but refusing the money said vnto her Mistresse sinâ⦠ãâã were agaynst good manners to refuse a Gentlewomans New-yeares gift I am content to take your Gloues but for your Money I vtterly refuse it much against her mynd he restored her the Gold backe agayne Another tyme also one ãâã Gresham hauing a cause ââ¦ding before him in the Chââ¦ncery sent him for a New ãâã gift a fayre Gilded cup The ââ¦shon whereof he very well ââ¦king caused one of his owne cups though not to his mynd of so good a fashon yet much better in value to be brought forth of his Chamber which he willed the Messenger in recompence to redeliuer vnto his Mistresse for with other condition he would in no wise receiue it Now when the King plainly saw that he could not by any meanes wyn Syr Thomas More to his syde he went about by terror and threates to inforce him thereunto the beginning wherof was occasioned in this manner There was a certaynâ⦠Nunne dwelling in Canterbury commonly called The holy Mayd ãâã ãâã who for the exteriour shew of her Vertue and Holinââ¦e grew into great esteeme amongst the common People first and then amongst others and for that cause many Religious persons many Doctors of Diuinity and diuers others of very great accompt of the Layty vsed to resort vnto her This holy woman affirmed to haue had a Reuelation from heauen to giue the King warning of his wicked life and of the abuse of the Sword and Authority committed vnto him by God and vnderstanding the Bishop of Rochester Doctour Fisher to be a man of notable vertuous life great learning she repayred to Rochester and there disclosed to him her sayd Reuelation desiring his aduice and counsell therein which the Bishop well perceiuing might stand with the lawes of God and holy Chuââ¦h ââ¦uised her as she before intenââ¦ed and had warning to do to ãâã vnto the King herselfe and ââ¦are vnto him all the cirââ¦stances therof Whereupon ãâã wââ¦nt and told vnto his Maâ⦠her said Reuelation and so ãâã home to Cantââ¦rbury Within a short tyme after this ãâã ãâã ââ¦oly Nunne made a ââ¦orney to the Monastery of Sion ãâã vpoÌ the Thames a litle ãâã ãâã by meanes of ãâã M. Rââ¦old a Father of the ââ¦ame house ãâã the Religious ââ¦erof At which tyme it hapâ⦠Syr Thomas More to be at ãâã visiting some of his aquainââ¦ance there talking with the ââ¦nne about some of her Reââ¦lations especially that which did concerne the Kings Supremacy and Marriage which he said he might freely and safely do without any daunger of the law by reason the same was then neither established by Statute nor confirmed by Oath as he himselfe had loÌg before prognosticated neuerthelesse in all the discourse and passages of speach which he had with the said Nunne as it after ward appeared he had carried himselfe so discreetly that he rather deserued coÌmendatioÌs theÌ blame At the Parlament following there was a bill put vp for the attaynting of the forsaid Nunne of Cantââ¦ury of some other Monasticall persons of High Treason as also Bishop Fishâ⦠of ãâã Sââ¦r Thomas More and diuers others of ãâã of Treason With which the King veriââ¦y thought Syr Thomas More would be so terrified that it would inforce him to relent coÌdescend to his purpose wherin as it seemed his Grace was much mistaken To this Bill Syr Thomas More was sââ¦ter to be receiued personââ¦ly to make answere for himâ⦠in his owne defence But the King not liking that assignââ¦d the Bishop of Canterbury ãâã Lord ChaÌcellour the Duke of No folke and M. Cromwell at a day and place appoynted to ãâã Syr Thomas More before them At which tyme M. Roper thinking his Father had now fit opportunity aduised him to labour thââ¦se Lordes for the help of his dischaââ¦ge forth of the Parlament Bill who answered M. Roper that he would At his comming before the Lordes according to theyr appoyntment they intertaââ¦ned him very ââ¦iendly and willed him to ãâã downe with them which in no wise he would ãâã began the Lord Chancellour to declare vnto him how many wayes the ââ¦ing had sheweâ⦠his loue and fauour towards him how gladly he would haue had him continue in his Office and how willing he would haue ben to haue heaped more Benefits vpon him how he could aske no worldly Honour or Profit at the Kings handes that was likely to be ââ¦enyed him hoping by this declaration of the Kinâ⦠fauours towards him to ãâã ââ¦im to fauour his Highnes buâ⦠of the mariage And lastly he requested his consent vnto no more but what the Parlament the Bishops and ãâã had allready admitted and ãâã To this Syr Tââ¦omas Mââ¦re ãâã maââ¦e answere sââ¦ying There is no man liuââ¦ng my Lordes that would with better will do the thing that might be aââ¦table to the Kings Highnes then my selfe who neeââ¦es must coÌfesse his manifold gooââ¦nesse and bountifull benefits mââ¦st ãâã bestowed vpon me Howbeit I verily thought that I should neuer haue heard more of this matter considering that from time to time euen from the first beginning heer of I haue declareâ⦠my mind playnly truly to his ãâã which his ââ¦ighnes eueâ⦠ãâã to me like a most graciouâ⦠ãâã very well to aââ¦ept ââ¦uer mynding as he said to ãâã me further therewith ââ¦nce ãâã tyme I could neuââ¦r ãâã further matter that was ãâã to moue me to any other ãâã whââ¦ch if I could there is nââ¦t a man in all the word that would haue bââ¦ne more glad thââ¦of then my selfe Mââ¦ny thinges more of like sort were heere vttered on both sides and in the end when they saw they could not by any manner of persuasion remoue him from his former determination then they began to touch him more neââ¦rely telling him that ââ¦he Kinges Maiesty had giuen ââ¦hem in commandemet ãâã they ãâã by no gentle meanââ¦s wyn ãâã to charge him in his Name with great ââ¦gratitude that ââ¦here was neuer found seruant ââ¦o his Soueraigne so vngrateâ⦠nor subieââ¦t to his Prince so ãâã as he for tââ¦at by his ãâã sinister ãâã he had moââ¦t vnnaturally vrged procuââ¦ed his ãâã to set forth ââ¦a Booke Of the Asertion of the ãâã ãâã and maynââ¦nance of the Popes Authoriâ⦠and therby caused him to ãâã great dishonour throughout ãâã to put a sword into the Popââ¦s handes to fight agaynst himselfe Now whââ¦n thââ¦y had thus laid ãâã these and all other such like terrours ãâã which they cold imagine agââ¦ynst him My Lordes quoth he these be but Bugbeares only to ãâã Children and not me Bââ¦t to answere that wherewith you do ãâã accuse me I ãâã ãâã that the Kings ãâã out of his Honour wilââ¦ââ¦euer lay any ãâã ãâã to my chââ¦rge for thââ¦e is no man in the world thââ¦t can in that ãâã sââ¦y ãâã in my excuse thââ¦n his ãâã himselfe who knoweth right well that ãâã uer was his procurer or Counsellour therevnto but after it was
deuised to allure his Maiesty who was alâ⦠ready contrary to the Cardinaâ⦠mynd and knowledge fallen iâ⦠loue with the Lady Anne Bullen to affect the French Kings Sister Which thing because of thâ⦠wars and hatred that was theâ⦠ââ¦etweene the French King and ââ¦e Emperour whome the Carââ¦inall now mortally hated he eryâ⦠earnestly indeauoured to ââ¦rocure And for the better furââ¦ering this his purpose he reââ¦uested one Langland Bishop of ââ¦incolne and Ghostly Father to ãâã Henââ¦y to put a scruple into ââ¦he K. head that it was not lawâ⦠for him to mary his Brothers ââ¦ife which thing the King not ââ¦ry to heare of related first to ãâã Thomas More required his ââ¦ounsell therein and with all ââ¦ewed himsome places of Scriture which seemed somewhat ãâã serue his purpose Syr Thomaââ¦ââ¦ore perusing the said places ââ¦ereupon as one that had neââ¦r professed Diuinity excused ââ¦mselfe vnto his Maiesty and said he was farre vnfit to meddle with such affaires The King not satisfied with this answere pressed and vrged him the more which he perceauing said vnto his Maiesty that for asmuch as such a busines required good aduise and deliberation he besought his Highnes to giue him sufficient respit to coÌsider aduisedly of the same Wherwith the King well contented replyed That Tonstall Clark Bishops of Durham Bath with others learned of his priuy CouÌsell should also be dealers therin So Syr Thomas More departed and conferred those places of Scripture with the Expositions of diuers of the ancient Fathers and Doctours of the Church and at his comming to Court talking with the King of the aforesaid matter he said To be playne with your Grace neither my Lord of Durham nor my Lord of Bath though I hold ââ¦hem to be both learned verââ¦uous holy Prelates nor my ââ¦elfe with any other of your Counsell being all your Maieââ¦ties owne seruants so greatââ¦y bound vnto you for your maââ¦ifold benefits dayly bestowed vpon vs be in my iudgment fit Counsellors for your Grace heââ¦ein But if your Maiesty desyre ââ¦o vnderstand the Truth such Counsellors may be found as ââ¦either for respect of worldâ⦠commodity nor for feare of ââ¦our Princely authority will ââ¦ny way be drawne to deceiuââ¦ââ¦ou And then he named vnto the King S. Hierome S. Augustine and diuers others auncient Fathers Doctors of the Church both Greeke an Latin and further shewed his Maiesty what authority he had gathered forth of them of which although the King as not fitting to his purpose did not very well like yet were they by Syr Thomas Moreâ⦠so wisely alleaged and so tempred with discretion that the King at that tyme tooke it in good part and had oftentimes conference with him againe about the same matter After this there were certayne questions propounded to thâ⦠Kings Counsell whether in this case the King needed to haue any scruple at all and if he had what was the best way to freâ⦠him of it The greater part of the Counsell were of opinion that there was good cause of scruple and that for his Maiesties discharge therin it was fit suite should be made vnto the Sea of Rome where the King thought that by his liberality he might with ease obtayne his purpose TheÌ was there procured from Rome a commission for the try all of this Mariage wherein Cardinall Campegius and Cardinall Wolsey were ioyned commissioners who for the determination therof sate at the Blacke-Fryers in London where a Libell was put in for the anulling of the said Mââ¦triomony affirming the Mariage betweene the King and Qââ¦eene to be vnlawfull Then againe for proofe therof to be lawfull there was produced ãâã dispensation in which after diuers disputations thereupoÌ holden there appeared an imperfection which notwithstanding by an other instrument or Breuâ⦠found out vpon search in thâ⦠Treasury of Spayne sent oueâ⦠to the commissioners in EnglaÌdâ⦠was supplyed so should iudgmeÌt haue ben giuen by the Popâ⦠accordingly had not the King vpon intelligence therof beforâ⦠the same Iudgment appealed to a Generall CouÌcell After whose Appellation the Cardinalls satâ⦠no more vpon that businesse It happened before the saâ⦠matter of Mariage brought in Question that M. Roper being one day in discourse with Syâ⦠Tho. More did with a kind of ââ¦oy congratulate with his said Father for the happy Estate of the Realme that had so Cathoââ¦ique a Prince as no Heretique durst shew his face so vertuous and learned a Clergy so graue and sound a Nobility and so loââ¦ing and obedient Subiects all ââ¦n one fayth agreeing togeather Troth it is so indeed Sonne Roââ¦er quoth he and then commended all degrees and estates of the same far beyond M. Roper And yet Sonne Roper quoth he I pray God that some of vs as high as we seeme to sit vpon the Mountaynes treading Heretiââ¦ques vnder our feete like Ants ââ¦ue not to see the day when we gladly would wish to be in league and composition with those whome you call Heretiques to let them haue their Churchâ⦠quietly to themselues vpon coÌâ⦠dition that they would be content to let vs haue ours quieâ⦠to our selues Then M. Roper produceâ⦠many reasons to the contrary saw no cause why any shoulâ⦠say so Well well Sonne Ropâ⦠quoth he I pray God some ãâã vs liue not till that day and ãâã no more To whome M. ãâã replyed By my troth Syr thââ¦s ãâã desperatly spoken seeming ãâã be halfe angry with Syr ãâã More who perceiuing the ãâã said merily vnto him Well ãâã SoÌne Ropââ¦r It shall not be then since you will not haue it soâ⦠Thus was he of so excellent ãâã temper that those who liued were coÌtinually coÌuersant with him in his house for the space ãâã twenty yeares and vpwardes ââ¦ould neuer perceiue him to be ââ¦nce moued or to make the ââ¦ast shew of anger But to returne agayne where ââ¦eft After the supplying of the ââ¦spensation sent vnto the comââ¦ioners into England as is ââ¦efore rehearsed the King taââ¦ng the businesse to himselfe as ââ¦t then mynding to proceed ââ¦y further in the matter assiââ¦ed the Bishop of Durham and ãâã Thomas More to go Embassaââ¦urs to Cambray a place neiââ¦er Imperiall nor French to ââ¦eat a Peace betweene the Emââ¦rour the FreÌch King himââ¦fe in the concluding wherof ââ¦r Tho. More so worthily manââ¦ged the busines that he procured therby much more benefit for the Kingdome then was at that tyme by the King and his CouÌsell thought possible could be coÌpassed For whose good seruice in that Embassy the King when he after made him Lord Chauncellour caused the Duke of Norfolke to declare openly to the people how much all ââ¦ngland was bounden vnto him as you shall see heeââ¦after more ãâã large Now vpon the coÌming home of the Bishop of Durham and Syâ⦠Thomas More from Cambray aforsayd the King began to reneâ⦠agayne his old suite and waâ⦠very earnest in persuading Syâ⦠Thomas More to agree vnto thââ¦
matter of his marriage vsinâ⦠all the wayes and meanes ãâã could deuise to draw him to his part and as it was thought did the rather for that end soone afââ¦er create him Lord Chauncelââ¦our of England And the King said further vnto him that alââ¦hough at his going to Cambray he was in vtter despaire to obââ¦ne dispensation thereof yet ââ¦ow he had conceiued some goââ¦d hope to coÌpasse the same ââ¦eaging that albeââ¦t his Marââ¦iage as being agaynst the posiââ¦ue Law of the Church the ââ¦itten Law of God was holââ¦en by the dispensation yet is ââ¦here another thing found out ââ¦flate quoth the King wherby ââ¦his Marriage appeareth so direââ¦tly agaynst the law of Nature ââ¦hat it can in no wise by the Church be dispensable as Doââ¦or Stokesley whome he had then preferred to the Bishopricke of London can well instruct you with whome vpon this point I would haue you to confer So they conferred togeatherâ⦠But for all this Conference Syr Thomas More could not be induced to change his opinion therein Yet notwithstanding did the Bishop in his Report oâ⦠him to the King affirme falsely that he found Syr Thomas More in the Kings cause very forward as being desirous to find some good matter wherewith he might serue the Kings contentment in that case Now this Bishop Stokesley hauing a litle before byn by Cardinall Wolsey openly rebuked in the Sarre-chamber awarded ãâã the Flecte he not well brooââ¦ing this contumelious vsage ââ¦nd knowing that forasmuch ãâã the Cardinall for his backeââ¦ardnes in pursuing the Kings ââ¦uorse was falling out of his ââ¦ghnes fauour and that he had ââ¦ow espied a fit opportunity to ââ¦euenge his quarell agaynst the ââ¦ardinall and to incense the ââ¦ing further agaynst him at ââ¦ast preuayled so far that the Cardinall was soone after disââ¦laced from his office of high Chancellorship and the same was conferred vpon Syr Thomas ââ¦ore hoping therby so to win ââ¦im to his syde that he would ââ¦ield his consent for the matter ââ¦f diuorse Then was Syr Thomas More betweene the Dukes of ãâã and Nââ¦rfolke brought througâ⦠ãâã Hall to his place ãâã the Chancery and the Duke ãâã Norfolkâ⦠in the audience of ãâã the people there assembled ãâã wed that he was from the ãâã himselfe straitley charged ãâã speciall commiââ¦ion to ãâã theââ¦e openly in the presence ãâã them all how much all ãâã was beholding to Syr ãâã ãâã for his good seruice anâ⦠how worthily he deââ¦erued thâ⦠highest roome in the Kingdom and further how deere his Maiesty loued trusted him wherââ¦in quoth the Duke he hatâ⦠great cause to reioyce praysâ⦠Almighty God Whereunto Syr Thomas Morâ⦠amongst diuers other wise and ââ¦arned speches made answere ââ¦nd replyed that allthough he ââ¦ad good cause to take comfort ãâã his Highnes singular fauour ââ¦wards him to whome thereââ¦ore he acknowledged himselfe ââ¦ost deeply bounden yet neââ¦erthelesse he must for his owne ââ¦art needes confesse that in all ââ¦ose things by thâ⦠Duks Grace ââ¦here alleaged he had done noââ¦hing but what was his duty ââ¦nd furthermore said That he ââ¦as very vnfit for that dignity ââ¦herein considering how wise ââ¦nd worthy a Prelate had lately ââ¦efore taken so great a fall he ââ¦aid he had no great cause to reââ¦oyce And as they had before in ââ¦he Kings behalfe charged him ãâã minister Iustice vprightly ââ¦ndiffereÌtly to the people without corruption or affection ãâã did he likewise charge them agayne that if they saw him at any time to digresse in the least thing touching any part of hiâ⦠duty in that honourable Office euen as they would discharg their owne duty and fidelity ãâã God and the King they would not fayle to declaââ¦e the same to his Maââ¦esty who otherwise might haue iust caùse to lay the fault wholy vpon them and to their charge Now when he was Lord Chauncellour on a tyme being at leasure as seldome he was a Sonne in law of his who had marryed one of his daughters spake merrily vnto him saying When Cardinall Wolsey was Lord Chancellour not onely ââ¦iuers of his priuy ChaÌber but ââ¦uch also as were but his very ââ¦oor-keepers got much proffit ââ¦nd now sith I haue maryed one ââ¦f your daughters and giue my ââ¦ayly attendance vpon youâ⦠I ââ¦hinke I might of reason looke ââ¦or ãâã ãâã ãâã ââ¦oyle all ãâã ãâã ãâã you be so ãâã ãâã ãâã to heare euery ãâã ãâã pââ¦re as rich beâ⦠ãâã ãâã no doores shut ãâã ãâã which is to me no ãâã ãâã and discouraââ¦eÌt whereas otherwise some ââ¦or friendshippe some for kynââ¦red but most for profit would ãâã glad to haue my furtherance ãâã bring them to your presence And now as the case stands if ãâã should take any thing of them know I should do them much wrong for that they may do ãâã much for themselues as I ãâã able to do for theÌ Which thinâ⦠though it be in you very comâ⦠mendable yet to me your Sonâ⦠I find it nothing profitable You say well Sonne quoâ⦠Syr Thomas More I do not mâ⦠like that you are so scrupuloâ⦠of conscience for there be mââ¦ny other wayes wherein I maâ⦠both do you good and pleasurâ⦠your friend also for sometymâ⦠may I by my word stand yoâ⦠friend insteed and sometimâ⦠I may by my letters help hiâ⦠or if he haue a cause dependiâ⦠before me at your request I mâ⦠heare him before another oâ⦠his cause be not altogether ãâã the best yet may I moue the paâ⦠tyes to fall to some reasonabâ⦠end or compound by arbitrement Howbeit this one thing Sonne I assure thee on my Fayth that if the parties will at my hands call for iustice then if ââ¦it were my Father that stood on the one side and the Diuell on the other side his cause being good the Diuell surely should haue right So offered he to his Sonne as much fauour as he thought he could in reason require And that he would for no respect digresse neuer so litle froÌ iustice did plainely appeare by another of his Sonns in law one M. Giles Hââ¦ron who had a sorry suite depending before him in the ChaÌcery yet presuming much vpon his Fathers fauour would in no wayes be perswaded by him to come to an indifferent compositioÌ with his aduersary wherevpon in triall of the matter Syr Thomas Mââ¦re pronounced sentence agaynst him He vsed euery afternoone to sit in his open Hall to the end that whosoeuer had any suit vnto him they might the more boulder come to his presence and there to open theyr Complayints before him Also his manner was to read euery Bill himselfe before he would grant any Sub poena and hauing read it he would either set his hand vnto it or else cancell it Whensoeuer he passed throgh Westminster Hall to his place in Chancery by the Court of Kings BeÌââ¦h if his Father one of the Iudges therof had bin there set before he came he would go into the same Court there most reuerently vpon his
his life he had vpon further consideration wââ¦thin two ââ¦ayes afââ¦r by another conu yance giuen the same immediatly to M. ãâã and his wââ¦e in present posseââ¦on So as the Staâ⦠had only auoyded the fiââ¦st cââ¦nueyance for faââ¦ting no more vnto the King theÌ had byn passed therââ¦n and the secoââ¦d conneyance passed to M. ãâã and his wife being dated two daââ¦es after falling without the compasse of the law was adââ¦dged good and valide Syr Thomas More being now prisoner in the Tower and one day looking fââ¦th at his window saw a Father of Syon named M. Rââ¦ynolds and three monkes of the Chââ¦rter house going out of the Tower to exââ¦cution for that they had refused the Oath of Supremaâ⦠wherupo he languiââ¦hing it were with desyre to beare them compââ¦ny sayâ⦠vnto his daââ¦ghter ãâã then preââ¦nt Looââ¦e ãâã ãâã thou not see that these blessed Fathers be now going as cherefully to their deathes as Bââ¦degromes to their marriages By whiââ¦h thou mââ¦yst see myne owne dââ¦re daughter what a great differenââ¦e there is between sââ¦ch as haue spent all theyr dayes in a religious hââ¦rd and penitentiall life and such as haue in this world like wretches as thy poore Father heere hath done consume all their tyme in pleasure and ease For which God oââ¦t of his gracious Gooââ¦nes wââ¦l ãâã ãâã them to remayââ¦e ãâã in this vale of misery aââ¦d ãâã but wiââ¦l speedââ¦y ãâã them hece into the ãâã of his euer lasting Dââ¦ty Wââ¦ras ââ¦ny siââ¦ly Fatheâ⦠ãâã who ãâã a moââ¦t wickeâ⦠ãâã hath ãâã the whole course of his ââ¦serable life most ãâã God tââ¦king him not worthy to ãâã so ââ¦oone thereunto lââ¦ueth here him ãâã the world to be furthââ¦r tryed plungeâ⦠and turmoyled in misery Within a whyââ¦e after M. Secretary came to him from the King and pretending much friendship towardes him said that the Kings Highnes was his good and gracious Lord not mynding any matter thence forward wherein he should haue cause of scruple to trouble his consââ¦ience As soone as ãâã ãâã was departed to expresse what comfoââ¦t the ãâã of his speaches he tooke a coale for pen inke tââ¦en he had none wrote theââ¦e lynes following ãâã ãâã looke ãâã ãâã ãâã Nor ãâã ãâã pleasantly begin to ãâã As ãâã thou wouldst my ruines all ãâã During my life thou shalt not me ãâã Truââ¦t I shall God to enter in a while Thy ãâã of Heauens sure and vniforme Euââ¦r after a calme looke I for a sterme Now Syr Thomas More had continued almost six weekes in the Tower before the Lady his wife could obteyne licence to visit him Who at her first comming to him like a good simple worldly woman bluntly saluted him in this manner What a good-care M. More I meruaââ¦le that you who haue ben alwayes hitherto taken for so wise a man will now so play the foole to ly here in this close filthy prison and be content to be thus shut vp amongst mice and rats when you mââ¦ght be abroad at your liberty with the fauour and good will both of the King and his Counsell if you would buâ⦠do as all the Bishops best leaââ¦ned of the Realme haue done And since you haue at Chelsey a right fayre house your Library your Bookes your Garden your Orchard all other necessaryes haÌdsome about you where also you might in the coÌpany of me your wife Children and houshold be merry ãâã muse what a Gods Name you meane thus foÌdly to tarry here After he had a while quietly heard her with a cheerefull couÌtenance he said vnto her I pray thee good ãâã Alice tell me one thinge What is that quoth she Is not this house as neere Heauen as myne owne whereto after her accustomed homely fashion not liking such speaââ¦hes she answered Tille-valle ââ¦valle How say you ãâã ãâã is it not so quoth he ãâã Deus bone ãâã man will your old Tricks neuer be left quoth she againe Well then M. rs Alice said he if it be so it is very well for I see no great cause why I should ioy much either in my gay house or in any thing belonging thereunto when as if I should but liue seauen yeares vnder ground and then rise againe and come thither I should not fayle to find some dwelling therein that would bid me get out of doores tell me it were ãâã ãâã myne What cause then haue I to loue such a house as would so soonâ⦠forget his old Master So as her perswasions moued him nothing at all Not loÌg after this there came vnto him the Lord Chancellour the Dukes of Norfolke and Suââ¦folke with Maister Secretary and diuers of the priuy Counsell at two seuer all tymes whâ⦠vsed all possible policy to procure him either precisely to coÌââ¦fesse the Supremacy or directly to deny it Whereunto ãâã appeareth by the booke of hiâ⦠Examinations they could ne uer bring him or iustly taxe him for the contrary Shortly heereupon one M ãâã created after wardes Lorâ⦠Rich that then was newly madâ⦠the Kings Soââ¦citour Syr Richard Southwell one M. Paââ¦mer seruant to the Secretary were sent vnto Syr Thomas More vnder colour of fetching hiâ⦠Bookes away from him Anâ⦠whilst Syr Richard Southwell anâ⦠M. Palmer were busy in pââ¦king them vp M. Rich pretending frieÌdly discourse with him amogst other things of set purpose as it seemed said thus vnto him For as much as it is well knowne M. More that you are a man both wise and well learned aswell in the lawes of the Realme as otherwise I pray you therefore let me in courtesy and good will be so bold to put you this case Admit there were Syr quoth he an Act of Parlament that all the Kingdome should take me for King would not you then M. More take me for King Yes marry quoth Syr Thomas More that would I Then I put case further quoth M. Rich Admit there were an Act of Parlament that all the Realme should take me for Pope would not you theâ⦠M. More take me for Pope For answere quoth Syr Thomas More to your first case the Parlament may well M. Rich meddle with the state of temporal Princes but to make answere to your later case Suppose the Parlament would make a law that God should not be God would you M. Rich then say that God were not God No Syr quoth he that would I not No more quoth Syr Thomas More as M. Rich after reported of him could the Parlament make the King supreme head of the Church And so M. Rich with the rest departed Now vpon the only report of this speach Syr Thomas More was indited of Treason vpon the Statute whereby it was made Treason to deny the King to be supreme head of the Church into which Inditement were put these heynous words ãâã Traitrously and ãâã Whereupon presently after he was brought froÌ the Tower ãâã answere the Inditement at the Kings Bench barre being there arraigned before the
being personally present vpon the Earth only vnto S. Peter the Apostle and his lawfull Successors Bishops of the same Sea by special prerogatiue It is not therefore ãâã inough for one Christian Catholike man to charge and conuince another Christian Catholike man say that this Realme of England being but a member a small part only of the Church of Christ hath power and authority to make a particular law disagreable to the generall law of Christs Vniuersall Catholique Church no more then the Citty of London being but one poore member in respect of the whole Kingdome might make a law agayââ¦st an Act of Parlament to bââ¦nd the whole Realme And further he shewed that it was coÌtrary both to the ancient Lawes Statutes of our owne Realme not theÌ repealled as they might well see in Magna Carta Quod ãâã libera sit habeat omnia iura integÌra libertates suas ãâã and contrary likewise to that sacred Oath which the Kings Highnes himselfe and enââ¦ry other Christian Prince of this realme with great Solemnity hath euer taken at their Coronation Alleaging moreouer that no more might this Realme of England refuse obedience to the Sea of Rââ¦me then the child might refuse Obedience to his naturall Father for as S. Paul sayth of the ãâã I haue regenerated you my Children in Christ so might holy S. Gregory Pope of Rome of whome by S. Augustine his messenger we Englishmen first receiued the Christian fayth truly say You are my Children beââ¦causâ⦠I haue giuen you euerlasting saluation a farre and better more noble Inheritance then any carnall Father can leaue to his Children by regeneration made you my Children in Christ. To this speach of Syr Thomas More the Lord Chancellor answered That seeing all the Bishops Vniuersities best learned of the Realme had to this Act of Parlament agreed it was very greatly to be admired that he alone agaynst them all would so stifly sticke and argue so vehemently against it To this Syr Thomas More a gaine replyed saying If the nuÌber of Bishops and Vniuersities be so materiall as your Lordship seemeth to take it then I see little cause my Lord why that thing should make any change at all in my CoÌscience For I nothing doubt though not in this Realme yet in Chââ¦istendome round about the nuÌber of learned men and Bishops to be farre greater who will defend and maintayne the contrary and therefore am I not bouÌden to conforme my coÌscience to the Councell of one Kingdome against the generall CouÌcell of Christendome Now when Syr Thomas More for the auoyding of the Inditement had taken as many exceptions as he thought fit the Lord Chancellour loath to haue the burden of that Iudgment wholy to depend vpon ââ¦fe there openly asked the aduise of the Lord Fitz-Iames then Lord chiefe Iustice of the Kings Bââ¦nch and ioyned in commission with him whether this Inâ⦠were ãâã or no. Who like a ãâã man answered My Lordes quoth he by S. ãâã that was euer his oath I must needs coÌfesse that if the Act of Parlament be not vnlawfull then is not the Inditement in my conscience insufficient Whereupon the Lord Chancellour said to the rest of the Commissioners Loe my Lordes you all heare what my Lord chiefe Iustice sayth so immediatly he gaue Iudgment Which being done the commissoners yet further offered him curteously all fauourable audience if he would speake who answered I haue no more to say my Lords but that like as the Blessed Apostle S. Paul as we read in the Acts of the Apostles was present and consenteâ⦠to the death of S. Stephen kept their clothes that stoned him to death and are now both hoââ¦y Saintes in heauen so I verily trust and shall right hartily pray that though your Lordships haue now heere in earth byn Iudges to my Condemnation yet may we hereafter meete all togeather in euerlasting glory After his condemnation he departed from the Barre towardes the Tower agayne led by Sir William Kingston a tall strong and comely knight Constable of the Tower his very deere friââ¦d who wheÌ he had brought him a part of the way towardes the Tower with a heauy heart the teares running downe his cheekes bad him farwell The which Syr Thomas More seeing comforted him with as good words as he could saying Good M Kingston trouble not your selfe but be of good cheere for I will pray for you and my good Lady your wife that we may meete togeather in HeaueÌ where we shal be merry for euer and euer And a little after Syr William Kingstone meeting with M. Roper said In good fayth M. Roper I was ashamed of my selfe that at my departure from your Father I found my selfe so feeble and he so strong that he was fayne to coÌfort me who should rather haue comforted him As Syr Thâ⦠More came neere vnto the Tower his Daughter Roper desirous to see her Father once more before his death and to receaue his last blessing gaue attendance about the Tower-wharfe where he was to passe so soone as she saw him hastning vnto him without respect or care of herselfe pressed in among the throng of the Guard that with halbards went round about him and there openly in the sight of all asking him blessing on her knees imbrac't him tooke him about the necke and kissed him Who with a merry countenance nothing at all deiected gaue her his Fatherly blessing with many Godly wordes of comfort theÌ departed So remayned he in the Tower more then eight dayes after his condemnation from whence the day before he suffered he sent his shirt of hayre not willing to haue it seene to his said Daughter Roper and a Letter written with a cole printed in the aforesaid booke of his workes expressing playnly the feruent desyre he had to suffer on the Morrow in these wordes following I comber you good Margaret very much but I wold be sorry if it should be any longe then to Morrow for to Morrow is S. Thomas of Canterbury his Eue the Octaue of S. Peter therfore to Morrow long I to go to God it were a day very meete and conuenient for me I neuer liked you manner better towardes me then when you last imbraced me and when daughterly loue and deare charity haue no leasure to looke towards worldly courtesy Vpon the next Morrow according as he wished earely in the morning there came vnto him Syr Thomas Pope his singular good friend with a message from the King and Counsell that he must before nine of the clocke the same morning suffer death and that he should forth with prepare himself therto M. Pope quoth he for your good tydings I most hartily thanke you I haue alwayes ben much bound to the Kings highnes for the many benefits and honours that he hath still from tyme to tyme most bountifully heaped vpon me especially that it hath pleased his Maiesty to put me here in this