway went to his foote, and, as some afRrmeth, took his greate toe in his mouth. So that in haste he pulled in his glori- ous feete from the spaniell and after that thought no more at that present for kissing his feete, but without anie further ceremonie gave eare to the ambassadours what they had to say." — The Ldfe^ Acts, and Story of Dr. Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury. i^ M.^j^ a 32 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. the more minute means of pleasing. He was found to possess wit without sarcasm, a happy manner of inculcating morality and thought, and, so won upon ail who associated with him, that the Earl of Wiltshire, who returned to England while Cranmer remained at Rome, informed Henry, he could find no ambassador more accomphshed for his purposes. The King, in consequence of these representations, sent him a commission with instructions to be his sole ambassador to the Em- peror. The commissional letters were dated January 24th, 1531 ; in these he styles Dr. Cran- mer '"• Consiharius Regius, et ad Csesarem Ora- tor." We now behold him in his new office, distin- guished by the favor of a monarch who had been considered as holding the balance of Europe, gifted in himself with excellent personal advanta- ges of manners, qualified to hold conferences with the most learned men of the age, and actu- ally converting them to his own view of the cause he had undertaken. The most important convert was Cornelius Agrippa, counsellor to the Emper- or. The melancholy fate of this man was prob- ably the result of his imprudence as much as his honesty, as he exasperated the Emperor by his gratuitous opposition to his wishes. He was cast into prison and died there. With Osiander, the pastor of Nuremberg, he CE.ANMER AND HIS TIMES. 33 formed a strict intimacy ; and, at his earnest re- quest, passed much time with him. Their con- stant interchange of sentiments seemed to result in a union of opinion. Osiander became a con- vert to Cranmer's view of the King's marriage, and actually wrote a book proving it unlawful. Osiander was engaged in a work upon the Gos- pels ; Cranmer earnestly exhorted him to go on with it, and assured him, that " it would not only be of use to the Church of Christ, but adorn it." It was pubhshed in 1537, and dedicated to Cran- mer. In the frequent intercourse which existed be- tween these two learned men, the study was usu- ally the place of their meeting and conversation. From this apartment, Osiander's family were not wholly excluded. His young niece was often a silent listener ; and, when they repaired to the little parlour, she it was that performed the house- hold duties for the guests of her uncle. Hitherto Cranmer had taken no decisive steps in espousing the reformed religion ; but the argu- ments of Osiander came seasonably to the aid of his own mind. In setting up the authority of learned divines as equal to that of the Pope, by his advice to Henry, he suJfRciently proved, that his views were not to be confined within the strict enclosure of the mother church ; but the time had now arrived when he was absolutely to defy 3 34 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. it, to break through its essential rules, and stand on the same ground as Luther. It would be un- candid to ascribe any undue influence over his opinions to the little German maiden ; for it was evident, that his views, previously to leaving England, had been greatly changed. His inter- course with German Protestants had facilitated this change, and, perhaps, we may venture to al- low to the niece of Osiander the power of invest- ing him with sufficient resolution to virtually ab- jure the right of the Pope in imposing on the clergy any obligation to celibacy. However this may be, she became his second wife early in the following year. We pause here for a moment, as it appears to be the first developement of Cranmer's character. He had been sent on an embassy by the King, which was considered highly important. It was his purpose, and had been his desire, to win all hearts to the royal cause. By a step like this, he outraged the Catholics, and spent much of his time in the " primrose path of dalliance." It does not appear, however, that Henry felt any dissatisfaction with his ambassador when he re- turned to England. That he himself did not consider the step he had taken a judicious one was proved by his leaving his wife in Germany. It was highly honorable to the Protestants at this time, that they threw aside all party feelings, CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 35 and warmly espoused the cause of Catharine. They were loud in expressions of indignation at the wrongs of an injured and faithful wife ; and the German reformers who had defied the Pope and the Emperor, now enhsted under their ban- ners in defence of an insulted and broken-hearted woman. There cannot, however, be any doubt, that Cranmer embraced the cause of the King in the full conviction that it was a righteous one. He had been far from obtruding his opinion, and shrunk from the office of ambassador, which the King forced upon him. But, when once engaged in the cause, it was natural that it should assume magnitude in his view. He beheved that the fu- ture salvation of the King and Queen was deep- ly perilled by living together in a state that he con- sidered unholy ; and, in endeavouring to dissolve the union, he lost sight of the sufferings of the wife, and the rights of the daughter. He proba- bly, too, considered, that the manner, in which this question was settled, would have an im- portant influence on the future rehgion of the country ; and his mind had embraced too fully the views of the reformers, to submit to the infallibility of the Pope. In his conversations with Osiander, he had sometimes quoted the Fathers, St. Austin, St. Jerome, and his master's favorite, Thomas Aquinas. " Tell me not," said the German, '' of the heroes of the dark 36 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. ages. Go to Peter, and Paul, and the great teacher of Christianity. Open your Bible, and find there your religion." All this correspond- ed with his early pursuits. His mind had been awakened, by the study of the Scriptures, years before, and he was well prepared to enter the lists of reform. There is an immeasurable distance, however, between Luther and the English reformer. Lu- ther, goaded on by his conscience, and aided only by the light of his own mind, seizing upon truth after truth, fighting for his cause against nations, and achieving the victory by the prowess of a single arm, is a phenomenon that he explained ; — " God is on my side." Cranmer was naturally diffident and cautious, and he appears to have wanted one of the essen- tial components of Luther's character, enthusi- asm. A life of tranquil duty and calm retirement was all he coveted ; but this cannot be allowed to the favorite of a king, and such he was rapidly becoming. On his return, he was offered the See of Can- terbury. This promotion he would gladly have declined. The turbulence of the times rendered the primacy an arduous and perhaps dangerous situation. The state of matrimony, into which he had secretly entered, was wholly opposed to the religious views of his still Roman Catholic country. CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 37 Another motive powerfully influenced him. It was necessary, in receiving the primacy, that he should take the oath of fidelity to the Pope. All these were, in his mind, insuperable obsta- cles. The King, however, did not consider them so. The oath was modified in a manner, that saved the conscience of the new archbishop, and concluded with an open protest, that he felt him- self bound, on all occasions, to oppose the Pope's illegal authority, and condemn his errors. Cranmer took possession of the primacy in 1533, and secretly sent for his wife. While these events had been passing, Wolsey's sun had set to rise no more. Henry had cast him off; and, though, for a time, habit, or some remains of kindly affections, induced him to show signs of returning favor, the Cardinal felt too surely, that, in proportion to Anne's ascendency, had been his own decline. " All my glories In that one woman I have lost for ever. " Such was the favorite's impression ; but when was a league of pleasure permanent ? Wolsey was no longer of service to the King ; he could neither administer to his passions nor his interest ; and, as his views changed, and he lost his rever- ence for the ancient faith, his ear opened wilHngly to the tale of his misdeeds. Wolsey's worst crimes appear to have been, his subserviency to a 38 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. heartless monarch ; his greatest offence to the people, his haughty and overweening pride and ambition. When arrested for high treason, it is said, that he discovered no signs of guilt, and only asked to be confronted with his accusers. On his way, he was seized with illness, and could only reach a monastery ; as he entered the gate, he said to the Abbot, " Father Abbot, I am come hither to lay my bones among you." His indisposition rapidly increased, but he was calm and resigned. He had previously passed through many stages of hope and fear, sometimes humbhng himself to the dust, and then, again, was suddenly elated by the shghtest symptom of royal favor ; but the storm and the whirlwind had pass- ed, and the still, small voice of conscience was whispering its admonitions in his ear, " Had I but served my God with half the zeal I served the King, he would not in mine age Have left me naked to mine enemies." He expired the next morning, in the sixtieth year of his age. In reading the history of Wolsey, as penned by CathoHcs and Protestants, we must use our own judgment. It is probable, that there is exaggera- tion on both sides ; that he had neither the virtues attributed to him by the one, nor the vices so lib- erally ascribed to him by the other. It does not appear that either Catharine of Aragon or Anne CRANMEll AND HIS TIMES. 39 Boleyii influenced his fate. In the capricious and selfish character of the monarch, and in the rest- lessness of his own pride and ambition, were deeply planted the seeds of his ruin. Though it was evidently Wolsey's desire to estabhsh the ec- clesiastical supremacy, and restore the omnipo- tence of the Pope, he seems, even in this thing, to have been looking forward to his own eleva- tion, and to the dream of his days and nights, the chair of St. Peter ; for himself, he wished to hedge it round with colleges and institutions. Gardiner, the defendant and confidant of Wol- sey, was not, as many expected, involved in his disgrace. His fidelity to him seems to have been unquestioned. This man possessed an uncom- mon degree of penetration, a thorough knowledge of human nature in its weakest and worst forms, a capacity of accommodating himself to all char- acters, and an instinctive perception of what would aid or retard his own advancement. He ventured on a game that rarely succeeds with the most artful ; that of allegiance to the Pope and to the King, both now bitter enemies. Though in his heart opposed to the Reformation, he promot- ed Anne's marriage, who, he knew, was a zeal- ous advocate for it. But he trusted to his own powers for making all subservient to his interest. Cromwell was another of Wolsey's adherents, and undertook his defence in Parliament. He was 40 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. secretary to the Cardinal, and originally the son of a blacksmith. He won the favor of Henry, by the earnestness with which he seconded his marriage with Anne. In the office of Chancellor, Wolsey was suc- ceeded by Sir Thomas More. His sanguinary measures must ever cast a shadow over his excel- lent gifts and high quahties. We must not forget, that the religion of that period seems to have par- taken but httle of the spirit of its great founder. The flaming sword guarded its precincts, and both Catholics and Protestants sacrificed their victims upon its altars. CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 41 CHAPTER IV. Very soon after his consecration, the Primate was called upon by Henry to pronounce the di- vorce. Cranmer had been too deeply engaged in the matter to feel any reluctance to utter this final decision. We are willing to believe that history, rather than his own heart, was silent on the subject of humanity. But it is to be feared, that his conviction of the unholiness of the marriage, his desire of defeat- ing the tyranny of the Pope and taking vigorous measures against the Church of Rome, added to his paternal affection for Anne, who had long honored, respected, and imbibed his opinions, and who, he had every reason to believe, would prove a powerful agent in the reform he was de- sirous of promoting ; — that all these considera- tions acted powerfully on his feehngs, and absorbed all tenderness and compassion for the unfortunate Queen. It is difficult for us to imagine, that a good and pious man should have taken the decided part he did in this matter ; but we are often disap- pointed in Cranmer's character ; he seems some- times to have yielded to the urgency or impulse 42 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. of the moment, with a want of resolution that was a melancholy augury of the future. To give to Anne the dignity of a title was Henry's next object ; and he determined, in defi- ance of all estabhshed rules, to create her Mar- chioness of Pembroke. This was done with much pomp and ceremony. " She wore a circote of cloth of gold, richly trimmed with crimson, and on her head had no other coif or head geer than her own braided hair. The King, with his royal hands placed on her head the halfe coronet, and the Lady Mary Howard threw over her shoulders the ermine mantle, white as snowe. When thus equipped, she was most beautifull to behold ; and some of the Papistes sayd, if it were only for looks and comeliness, she w^as worthy to be Queene. The King could not be satisfyed with gazing upon her." Those who have seen the picture of Anne will easily credit this account. There is a mixture of playfulness and dignity mingled in her expres- sion, that must have been truly captivating. She had now nearly reached the zenith of her ambi- tion ; the coronet, she was well aware, would soon be exchanged for a royal diadem ; and we may without difficulty imagine, that the bloom of her cheek, and the lustre of her eye, had acquired fresh brilliancy as she saw it hovering over her. CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 43 The playfulness and freedom of her manner was, at this time, one of her great charms in the eyes of the capricious monarch. The superb set of jewels sent to Anne by the King on this occasion, is thus recorded in Strype's Appendix to his " Memorials." We give it in the ancient text. " Furste, One Carkeyne of gold antique warke, having a shielde of gold, set with a great Rose, containing xij Dyamants. One fayer table Dya- mant. One poynted Dyamant. One table Ru- bye. One table Emerawde. And iij fayer hing- ing perles. " Item, Another Carkeyne of golde of harts with ij hands holding a great owche of golde, set with a great table balasse. One poynted dia- mant. Two table dyamants ; Whereof one ris- ing with Lozanges, and the other flat. And one other long lozanged diamant. And iiij perles, v/ith one longe perle pendaunt. " Item J Another Carkeyne of golde enameled with blac and white, with an owche of golde enameled white and blew : Set with a great rockey Rubye : One rockey Emerawde : One pointed Dyamant : one table Dyamant. A harte of a Dyamant, rising ful of Lozanges. And one fayer hinging perle. " Item J Another Carkeyne of lynks of gold. The one enameled blac, the other gold : having an 44 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. owche of golde, set with a great rockey balasse : Two smal table Dyamants ; and one Lozanged Dyamant. Five slight pedes, and one long perle pendaunt therat. " Item^ Another Carkeyne of gold, garnished thorowly with xxij coletts of dyamants, con- tening in al Ixxvij diamant smal and great : and xhij perles, with an owche of antique, set with xiiij dyamants, one rockey Rubye, and one rockey Emerawde ; and a flat round hinging perle. " Item, Another Carkeyne of golde, enameled blac, with an owche, set with a fayer table balasse, and three smal tryangled dyamants, and five perles. '' Item, A George on horse back : garnished with xvj smal Dyamants. And in the belly of the Dragon a rockey perle. " Item, Another Carkeyne of golde : al blac, having a George on horseback ; garnished with xviij smal Dyamants. And in the belly of the Dragon a perle ragged. '' Item, A cheyne of gold, of Spaynishe facion, enameled, white, red, and black." We are aware that the above hst of articles may want a glossary. The carkeyne is a collar ; fayer, fair ; balasses, rubies ; Lozanges, a figure in heraldry denoting the arms of the family. Soon after Anne was made Marchioness of Pembroke, she was privately married to the CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 45 King, probably on the 25th of January, 1532. The ceremony was performed in the presence of the Duke of Norfolk, and her father and mother. At this time there had been no public sentence of divorce. Henry said " there was no need of one after so many Doctors and Universities had decided for it." It became now a pressing matter that the for- mer marriage should be declared null, and Catha- rine was urged to yield her acquiescence ; but she positively rejected the idea, asserting that she was Queen of England, and Henry's lawful wife, and rejecting all entreaties and bribes ; and, when urged to retire to a nunnery, protested that she would never take any steps that might un- queen herself, or render her daughter illegitimate. When it was found that nothing would shake the resolution of Catharine, and that she persisted in saying, wherever the King sent her she should still be his wife, they proceeded to the public sen- tence of the divorce, of which Cranmer, in a letter, gives the following account. " As touching the final determination and con- cluding of the matter of divorce, between my Lady Katherine and the King's grace : and after the convocation in that behalf had determined and agreed according to the former sentence of the Universities, it was thought convenient by the King and his learned council that I should repair 46 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. to Dunstable, and there to cdl her before me, to hear final sentence in this said matter. Notwith- standing she would not at all obey thereunto. '^ On the 9th of May, according to the said ap- pointment, I came to Dunstable, my Lord of Lincoln being assistant to me." (Then follows a list of counsellors for the King.) "And so there at our coming, kept a court for the appearance of the said Katherine, where we examined certain witnesses, who testified, that she was lawfully cited and called to appear, as the process of the law thereunto belongeth ; which continued fifteen days after our first coming thither. The morrow after Ascension day, I gave sentence therein, how that it was indispensable for the Pope to li- cense any such marriage." Dunstable was chosen because the Queen re- sided at Ampthill, which was so near that she could not pretend ignorance. It appears, how- ever, that Catharine was above all these arts. She did not answer to the citation. She had uniformly declared that she would not do it. We can hardly imagine any other course that she could with dignity have taken. There is some- thing that deeply moves our sympathies in her conduct. She expresses no violent anger towards the King, not even when he sent Lord Mountjoy to inform her that she was a divorced princess, and instructed him to threaten her, that, in case CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 47 of her persisting in her resolution, it might be fa- tal to the succession of her daughter. She re- plied with calmness, '' I will never willingly sub- mit to such an infamy, or peril my soul by con- senting to it. I am the wife of Henry the Eighth. I will never call myself by any other name, nor suffer my servants to do it." There can be no doubt but her affections were deeply wounded. She had married Henry in his youth, and, however changed to every other eye, to hers he was the same. She had been a faith- ful, humble, trusting wife. What pangs must she have endured, when her resistance to Lord Mountjoy's message was followed by the informa- tion, that the King had been privately married to Anne Boleyn, for several months ! Even then she does not seem to have forgotten her self- respect. She replied to the messenger, when he asked if she had any commands, " Say to the King, I shall ever remain his faithful wife." Few die of a broken heart ; but, we beheve, this unhappy Queen was one of the few. The arrow had entered, and the wound was deep and incurable. She was sick, — sick to the very soul. She had given the King the best years of her life ; she had meekly borne wrongs that the poorest peasant would have murmured at. She still loved him, for it is the destiny of woman to love, through ill treatment, through obloquy, and 48 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. disgrace. For three years she lingered under the gradual decay of consuming grief. But, happily for her, the vital flame burned feebly ; it flickered awhile, and then expired ! As Catharine approached her death, she re- quested to see her daughter, who was now twenty years old ; Henry had the cruelty to re- fuse. From the time of the divorce, she had been separated from her mother. And what was her last message to a faithless husband ? She WTote thus ; ''My most dear Lord, King, and Husband: My last hour is now approaching. I would fain at this solemn moment impress upon you the im- portance of rehgious duty, and the comparative emptiness of all human grandeur and enjoyment. Though your fondness towards these perishable advantages has created much trouble to yourself, and thrown me into many calamities, I truly for- give all past injuries, and hope Heaven will forgive you as freely as I do. I have no request to make you, but commend to you our infant daughter, the sole pledge of our love, and my maids and servants." Then, as if human affection broke through all restraint, she added, " I make this vow, that mine eyes desire you above all things." We ask not whether such a woman was a Catholic or a Protestant. We feel that she was a Christian, and all our sympathies are enlisted in her cause. CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 49 When Henry received this last proof of her long and tried affection, even he was moved, and unbidden tears fell from his eyes. And Anne, — surely the tenderness of woman must be roused. She was the happy, the suc- cessful rival. There was nothing now to fear from indignant Catholics or just Protestants. She stood firm upon the throne, and might freely weep, and lament the sorrows of her once beloved mis- tress. There is surely no enmity in the grave ! The palHd cheek, the sunken eye, the closed and silent lips, the rigid form, can these awaken exul- tation ? Would that they could not ; but it was said, that Anne expressed a joy and triumph when she heard of Catharine's death, unbecoming the " painted shadow of a queen." It may be, that she still saw some lingering tenderness in the cold-hearted, selfish monarch, towards the wife of his youth. Such ties are only broken com- pletely by hatred or contempt ; and neither of these emotions could Henry conjure up. Her crime was, being no longer young. Well might Luther say, '' What a noble bond is formed be- tween man and woman," when even the whirlwind of passion could not wholly destroy it. " She has been to me a most loving and faithful wife," said the monarch ; " would that my conscience would allow me to be at rest ! " alluding to her marriage with his brother. If, as Catharine sol- 4 50 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. emnly protested, she had only been the nominal wife of Arthur, what shall we say of the odious hypocrisy of Henry. Hitherto, we have seen in Anne's conduct lit- tle to approve ; but let us not judge her too harshly. Early sent from a mother's watchful care to the French Court, allowed to mix with the society there, to sparkle and to dazzle while al- most a child, uninstructed in the ethics of our days, which, at least, inculcate the beauty and wisdom of self-discipline, her career was a thought- less one ; and, when she returned to England, she was placed again in a court, as maid of honor to the British Queen, disappointed in a first love, and taught that loyalty and ambition must go hand in hand. Spurred on by her father, and unreprov- ed by the Archbishop who was her model of wis- dom and virtue, may we not rather be surprised that her conduct was so discreet, as, in spite of calumny, it appears to have been. The King's addresses she at first received with coldness, and, more than once, retired to her father's house, and, let us hope, to the arms of a mother, whose counsels were true to nature. On this subject history is silent ; we know nothing of the domes- tic education of Anne. But what mother can be found who would willingly sacrifice a daughter to such a man as Henry the Eighth, at this period of his life, even though he were a monarch ^ Of CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 51 her father, it is recorded, that she went back to the Court, influenced by his tears and entreaties. The first act of the drama of Anne's hfe is ended ; let us proceed to the second ; and this was her coronation. " On Saturday, the one-and-thirtieth day of May, the Queen was conveyed through London, in order as follows." We pass over the greater part of this description, as the curious naay find it in Stowe, and select only such parts as may be interesting to all. After the long procession of nobility, passing through streets hung with tis- sues of gold, velvet, and other rich hangings, and " the windows replenished with ladies and gentle- men to behold the Queene as she passed, all making a goodly shew," came Anne, " in a white litter of white cloth of gold, not covered or braid- ed, which was led by two palfreys clad in white damask, down to the ground, head and all, led by her footmen ; she had on a kirtle of white cloth of tissue, and a mantle of the same furred with ermine, her hair hanging downe, but on her head she had a coif with a circlet about it full of rich stones ; over her was borne a canopy of cloth of gold, with four gilt staves, and four silver belles ; for bearing of the which canopy were appointed sixteen knights ; foure to bear it in one space on foote, and four another space, according to their own appointment. Next after the Queene, rode 52 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. the Lord Brough, her chamberlaine ; next after him, William Coffin, master of the horse, with a side-saddle trapped down with cloth of tissue ; after him rode seven ladies in crimson velvet, turned up with cloth of gold and tissue, and their horses trapped with gold." Then came innumer- able pageants, " one of little children, apparelled like merchants, which welcomed her to the cittie with two proper propositions, both in French and in English. From thence she rode toward Grace Church corner, where was a costly and marvel- lous cunning pageant made by the merchants of the Stillyard. Therein was the Mount Parnassus with the fountain of Helicon, which was of white marble,. and four streames without pipes did rise an ell high, and meet together in a little cup above the fountain, which fountain ran abundantly with rackt Reynish wine till night." Much of the same pageantry was everywhere exhibited " Then she went forward, and passed the great conduit in Cheape by a goodly fountain that ranne continually wyne, both white and claret, all the af- ternoon The recorder came to her with low reverence, making a proper and brief propo- sition, and gave to her in the name of the cittie a thousand markes in golde, in a golden purse, which she thankfully accepted with many good wordes, and so rode to the conduit, where was a rich pageant of melody and songs, in which pa- CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 53 geant were Pallas, Juno, and Venus, and afore them stood Mercuries, which in the name of the three goddesses gave unto her a ball of golde di- vided into three, signifying three gifts which these three goddesses gave to her ; that is to say, wis- dome, riches, and fehcitie." '' On the first of June, Whitsunday, the Queene again appeared in procession to attend the King's Chappel. The Queene was on this day attired in a circote and robe of purple velvet furred with ermine, and her hair and coif as it w^as on Satur- day ; her train, which was very long, was borne by the old Duchess of Norfolk When she came to the place made for her in the midst of the church, she was set in a rich chair, where she rested awhile, then went forward to the altar, and there prostrated herself before Archbishop Cranmer. He said collects, and anointed her on the head and breast. The Archbishop sett the crown of St. Edward on her head, and then delivered her the sceptre of gold in her right hand, and the rod of ivory with the dove in her left hand, and then all the choir sung Te Deum, &c., which over, the Bishop took off the crown of St. Edward, being heavy, and set on her head the crown made for her." An account is added of the feast, of costly dishes and subtilties, &c. ; but the specimen already given of the pageantry 54 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. attending Anne's coronation is a small part of it, though probably enough for the reader. We now behold Anne and her father in posses- sion of all they had so long coveted. They had reached the point of human greatness. We must follow her a little further in her history, — we must see her on the English throne, gay, affable, and dispensing her sunny smiles to all around her. Amidst the dark season of bigotry and persecu- tion, she seems to have glided amongst its minis- ters like an angel of peace. Her mind was ap- parently quick and versatile ; she read with avid- ity Tyndal's translation of the Scriptures, and others of his works which the Archbishop put into her hand, and which were deemed heretical. She delighted in the flowing verses of Wyatt, and made him her poet laureate. She spoke kindly to all her attendants, and, when the princess Ehzabeth was born, in less than a year after her marriage, she probably believed that her happiness was secure. CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 55 CHAPTER V. Soon after these events, Henry was prevailed upon by Bellay, Bishop of Bayonne, (who was commissioned by Francis,) to make concessions to the Court of Rome. The Pope, who really had no wish to come to extremities with England, finally agreed to defer his sentence of excommu- nication in consequence of Catharine's divorce and Henry's marriage, and wait for the submis- sion. This negotiation in part transpired, and gave doubt and alarm to Anne and her party. Anne knew that she could find no favor with the Pope, and the Protestants were fully aware that a renewal of apologies and promises was a re- newal of CathoHc bonds. Cranmer, well acquainted with the obstinacy of Henry, looked on with dismay, trusting, however, that the reformed rehgion might yet be protected. The messenger was despatched to Rome, and the English Protestants waited with anxious feelings for the events that were to fol- low. Contrary winds detained the courier of the King beyond the time appointed. To the ex- 56 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. cited mind of the Pope, this delay was a new in- sult. In vain his counsellors sohcited him to suspend the sentence, and suggested the possibil- ity of involuntary detention. The Pope posi- tively refused, and uttered the sentence of e^^ communication against Henry, and England be- came a Protestant country ! The dismay of the Catholic conclave, with Clement at their head, may well be imagined at the arrival of the courier freighted with Henry's submission, two days after the tremendous sen- tence of excommunication had been hurled at his royal head. Cranmer might well say with Lu- ther, ''God is on our side," when he found the intended submission of the King was rendered of no avail by the precipitancy of the Pope, and his zeal in the cause of reformation seems from this time to have been unceasing. The first step he proposed, was, to have the Scriptures put into vulgar or common language, and liberty given to all to read them. Though this motion was ac- ceded to in Parliament, yet another was added of an opposite spirit, and greatly vexed the Arch- bishop. '' That all in whose possession were books printed in the vulgar language, either be- yond or this side of the sea, of suspect doctrine, should be warned, within three months to bring them in before certain persons appointed by the King, under certain penalties to be determined by CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 57 the King." The Archbishop had openly in his preaching denied the Pope's jurisdiction ; but in March, 1534, a bill was read in the House of Lords, setting forth the intolerable exactions for Peter-^mce^ provisions, pensions, and bulls, which were contrary to all laws, and grounded only on the Pope's power of dispensing, which was usurped ; for the King, and the Lords and Com- mons only had the right to consider how the laws might be dispensed with, or abrogated, and that the King ought to be considered the supreme head of the Church. This act was accepted, and the suc- cession to the crown was secured, in another bill passed a few days after, to the descendants of Queen Anne, in which all were required " to swear to bear faith, truth, and obedience alonely to the King's majesty, and to his heirs of his most dear and entirely beloved wife, Queen Anne." This bill very naturally aw^oke new opposition among the Cathohcs, and new tumults. Anne had the mortification of seeing herself continually styled the " upstart Queen," the subject of coarse and indecent jests ; for the Enghsh were not at that time accomplished in the neat and pointed epigram of the French. They pounced upon their prey, and mauled and battered like any box- ers. Not contented with this prowess, their dissat- isfaction began to take a treasonable shape, mak- 58 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. ing a woman by the name of A«fie Barton their unfortunate tool. This person had been subject to epileptic fits, and, while under their partial dominion, adopted a wildness and strangeness of denunciation, that has since afforded a model for many romances. Bred in the Roman Catholic school, and deeply sensible of the wrongs of Catharine, she nat- urally turned her vituperation upon her succes- sor Anne. More than once, Anne had, in her excursions, heard the wild ravings of the self- styled prophetess. With the curiosity of youth, she had even paused to listen ; and, when her at- tendants would have arrested or used violence towards the woman, she had ordered them to let her alone. The impression was a fleeting one upon the Queen's mind, and it was not till she was styled the Maid of Kent, and her mission " accredited by a letter written in heaven, and sent to her by Mary Magdalene," that the mad woman was recalled to her memory. Nothing more entirely exhibits the darkness of the age, than the importance attached to this mis- erable woman. The King became more espe- cially the object of her predictions. She ven- tured to proclaim that he would die the death of a common felon. As she resided within the diocese of Cranmer, he could not remain igno- rant of her growing influence. For some time CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 59 he regarded her as Anne had done, as of little importance ; but, when her predictions took a form so treasonable, and she even fixed on a day for the death of the King, he could no longer remain inactive. There is a letter of the Archbishop's still extant giving an account of her. " When she was brought here and laid before the image of our Lady, her face was wonderfully disfigured, her tongue hanging out, and her eyes being in a manner plucked out, and laid upon her cheeks ; and so greatly disordered." Le Bas, the histo- rian of Cranmer, supposes she had something of the gift of ventriloquism, for the Archbishop goes on to say ; '' Then there was a voice heard speak- ing inwardly, her lips not greatly moving ; she all that while continuing by the space of three hours or more in a trance. The which voice, when it told any thing of the joys of heaven, it spake so sweetly and so heavenly, that every man was rav- ished with the hearing thereof. And contrary, when it told any thing of hell, it spake so horri- bly and terribly, that it put the hearers in great fear. It spake also many things for the confirma- tion of pilgrimages, and trentals, hearing of masses and confessions, and many other such things. And after she had lain there a long time, she came to herself again, and was perfectly whole. And so this miracle was finished and solemnly sung, and a book written of all the story thereof. 60 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. and put into print ; which ever since that time hath been commonly sold, and gone abroad among the people." Trances and somnambulism have generally been the medium of imposition. Cranmer goes on to say, that he had " sent for the holy maid and examined her, and now she confessed all, and said she never had a vision in her life ; but all that she ever said was feigned of her own imagi- nation, to satisfy the minds of them that resorted unto her, and to obtain worldly praise." She and her accomplices were arraigned and committed to the Tower. On the 20th of April, the Nun or Holy Maid, with her instigators, were brought to Tyburn. Whatever might have been her misdoings in other respects, it is shocking to think that a poor epileptic woman, the tool of others, should have been executed for treason. Her speech at the scaffold is such, as in lucid moments and removed from improper influence, might be expected. "- Hither I am come to die ; and I have been not only the cause of my own death, which most justly I have deserved, but al- so am the cause of the death of all those persons who suffer here at this time. And yet, to say the truth, I am not much to be blamed, consider- ing that it was^well known to these learned men that I was a poor wench, without learning, and therefore they might easily have perceived that CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 61 the things that were done by me could not pro- ceed in no such sort ; but their capacities and learning could right well judge from whence they proceeded, and that they were altogether feigned. Bui because the thing which I feigned was alto- gether profitable to them, therefore they much praised me, and bore me in hand, that it was the Holy Ghost and not I that did them ; and then, I being puffed up with their praises, fell into a cer- tain pride and foolish fantasy with myself, and thought I might feign what I would, which thing hath brought me to this case ; and for the which now, I cry God and the King's Highness most heartily mercy, and desire you all good people to pray to God to have mercy on me, and on all them that here suffer with me." Warham and Fisher were for a time duped by the delusion, and even Sir Thomas More thought the matter worth investigating ; but it does not appear that he was decided, as he always spoke of her as the " silly nun." Those who were executed with her as abettors, have been called the first martyrs of reform ; with how much jus- tice is easily determined. When the imposition was first discovered, Cromwell, then Secretary of State, sent to Fish- er, Bishop of Rochester, a reproof, and advised him to write an humble letter to the King, and desire his pardon, saying, he knew the King 62 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. would grant it. Fisher, however, evaded the ad- vice, and said that he was induced to have faith in her from what is said in the Prophet Amos, " that God will do nothing without revealing it to his servants." He continued obstinate, and would make no submission. The oath of succession for Anne's issue was now administered, including many other articles. It was -generally accepted and sworn to ; but Sir Thomas More and the Bishop of Rochester re- fused to take the oath. The Archbishop, who had a sincere respect for More, urged: him most earnestly to subscribe to it, and used arguments convincing to his own mind. " You say," said Cranmer, '' that you are not persuaded that it is a sin, but a doubtful matter. You certainly know you ought to obey the King and the law ; therefore there is a certainty on the one hand, and only a doubt on the other." " I have weighed the matter," he rephed, '' and examined it carefully, and my conscience leans to the other side. I am wiUing to take my oath that this is a matter of principle, and not done from disrespect or obstinacy." Gardiner, the Abbot of Westminster, then said, that he might see that his conscience was erroneous, since the great council of the realm was of another mind, and therefore he ought to change his conscience. CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 63 " If I were alone," said More, " against the whole Parliament, I might suspect my own judg- ment ; but I have the whole council of Christen- dom on my side." Secretary Cromwell, who tenderly loved him, began to fear that his ruin was inevitable, and pro- tested that his refusal of the oath was to him hke losing his only son. Cranmer, now finding that neither More nor Fisher could be wrought upon to sign what was called the succession, asked them if they w^ould swear to the succession of the crown for the issue of the King's present marriage, and let the other articles rest. After dehberation they consented, and Cran- mer wrote an earnest and touching letter to Cromwell, entreating these terms might be accept- ed. But the King was too much irritated, and determined the thing should proceed according to law ; and they were indicted and committed to the Tower. There they were imprisoned for a year. More was supplied with the necessaries of life by his favorite daughter, Margaret Roper ; but Fisher, in his seventy-seventh year, with all the infirmities of old age, was left without suitable clothing, and compelled to solicit it even from his persecutors. There is something in this proceeding, that calls forth our extreme indignation. Two men, 64 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. distinguished for their piety and truth, educated as Catholics, were thus condenaned for asserting that Henry was not the supreme head of the Catholic Church. Fisher was the last surviving counsellor of Henry the Seventh, and to his care the Countess of Richmond, the King's grand- mother, on her death-bed, recommended her roy- al grandson, Henry the Eighth. For a time, the young monarch had revered him, and even boast- ed, that no one possessed a prelate equal in virtue and learning to the Bishop of Rochester. His opposition to the divorce first alienated the King ; then the affair of Elizabeth Barton drew upon him an attainder for treason ; and the third oppo- sition in refusing to take the oath of succession, sealed his ruin. After Fisher was imprisoned, and before the news of his condemnation had reached Rome, Paul the Third, the successor of Clement, named him for a Cardinal. When this information reached Henry, he said with much jocularity, " Paul may send the hat, but we will take care that he shall have no head to wear it on." Cranmer did not cease exerting his influence to save the lives of these two men. When More was to appear at the bar, he was con- ducted on foot through the most frequented streets, on the 7th of May, 1535, and entered the court leaning on his staff, for he was much CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 65 weakened by his imprisonment ; but his counte- nance was cheerful and composed. The sen- tence pronounced upon him is too horrible to re- cord, but '' by the King's mercy " it was changed into beheading. Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, was still more enfeebled by age and great privations, but seems to have preserved a cheerfulness almost amount- ing to vivacity ; or, perhaps, the speedy prospect of relief, after the time of his execution was fixed, might have produced it. For instance, there was a false rumor that he was to be execut- ed on a certain day. His cook hearing of it, omitted preparing his dinner. He inquired why his dinner was not brought. '' Sir," said the cook, "it was commonly talked all the towne over, that you should have died that day, and therefore I thought it but vaine to dresse any thing for you." " For all that report," he answered merrily, " thou seest me yet ahve ; and, therefore, whatso- ever newes thou shalt heare of me hereafter, let rae no more lack my dinner, but make it ready as thou art wont to do ; and, if thou seest me dead when thou comest, eat it thyself." He arrayed himself for his execution with un- common care, calling it his "^'marriage day." When the heutenant came for him, he was not 5 66 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. quite ready, and sent for his furred tippet to put round his neck. The officer smiled, and said, " O my lord, what neede you be so careful for your health for this little time, not much above an houre." '' I think no otherwise," he replied ; " but yet I will keep myself as well as I can till the very time of my execution. I will not willingly hinder my health one minute of an hour, but still pro- long the same as long as I can, by such reason- able waies and meanes, as God hath provided for me." There is something truly dignified in this reply, showing the healthy and composed state of his mind. '' When the innocent and holy man was come upon the scaffold, he spake to the people in effect as followeth ; "Christian people, I am come hither to die for the faith of Christ's holy Catholique Church ; and I thank God hitherto my stomach hath served me very well thereunto, so that yet I have not feared death ; wherefore I desire you all to help and assist with your prayers, and, at the very in- stant and point of death's stroke, I may in that very moment stand steadfast without fainting in any one point of the Catholique faith, free from any fear." Would that this were the first blood shed' in CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 67 the cause of religious faith during Henry the Eighth's reign. But it is sad to think, that men who could die so nobly for their own belief, were previously instruments in shedding the blood of Lutherans ! There is sufficient evidence that Cranmer bitterly lamented the death of these two men, and used all the influence he possessed to save their hves. The execution of these two distinguished sons of the Catholic Church, Sir Thomas More and Fisher, filled the Pope, Paul the Third, with just indignation. He perceived that the peri- od for temporizing was past, and he determined to make a desperate effort to establish once more his authority among the subjects of the re- beUious King. For this purpose, in 1535, his celebrated bull was executed. The tenor of it is well known. It summons the King and his accomphces to appear at Rome within sixty days, on pain of excommunication and of exclusion from Christian burial. In case of disobedience, an interdict is laid on pubhc worship, and the pos- terity of Anne Boleyn pronounced illegitimate. It absolves the subjects of Henry from their fealty and allegiance, commands the clergy to leave the realm, and forbids the military to stir in defence of the King. It prohibits all Christian powers from entering into treaty or confederacy with the King, and dissolves all previous engage- 68 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. merits made with him. It charges the nobility and gentry to take up arms against their sovereign, and authorizes all to seize the property of those who disobey the bull, and to reduce them to slavery. There was two or three years' delay before this tremendous instrument was actually and offi- cially issued. Paul and his counsellors were credulous enough to beheve that the mere rumor of it would be sufficient to bring Henry to terms ; but, lest it should not accomplish all that was in- tended, another alarming report was circulated, that the Pope had determined, if Henry contin- ued disobedient, to take away his kingdom, and give it to one of the pious German princes. What in the present day excites derision, at that period stirred up controversy. And in this childish exhibition of pontifical power, Cranmer found the cause which lay at his heart strongly aided. He succeeded in consecrating the excellent Latimer in the see of Worcester ; a man who seems to have been free from the persecuting bigotry of the times. Cromwell was created vicegerent by the King ; and, whatever was his character, he did much towards aiding Cranmer's purposes. The suppression of the monasteries was his work, in conjunction with the King, who was nothing loth to convert their revenues to CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 69 his own emolument. Cranmer most earnestly desired, that the monasteries and abbeys might become schools and colleges, and used many arguments and much persuasion for that pur- pose. 70 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES CHAPTER VI. A HEAVY calamity was now impending over the Archbishop. He had loved the Queen with parental affection, and trusted that her reign might promote the cause of virtue and true religion. In the continuance of her gay and sometimes sportive demeanor, after she became Queen of England, he saw only the same natural vivacity, that had made her the dehght of her friends, the charm of her father's household, and had won the heart of the monarch. It does not appear, that he had ever advised her to a change of demeanor, or warned her that her royal husband had placed spies in her path. Such an idea was probably as remote from his mind, as it appears to have been from that of the unfortunate Queen. It was at a tilting match that the King's jeal- ousy is said to have reached its height. The fall of her handkerchief, whether by accident or design, which he chose to consider a signal to a lover, was the pretext he made use of to accuse the Queen. But, if the beautiful Jane Seymour was present, it elucidates the mystery. Anne was to be sacrificed to make way for a rival. CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 71 The mockery of her trial fills us with indignation. Surrounded by enemies, all eager for her ruin, for Henry had become despotic ; tormented by the presence of a woman, who, though the wife of her oiii^ffi, look pleasure in annoying her ; ac- cused of the vilest crimes by the infamous Lady Rochfort, who, for the sake of accomplishing the ruin of the Queen, condemned her own husband to the scaffold, what hope remained for the unfor- tunate Anne ? We naturally look to Cranmer ; but even here our expectations are frustrated. The King, knowing the antagonist he must en- counter, sent him his positive commands, not to appear at Court, but to go to Lambeth. It is evident that there had been some want of harmony between Anne and her royal htisband previously to the birth of a son, '' who, in being born dead," greatly enraged him, as his expecta- tions were at once disappointed. Her gentle and heart-breaking remonstrance, that it might have been different but for his unkindness, proves that she had suffered previously to the event. The best explanation of the sequel of the Queen's history, is in the following sentence. " The King saw her no longer with those eyes which she had formerly captivated." It is very possible, that her manners might have been too frank and open for the high dignity of her situation, and have given the King some 7-2 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. grounds for jealousy. But the extreme alienation that took place, can only be accounted for, by bearing in mind his character, as it exhibited itself through life. Jealous of the sentiments he in- spired, and forgetting how entirely he had lost the power of charming^ he probably discovered this unwelcome truth from Anne's involuntary deport- ment. Her own observation confirms this idea. While protesting her innocence of any crime, she adds, that possibly she might not have been suffi- ciently guarded in concealing her dissatisfaction towards him. Probably disgust was the true word, and we may well believe that her death was too slight a revenge for his insulted pride. It was sufficient however for his purposes, as it opened the way for a new Queen. No one can read the trial of Anne Boleyn, without feeling the mockery of it. The King's accusation against her of infidelity falls to the ground, and the poor resource of a pre-contract with Percy, Earl of Northumberland, is had re- course to. This the Earl positively denied on oath ; but Anne, perhaps, understanding less the nature of legal contracts, and remembering her first love, and feeling that her heart was closely allied to his, let fall words that could be interpret- ed into a confession of a contract before her mar- riage with the King. Let us look at the situation of this unfortunate CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 73 Queen, at whose coronation, three years before, we have glanced. She had decidedly advocated the reformed doctrines, and used all her influence that the Bible might be translated into English, in a manner that all might search it for themselves. She had endeavoured to promote a union between Henry and the Protestant princes. This natural- ly disaffected her Catholic subjects ; and as her charities, though freely given to all who were in want, were among the poor and uninfluential, they created for her no powerful party. In nine months she distributed between fourteen and fif- teen thousand pounds to the poor, and was urgent that the money that was raised by the suppres- sion of religious houses should be dedicated to benevolent purposes. Gardiner, who was abroad, and the Duke of Norfolk at Court, justly dreaded her influence in opposition to the Catholic cause, and heartily wished her out of the way. There were enough round the King to seize the humor of his mind, and to act as spies ; and, by informing him that a Lady Wingfield had sworn upon her death-bed that the Queen was unfaithful to hini, they gave him a pre- tence for arraigning her. " This," says an histori- an of the times, " was the safest sort of forgery, ^o lay a thing on a dead person's name, where there is no fear of discovery before the great davj." When she was first arraigned, she appears to 74 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. have doubted the reality, and said, smiling, " The King has only done this thing to prove me." When actually convinced, she was seized with violent nervous affections, and talked wildly of her own innocence and the judgment that would fall on her enemies. She earnestly entreated to see the King ; but, of course, this she was de- nied. The next day she was carried to the Tower, and Lady Boleyn, an aunt-in-law, was placed with her as a spy, who regularly studied to draw confessions from her, every day making known all that fell from her lips. We may imagine what was the state of the prisoner, naturally so excitable, and of a dehcate and sensitive frame. Her sense of wretchedness seemed to be extreme, and brought on nervous spasms. Sometimes she wept violently, and then, by a sudden transition of feeling, burst into laugh- ter. Then, again, she called on her mother, and bemoaned her misery when she should hear of her calamity ; but she was denied the natural solace of seeing her. Her mother was not permitted to be with her. Could she have rested her throbbing head on her bosom, could she have felt maternal tears mingling with hers, could she have listened to the soothing, though agonized accents of affection, we might have pitied her less ; for that being is not wholly desolate, who has one friend to lean upon. But poor Anne had none. CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 75 " O, if my Bishops were but here," she ex- claimed, " they would speak for me ! " But the King would not see Cranmer, and Cranmer alone dared by letter to plead her cause. This letter is given at length in various histories.* That it was written with the design of aiding the Queen, is fully apparent ; and yet, with the greatest caution, not to defend her so warmly as to ex- cite anew the evil feelings of the King. While he protests that he was most bound to her of all creatures hving, next to his Grace, he beseeches the King to suffer him to wish and pray that she may declare herself inculpable and innocent. " I am in such a perplexity," he says, " that my mind is clean amazed ; for I never had better opinion in woman than I had in her ; which maketh me to think that she could not be cul- pable." We must reflect, for a moment, on the despot- ic power of Henry, and the imphcit deference exercised towards him, to excuse in any degree the inactivity of Anne's former friends. We feel far from satisfied with the only one that made any attempt to bring the King to reflection ; and this was Cranmer. Yet it would have been proba- bly a useless sacrifice of his own life, had he ex- * Burnet's " History of the Reformation," Vol. II. ; « British State Trials," &c. 76 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. erted himself warmly in her cause. The methods he made use of were prudent and cautious, but failed, as all others would have done. We hope, for the sake of human nature, that he urged to see the Queen in her prison ; but this would be a matter between the King and himself, and was not grant- ed. She was doomed to linger through her days of suspense without the consolation of sympathy. At length she was summoned to her trial, pro- nounced guilty of high treason, and sentenced to be burned. We may imagine what her agony was at this terrible prospect, and how she might be wrought on to confess herself guilty in the hope of mitigat- ing the sentence. But, with all this natural hor- ror acting upon her mind, she never for an instant wavered in declaring her innocence of all offence save the pre-contract, which she evidently did not understand legally. It was now necessary that a divorce should be obtained, in order that Elizabeth, the daughter of Anne, should be rendered illegitimate. The Archbishop was called on to pronounce the sen- tence of divorce. This was done at Lambeth, he sitting as judge. Till we reflect fully on the circumstances, we are shocked that any human authority could have compelled him to such a step. But Anne had confessed the pre-contract with another before, CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 77 her marriage, and confessed it at Lambeth before Cranmer. In his office of judge he was obliged to pronounce the sentence of divorce. That he was deeply afflicted, there is abundant testimony. Other motives probably operated upon his mind. He thought, if Anne was no longer an obstacle to the King's marriage, but was fairly divorced, her hfe might be spared, and a pardon granted ; but no such mercy was in store for her. In consequence of her confession, her sentence of burning was commuted to beheading. When all suspense was over, and she knew that she must die, and the manner of her death, some natural feeling of apprehension seems to have clung to her, as she expressed to the executioner, Mr. Kingston. " ' Mr. Kingston, I hear say I shall not die this afternoon ; and I am very sorry therefore ; for I thought to be dead by this time, and past my pain.' I told her it would be no pain, it was so sottle. ' I have a little neck,' said she, laughing, and put her hands about it. I have seen many men and women executed ; and that they have been in much sorrow ; but this lady, to my knowledge, has joy and pleasure in death." * Thus ended the life of Anne Boleyn, in ] 536, the very year of Catharine's death. Catholic historians have argued presumptions of her guilt, * Kingston's letter. 78 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. because her daughter, Queen Elizabeth, instituted no process to prove her innocence during her reign. On the score of prudence, it agreed with her wary poHcy to let the question of succession, now at rest, remain so. And then how could she institute an inquiry, without rendering her father's memory as execrable as it deserved to be. She acted in this respect with her usual wisdom. Of the unfortunate Anne there is now httle to be said. Her great fault was ambition, and dearly she paid for it. Her advocates say, for five years she resisted the King's criminal suit, and., finally obliged him to make her his Queen, There is little of honor in that virtue which suffered such an assault for five years, nor is it uncandid to sup- pose that her coquetry kept alive his passion. She frequented his tilts and tournaments, when she knew herself to be the object of them, and some- times retired from the Court, and sometimes re- turned to it. We have seen many queen it on a smaller scale, and with a far less object than a di- adem ; but the want of truth and exalted virtue is the same. Poor Anne Boleyn ! for what does her history now serve, but to " point a moral." Let us use it then as we may. We are not fond of talking of retribution ; it is a mysterious subject, and may be the source of uncharitable mistakes. But there was a remarkable coincidence between Anne's errors and her misfortunes. Neither her CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 79 youth, nor her thoughtlessness, nor her constitu- tional gayety, can lead us to overlook her want of feeling for Catharine of Aragon, nor the little remorse with which she took possession of her throne. Three years afterwards, how bitterly was the pang brought home to her own heart. Did she not then think of the injured Queen } We are told that she did, and of the Princess Mary, and sent a message to the latter, imploring her for- giveness for any harshness she might have shown towards her in her relation of step-mother. Then, too, from the early attachment between herself and Percy of Northumberland, arose an- other striking coincidence. She had slighted his honest love in the prospect of a crown ; she had relinquished his affection in consequence of the unrighteous pursuit of the monarch ; and, on that very peg, he hung his accusation, — on the pre- contract (if there was one) which he had severed. Truly, " the gods make scourges " of our errors as well as vices. In these points, we think, con- sist the whole of Anne's offences ; and " griev- ously did she atone for them." Her last letter to the King ought not to be omitted. '* Sir, Your Grace's displeasure, and my im- prisonment, are things so strange unto me, as what to write, or what to excuse, I am altogether igno- 80 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. rant. Whereas you send unto me, (willing me to confess a truth, and so obtain your favor,) by such an one whom you know to be mine ancient professed enemy, I no sooner received this mes- sage by him, than I rightly conceived your mean- ing ; and as if, as you say, confessing a truth in- deed may procure my safety, I shall with all wil- lingness and duty, perform your command. "But let not your Grace ever imagine, that your poor wife will ever be brought to acknowl- edge a fault, where not so much as a thought thereof preceded. And to speak a truth, never prince had wife more loyal in all duty, and in all true affection, than you have ever found in Anne Boleyn, with which name and place I could willingly have contented myself, if God, and your Grace's pleasure, had been so pleased. Neither did I, at any time, so far forget myself in my ex- altation, or received Queenship, but that I alw^ays looked for such an alteration as now I find ; for the ground of my preferment being on no surer foundation than your Grace's fancy, the least al- teration, I knew, was fit and sufficient to draw that fancy to some other subject. You have chosen me from a low estate, to be your Queen and companion, far beyond my desert or desire. If then you found me worthy of such honor, good your Grace, let not any light fancy, or bad counsel of mine enemies, withdraw your princely CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. 81 favor from me ; neither let that stain, that unwor- thy stain of a disloyal heart towards your good Grace, ever cast so foul a blot on your most du- tiful wife, and the infant princess your daughter. Try me, good King, but let me have a lawful trial, and let not my sworn enemies sit as my ac- cusers and judges ; yea, let me receive an open trial, for my truth shall fear no open shame ; then shall you see, either mine innocency cleared, your suspicion and conscience satisfied, the igno- miny and slander of the world stopped, or my guilt openly declared. So that whatsoever God or you may determine of me, your Grace may be freed from an open censure ; and, mine offence being so lawfully proved, your Grace is at liberty, both before God and man, not only to execute worthy punishment on me as an unlawful wife, but to follow your affection, already settled on that party, for whose sake I am now as I am, whose name I could some good while since have pointed unto ; your Grace being not ignorant of my sus- picion therein. ^' But, if you have already determined of me, and that not only my death, but an infamous slan- der, must bring you the enjoying of your desired happiness, then I desire of God, that he will par- don your great sin therein, and likewise mine en- emies, the instruments thereof ; and that he will not call you to a strict account for your unprince- 6 82 CRANMER AND HIS TIMES. \y and cruel usage of me, at his general judgment seat, where both you and myself must shortly ap- pear, and in whose judgment, I doubt not, (what- soever the world may think of me,) mine inno- cence shall be openly known, and sufficiently cleared. '' My last and only request shall be, that my- self may only bear the burthen of your Grace's displeasure, and that it may not touch the inno- cent souls of those poor gentlemen, who (as I understand) are likewise in strait imprisonment for my sake. If ever I have found favor in your sight, if ever the name of Anne Boleyn hath been pleasing in your ears, then let me obtain this re- quest ; and I will so leave to trouble your Grace any further, with mine earnest prayers to the Trinity to have your Grace in his good keeping, and to direct you in all your actions. From my doleful prison in the Tower, this 6th of May. " Your most loyal and ever faithful wife, " Anne Boleyn." The night before her execution, she sent to the King the following noble message. " Tell him, I thank him that he has still continued to advance me ; from a private gentlewoman, he ^ first made me a Marchioness, then a Queen, and, now that he can raise me no higher on earth, he is sending me to be a saint in heaven." 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