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A51279 The life and death of Sr. Thomas Moore, who was Lord Chancelor of England to King Henry the Eight More, Cresacre, 1572-1649.; More, Thomas, 1565-1625. 1642 (1642) Wing M2630; ESTC R7630 170,245 434

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Christ in S. Matthew then which there can be imagined nothing more precious which without doubt he enioyeth for all eternitie 7. Now there was another parlement called where in there was a bill putt into the Lower house to attaynte the nunne and manie other religious men of high treason and Bishopp Fisher with Sir THOMAS MORE of misprision of treason which bill the King supposed would be so terrible to Sir THOMAS that it would force him to relente and condescende vnto him But therein he was much deceaued for first Sir THOMAS sued that he might be admitted into the Parlement to make his owne defence personally which the king not liking of graunted the hearing of this Cause to my Lo of Canterburie the Lo Chancellour the Duke of Norfolke and Mr. Cromvvell who appointing Sir THOMAS to appeare before them my vncle Roper requested his father earnestly to labour vnto them that he might be putt out of the parlement bill who answered then that he would but at his coming thither he neuer once entreated them for it when he came into their presēce they entertained him very courteously requesting him to sitt downe with them which in no case he would then the Lo Chancellour beganne to tell him how manie waies the king's maiestie had shewed his loue and fauour towards him how gladly he would haue had him continue in his office how desirous he was to haue heaped still more and more benefittes vpon him and finally that he could aske no worldlie honour and profitt at his Highnesse's hands but that it was probable that he should obtaine it hoping by these words declaring the king's affection towards him to stirre Sir THOMAS vp to recompence the king with the like by adding his consent vnto the king's which the Parlement the Bishopps and manie Vniuersities had already consented vnto Wherevnto Sir THOMAS mildely made this answer that there vvas no man liuing that vvould vvith better vvill doe anie thing vvhich should be acceptable to his Highnesse then he vvho must needes confesse his manifolde bountie and liberall guifts plentifully bestovved vpon him hovv be it he verily hoped that he should neuer haue heard of this matter anie more considering that from the beginning he had so plainely and truly declared his minde vnto his maiestie vvhich his highnesse of his benigne clemencie had euer seemed like a gracious prince very vvell to accept of neuer minding as he sayd vnto him to molest him anie more therevvith since vvhich time sayd he I neuer found anie further matter to moue me to anie change and if I could sayd he there is not one in the vvhole vvorld vvhich vvould haue bene more ioyfull for it Many speaches hauing passed to and fro on both sides in the ende when they saw euidently that they could not remoue him from his former determination by no manner of perswasion then beganne they more terribly to threaten him saying the king's maiestie had giuen them in commaunde expressely yf they could by no gentle meanes winne him that they should in his name with greate indignatiō charge him that neuer there was seruant so villanous to his Soueraigne nor anie subiect so trayterous to his prince as he For by his subtile and sinister sleights he had most vnnaturally procured and prouoked the king to sett forth a booke of the assertion of the Seauen Sacraments and for the maintenance of the Pope's authoritie so that he had caused his Maiestie to putt a sword in to the Pope's hands to fight against himselfe to his greate dishonour in all the partes of Christendome Now when they had displayed all their malice threates against him my Lord sayd Sir THOMAS these terrours be frights for children and not for me but to ansvver that vvhere vvith you chiefely burthē me I belieue the king's Highnesse of his honour vvill neuer lay that booke to my charge for there is none that can in that point say more for my discharge then himselfe vvho right vvell knovveth that I neuer was procurer promotour nor counseler of his Maiestie therevnto only after it vvas finished by his Grace's appointment and the consent of the makers of the same I only sorted out and placed in order the principall matters therein wherein vvhen I had found the Popes authoritie highly aduanced and vvith strong arguments mightily defended I sayd thus to his Grace I must putt your Highnesse in remembrance of one thing and that is this the Pope as your Maiestie vvell knovveth is a Prince as you are in league with all other Christian princes it may hereafter fall out that your Grace and he may varie vpon some points of the league vvhere vpon may grovve breache of am●t●e and vvarre betvveene you both therefore I thinke it best that that place be amended and his authoritie more slenderly touched Nay quoth his Grace that shall it not vve are so much bound to the Sea of Rome that vve cannot doe to much honour vnto it Then did I further putt him in minde of our statute of Praemunire vvhereby a good parte of the Pope's authoritie pastoral cure vvas payred avvay to vvhich his Maiestie ansvvered vvhatsoeuer impediment be to the contrarie vve vvill sett forth that authoritie to the vttermost For vve haue receaued from that Sea our Crovvne Imperiall vvhich till his Grace vvith his ovvne mouth so tolde me I neuer heard before Which things vvell considered I trust vvhen his Maiestie shal be truly informed thereof and call to his gracious remembrance my sayings and doings in that behalfe his Highnesse vvill neuer speake more of it but vvill cleare me himselfe with which wordes they with great displeasure dismissed him parted 8. Then tooke Sir THOMAS his boate to Chelsey wherein by the way he was verie merrie and my vncle Rooper was not sorrie to see it hoping that he had gotten himself discharged out of the bill When he was landed and come home they walked in his gardin where my vncle sayd vnto him I trust Sir all is well because you are so merrie It is so indeede sōne I thanke God Are you then Sir putt out of the parlement Bill sayd my vncle by my troth sonne I neuer remembred it Neuer remembred that sayd he that toucheth you and vs all so neare I am verie sorie to heare it For I trusted all had bene well when I saw you so merrie Wouldst thou knowe sonne why I am so ioyfull In good Faith I reioyce that I haue giuē the diuell a fowle fall because I haue with those Lords gone so farre that without great shame I can neuer goe back This was the cause of his ioye not the ridding himself of troubles but the confidence he had in God that he would giue him strength willingly to suffer anie thing for Christs sake that he might say with Christ IESVS Desiderio desideraui c. I thirst greatly to drinke of the Cuppe of Christ's passion
and with S. Paule Cupio dissolui ess cum Christo But these speaches though they liked Sir THOMAS well yet pleased they my vncle Rooper but a little Now after the reporte made of this their examinacion of Sir THOMAS to the King by the Lo Chauncellour and the rest king Henry was so highly displeased with Sir THOMAS MORE that he plainely tolde them that he was resolutely determined that the foresayd parlement-bill should vndoubtedly proceede against them Yet to this the Lo Chancellour and the rest sayd that they had perceaued that all the vpper house was so powerfully bent to heare Sir THOMAS speake in his owne defence that if he were not putt out of the Bill it would vtterly be ouerthrowen and haue no force against the rest Which words although the king heard them speake yet needes would he haue his owne will therein adding that he would be personally present himselfe at the passing of it But the Lo Aud ley and the rest seing him so vehemently bent vpon it fell downe vpon their knees and besought his Maiestie not to doe so considering that if he in his owne presence should be confronted and receaue an ouerthrowe it would not only encourage his subiects euer after to contemne him but also redounde to his his honour for euer throughout all Christendome and they doubted not in time but to finde some other fitter matter against him For in this Case of the Nunne they sayd all men accounted him so cleare and innocent that for his behauiour therein euerie one reckoned him rather worthie of praise thē of reproofe At which words of theirs the king was contented at their earnest perswasion to condescende to their petition yet was not his displeasure against Sir THOMAS anie whitt asswaged but much more incensed On the next morning Mr. Cromevvell meeting my vncle Rooper in the parlement house tolde him that his father was putt out of the bill which message he sent presently to Chelsey and when my aunte Roper toulde her father thereof he answered In fayth Megg quod differtur non aufertur knowing as it were the verie bottome of the King's hart and all his Counsells imagining that this was not anie fauour donne vnto him but that they might finde afitter matter to worke on as it shortly after proued Within a while after the Duke of Norfolke fell into familiar talke with Sir THOMAS and amongst other speaches he sayd vnto him By the masse Mr. More it is perillous striuing with princes therefore I could wish you as a friēd to encline to the king's pleasure for by God bodie Mr. More Indignatio principis mors est Is that all my Lord sayd Sir THOMAS in good faith then there is no more differēce betweene your Grace and me but that I shall dye to day and you to morrow Yf therefore the anger of a prince causeth but a temporall death we haue greater cause to feare the eternall death which the king of heauen can condēne vs vnto if we sticke not to displease him by pleasing an earthlie king THE NINTH CHAPTER THE REFVSALL OF the oath of supremacy cause of Sir THOMAS MORES imprisonment in the Tovver 1. The oath of supremacy and succession refused by Sir Thomas 2. His imprisonment first in vvestminster after in the Tovver 3. A notable discourse betvveen him and his daughter Margarit Roper 4. Some other passages of his in the time of his durance 5. A prety dialogue betvveen him and his vvife the Lady More 6. Maister Riche his sophisticall case put to Sir Thomas More 7. His bookes and meanes of vvriting taken from him 8. His great care to giue no occasion of offence to the King 1. NOw in this parlement in the yeare 1534. whē as Queen Elizabeth had bene borne the September before and Q. Anne had bene proclaimed Queen the 12th of April before that and Q. Catherine declared the widowe only of prince Arthur there was I say at this parlement an oath framed whereby all English subiects should both renounce the Pope's authoritie and sweare also to the succession of Q. Anne's children accounting the Ladie Marie illegitimate within a moneth or thereabouts after the enacting of this statute all the Clergie as well Bishops as priests yet no lay man but Sir THOMAS MORE were summoned to appeare at Lambeth before the Lo Archbishop Cranmer the Lo Chancelour Audley Mr. Secretarie Cromevvell the Abbott of Westminster with others appointed Commissioners by the King to tender this oath vnto them On the same morning that Sir THOMAS was to goe thither as he was accustomed before he tooke anie matter of importance in hand he went to Chelsey church and there was Confessed and receaued at masse deuoutly the blessed Sacrament and whereas euer at other times before he parted from his wife and children they vsed to bring him to his boate and there kissing them bad them Farewell at this time he suffered none of them to follow him forth of his gate but pulled the wickett after him and with a heauie hart as by his countenance appeared he tooke boate with his sonne Rooper and their men in which sitting sadly a while as it were with Christ in his agonie in the gardin at the last sodainely he rounded my vncle in the eare and sayd I thanke our Lord sonne the field is wonne whereto my vncle answered at randon as not knowing then his meaning I am very glad thereof But one may easily knowe what he meant and so my vncle afterward perceaued that the burning loue of God wrought in him so effectually that it now had conquered all carnall affections trusting to that saying of our Sauiour Beholde and haue confidence I haue conquered the vvorld How wisely he behaued himself at Lambeth may be seene in a letter of his sent after to my aunte Rooper which is sett out in printe in the latter ende of his English Workes with others his most singular letters wherein he liuely describeth to his children all his troubles sheweth what a heauenlie spiritt he had to endure all for Gods sake trusting still chiefely to Gods goodnesse not to his owne strength the effect whereof is this After he vvas called before them he requested of them to see the oath vvhich vvhen he had read vnto himselfe he ansvvered that he neither vvould finde faulte vvith the oath nor with the authors of it nor vvould blame the conscience of anie man that had taken it but for himselfe he could not take it vvithout endangering his soule of eternall damnation vvhich if they doubted of he vvould svveare vnto them that that vvas the chiefe cause of his refusall in vvhich second oath if they doubted to trust him hovv then could they trust him in the former Which he hauing sayd my Lo Chancelour replyed that all there were hartily sorie he should make such an answer for they constantly affirmed that he was the first mā that denyed to take it
as great sorrovv and saddenesse For vvhat can be more grieuous vnto me then to be depriued of your most sweete cōuersatiō whose vvholesome counsell I vvas vvont to enioye vvith vvhose delight some familiaritie I vvas recreated by vvhose vveightie sermons I haue bene often stirred vp to deuotion by vvhose life and example I haue bene much amended in mine ovvne finally in vvhose very face and countenance I vvas vvont to rest contented VVherefore as I haue found myselfe greatly strengthened vvhilst I enioyed these helpes so novv doe I see myselfe much vveakened and brought almost to nothing being depriued of them so long For hauing heretofore by follovving your footestepps almost escaped out of hells mouth so novv like another Euridice though in a contrarie manner for she vvas left there because Orpheus looked back vpon her but I am in the like daunger because you doe not looke vpon me fall back againe by a certaine violence and necessitie into that obscure darkenesse I vvas in before For vvhat I pray you is there here in this Cittie vvhich doth moue anie man to liue vvell and doth not rather by a thousand deuises dravv him back and vvith as maine allurements svvallovv him vp in all manner of vvickednesse vvho of himself vvere othervvise vvell disposed and doth endeauour accordingly to clime vp the painefull hill of Vertue VVhithersoeuer that anie man cometh vvat can he finde but fayned loue and the honie poyson of venemous flatterie in one place he shall finde cruell hatred in another heare nothing but quarrells and suits VVhithersoeuer vve cast our eyes vvhat can vve see but victualing houses fishmongers butchers cookes puddingmakers fishers o fovvlers vvho minister matter to our bellies and sett forvvard the seruice of the vvorld and the prince thereof and deuill yea the houses themselues I knovve not hovv do bereaue vs of a great parte of our sight of heauen so as the heighth of our buildings and not the circle of our horizon doth limite our prospect For vvhich cause I may pardon you the more easily that you doe delight rather to remaine in the countrie vvhere you are For there you finde a companie of plaine soules voyde of all crafte vvherevvith cittizens most abounde vvhithersoeuer you looke the earth yeeldeth you a pleasant prospect the temperature of the ayre refresheth you and the cleare beholding of the heauens doth delight you you finde nothing there but bounteous guifts of nature and saintelie tokens of innocencie Yet I vvould not haue you so carried avvay vvith those contentments that you should be stayed from hastening hither For yf the discommodities of the Cittie doe as they may very vvell displease you yet may the countrie about your parish of Stepney vvhereof you ought also not to haue the least care afforde you the like delights to those vvhich that affordes you vvherein novv you keepe from vvhence you may vpon occasions come to London as into your Inne vvhere you may finde great matter of meritt The countrie people is most commonly harmelesse or at the least not loaden vvith great offences and therefore anie phisician may minister phisick vnto them but as for cittizens both because they are manie in number as also in regarde of their inueterate custome in sinning none can helpe them but he that is verie skillfull There come into the pullpett at Paules diuerse men that promise to cure the diseases of others but vvhen they haue all donne and made a fayre and goodlie discourse their life on the other side doth so iarre vvith their saying that they rather increase then assvvage the griefes of their hearers For they cannot persvvade men that they are fitt to cure others vvhen as themselues god vvote are most sicke and crazie and therefore vvhen they feele their sores touched and handled by those vvhome they see are full of loathsome sores themselues they cannot but haue a great auersion from them But if such a one be accounted by learned men most fitt to cure in vvhome the sicke man hath greatest hope vvho doubteth then but you alone are the fittest in all London to cure their maladies vvhome euerie one is vvilling to suffer to touche their vvoundes and in vvhome vvhat confidence euerie one hath and hovv readie euerie one is to doe vvhat you prescribe both you haue heretofore sufficiently tryed and novv the desire that euerie bodie hath of your speedie returne may manifest the same Returne therefore my deere Colett either for Stepney's sake vvhich mourneth for your absence no lesse then children doe for the absence of their louing mother or else for London's sake in respect it is your natiue countrie vvhereof you can haue no lesse regarde then of your ovvne parents and finally although this be the least motiue returne for my sake vvho haue vvholy dedicated myself to your directions and do most earnestly long to see you In the meane vvhile I passe my time vvith Grocine Linacre and Lillie the first being as you knovve the directour of my life in your absence the second the maister of my studies the third my most deare Companion Farevvell and see you loue me as you haue donne hitherto London 21. Octob. By this letter it may clearely beseene how he gaue himselfe from his youth to the true rules of deuotion and thereby sought to profitt as well in holinesse as in learning For if Christ hath pronounced them happie that hunger and thirst after iustice surely he shewed in this letter a great earnestnesse of desire to attaine to perfection And his example may moue all his to follow therein his footestepps that their chiefe and principall endeauour in their youth be to seeke out a skillfull phisitian of the soule who both can and will guide vs in the path of Catholike doctrine and dutie and when we haue found such a one to follow his counsell precisely and make the secretts of our harts knowen to him This dutiefulnesse of the ghostlie childe to so rare a father made Colett also admire this yong man's towardlienesse so that this Doctour would professe to manie and at sundrie times say that there was but one witt in England and that was yong THOMAS MORE althoug manie flourishing youthes at that time liued in England which were of hopefull expectation And no doubt but God did further him with particular grace and towardlinesse because he was so extraordinarily deuout so that I doe imagine it may be sayd of Sir THOMAS MORE which S. Thomas of Aquine wittnesseth of himselfe that he learned more by praier and spirituall exercises then euer he could doe by anie studie For to what studie soeuer Sir THOMAS applyed himselfe he grew in short time most famous therein And first how great a Poet he was accounted euen in his youth we haue already partly spoken of then what Declamations he made full of all Rhetoricall eloquence to the amazement of all his auditorie manie haue wittnessed who heard them and haue read them
to whome he writeth thus VVhat soeuer he vvas my Crocus that hath signifyed vnto you that my loue is lessened because you haue omitted to vvrite vnto me this great vvhile either he is deceaued or else he seeketh cunningly to deceaue you and although I take great comfort in reading your letters yet am I not so proude that I should chalenge so much interest in you as though you ought of dutie to salute me euerie day in that manner nor so vvayvvard nor full of complaints to be offended vvith you for neglecting a little this your custome of vvriting For I vvere vniust if I should exact from other men letters vvhereas I knovve myselfe to be a greate sluggard in that kinde Wherefore be secure as concerning this for neuer hath my loue vvaxed so colde tovvards you that it neede still to be kindled and heated vvith the continuall blovving of missiue epistles yet shall you do me a great pleasure if you vvrite vnto me as often as you haue leasure but I vvill neuer persvvade you to spende that time in saluting your friends vvhich you haue allotted for your ovvne studie or the profiting of your schollars As touching the other parte of your excuse I vtterly refuse it for there is no cause vvhy you should feare my nose as the trunke of an elephant seing that your letters may vvithout feare approche in the sight of anie man neither am I so long snovvted that I vvould haue anie man feare my censuring As for the place vvhich you requirre that I should procure you both Mr. Pace and I vvho loue you dearely haue putt the king in minde thereof 4. But now as concerning the familiaritie he had with the most famous men of other nations it may be likewise seene by his letters to them as to that famous Iohn Cochlee who was Luther's scourge he writeth thus It cannot be expressed most vvorthie Sir how much I holde myself indebted vnto you for certifying me so often of those occurrences vvhich happen in your Countrie For Germanie novv daily bringeth forth more monsters yea prodigious things then Africk vvas vvont to doe For vvhat can be more monstrous then the Anabaptists yet hovv haue those kinde of plagues risen forth and spread for manie yeares togeather I for my parte seing these sects daily to grovve vvorse and vvorse do expect shortly to heare that there vvill arise some vvho will not sticke to preache that Christ himselfe is to be denyed neither can there arise so absurde a knaue but he shall haue fauourers the madnesse of the people is so greate In which letter he foretelleth of Dauid George the Hollander who called himself Christ and had diuerse followers at Basile So was there in England the like desperate fellowe called Hackett whose disciples were Arden and Coppinger At another time he writeth thus vnto the same man I vvould haue you persvvade yourself deare Cochlie that I haue not receaued anie letter from anie of my friends these manie yeares more gratefull then your last vvere to me and that for tvvo causes especially the first for that I perceaue in them your singular loue vnto me vvhich though I haue sufficiently found heretofore yet do these shevv it most plentifully and I account it as a great happinesse for to lett passe your benefitts donne me vvho vvould not highly esteeme the friendshipp and fauour of such a friend Secondly because in these letters you certifye me of the nevves of manie actions of Princes c. Afterwards he had also intire familiaritie with Budaeus which was often renewed by letters and once by personall meeting in France when the kings of England and France had a parlie togeather For Budaeus was in great fauour with his king Francis yea one of his priuie Councell as Sir THOMAS was to king Henrie all which may be perceaued by his letter to Budeus in this manner I knovve not my good Budie vvhether it vvere good for vs to possesse anie thing that vvere deare vnto vs except vve might still keepe it For I haue imagined that I should be a happie man if I might but once see Budeus whose beautiefull picture the reading of his vvorkes had represented vnto me And vvhen God had granted me my vvishe it seemed to me that I vvas more happie then happinesse itselfe yet after that our businesse vvere so vrgent that I could not fullfill my earnest desire to enioy your svveete conuersation often and that our familiaritie scarce begunne vvas broken of vvithin a vvhile the necessarie affaires of our Princes calling vs from it so as it is novv hard to say vvhether vve shall euer againe see one another each of vs being enforced to vvayte vpon our ovvne Prince by hovv much the more ioyfull our meeting vvas by so much the more vvas my sorrovv in the parting vvhich you may lessen somevvhat if that you vvould please to make me often present by your letters yet dare I not craue them of you but my desire to haue them is greate Another friend he had called Martin Dorpe a famous reader in Louaine and a singular good man whome by letters fraught with sound arguments he brought to the loue of the Greeke toung being altogeather before auerted therefore thus he speaketh of him in a letter to Erasmus I cannot lett Martin Dorpius passe vnsaluted vvhome I respect highly for his excellent learning and for manie other respects but for this not a little because he gaue you occasion to vvrite your Apologie to Brixius his Moria He mentioneth also Iohn Lascarus as a deare friend of his as also Philipp Beroalde in a letter of his to Budeus in this manner Commende me hartily to Lascarus that excellent and most learned man for I imagine that you vvould of yourselfe remember me to Beroaldus though I should not putt you in minde thereof for you knovve him to be so deare vnto me as such a one ought to be then vvhome I haue scarcelie found a more learned man or a more pleasant friend Hierome Buslidian who built the Colledge called Trilingue in Louaine we haue mentioned before when we spake of his learned Vtopia of whome thus he speaketh in a certaine letter of his to Erasmus Amongst other things vvich delighted me much in my Embassage this is none of the least that I gott acquaintance vvith Buslidian vvho entertained me most courteously according to his great vvealth and exceeding good nature vvhere he shevved me his house built most artificially and enriched vvith costlie housholde stuffe replenished vvith a number of monuments of antiquitie vvherein you knovv I take great delight finally such an exquisite librarie yea his hart and breast more stored then anie librarie so that it astonished me greatly And presently after in the same letter he speaketh of Peter Giles as followeth But in all my trauailes nothing happened more to my wish then the acquaintance and conuersation vvith Peter Giles of Anwerp a man so learned
spread abroad was brought to Sir THOMAS which when he read being in his boate going frō Chelsey to London he shewed certaine of the author's arguments with his fingar to Mr. Harris saying Loe here how the knaue's argument is taken out of the obiections of S. Thomas in 2.2 in such and such an article but the lewde fellow might haue seene the solutions which are presently added there He maintayned also in a learned Disputation with Fa Alphonsus the Franciscan Q. Catherin's ghostlie Father Scotus his opinion of Attrition and Contricion as more safely to be followed then that Occhamus by all which it may be gathered that he had great insight in the diuersitie of Scholasticall opinions He wrote also a booke in Latine against Pomeran the heretike and indeede laboured very much rather to reduce such men vnto the Catholike Faith then to punish them for their reuolte yet in his epitaphe he sayth of himself that he was to theeues murtherers and heretikes grieuous and Simon Grineus a Lutheran boasteth in his translation of Proclus dedicated to my grandfather how courteously Sir THOMAS his father vsed him whē he was in Englād THE FIFTH CHAPTER K. HENRIES FIRST scruples in his Mariage Sir THOMAS MORES care in the education of his children 1. The ambition of Cardinall Wolsey occasion of K. Henry his fall 2. K. Henry communicates his scruple about his marriage with S. T. More 3. S. T. Mores praediction of the fall of England from religion 4. He reduceth his sonne Roper miraculously from heresy 5. He obtaineth his daughter Margarets health of God by prayer 6. S. T. Mores domestique schoole 7. His delight and contentment in the studies of his children 8. How his daughter Margaret proued excellent for her sex in learning 1. WHile Sir THOMAS MORE was Chācellour of the Duchie the Sea of Rome chanced to be vacant and Cardinall Wolsey a man of vnsatiable ambition who had crept vp in the fauour of Charles the Fift so that the Emperour still writing vnto him called him Father and the other called him sonne hoped now by his meanes to attaine to the popedome but perceauing himself of that expectation frustrate and disappoynted because the Emperour in the time of their election had highly commended another to the whole Colledge of the Cardinalls called Adrian who was a Flemming and had bene sometime his schoole maister a man of rare learning singular vertue who therevpō allthough absent and little dreaming of it was chosen Pope and then forth with going from Spayne where he was then resident came on foote to Rome Before he entred into the Cittie putting of his hose and shoes barefoote and bare leggd he passed through the streetes towards his pallace with such humilitie deuotion that all the people not without cause had him in greate reuerence and admiracion but as I sayd Cardinall Wolsey a man of contrarie qualities waxed therewith so wroth and stomacked so the Emperour for it euer after that he studyed still how he might reuenge himselfe anie waies against him which as it was the beginning of a lamentable tragedie so the ende thereof we cannot yet see although there haue bene almost one hundred yeares sithence This VVolsey therefore not ignorant of King Henrie's vnconstant mutable disposition inclined to withdrawe his affections vpon euerie light occasion from his owne most noble vertuous and lawfull wife Q. Catherine the Emperour 's owne aunte and to fixe this amourous passions vpon other women nothing comparable vnto her either in birth wisedome vertue fauour or externall beautie this irreligious prelate meaning to make the king's lightnesse an instrument to bring about his vnconscionable intent endeauoured by all the meanes he could to allure the king to cast his fancie vpon one of the French king's sisters the king being fallen in loue alreadie he not suspecting anie such thing with the ladie Anne Bullen a woman of no nobilitie no nor so much as of anie worthie fame This French matche he thought to plott to spite the Emperour because at that time there was great warres and mortall enmitie betweene the French king and Charles the Fift For the better compassing whereof the Cardinal requested Longland Bishopp of London who was the king's ghostlie father to putt a scruple into king Henrie's head that he should as it were another S. Iohn Baptist though the case were nothing like tell his Maiestie that it was not lawfull for him like another Herode to marrie his brothers wife And although K. Henrie's conscience had bene quiett now aboue twentie yeares togeather yet was he not vnwilling to hearken herevnto but entertayning it opened his scruple to Sir THOMAS MORE whose counsell he required herein shewing him certaine places of Scripture that somewhat seemed to serue the turne and his appetite VVhich when Sir THOMAS had seriously perused and had excused himself saying he was vnfitt to meddle with such matters being one that neuer had professed the studie of Diuinitie The king not satisfyed with this answer knowing well his iudgement to be found in whatsoeuer he would apply himselfe vnto pressed him so sore that in conclusion he condescended to his Maiesties request being as it were a commaunde and for that the cause was of such weight and importance hauing neede of greate deliberation he besought his Maiestie to giue him sufficient respite aduisedly to consider of it with which the king very well satisfyed sayd that Tunstall and Clarke two worthie Bishops one of Durham the other of Bathe with others the learnedest of his priuie Councell should also be his Coadiutours Sir THOMAS taking his leaue of the king went and conferred with them about those places of Scripture adding thereto for their better meanes to search out the truth the expositions of the ancient Fathers and Doctours of the Church and at his next coming to the Courte talking with the king about this matter he spake thus To deale sincerely with your Maiestie neither my Lo of Durham nor my Lo of Bathe though I knowe them both wise vertuous learned and honourable prelates nor my self with the rest of your Councell being all your Grace's owne seruants and subiects for your manifolde benefitts daily bestowed vpon vs so much bound vnto your Highnesse none of vs I say nor we all togeather are in my iudgement meete counsellers for your Maiestie herein but if your princelie disposition purpose to vnderstande the verie truth hereof you may haue such counsellers as neither for respect of their owne worldlie commoditie nor feare of your princelie authoritie will be enclined to deceaue you and then he named S. Hierome S. Austine and diuerse others both Greeke and Latine Fathers shewing him moreouer what authorities he had gathered out of them that he neede not haue anie further scruple thereof and that marrying of a new wife whilst his owne was aliue was wholy repugnāt to their doctrine and the meaning of the Scriptures All
sendeth greeting The marchant of Bristow brought vnto me your letters the next day after he had receaued them of you vvith the vvhich I vvas exceedingly delighted For there can come nothing yea though it vvere neuer so rude neuer so meanely polished from this your shoppe but it procureth me more delight then anie other mens vvorkes be they neuer so eloquent your vvriting doth so stirre vp my affection tovvards you but excluding these your letters may also very vvell please me for their ovvne vvorth being full of fine vvitt and of a pure Latine phrase therefore none of them all but ioyed me exceedingly yet to tell you ingeniously vvhat I thinke my sonne Iohn's letter pleased me best both because it vvas longer then the other as also for that he seemeth to haue taken more paynes then the rest For he not only paynteth out the matter decently and speaketh elegantly but he playeth also pleasantly vvith me and returneth my ieastes vpon me againe very vvittily and this he doth not only pleasantly but temperately vvithall shevving that he is mindefull vvith vvhome he ieasteth to vvitt his father vvhome he endeauoureth so to delight that he is also afeared to offende Hereafter I expect euerie day letters from euerie one of you neither vvill I accept of such excuses as you complaine of that you had no leasure or that the Carrier vvent avvay suddenly or that you haue no matter to vvrite Iohn is not vvont to alleage anie such things nothing can hinder you from vvriting but manie things may exhort you thereto vvhy should you lay anie faulte vpon the Carrier seing you may preuent his coming and haue them readie made vp and sealed two daies before anie offer themselues to carrie them And hovv can you vvant matter of vvriting vnto me vvho am delighted to heare eyther of your studies or of your play vvhome you may euen then please exceedingly vvhen hauing nothing to vvrite of you vvrite as largely as you can of that nothing then vvhich nothing is more easie for you to doe especially being vvomen and therefore pratlers by nature and amongst vvhome daily a great storie riseth of nothing But this I admonish you to doe that vvhether you vvrite of serious matters or of trifles you vvrite vvith diligence and consideration premeditating of it before neither vvill it be amisse if you first indite it in English for then it may more easily be translated into Latine vvhilst the minde free from inuenting is attētiue to finde apt and eloquent vvordes And although I putt this to your choice vvhether you vvill do so or no yet I enioyne you by all meanes taht you diligently examine vvhat you haue vvritten before you vvrite it ouer fayre againe first considering attentiuely the vvhole sentence and after examine euerie parte thereof by which meanes you may easily finde out if anie solecismes haue escaped you vvhich being putt out and your letter vvritten fayre yet then lett it not also trouble you to examine it ouer againe for sometimes the same faultes creepe in at the second vvriting vvhich you before had blotted out By this your diligence you vvill procure that those your trifles vvill seeme serious matters For as nothing is so pleasing but may be made vnfauorie by prating garrulitie so nothing is by nature so vnpleasant that by industrie may not be made full of grace and pleasantnesse Farevvell my svvetest Children From the Court this 3. of September Another letter to his daugter Margarett only Thy letters dearest Margarett vvere gratefull vnto me vvhich certifyed me of the state of Shaw yet vvould they haue bene more gratefull vnto me if they had tolde me vvhat your and your brother's studies vvere vvhat is read amongst you euerie day hovv pleasantly you conferre togeather vvhat themes you make and hovv you passe the day away amongst you in the svveete fruits of learning And although nothing is vvritten from you but it is most pleasing vnto me yet those things are most sugred svveete vvhich I cannot learne of but by you or your brother And in the ende I pray thee Megg see that I vnderstande by you vvhat your studies are For rather then I vvould suffer you my children to liue idely I vvould my self looke vnto you vvith the losse of my temporall estate bidding all other cares and businesses Farevvell amongst vvhich there is nothing more svveete vnto me then thy self my dearest daughter Farevvell It seemeth also by another letter of his how carefull he was that his children might be learned and diligent and he prayseth them for it thus Thomas More sendeth greeting to his most deare daughters Margarett Elizabeth and Cecilie and to Margarett Gigs as deare to him as if she vvere his ovvne I cannot sufficiently expresse my best beloued vvenches hovv your eloquent letters haue exceedingly pleased me and this is not the least cause that I vnderstande by them you haue not in your iourneys though you change places often omitted anie thing of your custome of exercising yourselues either in making of Declamations composing of verses or in your Logike exercises by this I persvvade my selfe that you dearely loue me because I see you haue so great a care to please me by your diligence in my absence as to perfourme these things vvhich you knovve hovv gratefull they are vnto me in my presence And as I finde this your minde and affection so much to delight me so vvill I procure that my returne shall be profitable vnto you And persvvade yourselues that there is nothing amongst these my troublesome carefull affaires that recreateth me so much as vvhen I reade somevvhat of your labours by vvhich I vnderstande those things to be true vvhich your most louing maister vvriteth so louingly of you that vnlesse your ovvne epistles did shevv euidently vnto me hovv earnest your desire is tovvards learning I should haue iudged that he had rather vvritten of affection then according to the truth but novv by these that you vvrite you make him to be belieued and me to imagine those things to be true of your vvittie and acute disputacions vvhich he boasteth of you almost aboue all beliefe I am therefore maruelous desirous to come home that vve may heare them and sett our schollar to dispute vvith you vvho is slovve to belieue yea out of all hope or conceipt to finde you able to be ansvverable to your master's prayses But I hope knovving hovv steadfast you are in your affections that you vvill shortly ouercome your maister yf not in disputing at least in not leauing of your strife Farevvell deare vvenches And thus you may coniecture how learned his daughters were to whome for this respect Erasmus dedicated his Commentarie vpon Ouide de nuce Levvis Viues also writeth great commendations of this schoole of Sir THOMAS MORE 's in his booke to Q. Catherine of England And both Erasmus dedicated Aristotle in Greeke and Simon Grineus who although an heretike yet in respect of
matter wherein he might truly serue his grace to his contentment but yet he could not This Bishopp hauing bene lately by the Cardinall in the Starre-Chamber openly disgraced and awarded to the Fleete not brooking this contumelie sought by all meanes to wreake his anger against the Cardinall and picked a quarrell at him to the king because he beganne to waxe colde in the diuorce For so it was that Wolsey was sent ouer into France to treate a marriage betweene king Henry and the king of France's sister and finding their willing acceptance it was likelie to come to that issue which he hoped for Yet God so wrought to crosse him that this verie inuention which he had first plotted to reuenge himself on Charles the Emperour this same was the pitt wherein he fell and whereby all his dignitie creditt and wealth was taken away so that of him it may well be sayd incidit in foueam quam fecit For whilst he was contriuing for the king a marriage in France the king himself little to his knowledge had knitt the knott in England with a meane woman in respect of a prince a priuate knight's daughter and of meaner conditions then anie gentlewoman of worth Wherefore Wolsey returning and finding his embassage crossed beganne to repine at the king for disgracing him so much and now wished that he had neuer beganne to putt such scruples into Longlands head which Stokeley soone finding and himself hauing deuised a new knott in a rush to bring the king in better liking of himself for his forwardnesse and into more dislike of the Cardinall so wrought with his Maiestie that he sent for the Cardinal back being now on his way gone to be enstalled in the archbishoprick of Yorke so that by Sir William Kinston he was arreasted of high treason hauing confiscated all his goods before so that he that had bene one of the greatest prelates of Christendome had not now one dish to be serued in at the table who yf he had loued God halfe so well as he adored his prince could neuer haue come to such miserie for that he dyed either with sorrowe or poisō shortly after But the king caused in his place of Chancellourshipp Sir THOMAS MORE to be placed that with that bayte saith Card Poole corrupted he might the more easily be brought to the bente of the king's bowe who behaued himself so excellently in the place as one may say that none euer before him did better although he was the first lay man that euer possessed that roome as Card Poole noteth yea VVolsey himself hearing that Sir THOMAS MORE should haue it though he was very loath to leese it himselfe and withall bore Sir THOMAS no more good will then needes he must yet professed he to manie that he thought none in England more worthie of it then Sir THOMAS such was his fame that none could enuie it though it were neuer so vnaccustomed a case 4. The manner how Sir THOMAS MORE was installed in this high Office how the king did extraordinarily grace him therein and how modestly notwithstanding he accepted therereof is very remarkable For being lead betweene the Dukes of Norfolke and Suffolke through VVestminister hall vp to the Starre chamber and there honourably placed in the high Iudgement-seate of Chancellour the Duke of Norfolke who was the chiefe peere and Lo Threasurer of England by the king's order spoke thus vnto the people there with great applause and ioy gathered togeather The king's Matie vvhich I pray God may proue happie and fortunate to the vvhole realme of England hath raised to the most high dignitie of Chancellourshipp Sir THOMAS MORE a man for his extraordinarie vvorth and sufficiencie vvell knovven to himself and the vvhole realme for no other cause or earthlie respect but for that he hath plainely perceaued all the guifts of nature and grace to be heaped vpon him vvhich either the people could desire or himself vvish for the discharge of so great an office For the admirable vvisedome integritie innocēcie ioyned vvith most pleasant facilitie of vvitt that this man is endevved vvithall haue bene sufficiētly knovven to all English-men from his youth and for these manie yeares also to the king's Maiestie himself This hath the king abundantly found in manie and vveightie affayres vvhich he hath happily dispatched both at home and abroad in diuerse offices vvhich he hath born in most honourable embassages vvhich he hath vndergone in his dailie counsell and aduises vpon all other occasiōs He hath perceaued no man in his realme to be more wise in deliberating more sincere in opening to him what he thought nor more eloquent to adorne the matter vvhich he vttered VVherefore because he savv in him such excellent endovvments and that of his especiall care he hath a particular desire that his kingdome and people might he gouerned vvith all equitie and iustice integritie and vvisedome he of his ovvne most gratious disposition hath created this singular man Lo Chancellour that by his laudable performance of this office his people may enioy peace and iustice and honour also and fame may redounde to the vvhole kingdome It may perhaps seeme to manie a strange and vnvsuall matter that this dignitie should be bestovved vpon a lay man none of the Nobilitie and one that hath vvife and children because heretofore none but singular learned prelates or men of greatest Nobilitie haue possessed this place but vvhat is vvanting in these respects the admirable vertues the matchlesse guifts of vvitt vvisedome of this man doth most plentifully recompence the same For the king's Maiestie hath not regarded hovv great but vvhat a man he vvas he hath not cast his eyes vpon the nobilitie of his bloud but on the vvorth of his person he hath respected his sufficiencie not his profession finally he vvould shevv by this his choyce that he hath some rare subiects amongst the rovve of gentlemen and lay men who deserue to manage the highest offices of the realme vvhich Bishops and Noble men thinke they only can deserue The rarer therefore it vvas so much both himself held it to be the more excellēt to his people he thought it vvould be the more gratefull VVherefore receaue this your Chancellour vvith ioyfull acclamations at vvhose hands you may expect all happinesse and content Sir THOMAS MORE according to his wonted modestie was somewhat abashed at this the Dukes speach in that it sounded so much to his praise but recollecting himself as that place and time would giue him leaue he answered in this sorte Although most noble Duke and you right honble Lords and vvorshipfull gentlemen I knovve all these things vvhich the kings Maiestie it seemeth hath bene pleased should be spoken of me at this time and place and your Grace hath vvith most eloquent vvordes thus amplifyed are as farre from me as I could vvish vvith all my hart they vvere in me