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A02861 The liues of the III. Normans, Kings of England William the first. William the second. Henrie the first. Written by I.H. Hayward, John, Sir, 1564?-1627. 1613 (1613) STC 13000; ESTC S103916 128,414 316

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inconuenience by disturbing a setled forme of gouernment to open an entrance for all disorders wherein ambition and insolencie two riotous humours may range at large For as euill is generally of that nature that it cannot stand but by supportance of another euill and so multiplieth in it selfe vntill it doth ruine with the proper weight so mindes hauing once exceeded the strict bounds of obedience cease not to strengthen one bouldnesse by another vntil they haue inuolued the whole State in confusion BVt now to returne to the person and gouernment of this King William He was a man of meane stature thicke and square bodied his belly swelling somewhat round his face was red his haire deepely yealow by reason whereof he was called Rufus his forehead foure square like a window his eyes spotted and not one like the other his speech vnpleasant and not easily vttered especially when he was mooued with anger He was of great abilitie in body as well for naturall strength as for hardinesse to endure all ordinary extremities both of trauaile and of want In Armes he was both expert and aduenturous full of inward brauerie and fiercenesse neuer dismayed alwayes forward and for the most part fortunate in counsaile sudden in performance a man not doubting to vndertake any thing which inuincible valour durst promise to atchieue Hee had bene bred with the sword alwayes in action alwayes on the fauourable hand of Fortune so as albeit he was but yong yet was he in experience well grounded for inuention subtill in counsaile quicke in execution resolute wise to foresee a danger and expedite to auoid it In a word the generall reputation of his valour and celeritie made him esteemed one of the best Chiefetaines in his time His behauiour was variable and inconstant earnest in euery present passion and for the most part accompanying the disposition of his mind with outward demonstrations Of nature he was rough haughtie obstinate inuincible which was much enlarged both by his soueraigntie and youth so singular in his owne conceit that he did interprete it to his dishonour that the world should deeme that he did not gouerne by his owne iudgement In publicke he composed his countenance to a stately terrour his face sowerly swelling his eyes truculent his voyce violent and fierce scarce thinking himselfe Maiesticall in the glasse of his vnderstanding but when he flashed feare from his presence And yet in priuate he was so affable and pleasant that he approched neere the degree of leuitie much giuen to scoffing and passing ouer many of his euill actions with a ieast In all the other carriages of his life he maintained no stable and constant course but declared himselfe for euery present as well in vertue as in vice strong violent extreeme In the beginning of his reigne he was esteemed a most accomplished Prince and seemed not so much of power to bridle himselfe from vice as naturally disposed to abhorre it Afterwards either with variation of times or yeelding to the pleasures which prosperity vseth to ingender euen in moderate minds or perhaps his nature beginning to disclose that which hee had cunningly concealed before corruptions crept vp and he waued vncertainely betweene vertue and vice Lastly being imboldned by euill teachers and by continuance both of prosperitie and rule he is said to haue made his height a priuiledge of loosenesse and to haue abandoned himselfe to all licentious demeanour wherein he seemed little to regard God and nothing man Assuredly there is no greater enemie to great men then too great prosperitie in their affaires which taketh from them all iudgement and rule of themselues which maketh them ful of libertie and bould to doe euill And yet I cannot conceiue that this King was so bould so carelesse so shamelesse in vices as many writers doe report It is certaine that hee doubted of some points of Religion at that time without any great contradiction professed and namely of praying to Saints worshipping of Reliques such like It is certain also that out of policie in State he endeuoured to abate the tumorous greatnes of the Clergie at that time as well in riches as in authority and power with the people and that he attributed not so much to the Sea of Rome as diuers Kings before him had done Insomuch as he restrained his subiects from going to Rome and withheld the annuall paiment of Peter pence and was oftentimes heard to giue foorth that they follow not the trace of S. Peter they greedily gape after gifts and rewards they retein not his power whose pietie they do not imitate These were causes sufficient for the writers of his time who were for the most part Clergie-men to enlarge his vices beyond the trueth to surmise many vices vntruely to wrest his true vertues to be vices And this I doe the rather coniecture for that I doe not find his particular actions of like nature with the generall imputation which is cast vpon him for that also I finde the chie●…e of these generall imputations to bee these That he was grieuous to the Church of no deuotion to God preferring respect of temporall state before the rules of the Gospel Verely it is hard to doe that which will beare a cleere beauty in the eyes of all men and if our actions haue not the fauour of time and the opinion of those men who doe estimate and report them they are much dimmed with disgrace Out of all doubt he was a magnanimous Prince mercifull and liberall and in martiall affaires most expert diligent and prosperous wise to contriue his best aduantage and most couragious to atchieue it But two things chiefly obscured his glory one the incomparable greatnesse of his father to whom he did immediatly succeede the other was the prowesse of those men against whom he did contend in armes especially of Malcolme King of Scots and of Robert Duke of Normandie To these I may adde that hee died in the principall strength and flourish of his age before his iudgement had full command ouer his courage Many doe attribute his excellent beginnings to Lanfranck Archb. of Canterburie who during the time of his life partly by authoritie and partly by aduise supported the vnstable yeeres and disposition of the King which after the death o●… Lanfranck returned by degrees to their proper sway But I do rather attribute many of his first vertues to the troubles which happened in the very entrance of his reigne which partly by employment and partly by feare held his inclination in some restraint For Odo Bishop of Baion and Earle of Kent the Kings vncle by the mothers side had drawen the greatest part of all the Prelates and Nobilitie that were Normans into a dangerous confederacie against the King to deiect him from his Srate and to aduance Robert his elder brother for their King The secret cause of this conspiracie was partly vpon a generall discontentment at the great though worthy estimation and authoritie a
his fat belly did beare so hard vpon the pommell of his saddle that hee tooke a rupture in his inner parts And so ouercharged with sickenesse and paine and disquietnesse of minde hee returned to Roan where his sickenesse increased by such dangerous degrees that in short time it led him to the period of his dayes During the time of his sickenesse hee was much molested in conscience for the blood which hee had spilt and for the seueritie which he had vsed against the English holding himselfe for that cause more guilty before God then glorious among men Hee spent many good speeches in reconciling himselfe to God and the world in exhorting others to vertue and Religion He gaue great summes of money to the Clergie of Meux and of some other places in France to repaire the Churches which a little before he had defaced To some Monasteries he gaue tenne markes of gold and to others sixe To euery Parish Church hee gaue fiue shillings and to euery Borough Towne a hundred pounds for reliefe of the poore Hee gaue his Crowne with all the ornaments therto belonging to the Church of Saint Stephen in Caen which hee had founded for redeeming whereof King Henry the first did afterwards giue to the same Church the Mannour of Brideton in Dorcetshire Hee reteined perfect memorie and speach so long as he reteined any breath Hee ended his life vpon the ninth day of September full both of honour and of age when hee had reigned twenty yeeres eight moneths and sixteene dayes in the threescore and fourth yeere of his age So soone as he was dead the chiefe men that were about him went to horse and departed forthwith to their owne dwellings to prouide for the safety of themselues and of their families and estates For all men were possessed with a marueilous feare that some dangerous aduentures would ensue The seruants and inferiour Officers also fled away and to double the basenesse of their disposition tooke with them whatsoeuer was portable about the king his Armour plate apparell household-stuffe all things were held as lawfull bootie Thus the dead body was not onely abandoned but left almost naked vpon the ground where it remained from prime vntil three of the clocke neither guarded nor regarded by any man In the meane time the Religious persons went in procession to the Church of S. Geruase there commended his soule to God Then William Archb. of Roan commaunded that his body should be caried to Caen to be there buried in the Church of S. Stephen But hee was so forsaken of all his followers that there was not any found who would vndertake either the care or the charge At the last Herlwine a countrey Knight vpon his owne cost caused the body to be embalmed and adorned for funerall pompe then conueyed it by coach to the mouth of the Riuer Some and so partly by land and partly by sea brought it to Caen. Here the Abbot with the Couent of Monks came foorth with all accustomed ceremonies to meet the corps to whom the whole multitude of the Clergie and Lay-people did adioyne But when they were in the middest of their sad solemnities a fire brake out of a certaine house and suddenly embraced a great part of the towne Hereupon the Kings body was once againe abandoned all the people running from it in a headlong haste some to saue their goods others to represse the rage of the flame others as the latest nouelty to stand and looke on In the end a few Moncks returned and accompanied the Hearse to the Abbey Church Afterward all the Bishops and Abbots of Normandy assembled to solemnize the funerall And when the diuine Office was ended and the coffin of stone set into the earth in the presbytorie betweene the Quire and the Altar but the body remained vpon the Herse Guislebert bishop of Eureux made a long Sermon wherein hee bestowed much breath in extolling the honourable actions of the King In the end he concluded That forsomuch as it was impossible for a man to liue much lesse to gouerne without offence First by reason of the multitude of a Princes affaires Secondly for that he must commit the managing of many things to the conscience and courtesie of others Lastly for that personall grieuances are many times beneficiall to the maine body of State in which case particular either losses or harmes are more then manifoldly recompenced by the preseruation or quiet of the whole If therefore any that were present did suppose they had receiued iniurie from the King he desired that they would in charitie forgiue him When the Bishop had finished his speach one Anselme Fitz-Arthur stood vp amongst the multitude and with a high voice said This ground whereupon wee stand was sometimes the floore of my fathers house which that man of whom you haue spoken when he was Duke of Normandie tooke violently from my father and afterward founded thereon this Religious building This iniustice hee did not by ignorance or ouersight not vpon any necessitie of State but to content his owne couetous desire Now therefore I doe challenge this ground as my right and doe here charge you as you will answere it before the fearefull face of Almightie God that the body of the spoiler be not couered with the earth of mine inheritance When the Bishops and Noble men that were present heard this and vnderstood by the testimony of many that it was true they agreed to giue him three pounds presently for the ground that was broken for the place of burial and for the residue which he claimed they vndertooke he should be fully satisfied This promise was performed in short time after by Henrie the Kings sonne who onely was present at the Funerall at whose appointment Fitz-Arthur receiued for the price of the same ground one hundred pounds Now when the body was to be put into the earth the sepulchre of stone which stood within the graue was hewen somewhat too strait for his fat belly whereupon they were constrained to presse it downe with much strength By this violence whether his bowels burst or whether some excrements were forced out at their natural passage such an intolerable stinck proceeded from him as neither the perfumes that smoaked in great abundance nor any other meanes were able to qualifie Wherefore the Priests hasted to finish their office and the people departed in a sad silence discoursing diuersly afterward of all these extraordinarie accidents A man would thinke that a sepulchre thus hardly attained should not easily againe bee lost But it happened otherwise to this vnquiet King not destined to rest either in his life or after his death For in the yeere 1562. when Castilion tooke the Citie of Caen with those broken troupes that escaped at the battaile of Dreux certaine sauage Souldiers of diuers nations led by foure dissolute Captaines beate downe the Monument which King William his sonne had built ouer him and both curiously and richly adorned