¶ The chronicle of Ihon Hardyng in metre, frō the first begynnyng of Englāde, vnto y t reigne of Edwarde y e fourth where he made an end of his chronicle. And from y t tyme is added with a cōtinuacion of the storie in prose to this our tyme, now first emprinted, gathered one of diuerse and soundrie autours of moste certain knowelage & substanciall credit, y t either in latin or els in our mother toungue haue writen of y e affaires of Englande.
❧ LONDINI. ❧
In officina Richardi Graftoni
Mense Ianuarii.
1543.
Cum priuilegio ad imprimendum solum.
RG
¶ The dedicacion of this present woorke, vnto the right honorable lorde Thomas duke of Norffolke, by thenprynter, Richard Grafton.
The preface into the Chronycle of Iohn Hardyng.
¶ The Proheme of Iohn Hardynge into this his chronycle.
Edwarde the thyrd had fyue sonnes.
- Edwarde prince.
- Leonell.
- Iohn duke of Lancastre.
- Edmounde duke of Yorke.
- Thomas of Woodstocke duke of Gloucester.
¶ Howe the maker of this booke saieth his auyse in briefe for the duke of Yorke.
¶ Of the ryghte and tytles that my Lorde of Yorke hath to Fraunce and Spayne with Portingale & other landes by yonde the sea, Ierusalem and other landes.
¶ The appoinctement bytwixt duke Iohn & duke Emund who should bee kyng of Castle and Lyon, and what the maker of this booke sawe and red at Londō, to syr Robert Vmfrewill then lorde Vmfrewill.
¶ Nō. that I Ihon Hardyng maker of this booke, delyuered to kyng Henry the syxte the copie of the treatie of this land as kyng Edward the thyrd treated and had them after the battayll of Poytours.
Here begynneth the Chronycle of Iohn Hardynge.
The firste Chapter.
¶ Of the .xxx. susters that first inhabited this lande & named it Albion, that nowe is Englande Wales & Scotland.
The .ij. Chapter.
¶ Note that wemen desyre of al thynges soueraynte, & to my conceypt more in this land then in any other, for they haue it of the nature of the saied susters.
The .iij. Chapter.
¶ Note that Hughe de Genesis a Romayne historiographier declareth in his chronicle all the kyngdomes of the worlde, and all the names of suche kynges as ruled in theim, from Noes floude vnto the byrthe of Christ. In whiche chronicle the foresayed Hughe writeth, that Danays kyng of y t Grekes had .l. doughters and that Egistus his brother kyng of Egypte had as many sonnes that maryed together, which doughters kylled theyr owne husbandes, and for that cause were banyshed, and saylyng on the sea were dryuen vnto a certain ysle, which, Albina beyng the eldest suster of theim named accordyng to her name Albiō, and Brute after that called it accordyng to his name Brytayne.
The .iiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe these ladies had this Isle in the yere of Aioth .lxxii. in the third age of the world, and she called it Albion of hir name, and toke feauty & seruice of theim all, as souerayne ladie of this Isle, that nowe is Englande, Scotlande and Walis, as Hugh Genesis wryteth in his Dyaloge.
The .v. Chapter.
¶ Howe spyrites gatte Giauntes vpō the ladies, which gatte other Giaūtes within this lāde. Before Brute came were xii. M. Giauntes, what in this lāde that nowe is Englāde and the north that nowe is Scotland, and the west y t nowe is Wales, as the Scotte Marian saieth in his dialoge.
The .vi. Chapter.
¶ How the fathers laye by theyr doughters, the brethren by theyr systers, the sonnes by theyr mothers and euery kynde with other, as Hugh Genesis reporteth in his chronicles.
The .vii. Chapiter.
¶ How Brute conquered Albyon & called it Britayne of his The armis of Brute owne name, y t now is England Walis and Scotland, and the armes of Brute in whiche he was clade fyrste when he entred this ysle after Genesis the Italyane Chronycler were of Gowlys .ii. Lions crowne of golde Rampant and combattaunt.
The .viij. Chapiter.
¶ A shorte lamentaciō of the maker, for kyng Lamedone lose his life and his estate that might haue stande in peace and suertie, for a litle succour of Iasone in his voiage.
The .ix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Eneas exyled oute of Troye came to Cecyle and to Affrike to the cytee of Carthage, and fro thence to Italye, & there was made kynge of Tuskayne and of Latene.
The .x. Chapiter.
¶ Of the house of fame where knightes be rewarded after the merites in armes by Mars the God of armes, some translate wich kyrcheues of pleasaunce & some with rynges and onches, their sepulture in the felde of pitee by heuen gates y t haue be veraye louers of theyr louers ladyes and neuer panyneles but aye graceles.
The .xi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Brute came frome Grece into Albion, and named it Britaine and howe he arryued at Totnesse in Deuinshire
The .xii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Corneus wrastilled with Gogmagog the giaunt of the Isle, and sleugh hym.
The .xiij. Chapiter.
¶ Howe he buylded the citee of Troynouaunt, that nowe is called London. London.
The .xiiij. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Brute sette his lawes & peace of Troye in this Isle without whiche a kyng is no better then his subiecte or his leege manne.
The .xv. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Brute departed Britaine in thre partes to his thre sonnes, the two yonger to holde of the elder, so that Wales and Scotlande shulde do homage to Englande by hys ordynaunce by the lawe of Troye.
The .xvi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe by lawe Troyane the souerayntie belongeth to the eldest brother or syster.
The .xvii. Chapiter.
¶ Kyng Locryne the souerayne lorde of all Britayne had Logres to his parte, to whom his .ii. brethren dyd homage for Albyne and for Cambyr.
The .xviii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Humbar slewe Albanactus, wherfore Locryne and Cambre gathered a great power and disconfyted king Humbar, & ceased Albany by excheter vnto Lo [...]res againe for defaute of an heyre.
The .xix. Chapiter.
¶ Gwendolena. quene of Britaine had Logres and Albayne Guendolena. in peace and reste .xv. yere.
The .xx. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Maddan kynge of Britayne reygned after Gwendolena his mother, and reygned .xi. yeres.
The .xxi. Chapiter.
¶ Ebranke kyng of Britayne had Logres and Albany. Also he had .xx. wyues .xx. sonnes and .xxx. doughters, he made Yorke, Bamburgh, Edenburgh, Dumbritayne and Alclude, Also he made an archeflaume at Yorke & his temple that nowe is an archebishoppe.
The .xxii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe after the death of Ebranke reygned Brutus greneshilde.
The .xxiii. Chapiter.
¶ Leyle kyng of Brytayn had Logres & Brytayne, he made at Carlele a temple flamyne and a flaume to rule it.
The .xxiiij. Chapiter.
¶ Rudhudebras kyng of Brytayne had Logres and Albany he made Caunterbury, Wynchester and Shaftesbury, and three temples and three flaumes of theim.
The .xxv. Chapiter.
¶ Bladud kynge of Britayne had Logres and Albany. He made an vniuersitee and a study at Stamforde & a flaume and his temple at Bathe his citee, whiche vniuersitee dured to the commyng of saynt Augustyne, and the byshoppe of Roome enterdited it for heresyes that fell emong the Saxones and the Britons together mixte.
The .xxvi. Chapiter.
¶ Kyng Leyr of Brytaine gaue away with his doughter all his lande and had it all again, and dyed kyng possessid.
The .xxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Leyr made a temple, and a Flamyne to rule at all Laiceter.
The .xxviii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Cordell quene of Fraunce and doughter of kyng Leyr, reigned after the death of hir father.
The .xxix. Chapiter.
¶ Morgan kyng of Albanie, that cla [...]nyd all Briteyne, but this Isle of Britayne was departed, for this kyng had but Albany.
The .xxx. Chapiter.
¶ Condage kyng of Logres Cambre, and duke of Cornewaile, gatte all Bryteine againe, and made a temple w t a Flamyne at Bangor,
The .xxxi. Chapiter.
¶ Clotane, Pynner, Ruddan & Stater reigned with barōs warres .xl. yere, howe this Isle of Brytaine was departed in foure parties & stood departed .xl. yere in barōs warres.
The .xxx. Chapiter.
¶ The conseipt of the maker of this booke touchyng barrons warres, in defaute of peace and lawe.
The .xxxi. Chapiter.
¶ Dunwallo Moluncyus kyng of Cornewayle conquerid Logers, Lambry, and Albanie as right heire of Brytayne he gaue fraunchises to the temple, plough, merkettes, feyres and hie wayes, so that none should disturbe by lawe nor by [Page xxvii] wrong, he made sixe temples in Logers Cambre & Albanie and also many Flāynes to rule theim of estate as bishoppes nowe dooen.
The .xxxi. Chapiter.
¶ Belyne kyng of Brytain who gaue to Brenny his brother, Albany that made hym homage for it, and sone after made hym greate warre and was false to hym and after frendes againe in other landes, but not in Englande ne in Scotlande.
The .xxxij. Chapter.
¶ These. [...]i. brethren wanne all Fraunce & all Italie to Rome and besieged Rome, gatte it and wer Emperours of it.
The .xxxiii. Chapter.
¶ He made the hye wayes through out Britayn, and he founded three archeflamynes, at London one for Logres, another at Yorke for Albany that nowe is Scotlande for that tyme fro Humbre north that was that tyme Scotlande, & the thyrde at Laklion in Wales, for all Wales.
The .xxxiiii. Chapiter.
The .xxxv. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Guytelyn kyng of Britayne wedded Marcian to wife, that Mercian lawes made by her great wisedome.
The .xxxvi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Moruile kyng of Britaine was slayne by his owne immoderate Ire, withoute knowledge of eny man with a fysshe bestyall of the sea.
The .xxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe this kyng was crowned in defaute of his elder brother, and after of pure pytee crowned his brother agayne.
The .xxxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Eledoure was y t seconde tyme crowned king of Britayne for his good rule.
The .xxxix. Chapiter.
¶ Eledour kyng of Brytein thrise crouned, for his good rule and good condicions.
The .xl. Chapiter.
¶ Elynguellus kyng of Brytein had greate will to here all mēne whē thei came to hym, whiche is a vertue. For greate cunnyng maketh a manne wyse and to knowe muche, and for mischefes to fynde remedies, as my lorde Vmfrewill commended neuer a manne, that putteth a mischief and canne fynde no remedie therfore.
The .xli. Chapiter.
¶ Lud kyng of Brytain buylded frome London stone to Lud gate & called that parte Luds toune, & after by processe, was called London by turnyng of tongues.
The .xlii. Chapiter.
¶ How Iulius Caesar came to Britayn, that nowe is Englande, and arryued in Thamis, and fled to Fraunce for newe succour.
The .xliii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe, whan Iulius Caesar failed power, he gatte newe power by wily polycy, to haue his purpose, and came again to Brytayn and fled the seconde tyme.
The .xliiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Iulius Caesar came agayne to Britayne the thyrde tyme & accorded with the kyng and had truage of hym.
The .xlv. Chapiter.
The .xlvi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Aruiragus kynge of Britayne reygned .xliiii. yere. And howe in his tyme Cladeus Emperour had truage of this lande, and maryed his doughter to the kynge.
The .xlvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Ioseph Aramathie came vnto Britayne with Vaspasyan, and chrystened a parte of this lande.
The .xlviij. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Ioseph conuerted this kyng Aruiragus & gaue hym a shelde of y t armes that wee call sainct George his armes whiche armes he bare euer after, & thus became that armes to bee y t kynges armes of this lāde, lōg afore sainct George was gotten or borne, and as Maryan the profounde chronicler saieth, he bare of siluer in token of clennes, a crosse of goules significacion of the bloodde that Christe bleedde on y e crosse, and for it muste nedes of reason by called a crosse.
The .xlix. Chapiter.
¶ Marius the kyng of Brytain reigned sixty yere and three, howe the peightes inhabited firste in Albany y t is Sotclāde nowe in these dayes, in Catenes & thei wer the North peightes, and a parte of theim inhabited sone after bytwyxt the Scottes sea and tweid that were called South peightes.
The .l. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Scottes came of Scota kyng Pharois doughter y t came after many daye into Albanye so y t of peightes Irish & of Pharois people collect togethers wer Scottes named For at the tauerne or at a gatheryng of people or of mony is called a scotte and so came first y e name of Scottes which Scottes inhabited theim by twixt catnes & y e Scottishe sea.
The .li. Chapter.
¶ Lucius kyng of Britayn reigned .liiii. yere, and was the seconde Christened kyng of Britayn by Faggan & Dubyan that baptized all this lande, and for the same cause bare the same armes after he was baptized. Also he made of .iiii. archeflamynes in Britayn three archebyshoppes at London, Yorke and Carlion.
The .lii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe that ther was Britons warre .iiii. yere after the death of Lucius.
The .liij. Chapter.
¶ Howe Seuer made a dike with a wall on it, of turues and soddes to kepe the Pightes and the Scottes from the Britons, ouertwharte the land frō the east sea vnto y t west sea.
The .liiii. Chapiter.
¶ Carense kyng of Britayne reigned .iiii. yere by treason, borne of lowe bloodde and rose vp of robery by the sea.
The .lv. Chapiter.
¶ The wordes of the maker of this booke vnto my Lorde of yorke touchynge gouernaunce of this lande, by example of this kyng Caranse through robbery refen of poore bloude to royall estate.
The .lvi. Chapiter.
The .lvii. Chapiter.
¶ Asclepiadote kynge of Britayne reygned .x. yere, in whose tyme was great persecucyon in Britayne, sayncte Albons slayne and many thousandes slayne for Chrystes sake.
The .lviii. Chapter.
¶ This persecucion was in y t yere of Christes birth a C. lxxx and .iiii. yere, and the .x. yere of kyng Asclepiadote.
The .lix. Chapiter.
¶ Kyng Coyle of Briteyne reygned .xi. yere, that was father to saynte Elyne.
The .lx. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Constancius Senatoure and Emperour of Rome wedded saynt Elyne, and by her was kyng of this lande.
The .lxi. Chapiter.
The .lxii. Chapiter.
¶ Constantyne kyng of Britayne sonne of Constaunce and of saynte Elyn, by. xxxiiii, yere, was fyrst kynge of Brytayne, and afterwarde Emperoure of Rome.
The .lxiii. Chapiter.
¶ Thanswere of Constantyne whā he was a leper & should haue been heled with the bloodde of innocentes, and howe he sent his mother sainct Elyn to seke the holy crosse. And howe he gaue his palis and dignite emperiall of Roome to Siluester. And howe he went to Besaūce and builded it all newe, & called it Constantyne & destroyed all the Aryanes heresies and dyed there at sainct Nychomede whose daye is halowed with the Grekes in the twenty and one daye of Maye.
The .lxiiii. Chapiter.
¶ Gracian kyng of Britayne, in whose tyme kyng Malga & Gwaymes distroyed all Britayne
The .lxv. Chapiter.
¶ The Senate of Rome sente a legion of knyghtes into Britayn, who made the Britons to make a walle of lyme and stone from the easte sea vnto the weste sea and called it the peight wall.
The .lxvi. Chapiter.
¶ Constaunce kyng of Britayne reigned but one yere, that was monke first and after made kyng, and was not wyse but an ideote, whome Vortiger crowned to that entent to make hymselfe kyng by false cōtryuyng, seyng the kyng full symple to rule the lande.
The .lxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Vortiger kynge of Britayne reigned .xviii. yere through his falshed and treason cōspired with Peightes, to slea his kyng. And howe Engist and Horsus paiens landed in Kent and were beloued with Vortiger, and howe wednisdaye and frydaye had name, and what goddes and goddisses they honoured. Howe and when Engist and Horsus lāded in Kēte, & made Thoncastre & horne castre in the coū tre of Lyncolne, & howe Engist sent for his doughter & maried her to kyng Vortiger, and brought in with her greate multitude of paiens, that accombred all the realme both of warre & of Christen fayth, wherfore the Britons crowned the kynges sonne.
The .lxviii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Vortymer the sonne of kynge Vortyger, kynge of Brytayne to withstande the power of Engyste, and of Saxons was twyes crowned. Howe this Engyst vnder treaty slewe all the Baronage of Brytons on y t playne of Salysburye.
The .lxix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Engist caused Logres to bee called then Engestlande, of whiche the commons putte gest awaye in their common speache, and call [...] it England for shortenes of speache.
The .lxx. Chapiter.
¶ Aurelius Ambrose kyng of Brytain the seconde soonne of Constantyne,
The .lxxi. Chapiter.
¶ Vter Pendragō kyng of Brytain and of his armes that he bare.
The .lxxii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the kyng was an amoured of the duke of Gorloys wyfe, and how he gatte on her kyng Arthure.
The .lxxiii. Chapiter.
¶ Arthure kyng of Britayne, reygned .xxvi. yere. Howe the kynge bare syxe banners in his warre, and howe he renewed and increased the table rounde, and helde vp royally the rule of it, and howe he conquered Irelande and Denmarks with all the ysles of theim.
The .lxxiiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Arthure conquered Fraunce, and sleugh kyng Frolle of fraūce, and wan many lādes thitherward, and when he had wone Fraunce and ruled it nyne yere, he came to Carlion and he and the quene were crouned there again with greate solempnite & dewe seruice dooen by his homagers.
The .lxxv. Chapiter.
¶ A good cause to make knightes worthy and coragious, and ladies and gentilwomen to lyue in great clennes.
The .lxxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Galaad came to kyng Arthure and atheued y t seege pereleous in the roūd table, & howe the saynt Graal apered at supper in y t hal, wherfore he made a vowe, neuer to abide two nightes in one place, to tyme he knewe what it was, and that he might se it agayne.
The .lxxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Galaad and the knightes of the rounde table made theyr auowes to seke the saynt Graal, some tyll thei found it, and some for a yere.
The .lxxviii. Chapiter.
¶ The lamentacion of kyng Arthure for his knightes vpon theyr departyng from hym, & of the rule whiche Galaad made emōg the knightes in the quee [...] of the saynt Graal, and howe at A [...]elon he found a shilde of thesame armes, a speare & a swcorde that Ioseph lefte there for hym, which armes, Aruiragus, Lucyus and Constantyne bare of siluer a crosse of Goules.
The .lxxix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the embassado of the Emperoure Lucius was receyued solemplye, and presented the Emperours letters vnto kynge Arthure, and also of the tenoure of the same letters, the whiche Lucius sent to hym.
The .lxxx. Chapiter.
¶ The letter that kyng Arthure sent again to Lucius themperour of Roome.
The .lxxxi. Chapiter
¶ He gaue to thambassatours royall giftes, and sent his [Page] letters with his ambassatis to passe to Roome with theim in cōpaignie & he with his hoost folowed sone after theim.
The .lxxxii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the senate and the citee of Roome, mette hym in seuen processions, and crouned hym and there wintred hym by all the whole winter.
The .lxxxiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe that tydynges came to the kynge at Roome, that Mordred had wedded his wyfe, and vsurped the crowne of Englande, for the whiche he came home agayne, and gaue Mordred batayll at Douer, where Arthure preuayled, and after again at Wynchester, wher the round table began and fell for euer.
The .lxxxiiii. Chapiter.
¶ The battayll of Camblayn, where Arthure preuayled and s [...]ewe Mordred, and Arthure had his deathes wounde, and howe Arthure died and was buried in the Blacke chapel of Glastenbury.
The .lxxxv. Chapiter.
¶ The commendacion of Arthure, after the conceipte of the maker of this booke in fewe woordes, and also the compleynte and lamentacion of the sayde maker for the death of Arthure
The .lxxxvi. Chapter.
¶ Constantyne, kynge of Britayne, sonne of duke Cador of Cornewayle reygned foure yere.
The .lxxxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Gurmounde kynge of Affrycans, conquered Brytayne, and departed it in seuen kyngdomes, to Saxons, [...] Englyshe, and went to wynne moo landes, & made Gurmonde Chester.
The .lxxxviii. Chapiter.
¶ Ethelbert kyng of Saxons.
The .lxxxix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kynge Ethelfryde of Northumberlande had seruyce of Aydan kyng of Scottes, the yere of Christ .vi. hundreth and three, after saynt Bede.
The .xc. Chapiter.
¶ Cadwan kynge of Britayne, that firste was prince of Northwales. This Cadwan was crowned in the yere of Christ syxe hundreth and thre, and after Bede by. xiii yere reigned ouer the Britons, in the west parties of all Wales and Cornwayll.
The .xci. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Cadwall fled, and was dryuen from his realme by kynge Edwyn, and helde it in subieccion, and was baptyzed by saynt Pawlyn archbyshop of Yorke.
The .xcii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Cadwall and Penda slewe kyng Edwyn, and reigned ouer Brytons agayne.
The .xciii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Oswolde kynge of Englande reygned ouer Brytons, Scottes, and Peightes, Iryshe, and ouer all Logres and Cambre.
The .xciiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe an hermite proued sainct Oswold his wife at [Page xc] his desire by biddyng of sainct Oswold
The .xcv. Chapiter.
¶ In the yere of oure lorde God .vi. hundreth and. [...]v. Penda slewe the kyng of Escangles, and the yere of our Lord God .vi. hundreth and .vi. Oswyne slewe Penda kynge of Marchelande, and the foresayde kynge Oswyne condiscended to holde and kepe his Easter accordyng to the vse of Roome and Caunterburye, the yere of oure Lorde vi. hūdreth and .lxiii. whiche before was celebrated accordyng to the Iudeicall custome.
The .xcvi. Chapiter.
¶ Cadwalader kyng of Brytayn, and lorde of all .vii. kynges in Britayne.
The .xcvii. Chapiter.
¶ How Cadwalader fel in greate impotencye, that he might not gouerne the lande, wherfore in defaute of lawe & peace fell Barons warre and ciuyle discorde in all the realmes.
The .xcviii. Chapiter.
¶ The lamentacyon of the maker of this booke, and his counsayle to my Lorde of Yorke, for good rule in the realme of Englande.
¶ Nowe foloweth of the Englyshe kynges and Saxones.
The .xcix. Chapiter.
The .C. Chapiter.
¶ Etheldred kyng of Westsex protector of Englande that reigned thyrty yere.
The .C .j. Chapiter.
¶ Cuthred kyng of Westsex protectonr of England and reigned sixtene yere,
The .C .ii. Chapiter.
¶ Kynulphe kyng of Westsex protectoure of Englande, the whiche reigned .xxvi. yere.
The .C .iii. Chapiter.
¶ Brightryke kyng of Westsex protectour of Englande reigned .xvi. yere, that began to reigne in the yere of our Lorde vii. hundreth .iiii. score and three, and died in the yere .vii. C. foure score and nynetene.
The .C .iiii. Chapiter.
¶ Egbert kyng of Westsex, protectour of England that reigned .xxxv. yere, & dyed in the yere of Chryste, viii. hundreth [Page] thyrtye and thre, as after shall appere.
The .C .v. Chapiter.
¶ Athelwolfe kynge of Westsex, reygned .xix. yere, & dyed the yere .viii. hundreth .liii. after Chrystes byrth,
The .C .vi. Chapiter.
¶ Ethelbert kyng of Westsex protector of Englande that reigned fiue yere.
The .C .vii. Chapiter.
¶ Elfride kyng of Westsex protector of Englande reigned sixe yere, and dyed in the yere of Christ eyght hundred lxvi.
The .C .viii. Chapiter.
¶ Alurede kyng of Westsex protectour of Englande reigned xxi. yere and died the yere .viii. C .xcv.
The .C .ix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kynge Alurede fled, to Ethelyngay in Hidils, for dreade of Danes, and serued an oxherde of the countree.
The .C .x. Chapiter.
¶ How Marine bishop of Rome, graūted to kyng Alurede to [Page] found an vniuersytee and study for clerkes, which he made at Dxenforde, where the clerkes be sworne, they shall not rede for theyr fourme at Stamforde.
The .C .xi. Chapiter.
¶ How duke Rollo a panyme, gate Normandye, of whome all the dukes of Normandye, be lynally discended.
The .C .xii. Chapiter.
¶ Edwarde the fyrste kyng of Englande reygned, xxiiii. yere and dyed the yere of Chryste .ix. C. and, xix.
The .C .xiii. Chapiter.
¶ This kyng made an vnion of all the realmes, and called it Englande, and after it failed neuer of that name.
The .C .xiiij. Chapiter.
¶ Athelstane kyng of England reigned fiftene yere and dyed in the yere of Christ nine hundred thirty & fiue. How Constantyne kyng of Scottes warred again Athelstane but he recouered his homage by myracle of sainct Iohn of Beuerley as sheweth here afterward.
The .C .xv. Chapiter.
¶ Edgare kyng of Englande, reigned .xviii. yere & died in y t yere of Christ .ix. hundreth three score and eleuen.
The .C .xvi. Chapiter.
¶ Kyng Ethelrede, kyng of Englande reigned .xxxviii. yere and dyed in the yere of Christ, a thousande and thirtene
The .C .xvii. Chapiter.
The .C .xviii. Chapiter. * Knowt kynge of Englande and of Dē marke.
The .C .xviij. Chapiter.
¶ Herold kyng of England the soonne of kyng Knowt reigned fiue yere, and dyed in the yere a thousand and .xxxix.
The .C .xix. Chapiter.
¶ Kyng Edwarde the confessour kyng of Englād reigned twenty and foure yeres, y t began the yere of Christ a thousand fourty and one and dyed the yere a thousand sixty and fiue.
The .C .xx. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Sywarde duke of Northumberlande, slewe in battayle Maclom kyng of Scotlande, and crowned Malclome kyng at Scome, accordyng to saynt Edwarde the confessoures commaundement whiche Malclome did homage to saynt Edwarde, as apeareth by his letters patent.
¶ Willyam Conquerour, kyng of Englande, and Duke of Nor mandye, beganne to reygne, the yere of Chryste, a thousande .lxvi. and reygned .xxiiii. yere, and dyed, the yere, a thousande .lxxxx. and the sayde Conqueroure founded the Abbaye of Batayle, for the soules of the people slaine there, the fourenene daye of October, in the yere of Chryste a thousande, thre score and syxe.
The .C .xxi. Chapiter.
The .C .xxii. Chapiter.
¶ Homage of Scotlande dooen to kynge Willyam conquerour, at Birmithi in Scotland, and also howe the kyng of [Page] Fraunce scorned the kyng Wyllyam & he quit it hym after
The .C .xxiij. Chapiter.
¶ Wyllyam Rufus kyng of England reigned thirtene yere, and began to reigne in the yere of our lorde a thousand four score and ten, & dyed y t yere a thousand one hundred & three.
The .C .xxiiij. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Malcolyn of Scotland warred in England for his wifes right, pretendyng y t she was right heire of England, and afterward he did homage to kyng wyllyam Rufus for the realme of Scotland.
The .C .xxv. Chapiter.
¶ This kyng Willyam Rufus taxed so sore the commons, y t they'might not mayntene tilthe, for whiche fell great derth and great myschiefe and moren of catel for defaute of food, for whiche the commons wer glad of his death.
The .C .xxvi. Chapiter.
¶ Henry the first kyng of Englande and duke of Normandy [...] reigned .xxxvi. yere, and died in the yere of Christe a thousande .C. and .xxxix.
The .C .xxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Stephan of Bloys, kynge of Englande reygned .xix. yere, & beganne the yere of Chryst, a thousande .C. and. xxxix, and dyed in the yere a thousande .C .lviii.
The .C .xxviij. Chapiter.
¶ Thenterchaunge of kyng Stephan and of tht duke Robert Clare duke of Glocester.
The .C .xxix. Chapiter.
¶ Henry fitz Emprice kyng of Englande and erle of Angeou, duke of Normandye and Guyen, by .xxxvi. yere and beganne to reygne the yere of oure Lorde a thousande a hundreth .lviii. and dyed the yere a thousande an hundreth and .xciiii.
The .C .xxx. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Malcolyne the seconde kyng of Scottes made homage for Scotlande & for therldome of huntyngdon.
The .C .xxxi. Chapiter.
¶ This kyng Henrye exiled Thomas becket byshop of Cauntorburye.
The .C .xxxii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kynge Wyllyam of Scotlande wente in to Normandye, with kyng Henry of Englande the seconde, as his liegeman.
The .C .xxxiii. Chapiter.
¶ This yonger Henry reigned but .iiii. yeres, and died before his father, wherfore he is not accompted as kynge because his father outlyued hym and reigned after his death.
The .C .xxxiiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Wyllyam of Scotlande made his homage to kyng Henry the seconde.
The .C .xxxv. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Geffrey Plantagenet, otherwyse called Plantageneth Earle of Angeou, elder brother of Bawdewyne and Almaryk, shoulde haue ben king of Ierusalem afore, and so by consequens thys kynge Henrye shoulde haue be kynge of it.
The .C .xxxvi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe that kyng Henry the seconde was very heyre of Ierusalem, and by consequens, Rycharde of Yorke shoulde be the same.
The .C .xxxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Richard king of England, duke of Normādy, & earle of Angeou, reygned .x. yere, and beganne the yere of Chryst a. M. an .C .lxxxxiiii. & dyed the yere. M .CC. and .iiii.
The .C .xxxviii. Chapiter.
¶ How kyng William of Scotland, made homage for Scotlande, and then after his coronacyon at Westmynster, he went to Fraunce, and so to Ierusalem, by the assent of the Kynge Phylippe.
The .C .xxxix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Rychard sold the realme of Cipres to Statyn once, & an other tyme to the kyng Guy [...] Lezinaunt to resorte to hym & to his heires, in de faute of issue of theim.
The .C .xl. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the Soudā toke a trewce w t kyng Rychard, after he had putte hym to flight & wonne his citee and castels in Surry. Kyng Rychard gaue Ierusalem and y t realme of Surry, to his susters soonne Henry erle of Campanya, with the heire Sibill to his wife, and homewardwas takē prisoner in Oistrich, but in his gift of Surrry [Page Cxlvii] [...] Ierusalem, he reserued the resort to hym & to his heires
The .C .xli. Chapiter.
¶ Iohn kyng of Englande, duke of Normandy and Guyan [...] erle of Angeou, began to reygne the yere. M .CC. and .iiii. and reigned .xvii. yere and died the yere. M .CC .xxi.
The .C .lxii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Wyllyam of Scotlande did homage leege to kyng Iohn at Lyncolne, the duke Arthure of Britayne & all the lordes of Irelande did the same
The .C .xliii. Chapiter.
¶ Henry the thyrde, kynge of Englande, duke of Normandye and Guyen, and Earle of Angeou, that beganne to reygne the yere of Chryste, a thousande .CC. xxi, and dyed in the yere, a thousande .CC .lxxiii. and of his reygne the .lvi. yere
¶ In his tyme was a batayl at Lincolne, where Earle Raudolfe of Chester discomfyted Lewys, y t sonne of kyng Philyppe of Fraunce.
The .C .xliiii. Chapiter.
¶ Of the byrthe of Edwarde his eldest sonne, and heyre was in the .xxix. yere of his father, and in the yere of Chryste a thousande .CC .xxxix. Howe Symonde Mountforte Earle of Leycester was create.
The .C .xlv. Chapiter.
¶ The [...] of [...] of Lancaster and of Leicester, long after in the yere of his father one and thirty, and in the yere of Christ M. iiC xli.
The .C .xlvi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Robert Ferrers erle of Darby was dishe rite and many other of their compaignie.
The .C .xlvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Edward theldest soōne & heire of kyng Henry the third, and his brother erle Edmond of Lancaster and of Leicestre went to Ierusalē with greate power whiche twoo princes were coūted the semeliest of all the hoste of Christendome.
The .C .xlviii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Edwarde of Englande, the first after the conqueste, called Edwarde with the longe shankes, beganne to reigne on the morowe after saynt Edmondes daye y t kyng in the yere a. M .CC. and .lxxiii. & died the yere. M .CCC. and .vii. the eyght daye of Iulye, and the .xxxiiii. yere of his reygne.
The .C .xlix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Gladowys Dewy, the doughter of Dauyd, prynce of Wales, was wedded to syr Raufe Mortymer, of whom came the Earles of Marche.
The .C .l. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the kyng dyd atteynt his Iustices, and sette enquery of peace breakers, ryouters, oppressours, extorcyoners, and of the vsurye of Iewes.
The .C .li. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Edmonde Earle of Lancaster, and of Leycester, kept Gwyan, and wed quene Blaunche of Nauerne the kynges syster of Fraunce, and therfore he bare the labell in his armes for dyfference fro the kynges of Englonde euer after.
The .C .lii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the fyue portes, toke the nauy of Fraunce on the se [...] in batell.
The .C .liii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Morgan and Madoke his brother, were sette in the towre for rebellyon in Wales made by comforte of kynge Phylip of Fraunce.
The .C .liiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Earle Edmonde was Leuetenaunt of Guyan, and warred vpon the kyng of Fraunce, and defyed hym by letter, for he brake the promyse made to Edwarde his brother kynge of Englande.
The .C .lv. Chapiter.
¶ Howe syr Roger Mortymer was made Earle of Marche at Kyllyngworthe, and set the rounde table of a thousande knyghtes, and as many ladyes.
The .C .lvi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Edmond erle of Lancaster and of Leicester faught at Bayon with the power of Fraunce and was slain there & sir Wyllyam Valence erle of Pē broke was dedde ther and many other lordes, in the yere a thousand twoo hundred four score & sixtene.
The .C .lvii. Chapiter.
The .C .lviii. Chapiter.
¶ How Florēce erle of Holād & his persuers boūd hym to vide the iudgement of the kyng Edward, if he should be kyng of Scotlād.
The .C .lix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Edward made sir Iohn Balyoll kyng of Scotland.
The .C .lx. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Iohn of Scotlande, made confederacye with Fraunce agayn Englande.
The .C .lxi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Iohn of Scotlande surrendred his homage to kyng Edwarde, and disclaymed to holde of hym.
The .C .lxii. Chapiter.
¶ Of the battayle of Dunbarre, where that kyng Edwarde preuayled.
The .C .lxiii. Chapiter.
¶ How the byshop of Rome, at the suggestion of the Scottes wrote to kyng Edwarde vnder this fourme.
The .C .lxiiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Edwarde wrote agayn an aunswer of his lettre.
The .C .lxv. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the lordes wrote to the byshop of Rome for the same cause.
The .C .lxvi. Chapiter.
¶ Of the batayle of Argyle, where Vmfreuyle tooke Wyllyam Waleys, and Iohn Waleys.
The .C .lxvii. Chapiter.
¶ How Peirs of Gauerstone, erle of Cornwaile was exyled
The .C .lxviii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe syr Robert Vmfreuile, Earle of Angeou, and syr Aymer Valence Earle of Pēbroke discomfyted kyng Robert Bruys, besyde saynte Iohns towne, and put hym vnto the flyghte.
The .C .lxix. Chapiter.
¶ Edward the second kyng of England began to reigne the yere a thousand three hundred and seuen, the eyght daye of Iuly and was deposed the yere a thousand thre hundred twenty and sixe, and of his reigne nyntene yere.
The .C .lxx. Chapiter.
¶ Of the relesse that kyng Edward made to Robert Bruys at Dūbarre whiche relesse Iohn Hardyng deliuered in to the tresorye, in the dayes of kyng Henry the fifth at Boys Vincent in Fraunce with other, for whiche he gaue hym Godyngton that the quene hathe nowe.
The .C .lxxi. Chapiter:
¶ Howe kyng Robert Bruis toke all the lordes of England, and sleugh many at Stryuelin bridge & distroied the Marches and bete doune castelles therin.
The .C .lxxii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the lordes of England with powre royall dur [...]not ryde into Scotlande passyng fourtene mile, England was so at vnder that tyme.
The .C .lxxiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Edward laied siege to Barwyke and for sooke the siege and went South, for Robert Bruys had destroyed mikell of Yorkshire, & discomfited y t archebishop of Yorke & his clergy, at Milton on swale
The .C .lxxiiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe at the nexte parliamente after, Thomas of Lancaster and Leycester erle and certayne lordes, exiled the twoo Spencers out of the land, but then y t Spencers made great persecucion with the kyng agayn the lordes, and slewe the erle of Lancaster and the other lordes.
The .C .lxxv. Chapiter.
¶ Howe syr Roger Mortymer the younger wente oute of the toure of London & went into Fraunce to the quene of Englande and to the prince Edwarde hir soonne, and also howe the lorde Lucye tooke syr Andrewe Hertlawe erle of carlele, and headed hym at Carlele for treason.
The .C .lxxvi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the quene Isabell treated mariage, of one of the doughters of therle of Henaulde for hir sonne Edwarde to haue to wife, by thauice of her brother kyng Charles & came to Englande with great power, and toke y t kyng and slewe his counsell for treason.
The .C .lxxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Edwarde the thyrde, kynge of Englande and of Fraunce, beganne to reygne, the yere a thousand thre hundreth twentye and syxe, and dyed the yere, a thousande thre hundreth thre score and seuentene, and of his reygne one and fyftye yere.
The .C .lxxviii. Chapiter.
¶ Of the relesse that kynge Edwarde made in his tender age to kynge Robert of his seruyce of Scotlande, whiche Iohn Hardinge delyuered to kyng Edwarde the .iiii. at Leycester with a patent, by which y e earle of Dunbar bound him and his heyres, to holde his landes of y t kinges of Englande.
The .C .lxxix. Chapiter.
¶ Of the battayle of Halidon hill, and howe Edwarde Bayliol did homage leege, to kyng Edwarde of Englande.
The .C .lxxx. Chapiter. [...]
¶ Howe kynge Edwarde smote the battayle on the sea at Sluse besyde Brydges, & howe the kyng firste rode into Fraunce, and quartred his armes with the armes of Fraunce, and sent to kyng Philip, to trye the ryght betwene theim two.
The .C .lxxxi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Henry duke of Lancaster went to Guyan, in y t yere of Christe, a thousande thre hundreth .xlv. And of the batayle of Cressy, in the yere of Christe, a thousand, thre hundeeth fourtye and syxe.
The .C .lxxxii. Chapiter.
¶ Of the greate pestylence, in the yere of Chryste a thousand thre hundreth fortye and nyne, and the yere nexte after, the kynge wente vnto Fraunce, and the prynce of Wales vnto Guyan.
The .C .lxxxiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the kynge of Fraunce was taken prysoner at the batayle of Poyters, the yere of Christe, a thousande, thre hundreth fyftye and syxe.
The .C .lxxxiiii. Chapiter.
¶ Of the seconde pestylence and the greate wynde and earthquake, the yere a thousande. CCC, lxi.
The .C .lxxxv. Chapiter.
¶ Howe prince Edward of Wales wedded dame Iohā doughter of Edmond Wodstoke erle of Kent, he of y t third degree and she of the second.
The .C .lxxxvi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the lordes of Italy sent ambassiate to kyng Edward for sir Leonell of Andwarp, to make hym kyng of Italy, who was create erle of Vister by his wife, doughter & heire to Rychard erle of Vister of whom he gate dame Philip, wedded to Edmond Mortimer erle of Marche, whiche erle of Marche gate Roger erle of Marche and my lady Percy.
The .C .lxxxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe sir Leonell when his wife Elionor was dedde was create duke of Clarence, and weddid the dukes doughter of Melayn in Lumbardy, and dyed ther & [Page Clxxxvii] had no childe with her, and some saye he is buried there and some saye, his boones were brought home and buried at Clare in Essex, but in trouth of Clare he had his name, and honoure of duke of Clarence, for Clare is called Clarencia in Latyne, and also Clarence in Frenche.
The .C .lxxxviii. Chapiter.
¶ Richarde the seconde kyng of Englande and of Fraunce, began to reigne the yere a thousand thre hundreth & .lxxvii. and was deposed by parliamente, in the yere a. M .CCC .cxix. and the .xxii. yere of his reygne.
The .C .lxxxix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Richard wente into Scotlande, in the yere a thousande three hundreth and .lxxxvi. and in his reygne the .x. yere, and howe he create two dukes of Yorke and of Gloucestre.
The .C .xc. Chapiter.
¶ Of the great parlyament, where the fyue lordes foriuged y t duke of Irelande, and his compeers
The .C .xci. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the quene Anne dyed, and howe kyng Rychard went fyrste to Irelande with his hooste.
The .C .xcii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the kyng arest the duke of Gloucester, the Earles of Warwyk, and Aroundell, and foreiuged them for treason, and made fyue Dukes, a Marquis, and foure Earles, and watched daye and nyghte with Cheshyre men, for drede of insurreccyon.
The .C .xciii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe in the tyme of kyng Rychard reigned ouer passyng pryde, aduoutree, and lechery as well in menne of the spiritualtie as in other of his hous.
The .C .xciiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the duke of Herford and the duke of Northfolke wer exiled out of England.
The .C .xcv. Chapiter.
¶ Howe duke Henry of Herford and of Leicestre landed in Holdernesse in the same yere, and Thomas Arundell archebishop of Cantorbury that before was exiled, and howe duke Henry swore to therle of Northūberland and to sir Henry Percy wardeyns of the Marches and to therle of Westmerland and to other lordes of y t North.
The .C .xcvi. Chapiter
¶ Howe duke Henry of Lancaster was made kyng, by resignacion, renunciacion and deposayle and election of the parliamente and crouned at Westmynster on saynte Edwardes daye in Octobre.
The .C .xcvii. Chapiter.
¶ Henry the fourth kyng of Englande and of Fraunce, was electe by y t hole parliament, the morowe after Michelmasse daye, the yere of our Lorde, a thousande thre hundreth foure score and nynetene, and reigned .xiiii. yere, & died at Westmynster [Page Cxcvii] the .xix. daye of Marche in the yere of Christe a thousande foure hundreth and .xiii. and of his owne reygne the .xiiii. yere.
The .C .xcviii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the kyng gaue the Constablerie and the Marshalsee to therles of Northumberlande and Westmerlande wyth certayn landes, and how syr Robert Vmfreuile was made knight of the Garter & capitayn of Rokesburgh, & faught on fote on Fulhoplewe and wan the feld with victorie and was made lorde Vmfreuile.
The .C .xcix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the kyng Henry remeued kyng Richard from place to place, by night in preuey wise, in whiche tyme theries of Kent, Salisbury and Huntyngdon, the lorde Spencer and syr Raulfe Lomley were headed.
The .CC. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Richard was brought deade frō Pountfret to Powles, and after buried at Langley, for menne shoulde haue no remembraunce of hym. And howe syr [Page Cxcix] Robert Vmfreuyle faught with y t Scottes at Redeswere and had the felde and the victorye.
The .CC .i. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Owen of Glendoure rose in Wales againe the king and made warre on the lorde Gray Ruthin, and toke the lorde Graye and syr Edmonde Mortymer.
The .CC .iii. Chapiter.
¶ The Earle of Northumberlande, & his sonne Henry Percy stroke the batayle of Hamildon with the Scottes, & toke syxe Earles, and discomfyte .xl. thousande Scottes.
The .CC .iii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe for therle of Marche his right, sir Henry Percy and sir Thomas Percy his vncle erle of Worcester, faught with the kyng and were slain at the battaill of Shrewesbury wher all y e lordes deceiued them the yere of Christ a thousand foure hundred and thre and of his reigne the fourth yere, that were bounde to theim by their seales except therle of Stafford, whiche letters I sawe in the castell of Werkeworth when I was constable of it vnder my lord sir Robert Vmfre uile who had that castell of kyng Henry his gift by forfeture of therle of Northumberland.
The .CC .iiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe in y t yere of his reigne & in y t yere of Christ a thousand foure hundred and fyue, master Rychard Scorpe archebishop of Yorke, Thomas Mombray [...] [...]rle marshall sir Iohn Lamplewe and sir Wyllyam Plompton were hedded byside Yorke.
The .CC .v. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the lord Hastynges, the lord Fauconbridge and sir Iohn Coluile of y e Dale and his make, and sir Iohn Ruthyn were hedded at Duresme by y e kyng for therles of Northumberland & then he gate therles castelles and stroke of seuen heddes at Berwyke.
The .C. C .vi. Chapiter
¶ Howe the kyng his soonne of Scotlād & heire Iames was taken on the sea and brought vnto the kyng and then dyed Owayn and the kyng of Scotland.
The .CC .vii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Robert Vmfreuile went into Scotlande and lay in the Scottishe sea .xiiii. dayes, and euery daye faught with y t Scottes, somedaye on the northsyde, and some daye on the southsyde, and gatte .xiiii. greate shippes, & brent there Galiot with ordinaunce and sore battayll in the Scottishe sea afore Edynburghe and at the Blakenesse.
The .CC .viii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe syr Robert Vmfreuile brent Pebles on there market daye, and made his men to mete their clothe with speres & bowes, and after the Scottes called hym Robyne Mendmarket, and his neuewe brente Iedworth and Teuidale sone after.
The .CC .ix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the prince Henry of Wales sent power to the duke of Burgoyn to helpe hym, the two Vmfreuiles, syr Iohn Graye with other, where Vmfreuile with the Englyshe men helde the felde for he would not kyll the prysoners, as the duke of Burgoyn had ordeyned
The .CC .x. Chapiter.
¶ The wordes that the Kynge sayde at hys deathe of hyghe complaynt, but nought of repentaūce of vsurpement of the realme, ne of the restorement of ryght heyres to the crowne
The .CC .xi. Chapiter.
¶ Henry the fyfth, kyng of Englande and of Fraunce, began to reygne the twenty daye of Marche y t was saynte Cuthbertes daye, and was crowned the ninth daye of Apryl, the yere of Christe, a thousande foure hundreth twenty & two, after he had reigned .ix. yere and an halfe. And in the houre that he was crowned and anointed he was chaunged from all vyces vnto vertuous lyfe, and lycensed the folke to offer vnto Richarde Scrop, and buryed kyng Rychard at West mynster, and graunted to Henry Percy his landes.
The .CC .xii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe sir Robert Vmfreuile faught at Geteryng the third yere with the Scottes, that had but seuen score speres and three hundreth howes, on Mad [...]lyn day and discomfited of theim .iiii. M. menne & made chase twelfe mile on theim in to their owne land, and went with the kyng to Harflite to the siege with whom I went thether.
The .CC .xiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the kyng wēt in to Normādy and steged Hareflete and gate it with greate peyn and losse of menne But who maye cas [...] of rennyng hoūdis and many racches but he must lese some of theim.
The .CC .xiiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the kyng came homewarde through Normādy and Picardie, and s [...]ote the battaill of Agyncor [...] wher I was with my maister.
The .CC .xv. Chapiter.
¶ Howe themperour and the duke of Holand came to the kyng, the Coūte palatine the duke of Melayn the marquys Farrar, the lorde Mantowe and the marques Mount Ferrete the lorde Moūt Palestrine came with themperour the same tyme, and the duke Bauers and Embeir and the prince of Orenge also
The .CC .xvi. Chapiter.
¶ Of the battayle of Sayne, & of the carykes there taken in the sea afore the mouth of Sayne.
The .CC .xvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the kyng wēt into Fraūce, in the .v. yere of his reigne the seconde time, and landed at Towke in Constantyne in Normandy.
The .CC .xviii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the duke of Albany besieged Barwske, and therle Douglas Rokesburgh in heru [...]ste, in the seuenth yere of [Page] the kyng, and howe Henry Percy erle of Northumberland rescowed Barwike and Roliesburgh, with .vii. score. M. mē, for trust it true, there is no lorde in Englande, that may de fende you agayn Scotlande so well as he, for they haue the hertes of the people by North and euer haue had, and doute it not, the North parte bee your trewe legemen.
The .CC .xix. Chapiter.
Howe the Kynge and the Quene came into Englaude, in the eyght yere of his reigne.
The .CC .xx. Chapiter.
Howe on Easter euen, the duke of Clarence smote y t batell of Bawgy, in the yere of Christe, a thousand .iiii. hundreth & twenty, and in the nynth yere of kyng Henry for that yere the feaste of the Annuncyacyon of oure Lady fell on Ester twysdaye, and the date chaunged after that batayle in the Easter weke.
The .CC .xxi. Chapiter.
Howe the quene wente agayne to Fraunce, & lefte the quene in Englande with chylde, and wanne dyuerse cytees townes and castelles in somer, in the nyngth yere of his reigne
The .CC .xxii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the kyng dyed the last daye of August the yere of Christ a thousand foure hundred two and twenty and of his reigne the tenth yere, for all his rightwisnes and iustice that he did, he had no consciēce of vsurpement of the croune.
The .CC .xxiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe through [...]we and peace, conserued was the encreaso of his conquest, and els had he been of no power to haue conquered in out landes.
The .CC .xxiiii. Capiter.
¶ Henry the sixte kyng of England and of Fraunce that fled in to Scotland without cause, on Palmesondaye the thirty and nyne yere of his reigne, and of Christ a thousand foure hundred three score and one, began to reigne the yere of Christ a thousand foure hundred twenty and twoo.
The .CC .xxv. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the regent w t lordes of Englād smote the vattaill of Vernoyle in Perche, in y e third yere of kyng Henry y t .vi.
The .CC .xxvi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Mountague erle of Salisbury layde siege to Orle aunce and was slayne there.
The .CC .xxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the kyng was enoynted and crouned in England in the yere of Christe a thousande .CCCC. and .xxix. and of his reigne the .viii. yere. And afterwarde he was crouned in Fraunce, the yere a thousand .CCCC. and .xxxi. and of his reigne the .x. yere, in whose presence the regent ceased of his office, for whiche he was wroth with the cardinall is vncle for asmuche as the kynge was there presente, therfore there shulde bee no regente.
The .CC .xxviii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the lorde Cromwell was chamberleyne in Fraunce at his coronacion, and discharged at his commyng home in to Englande, and the duke of Bedforde regent of Fraunce died, and then y t duke of Burgoyne was made regent a yere and then therle of Warwike was made regent a yere & died at Roan in the castell.
The .CC .xxix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the duke of Burgoyn besieged Calys and set vp his bastell there, and howe the duke of Gloucester rescowed it.
The .CC .xxx. Chapiter.
¶ Howe kyng Iames of Scotlande besieged syr Raulfe Gray in Renkesburgh, and howe Henry Percy erle of Northumberlande rescowed it with seuen score thousande men.
The .CC .xxxi. Chapiter.
¶ Howe therle of Stafforde was .ii. yere regent of Normandy and howe therle of Huntyngdon was other two yere, and howe Richard duke of Yorke was regent of Normandy. vii yere with holden, and afterwarde was made liuetenaunte of Irelande.
The .CC .xxxii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Edmonde Duke of Somerset, was made keper of Normandy.
The .CC .xxxiii. Chapiter.
¶ The duke of yorke, was made protectour and chyef of councell, the thyrty yere of kyng Henry the sixte, and the Earle of Salisbury was chaunceller of Englande.
The .CC .xxxiiii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the Earle of Northumberlande, the duke of Somerset and the lorde Clyfforde were slayne at saynte Albones the thyrty and .iiii. yere of his reigne, where y t duke of yorke the Earle of Salisbury, and the earle of Warwike toke the [Page CCxxv] kyng, [...] kept hym in good rule, the twenty & two days of Maye, that was then the Thursdaye next of Pen teco [...]t the yere of Christ a thousand foure hūdred & lv.
The .CC .xxxv. Chapiter.
¶ Howe y t lord Audely faught with therle of Salisbury at Bloreheth at Mighelmas terme, in the thirty and eight yere of his reigne.
The .CC .xxxvi. Chapiter.
¶ Of the battaill of Northampton, wher the Earle of March, & therle of Warwike preuailed & led the king to Westminster & kept hym there, the yere of his reigne right and thirty, and the yere of Christ a thousād foure hundred nyne and fiftie, and slewe the duke of Bokyngham, therle of Shrowisbury tresorer of England, the lord Beaumont, sir Thomas Percy, lord Egremond, and led the kyng with theim to London and gouerned hym full well and worthely, the tenth daye of Iuly.
The .CC .xxxvii. Chapiter.
¶ Howe the battaill of Wakefeld wher the North partie preuailed, was the fifth daye of Christmasse, and of the kyng his reigne the nyne and thirty.
The .CC .xxxviii. Chapiter,
¶ Howe therle of Northumberland, the lord Neuell and the North partie, faught at sainct Albones y t seuētene daye of Feueryere, and slewe the lord Bo [...]nuile [...] six Thomas Kiryell and many other, the thirty and nyne yere of the kyng, and the yere of Christ a thousand foure hundred & sixty, and led the king to Yorke.
The .CC .xxxix. Chapiter.
¶ Howe Edward duke of Yorke and erle of Marche toke on hym y t roiall charge for the wele of the realme the fourth daye of Marche, the yere of Christ a thousand foure hundred and sixty, folowed kyng Henry that refused tho the rule of the land and gaue vp Berwike to the Scottes, and fled in to Scotlād and gaue battaill to the North partie at Feribrig on Palmesondaye, wher kyng Edward the fourth preuailed, the yere of Christ a thousand foure hūdred sixty and one whiche was then the twenty and nyne daye of Marche, foure dayes after our lady daye that tyme.
The .CC .xl. Chapiter.
¶ The mocion & conceypte of the maker of this booke touchynge kynge Henrye the syxte, his wife and his sonne, to be gotten home and putte in gouernaunce with all that fled with hym, cōsyderyng their trouth that forsoke their lyuelodes and welfare for his sake, and fro they so gotten home, that after they will be as trewe to you, and els to geue sore iudgement vpon theim.
The .CC .xli. Chapiter.
¶ The kynges tytle to all his landes, briefely reported, with a mocyon to vnion Scotlande and Englande.
The .CC .xlii.
¶ Thexcusacion of the maker, touchyng defautes of this booke and of the simplenes of it.
¶ How the maker of this booke reporteth the distaunce and miles of the tounes in Scotland and y e waye how to conueigh an armie aswell by lande as water into the chefest partes therof.
¶ A continuacion of the chronicle of England, begynnyng wher Iohn Hardyng left, y t is to saie, frome the begynnyng of Edward the fourth vnto this present thirty & foure yere, of our moost redoubted souereigne lorde kyng Hēry y e eight, gathered oute of the moost credible and autētique wryters.
RG
To the reader.
FOrasmuche moost benyng reader, as this former autour Ihō Hardyng, wrote no ferther then to kyng Edward the fourth: in whose dayes it should apere y t he departed out of this world: & also consideryng the length of y • tyme sence, and the manifolde goodly historyes, battailles, decres and statutes with the discēt and lyne of the kynges of England sence that tyme, I thought it not onely my dutie to labour y t knowledge of thesame historyes to thētent to adioyne & annexe thesame herunto, but also it should bee a greate offence in me to suffre you to bee depriued of so many fruitefull & necessarie thynges. Wherfore I haue here to the vttermost of my poore wit gathered and set foorth vnto you thesaid histories not in metre, like as Iohn Hardyng hath dooen before, partely because I would therby declare a dyfference betwene the former wrytyng of Iohn Hardyng and this my addicion, but specially, that these excellent storyes should nether in sence ner woordes bee defaced of the eloquence and greate grace that the autoures of thesame haue all readie geuen theim, and therfore haue I wrytten theim vnto you in prose and at length, y t whiche thynges howe muche y e more that thei shall delyte and please you, so muche the more glad shall I bee of my peynes taken.
¶ Edward the fourth.
AFTER TAHT EDVVARD had vāquished & put to flight Henry the sixte, beyng then verie ioious and proude (partely thorowe y t victorie that he had gotten and partely for that the commons began to cleaue vn to hym and to take his parte, and lykewise did the states of the realme) then departed he with all conuenyent spede to London, and ther assemblyng his counsaill together, was shortely after proclaimed kyng at Westminster y t nyne and twēty daye of Iune and was called Edward the fourth of that name after Wyllyam the conquerour, and this was in the yere of Christ his incarnacion a thousand foure hundred three score and one. And the self same yere kyng Edward held The first yere. his parliamēt again, in the whiche, first the realme was sette in good ordre, and all thynges wholy redressed, whiche was very good & expedient for the commen weale, for y t it had not been looked to all y • tyme that ciuile battaill did continue. And also thorowe his decree & will, all y e statutes that kyng Hēry y t sixt had made, was vtterly abrogated & of no vertue or strength, finally his twoo brethren y t wer younger then he, George was made duke of Clarence, and Rychard duke of Gloucestre, and Iohn the brother of Rychard Erle of Warwike, was made marques Montacute, and Henry Burchire [Page] the brother of Thomas bishop of Caunturbury erle of Essex, and Wyllyam Faucounbridge erle of Kent, & this Henry Burchire beeyng a noble manne & moost puissaunte in feactes of warre had gyuen hym to mariage the suster of Rychard duke of Yorke, called Elizabeth. And for this cause chiefely, that the said Rychard might haue his assistaūce and helpe of hym in all maner of aduersitie that should chaūce, either by battaill or other wise and that he did, after that kyng Edward the soonne of the same Rychard had made hym erle of Esser, tothend y t bothe the father & the soōne might at all tymes bee a sure fortresse and defēce for hym And he had begotten of this Elizabeth in laufull mariage foure menne children, y t is to saie, Wyllyam, Thomas, Iohn, and Henry, and one doughter called Isabell, the whiche liued but a shorte space, the whiche soonnes vsed greate diligence in bryngyng matters to passe, & in weightie affaires and busynes very laborious, in aduentures and ieoperdies manly and bold, and in forseyng thynges very circumspect, but specially Wyllyam the eldest had all these qualities. This Wylliam maried Anne a mayden discēdyng of high parentage and of moost pure virginitie, the doughter of Iames Lussheburne erle of sainct Paule, by whome he had Henry nowe erle of Essex, also Cicile and Isabell doughters, the whiche Isabell died before she was ripe to mariage, and y t other was maried to Walter Ferryse. But to come to that I spake in the begynnyng.
When all thynges chaunsed thus luckely to Edward, and that all was as he would haue it, [Page iii] Henry the duke of Somerset fearyng that kyng Howe Hē ry y t duke of Somersette lefte kyng Hē ry the .vi. and fled to kyng Edward and after repented & fled againe to Hē ry the .vi. Henry should goo to wracke, and take the woorse, fled to kyng Edward, of whome he was after the moost gentle sorte intertayned, but sone after it repented hym of his deede, for in the meane season kyng Henry had gotte a greate power of Scotish menne, & vnwittyng to Edward gat Duresme, the whiche thyng after hearde, the duke of Somerset fled priuely to hym, with a greate compaign [...]e of y t kyng his frēdes folowyng after, and so many for desire of lucre and vaūtage did turne to hym, that Henry was thought to haue as greate an armie as his enemie had. The whiche armie he made menne thynke to bee the greater for y t he did spoile and destroye townes and feldes where soeuer he came, & so by long burnyng and wastyng he came to a village called Exham, where as he buckeled The discomfitur of Henry the sixt. with Iohn marques Montacute whome he mette there, and there fightyng very sharpely, as often tymes it had chaunsed before, was putte to flight, losyng the greatest noūbre of his hoost, & he hymself with a fewe ino, went in all the hast to Scotland, and the residue fled, some one waye and some an other to saue their liues. Ther was taken there prisoners, Henry duke of Somerset, Robert duke of Hungerforde, and Thomas Rosse, the whiche duke of Somerset was putte to death by and by The duke of Somerset taken & beheded for that he had chaunged his mynde so sone and went to y e other partie, the other were had to Newe castell, and ther beyng for a season were putte to death in like maner, wherby other should haue no trust of any victorie, when their capitaines were dedde & gone. Albeit kyng Edward nowe might [Page] thynke all thynges to be wel, and him selfe strong enough agaynst the power of hys enemy for that he had gotte suche a vyctorye, yet dyd he wyth all dylygence prouyde that Margarete kynge Henrye the .vi. hys wife, shulde at no hande be let into Englande for feare of wynnynge mennes hartes to her. Wherefore, he made bulwarkes & sure for tresses on euerye parte and coastes of hys realme that there myghte be no landynge, and dyd wryte to all theim of the southe partes, that they shulde in nowyse take in anye woman, or helpe anye, for yf anye so dyd, he shulde be taken as an enemye & an hyghe traytoure to the crowne, as they were agaynste whome he dyd fyghte.
And of that parte that is nygh to the Scotish bancke, he layed watches, that none shoulde goo oute of the realme to kynge Henrye. But kynge The takynge of Hēry the xyxte▪ Henrye hym selfe was neuer in anye greate feare whatsoeuer chaunced, in so muche that he came in to England in a dysguysed apparel, and then beinge knowen and taken of certayne spyes sone after he had come in, was caried to London to king Edwarde, and there layde in holde. After whose attachynge and imprysonmente, the realme was set in more quyetnes. Wherfore, Edwarde nowe beynge oute of all feare and daunger of hys enemyes, dyd wholy set hym selfe the foure yeres after ensuynge to the reformatyon and redressynge of hys publyke weale, and to the recompensynge of hys souldyers for their paynes: did deuyde and geue the landes of theim that were wyth kynge Henrye to hys owne, and so wyth geuynge large and ample rewardes, dyd get the fauoure of all [Page iiii] hys people as well the laye as the nobles, and vsynge suche vrbanyte and clemencye to all kinde of men, that he had throughlye wonne the hartes of all men: the whyche gentylnes and fryndely famyliaritee he dyd euer after vse. Also as for the lawes of the realme he dyd alter and mend some, and some he made newe, besydes that he coyned monye as wel golde as syluer, the whyche at this The coynynge of royalles & nobles. daye is currante. The whyche golde was royals, and nobles, and the syluer, was grotes, so that in hys tyme thys kinde of coyne came vp.
And after that hys realme was in thys state he made a proclamation, that yf anye manne beyng a traytoure or rebellyon hertofore to hys grace, & wyllyng to submyt hym selfe wholy to hym shuld haue his pardon, and other that wolde not, shuld die, and suffer according to the lawes. The which kyndnes and natyue loue dyd cause hym to haue the good wyl and herte of his commons, so much that it is euydent, he was al the dayes of hys lyfe a conqueroure, through the helpe and ayde of thē in so much, that hys enemyes were euer shamefully put to wrack, as it shalbe shewed more playnly hereafter. And also not contented wyth the frendshyppe of hys owne countree menne, dyd wynne and procure the loue of foren and straunge prynces, and made theim to bee of kynred wyth hym, whereby that they myghte, (yf nede shoulde so requyre) ayde and socour him, or at the least, not bee iniurious or noysome to hym. So that he maried hys syster lady Margarete, to Charles the sonne of Phylyppe duke of Burgoyne, throughe which maryage he had greate helpe at the insurrection [Page] that chaunsed in thys his natiue countree, and after that sente Rycharde the erle of Warwyke embassadoure into Fraunce, the whyche shoulde desyre for hym to wyfe, a mayden called Bona, the syster of Carlotta the quene of Fraunce, and the doughter of Lewes duke of Sauoye, whyche after dyd marye Iohn Galeot duke of Mylayne, the whyche busynes dyd cause cyuile battayle to bee. For in the meane tyme that the earle wente in to Fraunce, and had spoken wyth Lewes the kynge, wyth whom the ladie Bona was, and wayted vpon the quene her syster, Edwarde chaungynge hys mynde, maryed ladye Elyzabeth the doughter of Rycharde the earle of Ryuers, which was maryed before to syr Iohn Gray knyght, by whome she had two chyldren, Thomas and Rycharde, of the whyche maryage, for the humylytie or basenes of stocke that the lady was of, he wold no prynce or kynges to haue knowne of it, no not so muche as her owne father Rycharde the earle, for the whyche cause, when it was blased abrode, euerye man dyd meruayle greatelye, kynges and prynces were dyspleased and grudged at it, and sayde playnelye, that it was not for hys honoure so to dooe, and beganne to reproue the foresayde maryage shamefullye, and for that he was led rather by blynde Cupyde, than by anye reason, they dyd incessaūtlye reproue the same. And ether thys was the cause of the sedycion whyche afterwarde dyd ryse betwyxte kynge Edwarde and the earle of Warwycke, or els the pryuie enuye and malice whiche was in both theyr hertes nowe brastynge out, wherby, an occasiō or quarel might be picked [Page v] For Edward after that he had got his kyngdome (as it was openly knowne) by the erle of Warwykes meane and helpe, begonne to suspect hym for that he was in such authoritee, so that he woulde haue plucked somewhat frome him & diminished his powre, wherby he myght haue ruled all thynges at his owne pleasure both in hys owne countree, & in other nacions. So that a man may see, it ofte chaunceth y t frendes will geue very seldome condygne rewarde to a mans deseruinges, yea, & eftsones when a greate benefite is bestowed or cō ferred vpon theim, thei will like ingrate persons nothyng cōsider it. Of this y e earle of Warwycke was not vnknowing, y e whiche although he loked for better thankes & a more ample benefite at his hādes, yet neuertheles, he thought best to dissēble and cloke y • matter, vntill such oportunitie might be had; wherby he myght, considering the wylfulnes of the kynge exprobrate vnto hym the pleasures y t he had done for him. And it is verye true and euidēt that king Edward dyd make serche in his house for a thing that touched much his honestie, wher the earle in dede was a man that loued women well, and had great fantesie to their company. But what soeuer it was, ether euell wyll, or desire of the empire that theyr league shuld bee infringed or broken, after that the earle had sure knowledge by the letters of hys frendes that the king had got him a wife priuely and y t al y t he had done with king Lewis in his embassad for the ioyning of this newe affinitee was but frustrate and in vain, he was so ernestly moued with it, that he thought best that the kynge shuld be deposed frō [Page] the crowne, and as one not worthy of such a kingly offyce. But to oure purpose. The earle of Warwyke beyng then sore vexed, and moued wyth the kynge, least y t in this his furoure hys intēt beyng rashely gone aboute, shulde bee broughte to no good ende, he determined so lōge to suffer & beare suche iniuries, vntyll suche tyme that he myghte brynge his matters to passe as he wolde haue thē whiche shortly after came into Englande, and salutyng the kynge, dyd hys message vnto hym, makinge hym selfe to bee ignoraunte of that maryage. And after that, the earle throughe the licence of the king went into his shyre of Warwike, partly to take his pleasure, and partly for the preseruation of his safetie and helth, whyche was the yere The sixt yere. of oure lorde God a. M .CCCC .lxvii. and the. vi yeare of the reygne of kynge Edwarde. In the whiche yeare, George Neuell brother to the earle was made archebyshoppe of Yorke, after the dyscease of Wyllyam late archebyshoppe before him beeynge the .lii. byshoppe that had possessed that rome, and Phylyppe duke of Burgoyne dyed the same yeare, and Charles hys soonne was made duke, a manne bothe for manhode and valyantenes in warre moste exellente. Thys Rycharde as we sayde before, was in hys shyre of Warwycke, and there callynge to hym George the archebysshope of yorke, and Iohn Montacure Marques hys brethren bothe, and after long communycation had of many thinges, the space of .ii. or .iii. dayes, at length gettynge meete occasion to speake of the kynge and hys doinges, dyd shewe hys mind to theim, desyrynge theim, by all the wayes that [Page vi] he coulde possyble, to take kynge Henry hys part and to helpe him to the crowne, saiynge after this wyse and maner. Brethren, it is not of anye lyghtenes of mynde, but of playne iudgemente that I am moued to speake of kynge Edward and king Henrye. Thys Henrye is a very godlye manne, and loueth theim that bee hys faythfull subiectes and doth cōsyder also who taketh paynes for him whyche hathe a soonne borne by nature to bee of greate worthynes, prayse and free lyberalitee, by whome euerye manne maye perceaue muche god lynes, whyche helpeth hys father nowe beynge in thraldome and captiuitee as muche as in hym lyeth. And as for kynge Edwarde, he is a man full of contumelye, and ingratytude, geuen all to pleasure, euell wyllynge to take anye paynes, and promotynge rather theim that come of nought, than noble and auncient men. Wherefore I thyncke it wyll come to passe shortlye, that eyther he wyll destroye all nobilitee, or elles nobilitee destroye him But before al other, we shulde fyrste enterprise to reuenge oure cause whych haue fyrste taken hurt at hys handes. For he (as I am sure you knowe it bothe) after that he was kynge dyd fyrste pryuelye gooe aboute to defyle oure dygnitee, and then after dyd openly intende our confusyon and losse of honoure, as thoughe he was not broughte to that dygnitee by vs, and not we by hym, and therfore euen now of late when I went ambassadour to Fraunce I was had in no regard, whereby the estimation whiche all kynges haue conceaued of vs, partely gotten by our auncetours, & partly by our owne trauailes & peines, shal nowe be extynguished [Page] vtterly, & nothinge sette by. And by these ꝑsuacions he wonne his brother y e archebishoppe his hert, & brought him to be of his minde, but he could not so sone nor easelye persuade the Lorde Marques, for at y t first he would by no meanes be moued to worke treason at any hād against kyng Edward, but at the last whē the earle had promysed him the helpe & powre of many noble prynces he was cōtented to kepe warre. The which Marques as he was vnwilling to consent to this at y t fyrst, so dyd he at the time of warre holde more of king Edwardes side thē king Henryes, as it shal appere more plain hereafter, the which was both destruccion to him, & his .ii. brethren. After this y e earle of Warwike a man of greate wytte perceauing George the duke of Clarēce, brother to kīg Edward, to beare no great good wyl toward his brother y t king, what so euer the matter was, first to proue hym and to knowe his minde, begāne to complain a lytle of the king his doinges, then after that the duke was in the same tale wyth hym again, & shewed him also what iniuries he had taken at his brothers hand: he beyng somwhat bolder to speake, brake his mynde more at large desiring him to folow his coūcel, & that he should not think this to be done of any rashnes, shewed hym how warely through his pollicie all his matters were wroughte, & desired him, y t he would cast w t him selfe how to bring such a weyghtie matter to passe, wherby al thinges may be prouided before hand, to whom after many great promises, he offered his daughter then of ripe age, to be maried to him, The duke throughe the councell and greate [Page vii] desieryng of therle of Warwike was contented to dooe all thynges as he would haue hym. After y t therle had this communicacion with the duke, he purposed to goo to Caleis, of the whiche toune he was then chief capitain, and wher his wife and doughters wer then inhabityng, but to thend that this sedicion might bee the soner begonne, where with all Englād was sore troubled a greate tyme, he had apoin [...]ted that sone after he was gone to Caleis his brother tharchebishop, & the lord marques should make an insurreccion in Yorke, wherby the battaill might bee begonne while he was so farre frome theim.
When all these thynges were prepared for, and his counsaill well alowed and taken, he went streight with y t duke of Clarence to Caleys. And ther after that the duke had promised by an othe that he would euer bee true, he maried lady Isabell the erles eldest doughter, y t whiche whē it was dooen, thei bothe consulted together y t more spedily, for y t y t insurreccion was made in Yorke as it was commaunded and appoincted. The whiche cōpaignie begōne first to spoile with out all mercie or respect of any thyng. For ther was at Yorke an old and a riche hospitall of sainct Leonard, where the poore and impotent persones wer harboured, & the sicke menne comforted, and this hous was founde of y t charitee of the coūtree, whiche did geue yerely certain of wheate, as y t first fruites of all their corne to the sustenaunce and mainteynyng of theim, to the whiche noumbre of grayne certain housband menne of the countree did refuse to gyue any part through the counsaill of therle of Warwikes compaignie, [Page] saiyng plainly that the poore and sickely people had it not, but thei that had y t rule and gouernaunce of the hous, and after that the procters of the hospitall claimyng it as dewe vnto theim, sought for their right. And for that cause greate tumulte was and muche conspiracie made, so that within fewe dayes, there was gathered aboute a fiftene thousand, whiche compaignie came towardes Yorke. But after y t it was knowne in the citee that suche a compaignie of menne had risen, the citizens watchyng euer for feare, was in doubte whether thei should mete theim and trie it in open felde, or tary in the citee and kepe theim frome the walles. But the lord Marques chief of that coūtre did put theim streight out of all feare and doubte, the whiche takyng good deliberacion and aduisement, metre theim cūmyng at the gates of y t citee where after a sharpe cōflicte, he tooke Robert Hulderne duke, and by and by chopped of his hedde, the whiche whē he had dooen, he receiued into the citee at y e midde night all his souldiours that wer there. The people beyng nothyng abashed at the death of their capitain, but rather the more eger & fearce, consideryng that thei could not ouercome Yorke, without ordinaunce whiche thei lacked, wēt streight forth to London. And as for that the lord marques putte to death y t duke and capitain of y t cōmons, beyng also one of his cōspiracie, did it for this intent, that either he would not bee aknowen faultie of this cōmocion, or els that he had vtterly determined to holde with kyng Edward, of whom as it dooeth after appere, he did get perfect amitie but after the kyng knewe the mynd and purpose [Page viii] bothe of therle of Warwike and the duke of Clarence his owne brother, & also certefied by dyuerse mēnes letters that the armie was drawyng nigh to London, he sent by and by Wyllyam Harberte whome he made twoo yeres before duke, with a greate power of Walshe menne, commaundyng hym if he could conueniently, bydde battaill to his enemies. The erle makyng hast towardes Northampton, hard saie that the Northrenmenne had gotte it, where also he sette his tentes, and the next daye folowyng fought w t theim, in the whiche battaill he was putte to flight in a momēt and cleane discomfited. The Yorkeshire menne beyng glad of this victorie, wer streight couled & went no ferder, but hauyng their handes full of spoyles & prayes went backe ward again, lookyng when the erle of Warwike would come, the whiche shortely after came from Calais with the duke of Clarence his soonne in lawe to the hoost, & commēdyng highly the capitaines, and reioisyng gladly that thei had y e victorie, did spedyly prepare an other armie. Yet kyng Edward beeyng nothyng abashed y t therle of Pēbruch had so eiuill sped, sēt hym forth again with a greater armie, whiche he had readie at all tymes what so euer should chaunce, & he hym self he did folowe with a small cōpaignie, and that he might bee readier for all thynges, in his iourneye did encrease his armie w t many that came to hym of his secte, saiyng that his entent was to destroie y t route of misliuers and flagicious persones, and then therle of Warwike perceauyng that his aduersaries came vpon hym, sent in all the hast to y e duke of Clarence whiche was nigh by hym with [Page] an hoost that he would bryng his armie in all the hast to hym, meanyng y t bataill was at hand. The duke when he hard it, came streight to ther [...]e. So thei bothe commyng together went to Banberie, where thei perceaued their enemyes tētes wer pitched, & there buckelyng together, tooke the erle o [...] Penbruch prisoner, and killed and discomfited all his menne, and emonges other of his nobles the [...] was killed Rychard the erle of Ryuers the father of Elizabeth the quene, & his soonne Iohn Woduile. And towardes euenyng kyng Edward drewe nigh, and heryng of the death and soden betyng doune of his menne, taried at a toune fiue myle frome that place. Therle of Warwike went to his chief toune with all his hoost, and there within twoo dayes caused therle of Pēbruch with certain other states taken at y t tyme, to bee behedded. In the meane season there begonne awaie to bee foūd for peace, for the whiche, letters wer wrytten too and fro, & herauldes sent from the kyng to therle, and frome the erle to the kyng again, wherby the kyng trustyng verely that all was pacified, was lesse ware of hym self, and feared lesse his aduersaries, the whiche thyng when it was knowen, and shewed to the erle by certain spies: he went furth in a night as priuely as he could with a strong power to the kyng his tentes, & ther killyng theim y t kepte watche, tooke the kyng vnware, & brought hym to Warwike, and to the entent the kyng his frendes might not knowe wher he was, conueighed hym priuely from thens in the night to a toune in Yorkeshire called Middelame, and there to bee kepte fast in hold. But yet the kyng could bee in [Page ix] no place nor prisone but that shortely it was knowen, the whiche caused many menne to bee sorie, & lament his chaunce. But he hym self after that he was in prisone, spake faire to the kepers of the castell, and with muche intreatyng and greate promises made, did so tempte and corrupt theim, that he was dimissed, althoughe the rumour was that the erle was willyng to it, the whiche might bee of likelyhood, if therle had gyuen ouer fightyng, but suche was y t eiuill fortune of kyng Henry, wherby a manne maye perceiue that he could neuer haue his purpose, seyng mannes strength nor policie is not able to ouercome, for therle with all his frēdes did ventre their bodyes, and spent their substaūce to haue brought Henry to the royall dignitee, for because he knewe suerly, that as long as Edward reigned, neither could he nor yet kyng Hēry beare any rule. And yet neuerthelesse thei lette hym goo when he was in holde, & when kyng Edward was deliuered, he went streight to Yorke, and there beyng honorably receiued of his citezens, taried for the space of twoo dayes to gette hym an hoost of menne, but when he could not haue a worthy compaignie, consideryng y t he should goo to London emong the middest of his hoost, went frome Yorke to Lancastre, & there found Wyllyam Hastynges lord chamberlain, of whō he hauyng greate helpe came safe to Lōdon. But therle of Warwike and the duke, after thei had perceiued kyng Edward to bee deliuered throughe the meanes of false trai tours, & that all thynges that thei had appoincted was to none effecte, was greately moued with anger and sorowe, and by and by callyng together [Page] all their chief frendes, consulted howe thei might begynne battaill again, the whiche whē the kyng was taken and in hold, was ended and dooen. And thus dooyng, there was certain that for veray angre and for the loue that thei had to warre, offred theim selfes to fight of freshe for nothyng, y t whiche moued y e chief capitaines to be y e more earnest. Also kyng Edward was as wyllyng to fight as thei were, wherby he might either bryng theim by force of armes to quietnes & peace, or els destroy and kylle theim euery mother soonne, that the realme might bee in [...]tter state. For thorowe their sedicious rebellyng, the people wer greately impouerished, seyng that the churche [...] and houses of menne were spoiled and [...]obbed, and menne s [...]ain in euery place, y e corne & grasse also destroyed that was of the grounde, and many other mischiefes dooen the whiche dooe chaunce eftsons in battaill The consideracion wherof, it piti [...]d many menne to see the cōmen weale in that case, the whiche wēt dayly and hourely aswell to therle as to the kyng for atonemēt, desieryng & counselyng theim bothe that thei would rather kepe peace & haue the loue of all menne for their quiet lyuyng, then to liue in angre and enuie, fightyng one with an other to y t vndooyng of all the realme, wher as it wer a wicked deede to kylle the father, but yet a greate dele more wicked to destroye the whole bodie of the commen weale, whiche is the father of all menne, and by the whiche euery manne is maynteyned & kept. By this greate entreatyng of noble menne therle and the kyng gyuyng feyth one to an other peace was had for a tyme, wherein the erle and [Page x] the duke went bothe to London with a small compaignie of menne in comparison to the daunger that thei wer in, and at Westminster was with the kyng for the reformacion and stablishyng of all thynges and for peace to bee had, wher the kyng and thei beeyng at greate woordes, nothyng was determyned or ended. Therfore the kyng for the vowe that he had made, departed and said lytle, and the erle with the duke also went to Warwike, and in Lyncolne shire gotte vp a newe hoost, and made sir Robert Welles the soonne of Rychard Welles graūde capitain, a noble manne of warre. These tydynges commyng to London, moued the kyng veray sore, whome he thought would rather haue kepte peace thē warre, but the more y t it was shewed to hym vnlokyng for it, y t battaill was at hande, w t so muche y t sooner & more spede he gathered an armie, & at the same tyme sēt dyuerse messē gers and haroldes for Rychard Welles, and thesame Rychard [...]eeyng often so sent for, made his excuse that he was sicke & diseased, but afterward whē his excuse was not admitted, he thynkyng to purge hymself sufficiētly before the kyng, came to London, bringyng w t hym sir Thomas Democke his brother in lawe, and whē he was there, certain of his frendes certified hym that y e kyng was sore moued with hym, whiche for feare of the kyng did take sentuarie at Westminster & his brother also, mindyng to tary there vnto suche tyme as y t kyng his anger wer couled & apeaced. But kyng Edward trustyng to pacifie all this tumulte without bloddeshede, promisyng those mēne his feith y t he would not harme thē, caused theim bothe to come [Page] out of sentuarie. Then the kyng callyng Rychard to hym, warned hym to byd his brother Robert that he should leaue of warre, and goo frome the erle, and in the meane season the kyng went foreward w t his hoost against his enemies, bryngyng with hym this foresaid Rychard & Thomas, and beeyng but frome Stamforde wher his enemies did lie the space of twoo dayes iourney, was informed y t Robert kepte y t armie still, nothyng moued with y t letters of his fathers wrytyng, for the whiche the kyng beyng sore greued, caused bothe Rychard and Thomas euen there cōtrarie to his promise, moost shamefully to haue their heddes chopped of. Robert, whē he sawe the kyng drawe nigh, and hard that his father & sir Thomas Democke was put to death, stoode first in a doubte whether he should fight or no, for because it was ieoperdeous to ventre vpon suche a greate power before y t erle came, yet at the last for the stoute courage and manly boldenes that was in hym, thei went together, and fought sore, long, and many menne killed on bothe sydes, and at the last whē the fore named Robert encouraged his menne that wer ready to geue ouer, was coumpassed about of his enemies & taken, and also sir Thomas Delalāt with many [...]o, the whiche capitaines beyng taken all y e hoost was putte to flight & driuen awaye. The kyng beyng glad of this victorie, cōmaunded Robert & sir Thomas Delalant with many other to bee put to death at y t same tyme & place. And in this battaill ther was kylled as mēne reported tenne thousand menne. The erle at this tyme beeyng at his owne toune of Warwike, and commyng shortely to his [Page xi] armye at Stamforde with his power, was enformed that the battayle was foughte quickelyer then he looked for, and that his men had the worse parte, although he might now be discouraged, yet he made as thoughe he passed not and would not beleue, to the entente that he myghte the more enbouldē certaine of his compaigny then despayryng and geuyng theimselfe to flight, beganne to make a newe hoste, and with many faire promyses did wowe his brother in lawe Thomas Stanley, to take his parte, but when y t said Thomas would by no meanes fight or rebell agaynste kyng Edwarde, then seeyng it was tyme to gooe one waye, and he mistrustyng that he was not able to resiste the power of hys enemyes, fled wyth the duke of Clarence (his soonne in lawe) to Excetre, and whē he had taried there two or three dayes, seyng that he lacked al thynges necessarye for warre, purposed to gooe to Lewes the kyng of Fraunce, with whom at his ambassate into Fraunce, was veraye well acquaynted and beloued, trustyng ether to haue some helpe of the kyng, or els to incense hym wholy to fight against hym, and so toke shippe at Dartmouth, both he and the duke with a greate nombre of theyr familie, and sayled with y e wynde to Normandie, where the chiefe lord of that towne entreteyned hym most royally, & in al y e hast certified y t kyng Lewes of his cōmyng thither. And y t kyng meruailyng greatlye at y t noble actes that y t erle had doen, was mynded thorowly to helpe hym in all y t he could, & when he knewe y t he was lāded in Fraūce, was glad of it, & sent to hym certayn of his nobles, to shewe hym that he did wishe to haue [Page] an occasion, wherby he might helpe hym, & at this time would gladly dooe for him, desieryng hym to come to Ambassy where the kyng laye, which Ambassy is a manour place of y t kynges set vpō the ryuer syde of Loire, & the duke also his sonne in law and that it should not bee for his losse or harme.
This was y t .ix. yere of kyng Edwardes reigne The .ix. yere. when the erle fled to Fraunce, and of our Lorde a M .CCCC. and .lxxx. But this greued kyng Edward that thei wer fled, for because many of y e people and cōmunaltee was desyrous to see hym, and thought that the sonne had been goone from theim and out of this worlde, when he was absent. And in suche estimaciō and honour was he had of the people, y t thei worshipped & honoured none but hym, or at the least none more then hym. In so muche y t his only name was euery mannes song & voyce, especially of the cōmē people when they made triumphe abrode in y t stretes. Wherby, the moste parte helde of the earle his syde, and bare hym more fauoure in theyr hartes then kyng Edward. Wherby y e kyng was in feare and daunger both of his owne countremen y t wer in his realme, and of theim that were abrode in Fraunce, but before all other he did prouide for y t erle his cōmyng. And first he sente to Charles the duke of Burgom his brother in law desiryng him y t he would manashe Lewes the kyng, w t whom he had made a league of peace, not to aide the erle of Warkwike or y t duke his sonne in lawe, neither w t mony nor with mē. The which Charles wrote to y t kyng of Fraūce, & thretened hym many thynges, if so that he mainteyned or helped theim. And when the kyng of Fraūce had red his letter, aūswered again [Page xii] & saied y t he might lawfully & would sauyng his league & truce, helpe his frēds y t wer valiaūt & noble men as the earle was, and settyng nothyng by all his thretenyng & braggyng wordes, sayd it shoulde bee neither greate peyne nor coste to hym. Whē these tydynges came into England, y t kyng was veraye sorie, & for that cause searched priuely in his realme, who wer frēdes to his enemies. And for feare by y t reason of the examinaciō of theim y t wer prisoners & in his hand, some did take sentuarie, and some came to y e kynges side. And emonges theim the lord Marques Montacute offered hymself to the kyng again, to helpe hym in his warres, whom the kyng gladly receaued, for because that by him mo would leane to his side. In this meane season y e erle of Warwike & the duke went to Ambassy, wher the kyng of Fraūce was, & by the way the people came veraye thicke to see hym, because they harde so muche speakyng of his noblenesse, & when he came there, the kyng receaued hym moste gently, to whō shortly after the erle did breake his mynd, and shewed the cause of his commyng. To whome the kyng promysed all that he coulde dooe for hym to the vttermoste extente of his power. Sone after quene Margarete the wife of Henrye y t .vi. came to theim, with her sōne prince Edward and the earle of Penbruck, and also of Oxēforde the whiche a lytle before sayled ouer to her. After they cōmuned together, as concernyng y t safegard of their bodies, a league was made thorowe the kyng of Fraunce his counsel. And first lady Anne the doughter of the earle was maried and despoused to prynce Edwarde the quenes soonne. [Page] Also the erle and the duke promysed faithfullye y t they woulde not geue ouer, vnto suche tyme that kyng Henrye the .vi. or Edwarde his soonne were proclaymed kyng of Englande, & after kyng Henry, that the erle and the duke should ouersee and gouerne the realme by the wyll and apoyntmente of the quene Margarete and her sonne prince Edwarde, vnto suche tyme that the forenamed prince wer of lawfull age and habilitee, the whiche they promysed faythfully to obserue and dooe as they wer apoynted. And besydes these, many other condicions were made, aswel for that reason did so require, as the busynes y t was at that tyme. When this league of truth & faithfulnes was thus made the kyng Lewes holpe the erle with mēne, harnes and nauie, that he might the surer go to Englāde. And Rhenate also the father of y • quene Margarete, gaue hym mēne & harnyse to his power. So that he hauyng no small nombre of men, did take shippe at Sayne mouth & ther tariyng, hard word from Englād by letters, that he should come ouer in all the haste, & that there were so many y t would take his parte, y t he shoulde haue no nede to bryng any with hym, for they wer redy in harneyse at the water side, willyng to helpe hym in al y t they could and not they onely, but many noble men & princes would helpe hym both w t mony, men & harneyse, & with all y t they could dooe. When he had receaued these letters, he purposed to go forth, and take the oportunitee of the tyme. And because that y e quene was not redy to set forth, he & the duke of Oxēford and y e duke of Penbruch, went before w t parte of y t hoste & nauye, to trie what chaūce thei shuld haue, [Page xiii] that if all thinges should chaunce well, the quene and the prynce should folowe and come vnto Englande. Therfore the Earle and the Duke thanking the king as highly as they coulde for that he had doone so much for theim, dyd take their leaue and sayled vnto Englande with all their armie. Then the Duke of Burgoyne not contented that the earle shoulde bee holpen of the king of Fraūce agaynst king Edward, prepared a great nauye of shippes aboute the costes of Normandye, that he might take hym cōming towardes Englande, yet neuerthelesse the Earle escaped all daungers, and landed safe he and all his menne at Dartmouth, frome the whiche place he sayled to Fraunce halfe a yere before.
After that the Earle came to lande, he made a proclamacion in king Henry the .vi. name, that all they that were of lawfull age shoulde make battayle agaynst Edwarde duke of Yorke whiche agaynste all ryghte and lawe at that tyme had the crowne. The whiche when it was doon, it cannot be spoken howe soone it went aboute all y e realme that he was come and had made this proclamacy on, at the whiche also is not to be expressed howe many thousandes of menne came to hym. The Earle hauing all this power & greate armie went streyght to London, whome when Edwarde perceyued to drawe nighe, he fledde for the tyme, trustyng to haue hym at some vauntage, but at the laste he was dryuen to that ende, that he had no mynde to get any hoste to resyst his enemies, but beyng in greate daunger of his owne lyfe, fled w t the duke of Gloucestre his brother, vnto a towne [Page] night the sea called Lye, and there taking shippe, sayled into Flaunders, to Charles the Duke of Burgoyne with greate daunger and parell of his lyfe by the reason of the boisterouse & cruel winde Elizabeth his wyfe beyng then greate [...]th childe dyd take sentuarye at Westmynster, where she was broughte in bedde with a m [...]n chylde, whose name was Edward. After that the earl [...] newe of the going awaye of kyng Edward, he made haste to London and hearing of the tumulte and busynesse that was in Kente, and that all the villages and suburbes there were spoyled piteously, a lytel before the going awaye of y t kyng, pacified theim and sette all thinges in good ordre agayne: by the doing of the whiche benefyte, he was the more louingly accepted of theim all, and that doon, came to the towre & there deliuered kyng Henry the .vi. out of prisone, & geuing hym his robe of maies [...]ye broughte hym to Poules, the people reioysing on euery syde, and there thanked God for that it had chaunsed as they wolde, & desired. And this was the yere of our Lorde a. M .iiii. C. foure score and one, that kyng Henry beganne to reigne. So that king Henry so often vanquyshed began to reigne nowe, likely shortely after to faule againe. The which fortune chaunsed to hym by many mennes opinions, because he was a very simple and innocent man, and y t he had rather in godlinesse & vertue excell other, then in honoure and rule, so y t for the loue y t he had to religion, he loked for no dignitee or honoure, whiche chaunseth to fewe that wil not seke for it or regard & kepe it when they haue it. But his enemies saide he was a coward, & had [Page xiiii] not the herte or manlynesse to bee a kyng or meete for that offyce. So that who soeuer despiseth that the cōmune people alloweth & maruaileth at, is accompted for a mad man, contrariwyse, he y t doeth agree to theim and in their tale, he is a wise man, where in dede suche wisdom (as it is comēly saide) is foolishnesse before God. Also some saide, it was the will of God y t it should so bee, for his graundfather Henry the fourth gotte it by violencye and force of armes, so y t it coulde not bee longe enioyed of hym, but that faute of the graundesire did redounde on the nephewes. But nowe to y t matter.
After this king Henry held his parlyament at Westmynster, the .xxvi. daye of Nouembre, in the whiche Edwarde is declared openly tray toure to his coūtree, bycause he had taken y t crowne to him and all his goodes geuen away, & in like maner al theirs y t did take his parte, and so iudgement was geuen on theim to dye. Furthermore, all y t decrees statutes and actes of y t forenamed Edward were broken & of none effecte. And then y t earle of Warwike, as a man y t had deserued much of his coūtre was made gouernoure ouer all y t realme, to whō he did take y e duke of Clarence as felowe to hym. So by y t meanes y t realme was brought to a new state, cleane transformed & altered. To this parliament came the lorde Marques Mountacute, the which excusing his treason y t he did take kyng Edward his parte, & saing it was for feare of death, had his pardone▪ Truely yf this man had taken kyng Edwardes part, & had stand to his side manly, he had not been so sore an enemie, and hurted so much his frendes, as he was being a false fained [Page] and coloured frende, for those thinges that we be ware of, and knewe before to bee pernicious, dooe lesse hurte vs. But nowe quene Margarete being in Fraunce prayed euery daye from that time the Earle went into England, for the victorie, the whiche when she knewe was obteined by the king his letters that came to her, shortely after did take shyppe, towardes England, but thorowe y t sharpnesse of the wether and greate tempestes she was constrayned to lande, and to differre her iourney to an other tyme. At the same tyme Gaspar the earle of Penbruch went to Wales to his Earledome, where he founde lorde Henry the Earle of Richemonde his brothers sonne, a chylde of ten yere olde, & there kepte prysoner, but lyke a noble man of y e erle willyam Harberte his wyfe, whome we spake of before, that Edwarde had made hym erle, and then after taken in batayl was behedded at the cōmaundement of the earle of Warwike.
This is that Henry the whiche when Richard King [...] [...]y [...] vii. the thirde brother to Edward was ouercome and vanquished, had the gouernaunce of the realme, of whome this is to bee beleued, that after that he came to his kingdō sent as one by god, to quench and put awaye the greate sedicion and stryfe that was betwixte Henry and Edwarde, seyng that he minded nothyng so muche as that, whome lady Margarete the onely doughter of Iohn the fyrste Duke of Somerset dyd bryng for the beyng but fourtene yeres of age, the whiche althoughe she was maryed after to Henry the duke of Bucking ham his sonne, and after that to the earle of Derby, yet she neuer broughte for the chylde after, as [Page xv] thought she had doone her parte when she hadde borne a manne chylde, and the same a kynge of a realme. Gasper the earle of Penbruch tooke thys chylde Henrye from the earle Harberte hys wife and brought hym soone after to London to king Henry the syxte, whome when the kynge had beeholded longe holding hys peace, and maruailing at the goodlye wytte of the chylde, sayde in thys wyse to the nobles that were at that tyme present Loo, thys is he, thys is he I saye, to whome both wee, and oure aduersaries shall geue place to, in The prophecye of Henrye the vi. of kyng Henry the vii. possession. And by thys he prophecied that the self same Henry shuld in tyme to come, as it chaunsed in dede, haue the kyngedome and rule of all the realme. And nowe Edwarde althoughe he was oute of his countree, yet dyd he not dyspayre but that he shulde haue mattre and redy occasion to recouer his kingdome, for the duke of Burgoyne partlye had promised hym both greate ayde and socoure, and partly the priuy frendes that he had in Englande dyd councell hym by letters sente from tyme to time, y t he would hasten his iournay homward, and incontin [...]tly after, very many fled to hym oute of Englande, eyther for feare of the lawes, that they had offended, or elles for sorowe that the worlde was so turned, that they could not haue theyr wyll, as they had before, in accomplyshynge theyr couetouse myndes and desyres, and caused hym to make the more haste homewarde. And kynge Edwarde beynge rauished with their golden promises, thoughte nothyng more payneful or wretched, then to tary one daye lenger, and nothyng more pleasaunt thē to go of his iourney, [Page viii] and so takynge no moo wyth them then two thou sande harnesed menne, at the sprynge of the yeare sayled into Englande, landynge in the coastes of Yorkeshyre at an hauen towne called Rauinsport And there settynge for the all hys menne, dyd reason wyth hys captaynes and consulte, to what place they shoulde fyrste goo. For it was ieoperdious consydering the small companie that he had, to take anye waye for the. But after longe delyberation, they were all agryed that some certayne knightes and horsemen of that smal compaignie shuld bee sent one to euerie quarter to the townes that wer nyghe, to the intente that they myghte drawe the hartes & myndes of the people to king Edwardes syde. But it is not lykelye that kynge Edwarde beyng a wyse manne durst be bolde, or would in any wyse come into England, with such a small power, excepte he had knowen surely that he should haue had great helpe at hys commyng the whych is a plain token, that the duke of Clarence, and the lorde Marques, had procured hys fauoure, promysinge him all their helpe that they coulde make, for the tryall of the whych, ther was manifest tokens, that dysclosed and bewrayed all their falshed. For they priuilie wēt about to know mennes mindes and to what parte they would declyne and the nexte day after came to kinge Edwarde, and shewed him that the common people dyd stande stiflye of kynge Henrye his syde, and woulde defende hys quarell as ryghte and iuste at al times, and that they had nomore nede nowe to make anye tumulte, in so much, that no manne would (althoughe eftsons desired and prayed,) go [Page xvi] to king Edward, yea, and that noman woulde for feare of the earle of Warwike, heare anye thinge spoken of that matter, whose myndes after that kinge Edwarde had throughlye serched and knowen, he chaunged his mynd and purpose, & wher as before he claymed the crowne, then he publyrshed abrode that he woulde haue but hys ryghte that was his landes, and heritage of Yorke shyre. And [...]t that worde, it cannot be well spoken, howe redily mē wer willinge to helpe him, consideringe that he claymed nothinge but hys ryghte, in somuch, y • very pytie dyd moue manye, althoughe they woulde not helpe hym, yet at no hande to resyste him. And kynge Edwarde reconsilyng him selfe to the common people by these meanes, toke hys iournye towarde Yorke, and wente to Beuer lay. The earle then beinge at Warwik, after that he knew y t king Edward was landed about York streyght sent a post to his brother lord Mōtacute then liyng that winter at Pomfreit w t a great army, to shewe him what daunger mighte ensue, yf king Edward got y t towne of york, & bed theim yf his enemies drewe nigh, ether to mete with thē in plain felde, or elles to bete theim from the towne, vnto such tyme, that he came wyth a greater host which he prepared then, in all the hast he coulde. And because he knew not surely which way his enemies wolde come, he fyrst sent to euery towne in york shyre, and to yorke it selfe certayne postes, to bid euery man be in his harnesse ready, and that y t citezins should shut the gates surelye that kynge Edward myght haue no accesse. In the meane tyme king Edward came peaceably, and wythoute [Page] the resistaunce of anye man towardes the towne of Yorke, of whose commyng when the citezens were certified, they made sure the gates, and standynge in harnesse, for the defence of it, dyd sende twoo of the aldermen, to warne the kyng the comming nyghe, that he dooe not enterpryse to farre, or put hym selfe in ieopardie, for they were mynded to dryue him and all hys awaye, wyth all the power they myghte. When Edwarde had heard theyr myndes, he was in so greate feare & agonie that he could not tell what to dooe, for yf he shuld haue goone back, he feared that the common people as men gredye of a praye, woulde persue him and yf he should goo forth, he was in daunger of the Yorke shyre men, leaste they shoulde sodenlye faull vpon hym, and take hym: and therefore, seeyng that he was not able to match them in battayle, thought to mollyfie theim with fayre wordes, and so beganne to entreat after the most lowlye and gentle maner the messaungers, that they woulde in hys name shewe the cytezyns, that he came not to clayme the crowne, but hys herytage and ryghte of Yorke shyre, and therfore that they woulde helpe theyr lorde and duke of Yorke, and yf that he myghte be receaued through theyr meanes, he wolde requyte theyr kindenes, and remember theyr benifyte as longe as he lyued. And by suche fayre speaking and flatterie, he dimissed thē and folowed straighte after to the gates with his companie. The citezins beynge somwhat moued wyth thys answer, for that he entended no harme agaynst kyng Henrie, they spake wyth hym from the wall, and badde hym to go frome thence, and [Page xvii] if he would go quickely, he should take no harme. But he speakyng veraye gentely to euerye one of theim, & callyng some by name, moost gentely did desire theim y t he might come into his owne toune And so passyng all the daye in that cōmunicacion, at y t length the citezens partely ouer come w t his moost gētle speakyng, & large promises made, fell to this poincte, y t if Edward would swere to handle his citezens after a gentle sorte, & hereafter bee obedient to kyng Henry his cōmaundement, thei would receiue hym in to y t citee, and helpe hym w t all y t power that thei might. Edward beyng glad to here this, the next daye after early, a masse was said at y e gates, wher he receiuyng the sacrament, promised feithfully vpon his othe y t he would obserue bothe the thyngēs afore named, & so was receiued in to the citee. Neuerthelesse, it was so ferre vnlike that he would obserue one of theim, that he minded none other thyng then y t he might depriue the kyng of his croune, as here after shall appere more euidēt. So y t oftē tymes we se noble men, aswell as the laye people thorowe ambicion & filthy couetousnes, thei forgettyng god & all godlynes dooe swere greate othes in promisyng thynges, y e whiche entendyng before thei make their othe, to breake it shortely after. Yet suche persons oftymes haue their rewardes of God at one or other tyme as this Edward had, so that some tyme the punishment falleth on the nephewes, for the offence that the vncle had cōmitted. But of this thyng I will speake more in Rychard the third, in a place wher a manne maye see that y e progenie of Edward wer punished for this offence, when Edward had thus [Page] framed his matters, he forgettyng y e othe y t he had made, did se y t the citee was strōgly kepte, and gettyng hym an army together thought he wold not lynger his busines bycause he harde his enemies made no greate preparaūce or haste, but tooke his iourney towarde London, & in his goyng did purposely goo out of his waye y t led hym to Pomfret wher y e lord marques was, & toke on y t right hand within lesse thē .iiii. miles of his enemies. And whē he perceiued y t thei made no skyrmishe nor mocion came in to the right waie again when he was past theim, & wēt to Notynghame. But this greued the Yorke shire mēne that he should deceiue theim so vnhonestly & otherwise then did become a kyng, or noble manne. After that it was knowen that kyng Edward came w t out all daunger of his enemies, to Notyngham, then came there to hym many noble mēne, vpon this consideracion y t the lord Moū tacute either would not entre vpō his enemies as though he had agreed with theim, or els durst not come out of his tentes, for that he was not able to matche w t theim. Therfore menne thought better to take Edwardes part, consideryng y t his power was so greate, then to hold with kyng Henry and hee in daunger of their liues, and losse of all their goodes & landes. Edward reioysyng at this, went to Lecestre, & hearyng that therle was at his toune of Warwicke & therle of Oxenford with hym, hauyng a greate armie, and that thei bothe entended to bryng hym to theim, preuentyng their purpose wet awaye w t his hoost, either wyllyng to fight, or els ioyne in frendeship and loue with his brother duke of Clarence, with whome then commyng frō [Page xviii] London w t an hoost of mēne he thought to speake before y t he came to therle & his cōpaignie, fearyng leste y t he would not stand to y t promise y t he made, for y t he was variable & incōstāt. In y e meane tyme therle of Warwike was very heuie & sore moued w t y e lord marques because he would neither kepe the kyng from Yorke as he was bed, nor yet when thei came before his nose, would not proffer theim ones to fight, & therfore cōsideryng y t his enemies multiplied more & more, in his gooyng towardes hym made an hoost, & sent for y t duke of Clarence to come to hym, then hauyng an hoost at London. Whō whē he perceiued to linger, & as a man doubtyng whether he should kepe battaill or peace, to haue no mind of settyng forth his mē, mistrusting also y t he was by some traine allured to folowe his brethren and take their partes, tooke his waye to Couētrie, to thende that there he might meete his enemies. Then Edward came to Warwike, and frome thens to the erle, and pitched his tentes by hym, and the next daie after bad battaill to therle, the whiche erle durst not come oute, for feare that the duke of Clarence whome he thought had deceaued hym, which duke in deede came, as it was shewed after with a greate power of menne. The whiche when Edward perceaued, he made towardes hym, & that it should not bee thought to bee a made guyle, sette his hoost in araye as though he would fight, and so did the duke. But when thei came in sight, Richard duke of Gloucestre as one that should take vp this matter, firste spake with the duke priuely in his eare, and then came to Edward and did the same to hym, and at the laste [Page] peace was proclaimed, wherby euery manne puttyng doune their weapons, Edward & his brethrē enbraced louyngly one an other. After this Edward made it bee proclaimed that y t duke with all theim that came with hym, should bee perpetuall frendes, & that thei three should loue like thre brethren as thei wer in brotherly loue for euer. Neuer thelesse God dooeth not seme to haue forgiuē this Edward his offēce of periury, although euē nowe fortune fauored hym, for yer it were long he was again vexed w t werre, beside y t plage & distruciō of his children after his death. When thei wer thus come together, thei minded to proue if y t erle wold come to theim also & hold w t theim, to whō y e duke of Clarēce sēt certain of his frendes, y t whiche first shuld excuse y t he had done, & thē desire hym if y t he would to bee at one with kyng Edward. Whose mynde whē therle heard, he vtterly detested hym, & with muche cursyng cryed oute of hym y t he had contrary to his feith & othe made, fled to kyng Edward. And to his cōmaūdemēt & biddyng y t he sēt, he made none other aunswer but this that he had rather bee like hym self, thē like a false & periured duke. So y t he appoincted vtterly neuer to leaue battaill, before that either he wer killed and ded or his enemies ouercomed. After this, Edward hauyng suche a strong power of mēne went boldely to London, wher after that it was knowen that the duke of Clarence had taken his parte, and that all the brethren were come in to one knot, the citezens were in suche a feare, that thei could not tell what to dooe, but at the lengthe they were dryuen for feare to take kyng Edward his parte [Page xix] At thesame tyme there came letters from the earle to kyng Henry, to y t duke of Somerset, to y t archbyshop of Yorke, and other of the kyng his counsel, y t they should kepe the citee from their enemies handes for the space of .ij. or .iij. dayes, & he would come streyght with a great armye of mēne. They defended the citee as strongely as they coulde, but it was to no purpose, for the citezens cōsyderyng y e kyng Henry was no greate warryer, and y t he had but small policie in the feates of thesame, and contrary wise, that kyng Edwarde was a man that of hym selfe coulde rule a realme maruelous well, and suche a man that woulde not onelye preserue hym selfe and all his, but also defende theim from all maner of iniuryes and harmes that shoulde chaunce, thought best to leane on his syde. And at his commyng to London, the people coulde by no thretenyng or strayt cōmaundement, be otherwyse kepte backe, but that they would mete hym then comyng, & salute hym altogether as kyng & ruler of the realme. At whose commynge in, the duke of Somerset and certayn other fled away, and made the beste shifte euery manne for hym selfe that he could, to escape his hādes, sauyng that kyng Hē ry taryed poste alone in the bishoppes paleyce besyde Powles, where standynge lyke a desperate manne, and not knowynge what to dooe was taken of kyng Edward, and cast into pryson agayn in the towre.
This Edward came into London the .xi. day of Apryll, halfe a yere after that he hadde sayled into Flaunders, and callyng his councel together, did highly commende the citezens, for y t faythfulnesse [Page] that they bare to hym, and in especiall the Aldermen, y t they caused the people to do their obeysaūce to hym, & also sharpelye rebuked other of the cytie whom he knewe to haue lent monye to kyng Henry. And for y t cause woulde haue made theim paye mony to the preparyng of an hoste for hym, but at the last he bad, theim bee without all feare, promysyng theim their pardon & safetie of life, thorowe the whiche gentlenesse, he gatte the fauoure of the cōmen people wonderfully. The erle consideryng that battayll should be shortelye, folowed his enemyes in great haste, to the entente that yf his enemies had any stoppe or lette by y t waye, he myght fight & buckel with theim, before they came to Lō dō. But now after that he had pursued theim long and came a good waye of his iourney, worde was brought y t Edwarde had gottē London & imprisoned the kyng. The earle then perceauyng that the victorie & ende of fightyng should be tryed in this one batayle, rested at saynt Albones, partely to refreshe his men, and partely to take some counsayl. In this hoste there was the duke of Excester, the earle of Oxenforde, the duke of Somerset and the lorde Mountacute Marques, brother to the earle whom the earle perceaued to bee very vnwyllyng to fight, and that agaynst kyng Edward, and therfore he had no trust to hym, yet the loue y t betwixte brother and brother diminished the suspicion, but whatsoeuer he thought eyther of hym or of other, he hymselfe was euer out of feare and daunger. And so came from saynt Albones, to a toune that is halfe waye betwyxte London and that, aboute a tenne myle frome London, called Barnet, and [Page xx] this toune standeth on a hyll, where there is a goodlye playne, and here the earle entended to pitche his battayle. And Edward hearyng of this prepared his armye, and adioyned a greate power of young menne to theim, and so with bowes, bylles, speares and arowes, and all maner instrumentes apperteynyng to warre, he had so furnysshed his menne, that he thought to make riddaūce of theim at that tyme for all, and fynishe battayle that was so longe holden. And so came with this his armye to mete his enemies, and that he might bee the redier to fight with theim wheresoeuer he mette theim, he had foure wynges, that they could escape hym at no hand. And he brought with hym to battayle also Henry then prisoner, to the entente that his aduersaries might bee the more discouraged at the sight of hym, or els, if fortune fauoured hym not, he might neuerthelesse bee saued by him. After the noone, he pytched his tentes at the fore named Barnet nighe to hys enemyes, but that he myghte not fyghte that daye, he defended hys tentes veraye strongelye, for the longer he taryed the better it was, by reason of the daylye concourse of noble men and commen people to hym, and the woorse for the earle, for that he was farre from his frendes.
There they lodged that night, and by breake of day y e earle of Warwike begā to araye his armye of this sorte. Fyrste the lorde Marques and the earle of Oxenforde was set on the lefte syde wyth certayn horssemen, and he hymselfe with the duke of Exceter on the ryght syde. In the myddeste betwixte [Page] theim bothe he setteth the duke of Somerset with all the archers. And thus araiyng theim to this battayl, beganne to exhorte theim, that thei would fight lustely and lyke hardye meune, reuengyng the quarell of their countree, for that he had moste falsely possessed y t croune. In like maner did kyng Edward, whiche after that he had set theim in ordre, encouraged theim to fight lykewyse, and to remembre that thei inuaded rebelles, traytours and sedicious persons, whiche entended nothynge but the vtter destruccion and losse of theyr countree. When daye came, the trompettes beganne to blowe on bothe sydes, as the tokens and lignes of the battayle. And firste the bowe men shot, & then drawynge nere tryed it with sweorde. Edwarde trustyng thorowe the multitude of his mē to haue the better hād did stāde stiffely to theim, enbouldenyng his souldiours in all that he coulde. Whose power the erle moste manfully resisted. And so by long cōtinuaunce of battail, many men wer slayne in whose places succeded euer fresher & fresher. At the length the erle perceauyng his mē to bee ouerthrowen by the kyng his great power, drewe nigh with his foreward, & constreyned the kyng to geue backe a litle. Then Edward seeyng that, brought freshe men to aide y e other, so that thother mē wer beten downe very sore to y e groūde. And Edwarde beeyng werye of this longe fyghtynge (for they fought from mornyng to none) caused theim that wer without the battayl, then standyng for the defēce of Edward, yf such nede should be, to fall vpō their enemies, & beare theim downe w t their great power. The erle then seyng freshe mē to come vpō [Page xxi] theim, was nothing afeard, but trusting & loking surely for the victorye, dyd comforte & encourage his menne then almoste discomfited, moost manfully, desiring theim to beare oute this laste brunt lustely, and the victorie should redounde to theim but they being weryed with longe continuaunce, were nothing moued at his wordes. Then he him self moste valiauntly came among the myddest of his enemyes, and there kylled and slewe many of theim, where he hym selfe at the laste was striken downe and his brother lorde Marques then folowing hym, after whose deathe all the other fled, & so were taken moste parte of theim. And this was the ende of the earle, whose stoutenesse of stomack made hym bee in lyke peryll and leopardye at many other times at dyuerse and sundrye suche conflictes and warres. There was killed of both partes more then ten thousande menne, and so many taken prisoners that they could not be noumbred. The duke of Somerset, and the earle of Oxforde entendyng to take their waye to Scotlande, dyd chaunge their mindes, bicause it was so farre frō theim, and fledde streight to Wales to the earle of Penbrucke, and so euery man to saue their liues, fledde, some one way and some an other. The erle of Exeter skaping very hardely, tooke the sentuarye at Westminster, and there remayned. When Edward had gotte this victorye, he went to London after the moost triumphyng fassion, hauyng Henry with hym as prisoner. The deed corps also of the earle and the lorde Marques were brought to Poules, and there laye for the space of .ii. dayes that euery manne might see theim to bee deed, and [Page] that no man after fainyng y t he was aliue, myght sowe sedicion againe in reuenging his quarel. Yet the kyng was not so glad at y e death of therle, but he was as sory for the losse & destruccion of y t lord Marques, whome he dyd esteme and take for his great frende. After this, quene Margaret hearing y t Edward was come into Englande, & had done much hurte in y t realme, purposed to come into England & her soonne also prince Edward w t a great armye of chosen & picked Frenchmen, & so to land at Waimouth. But for y t greate tempest y t was on the see, she could not come so soone as she woulde. But after she had landed, & heard that kyng Edward had conquered all, & her husband to be takē prisoner as destitute of all his frendes, and that y e erle with his brother lord Marques was slaine in felde, and all their army discomfyted and slayne & putte to f [...]ight, she began like a piteful & desperate ladye, to mourne and lament the fate & calamitee of her husband, y e whiche she did nowe see to haue chaūsed, and sowith this great feare & agonie she was in that case that she had rather dye then lyue The quene mighte haue thought y t this euell had chaunsed to her for the putting to death of y e duke of Gloucestre, of whose deathe althoughe peraduēture she was not giltie, yet she offended, in that she dyd not saue suche a good man. For yf he had liued and had the dominion of the publike weale, king Henry had neuer been in suche trouble. But nowe (to leaue of this) y t quene despering bothe of her owne life & her sōnes also, went therby to a monastery of the charterhouse monkes at a place called Bewe lieu, in englishe called faire place, & ther [Page xxii] taking sentuarie, remained with her soonne. And when it was knowen, that she was there in sentuarie, there came to her the duke of Somerset, & his brother the erle of Deuonshire, whiche man euen frome the beginnyng had taken the other parte, whose returning after redounded to his euell and destruccion, also the erle of Penbroke Ihon Wen locke, & Ihon Longstrother Capytaines and rulers of the Rhodes. The quene being in sorowe & miserye, was somwhat comforted at the sighte of her frendes, w t whome she talked and shewed the cause y t she came no rather, desiryng theim to prouyde for the safegard of her soonne & to helpe her nowe, and y e she would if the wether serued goo to Fraunce againe and bryng w t her, god willing at a more better & mature time a greater power of mē The duke began to putte her in good comforte & would in any wise y e she should set her mind whole vpon batail, & nowe to fight against Edward whē he was bothe vnprepared & also not furnyshed of men y t were hable to fight, considering y e great batell that he had w t therle of Warwike, in y t which his men were sore hurted & weryed all together, & y t it myght be their chaūce now to haue y t better of hym, although he discōfyted therle & his hoste, for because y t victorie turneth oftentymes from one to an other in a momēt & short space. Furthermore he shewed her y e the most part of y t nobilyte bare theyr good mindes & hertes to kyng Henry, & if so bee y t she would bee a capitaine as she had bene in tyme passed, he promised her a great army of his owne costes and charges, and that he woulde make other noble menne to take her parte, and defende [Page] her at all times. The Quene mistrusting and fearing yet muche of her owne soonne, aunswered & saied that she allowed his counsell well, yf so that she only might bee in daunger, and not her sonne And therfore fearing that when they fought most earnestly for their countree, her soonne might bee destroied or caste awaye, she thought best either to putte of and differre the battayl to an other time, or elles to sende her soonne into Fraunce, & there to bee kepte vnto suche tyme y e they had some better successe in their warres. And truely the mother was not withoute a cause so louing to her chylde; for that her owne husbande was a prisoner and a captiue persone, and therfore as one caste awaye, so that nexte after hym, she loued mooste tenderly this her soonne. Also that they might goo y t more wisely aboute their entente, the quene counsayled theim all to laye their heedes together, and caste all the waies howe to conuey their businesse, and then yf they would fight, she promised theim both her helpe, and good councell. Then the Erle saied it was no nede to waste any more wordes, for he & all they woulde fight stoutely agaynste their enemies, and therfore they woulde doo that with all their might and power, that they had determined and apointed vpon. So they all gathered their armye, euery manne for his parte, oute of his owne countree & shire. The quene brought now in good hope of warre, saied wel be it, & streight went by y t councell of y t duke to Bathe, looking and tarieng there for the armye, but to what place so euer she went, she would be aknowen to none, to thentent y t her aduersaries might not knowe, vnto such time [Page xxiii] that she came wher she woulde bee. Edward hearyng that the quene was come, and that the duke of Somerset, had prepared an hoost to ayde her, sente certayne spies to viewe of what number the armye was. And when they had shewed hym the nomber (but yet not knowyng whether they wold goo) the kyng apoynted to mete them before they came to London. And gathering his armie went to Oxforde shyre, and there pytched hys tentes at Abyngton, encreasinge hys nomber and army as much as he could. But perceauyng, that they wer at Bathe, and there taryed purposely to multyply and enlarge their company, came to Malebrydge xv. myles frome Bathe, & so hasted to come to thē before they did go to Wales, as he suspected, whether in dede thei entended, to the erle of Penbruck hauyng theyr a great bonde of men. From which toune of Bathe the quene fled, and frome thence to Brystowe, and wyllinge to goo by Glouceter, sent spyes before to knowe, yf she myght haue passage, to whome aunswere was broughte that she coulde not, nor that thei of the towne would by anye meanes geue her place, she hearynge of that went from Bristowe to Teukisbury. And ther the duke pytched hys battayle, agaynst the wyll and aduise of many other captaynes, whych counsayled hym to tarye the erle of Penbruches comyng. Where Edwarde dyd take the quene, and kylled or at the least imprysoned euery one almoost that came with her. And of the nobilitee, there was killed the earle of Deuonshyre, Iohn Wenlock captayn of the Rhodes, and the brother of the duke of Somerset, wyth manye other moo. And taken [Page] prisoners, the quene Margaret, & her sōnne prince Edward, y t duke of Somerset, y t lord of s. Ihons, & more then .xx. knyghtes besyde thē. And all these wer behedded .ii. dayes after in y t selfe same towne sauyng only the quene Margaret and her soonne Edwarde. Shortelye after prynce Edwarde was brought before the kyng, and there asked wherfor he did inuade hys realme, which answered boldly and sayde, to recouer my kyngedome as heritage by my forefathers and progenie dew to me. At the which wordes, Edwarde sayde nothyng, but thrustyng hym from hys syght wyth hys hande, whō the duke of Clarence and Glouceter, and y t lorde Hastynges dyd kyll mooste cruelly at hys departyng. Hys mother the quene, was caryed to London prysoner, and frō thence raunsomed was had to Fraunce, where she lyued in perpetuall sorowe and care, not so much for her selfe, or her husband as for her onely sonne Edwarde, whome both she and Henry her husband trusted should lyue, and possesse y e croune. When kinge Edward had thus ouercome theim, he went to London, and ther for iii. dayes caused procession to bee through euerye place after the moost solempne and deuoute fassy on. And here was the last ciuile battaile that this king kept, which was the yere of our lord. M .iiii. C .lxxx. and .xi.
After that kynge Edwarde was returned backe after the subduynge of hys rebelles, one Fauconbrydge the Earle of Kente hys basterde, a stoute harted manne, beynge admyrall of the sea, that none shoulde passe betwixte Calysse and Douer, to ayde or socoure kynge Edwarde, by the appoyntemente [Page xxiiii] of the earle of Warwyke, then after dryuen to nede and pouertee, beganne to bee a pyrate and rouer in the seea. In so much that he had throughe his robberye and shamefull spoylynge gotte vnto hym a greate nauye of shyppes, and at the laste, landed in Kente, and there getting to hym a greate multitude of Kentyshemenne, wyth the assistence of theim and hys ryotouse compaignye of shyppemenne, came to London, and sayde wyth a lowde voyce, they woulde defende kynge Henrye, and restore hym to hys crowne. But the people and cytezyns of London perceauyng that quene Margarete was ouercome in battayle, woulde geue theim no passage, but wyth greate myghte and vyolence enforsed Fawconbrydge to geue backe, and to take shyppe, and kylled and toke prysoners the better parte of his menne.
Shortely after, the same Fauconbridge landing vnware at Southampton, was taken and behedded. But to speake of the earle of Penbrucke, whē he had knowne that the quene was taken at Tewkesburye, where she had waged battayle, then goynge of hys waye to her, turned backe agayne to Chepstey. And there lamentyng greatly both his owne chaunce, & also the euell fortune y t kinge Hē ry had, dyd breath alitle & deliberate w t him selfe, what wer best to be done. In the meane time king Edward sēt one Roger Vaughā to take y t erle by some train or guile. But the erle certified of it, did take y • self same mā & hedded hī, so y t he was killed y t intended to kyll. From that place y t erle went to his toune Pēbrucke, wher he was besiged of Thomas Morgan then sēt frō the king, that he could [Page] get oute by no meanes, but on the eyght daye one Dauid the brother of the forsayde Morgane his moost assured frende conueyed him awaye, which then went to a toune by the sea syde called Tinby and there takynge shyppe into Fraunce w [...]th the lorde Henrye his nephewe, by the earle of Rychemonde his brother, by chaunce came to Britaine, and there shewing the duke the cause of hys comminge, committed him selfe wholy into his handes. The duke entertayned the earle and all his company, after y t most best maner that he could, & made of theim as though they had bene hys brethren, promysing to theim sure passeporte & saueconduite, ouer ani place that he had rule or gouernaunce of. Nowe kinge Edwarde, after that hys realme was pacified, and these great tumultes apeaced, he tooke his iourny into Rence, and there setting his iustices, caused inquisicion and serche to be made of this busines and insurrection, by y • basterd and his adherentes, for the which offence manye were put to death, and suffered execution moost sharply, accordīg to their merites. And not longafter, to thentent y t king Edward myght bee out of al daūgers & assaultes of his enemies Hēry y t was depriued not lōg before of his crowne, was also spoiled of his life, y t is, was killed. And as the report & fame went, the duke of Glouceter was suspected to haue done y t dede, which sticked him w t a dagger. And when he was dead, his corps was brought vnreuerētly frō the towre, through y t stretes of y t citee vnto Poules, & ther lay all y t daye & on the morow folowing conueyed & caried to y e abby or blak freres at Chertessey, & ther was buried [Page xxv] And shortely after had to Wīdesore castell, & laied in y e newe chapell of. s. George in a solēpne toumbe This Henry reigned .xxviii. yere, and after he had repossessed his kyngdome, but halfe a yeare. He lyued vnto he was .lii. yeres of age, and had by his wife quene Margaret one soōne called Edward.
Nowe to the entent y t Edward the kyng might liue in quiet after this manne his death, he went a boute to serche all the rebelles that thei might bee weeded out of the compaignie of menne as pernicious and vnprofitable to the publique weale. At what tyme he tooke tharchebishop of Yorke brother to therle of Warwike and sent hym prisoner to Guynes, wher he long remained in holde, but after dimissed, dyed shortely for thought and pensifulnes of mynde, also he attached the erle of Oxenford the whiche from the ceason of Barnet felde had holden sainct Michaelles Mounte, & by his cōmaundement was had to a castell beyond y t sea called Hant, wher he remained prisoner y t space of xii. yeares. Furthermore vpō cōsideraciō y t no rebelles or traitours might haue any refuge to straūge coūtres, he had made a league w t the kyng of scottes of peace & amitee to bee obserued & kepte for y t [...] of .xx. yeares. Yet he was not out of all feare, for y • [...]e of Pēbruck & of Richemond wer with y e duke of Britain, wher thei had moost honorable intretainmēt, cōsideryng also y t the young erle of Richemōd would clayme y e croune ī tyme to come he was in y e more feare for y e whiche matter, he sent priuie ambassadours to y e duke, promisyng hym y t if he would restore & deliuer vnto their hāde bothe therles he should haue an ample & large porciō of [Page] monye for so dooyng. But y t duke, to make a short tale, would by no meanes deliuer theim out of his handes, but so kepte theim, that thei neuer might bee in any daūger of their enemies through hym. Edward therfore in this his thirtene yere of his reigne, whiche was the yere of our lord a thousand foure hundred three score and thirteen, helde his parlyament at Westminster, wher first he caused all the statutes and actes of his whiche wer abrogated by Henry the sixt, to stand and bee of good effecte, then the goodes of these traitours to be bestowed & gyuen abrode, also the banished menne y t fled as rebelles and false to their countree, to bee brought in, & that if any grudge or eiuill will wer betwixt any one or other of the nobilite, that ther it should bee forgottē, & turned to loue, & lastly that certain mony should bee payed to the kyng towardes y t greate charges of his werre. When he had thus studied & determined to liue quietly & set his realme in good ordre, Charles y e duke of Burgoin sēt for aide to hym against Lewes y e Frēche kyng so y t he could neuer bee at rest, but one thyng or other shuld disquiet hym, for he could not deny hym helpe consideryng y e benefites y t he had receiued of hym at diuerse & sūdry tymes before y t, & y t he nowe fought against his dedly enemie whiche aided the erle of Warwike bothe w t menne & mony to come against hym. Wherfore he assēblyng his coūsaill together, & shewyng theim the matter, sent woord to the duke y t he would kepe one piece or parte of a battail agaīst y e kyng. For in deede at y t same tyme there was mortall battaill betwixt the duke & Lewes y t kyng, & because that the same Lewes was a [Page xxvi] very harde manne & churlishe & also hurtefull aswell to his frēdes as to his foes, many Frēchmen abhorryng his cōdicions, did consent to hold with y t duke. And emong many other, one Lewes of Lucēburge did apoinct w t the duke to dooe mischief to hym one waye or other, so y t the kyng was bothe in daūger of his owne coūtree menne, & also of the duke beyng a straūger. The duke shewed this to kyng Edward, y t he might the soner allu [...]e & entise hym to battaill. And vpō this, kyng Edward toke his voiage to Fraūce, takyng besides his tribute y t he had, certain mony of y e lordes & commons of the realme, which thei of their owne gētlenes gaue vn to hym, to y e sustenaūce & maintenyng of his armie And for y t, the kyng called that tribute & leuiyng of mony, beneuolēce, whiche neuerthelesse was giuen w t an eiuill will of many one. But he vsyng suche gētle fassions towardes theim, & praiyng theim so hartely of their assistaunce y t thei could none other wise dooe but geue it hym. Whiche whē he had, he gathered his armie whiche was .xx. M. & went to Caleys y e .iiii. daye of July. Whō Charles y t duke did mett, & reioysyng gretely at his victory did instantly desire hym that he would sticke stoutely to this battaill, y t he might haue of y t Frenche kyng y t he had lost by hym. But when Lewes y t kyng hard that Edward came w t his armie, he encreased the nombre of his people as muche as he could & the more nigher the daunger that he was, the sooner & hastely he came vpon theim. And with this armie he sent foorthe Robert of Stoteuill a noble capitain to the coostes Atrebatium to resyst the power of the Englishe menne. And the kyng hym self taried [Page] at Siluanect, castyng w t hymself what waye he might make a league of peace betwixt y t duke & y t kyng of England & hym. Heryng therfore that y t king was gone to Atrebates, he sēt ambassodours to hym for peace: whose myndes when y t kyng had knowē, although he had foūd but litle frēdship at his hādes in tymes past, yet consideryng y t all his substaūce & treasure was wasted in ciuile battail, & that he was not hable to maintein a newe hoost if nede shuld be, nor yet vnneth sustein theim whom he had vnder his bāner, thought best euē for pure necessite to leaue to peace & growe to atonemēt w t Lewes y t kyng. The whiche thyng he might dooe also sauing his honour, cōsideryng y t bothe y e duke & Robert of Lucēburge aforenamed had not dooē accordyng to their promise. So y t, at the desire of y e ambassadours he went to speake with the kyng at Pinquinake a toune in Ambiā shire wher noble mēne dooe assēble together, & there found y • kyng. Thē bothe y t kynges after due salutaciō, either to other had long communicaciō, & at the last a peace was cōfirmed & stablished for many yeres, for y e a [...]emēt wherof y e Frēche kyng gaue vnto Edward toward his charge & cost .lxcv. M. crounes, & from thēs forth yerely l. M. crounes. After y t truce made & mony paid, kyng Edward wēt to Caleis, & from thēs to Englād. In this battaill none was slain sauyng onely y t duke of Exceter, y e whiche māne was in sētuary before, & cōmaunded to folowe y • kyng was put to death cōtrary to y t promise made. This was the yere of our lord. M .CCCC .lxxv. frome that tyme foorth Lewes y t kyng payed duely his raunsome to Edward, vnto the laste yere before [Page xxvii] he dyed, at what tyme he denyed the paymente, as though he knewe before his laste dayes. But the duke of Burgoyne and Roberte of Lucenburgh, after they had knowen that Edwarde had made a league wyth Lewes the kynge, they freted sore with hym, and wrote sharpe letters of thretenyng and tauntyng hym, saiyng: that he was the cause that they reuenged not theimselfes of the kyng. Whose fyrye and thundryng wordes the kyng no more passed vpon, then of the turnyng of his hāde And as for Lucenburgh he was taken prysoner, and for his proude and malicious writyng, behedded at Lutece.
Thus kyng Edward beyng in quietnes both in his countre and abrode also, although he mighte wel thynke hymself to lyue so perpetually, for y t he had been so great a conquerour, yet consideryng y t the erle of Richemōde was of nigh affinitee to Hē ry the .vi. he was not out of feare & daunger. Therfore he thought ones to attempte the duke of Britayn agayn, with giftes, promyses & faire wordes that he might haue y • erle, whō he thought to rule as he would, after that his auncestrie was geuen. The ambassadours came to the duke with a great substaunce of mony, & that their request might bee the honestier, they shewed the duke that they came to desire the erle of hym, that he mighte marye the kynges doughter, so that by affinite, al euil wyll & grudge might be forgotten, and sedicion vtterlye reiected, although they entended not so to cause al suche thynges to bee forgotten, but by the death & kyllyng of hym. The duke after longe and muche deniyng theim, at the laste thorowe muche entreatyng, [Page] and also great rewardes that was brought gaue the earle to theim, sendynge a letter to the kynge, in prayse and commendation of hym, not thynkynge that he commytted the lambe to the woulfe, but the soonne to the father. The ambassadours was verye glad, that they had got hym, and sayled into Englande, in all the haste they coulde. But the earle knowynge well that he wēt to hys death, for sorowe and care that he conceaued in hys mynde, was caste in an agewe. When he was goone, one Ihon Chenlet, suche a man as could not bee found agayne in al the countre, & in great fauour w t the duke, hearing of y t dede, being very sore moued therwith, wēt to the dukes place & coming before his grace, stode lyke a man strykē with some sodeyn dysease, very pale & holding his head downe, the duke maruayling at hym, enquyred what the matter was. To whom he sayde. O moost noble duke, my time is at hande, & thys palenes betokeneth death without remidy. That I would God yt had come before this day, & then it should not haue greued me so much. And thys all cometh to me through a deed y t you haue done of late, which wil ether cause me to lose my life, or els to lyue in moost miserie & wretchednes as one wery of thys present lyfe. The noble actes y t you haue doone, (moost noble prynce) haue enhaunsed your fame & glory to the fardest part of the world but this one thing me thynke (I praye you pardō me what I saye) is a great blemyshe to your dygnitee, that forgetting the promyse that you made so faythfully haue geuen the innocēt erle of Richmounte to be destroyed, & pitefully killed emonge [Page xxviii] wretched knau es & hangmen. Wherfore, they y t loue you, of whom I am one, cannot but lamente [...]o see you dyshonored by this great fault of periury. Whē he had sayd, the duke answered, hold thy peace man I praye the, ther is no such harme shal chaunce to him, Edwarde the kinge woulde haue him to mary his daughter. Then sayd Iohn, Beleue me (mooste excellente and redoubted prynce) this Henry is nowe almoste famyshed and loste, & yf he once goo out of your countree, he is but cast awaye and paste all recouerye. At these wordes y e duke was persuaded, through the whych he commaūded one Peter Lādoson hys receauer, to take the same Henry frō the ambassadours. The sayd receauer pursued the Englyshe ambassadours to Maclonium, and there holdyng theim wyth long cōmunication, made him to be conueyed into a sē tuary, whych was then almost ded through that feuer and thought whych he was caste in. And so after that he was emended broughte hym to the duke. The ambassadours then beyng spoiled and deceaued, both of theyr pread and mony that they brought, desyred y t same receauer that they might not goo home in that wyse, whyche receauer promised, that he woulde eyther kepe hym in sentuary, or eles cause hym to be imprisoned at the duke his place, so that they should neuer neede to feare hym.
In all thys tyme Edwarde beynge desyreous to knowe what became of the Earle, was enfourmed, that he was taken prysoner, but after that escaped theyre handes, where at the kinge was verye angrye: but when he knewe that he [Page] should bee kepte in holde, was well pleased & then dyd take no thought. And liued after, & that most welthy, sparing no expēses nor cost in kepyng his house, neuertheles, he dyd fall into one great offence in this time. For sodēly, he cōmaunded his brother the duke of Clarence to be killed & drowned in an hogshhed of malmesey. And the cause of hys death was, as men report, through a certaine prophecie, which sayd y e after kyng Edwarde, one shuld reigne, whose name begā wyth a. G. which prophecye some sayde, was completed & fulfilled when the duke of Glouceter, y e after hym had the kingdome, dyd reigne. Some holdeth another opinion of this his death, saiyng: y t at what time y e olde malice dyd breke out bewixt thē both, y e duke through his sisters councel, woulde haue maried lady Mary y t duke of Burgoyn his only daughter, which mariage y e kyng did infringe & stoppe, as one enuiyng of his brothers felicitee, or good chaunce. After that they both beryng in theyr mindes mortall hatred, one of the sayde duke hys seruauntes, was accused of wichcraft & charming for which offence, he was put to death. The duke [...]g y t, could not but speake & resist againste the [...]g his cōmaundement, and therfore, was com [...]ted to prison, & ther beyng was killed, and procla [...]d after as a traytour to the kyng for whose [...] y t, the king was verye sory, and whan any [...] kneled to hym, and asked pardon [...]der, he would saye. O infortunate bro [...] that noman would aske thy pardon.
And this duke had .ii. children, one lady Margarete, that was after maried to Richard Pole, & [Page xxix] an other Edward, whome the kyng made earle of Warwyke, but this childe folowyng the fate and destenie of his father, was after putte in prisone, & there priuely put to death. And these thinges were doone in the yere of oure Lorde a thousand foure The .xix. yere. hundreth and foure score, and the .xix. yere of the reigne of kyng Edward. And two yeres then after folowing, the kyng died, before y e whiche yeres he beganne to bee very harde and couetouse in getting monye, and also very diligent in marking & attaching his lordes that did offend. In this time the kyng of Scottes willed his soōne Iamy to be maried to the kynges doughter lady Cicile, which was the yonger, that should haue been maried to Charles the kyng his soonne of Fraunce. But it chaunced not, thorow Lewes the kyng that brake his promise, bothe in geuing his seruice, and payeng his raunsome the laste yere of his reigne.
Likewise the kyng of Scottes seing that Lewes the kyng was false of his promise, he thoughte he might bee so bolde too, and so breaking league of amite, sette vpon the Englishe men. At the which Edward was sore vexed, and entended batayl against hym, yet after that he knewe y e it was not by his wyll, but thorowe the councell and euell disposed mindes of his lordes, woulde haue borne it in good worthe, had not kyng Iames owne brother streight vpon that, prouoked hym to fighte. Furthermore, suche was the nature of the Scottishe kyng that when he had sette his minde vpon a thing, no manne coulde turne hym, and because that no manne mighte reproue hym in any thing, he promoted laye people, & menne of basse bloude [Page] to his counsell, putting to deathe, or banishyng euermore the nobilitee Emong whom this duke of Albanie his brother, consydering the condicyons of the king, fled to y e kyng of Englād at what time he was sent into Fraūce, & ther counsailed y e kyng to fight against hym. The king willing to reuēge his olde iniuries, vpon many consideraciōs gathered, entēded no lesse by y e helpe of the saied duke of Albany, then to kepe open warre. So y t he did send the duke of Gloucestre, y e erle of Northumberlād, syr Thomas Stanley, & this duke of Albany w t a great power of men against y e Scottes. The king knowing of their cōming, went to Barwyke with his army to kepe theim from the borders, but perceiuing that he was not hable so resist their great power, fled backe in y e night to Edinbrough & ther taryed for his enemies. And y e duke of Gloucestre folowing, burned and spoyled all the way, & when he was somewhat nighe his enemies, perceiuing also that none of the Scottishe lordes came to the duke of Albanye, mistrusted that some deceyte or crafte was wrought, & so laboured to haue peace, whiche gotten, he went backe to the castell of Barwike, that sir Thomas Stanley had wonne a lytell before. And the duke of Albany y e authoure of this warre, for y t he had but lytle thankes of England for his so dooing, fled into Fraunce, & there was kylled running at the tylte in Parys. After this businesse Edward assembled his counsell together, & willed theim to prepare batayle againste the Frenche kyng, for that he had neyther payde nor woulde paye his raunsome, nor yet geue his soonne in mariage to his doughter (as he promised) [Page xxx] to the setting forth of y e which batayl, certaine mony was exacted of the prestes & religiouse men to be payde. At the which time y e kyng was sodēly sickened, & shortly after died at Westminster y e .ix. day of April then being .l. yeres of age, & reigning xxiii. after the date of oure Lorde a. M .iiii. C .lxxx. and thre, whose corps was after conueyghed and had with great pompe and solempnitee to Winde sore, and there buried in saint George his chapell Whiche kyng had by his wyfe the quene ten children, & of theim lefte aliue behinde hym Edward prince of Wales, and Richard duke of yorke, and one bastarde called Arthure and fyue doughters, Elisabeth, Cicilie, Anne, Catherine, and Brigyde, whiche after were maryed all, sauyng that ladye Brigide was a nonne. This Edward was a goodly * T [...]e descripcion of Edward the fourth. man of personage, of stature hyghe, of countenaunce and beautee comely, of sight quicke, brode brested, and well sette in euery other parte conformable to his bodye, of a pregnant wytte, stomake stoute, & haulte courage, of perfect memori of such thinges as he conceaued in his braine, diligent in his affaires & weighti busines, in auentures bold and hardy, againe his aduersaries fearce & terryble, to his frendes liberal & bounteous, hauing in all his warres most prosperous & lucky successe, & escheuing all pleasure & sensualitee, to y e which he was by nature most proue vnto, for y e which cause and for the lowlines and humanite y t is in hym in gendred by nature most plētifully, he bare him self honestly amōg his priuate persons, otherwise thē the degre or dignite of his maieste required, wherfore the fame ranne, that he was poysened. [Page] A lytell before his death, it was saied that he gaue hym selfe to auarice, whiche before, as you see, vsed greate liberalytee. Yet the realme whiche thorowe ciuile sedicyon was greatly impoueryshed, he made ryche and plenteouse at his death daye.
Also he gaue spiritual promocions to the moste excellent and famous clerkes, and made theim of his councell, other of the laye sorte, whome he loued, he did not enriche with possessions but with monye and other lyke goodes, the whiche many prynces, hauyng no respecte of the honoure, dooe not alwayes obserue. By the whiche suche giftes & rewardes he had so farre wonne the hartes of the people, that after his deathe many menne dyd lamente the losse of his grace.
¶ Edward the fyfth.
WHEN ALMIGHTIE GOD had called to his mercye the noble prince kyng Edwarde the fourth of that name, Edward his eldest sonne (prynce of Wales) began his reygne the .ix. daye of Aprill, in y t yere of oure Lorde a. M .CCCC .lxxxiij. and in the .xxij. yere of Lewes the .xi. then Frenche kyng. Whiche younge prince reigned a smal space and lytle season ouer this realme, other in pleasure or libertee, for his vncle Richard duke of Gloceter, within .iij. monethes depriued hym, not only of his croune and regalytie, but also vnnaturally bereft hym his naturall life, and for the declaracion by what craftie engine he first attempted his vngracious purpose, & by what false colourable & vntrue allegaciōs he set forth openly his pretensed enterprise, & fynally by what shamefull cruell and detestable acte he perfourmed the same: Ye muste fyrst consyder of whom he and his brother descended, there natures condicions & inclynacions, and thē you shall easely perceaue, that there could not be a more crueller tyraunt appoynted to acheue a more abomynable enterpryse.
There father was Richard Plantagenet duke of Yorke, whiche began not by warre but by lawe to chalenge the croune of Englande, puttyng his clayme in the parliamēt, holden y t .xxx. yere of kyng [Page] Henry the .vi. where ether for right or for fauoure his cause was so set forthe and auaunced that the bloodde of the sayd kyng Henry, although he had a goodly sonne was clerely abiected, and y t croune of the realme (by autorytee of parliamente) entayled to the duke of Yorke and his heyres after the discease of the sayd kyng Henrye the .vi. But the duke not entendyng so long to tary, but myndyng vnder the preterte of discencion growen and arysen within the realme, and of couenauntes made in the parliament, not kepte but broken, to preuēte the tyme and to take vpon hym the gouernaunce in kyng Henryes life, was by to muche hardynes slayne at the battayle of Wakefylde, leuynge behynde hym three sonnes, Edwarde, George & Richard. Al these three as they wer greate estates of byrth, so were they greate and statelye of stomake, gredy of autoritee and impaciēt parteners of rule and autoritee. This Edward reuēged his fathers death and deposed kyng Henry the .vi. and atteyned the croune and sceptre of this realme. George duke of Clarence was a goodlye and well feautured prince, in all thynges fortunate, yf ether his owne ambiciō had not set him against his brother or thenuie of his enemies had not set his brother agaynst hym, for were it by the quene or y e nobles of her bloode, which highly maligned the kynges kynred (as women cōmenlye, not of malyce but of nature, hate suche as theyr husbandes loue) or wer it aproude appetite of the duke hym selfe, entendyng to bee kyng, at the leaste wise heynous treason was layde to his charge, and finally were he in faute or were he fautelesse, attaynted was he by [Page xxxii] parliament and iudged to deathe, and thereupon hastely drouned in a butte of malmesey, within y e towre of Londō. Whose death kyng Edward (although he commaunded it) when he wyste it was done, pyteouslye he bewayled and sorowfullye he repented it. Richard duke of Gloucestre the .iij. sonne (of whiche I muste mooste entreate) was in The descripciō of Richarde the thyrde. witte and courage eguall with the other, but in beautee and lyniamentes of nature farre vnderneth both, for he was lytle of stature, euill feautered of lymmes, croke backed, the lift shulder much higher then the right, harde fauoured of vysage suche as in estates is called a warlike vysage, and amonge commen persons a crabbed face. He was malycious, wrothfull and enuyous, and as it is reported, his mother the duches had much a dooe in her trauayle, y t she could not be delyuered of hym vncutte, and that he came into the worlde the fete forwarde, as men be borne outwarde, and as the fame ranne, not vntothed, whether that men of hatred reported aboue the truthe, or y t nature chaunged his course in his begynnyng, which in his life many thynges vnnaturally cōmytted, this I leue to Goddes iudgemēt. He was none euell capitayn in warre, as to whiche, his disposicion was more enclyned to then to peace. Sōdry victories he had & some ouerthrowes, but neuer for defaute in his owne person, either for lacke of hardynes or polytike order. Fre he was of his dispences & somwhat aboue his power lyberall, w t large giftes he gatte hym vnstedfast frēdship, for whiche cause he was fayn to borowe, pil & extorte in other places, which gat hym stedfast hatred. He was close & secrete, a [Page] depe dyssymuler, lowly of coūtenaūce, arrogāte of herte, outwardly famylyer, where he inwardly hated, not lettyng to kysse whome he thought to kyll dispiteous and cruell, not alwaye for eiuyll wyll, but after for ambycion and to serue his purpose, frende & fooe wer all indifferent, where his auaū tage grewe, he spared no mānes death whose lyfe withstode his purpose. He slewe in the towre kyng Henry the .vi. (saiyng: nowe is there no heyre male of kyng Edward the thyrde, but we of the house of Yorke) whiche murder was done without kynge Edwardes assent, whiche would haue appoynted that bocherlye office to some other, rather then to his owne brother. Some wise mē also wene, y t hys drift lacked not in helpyng forth his owne brother of Clarence to his death, whiche thyng in all apparaunce he resisted, although he inwardly mynded it. And the cause thereof was, as men notynge his doynges and procedynges did marke (because that he longe in kyng Edwardes tyme thought to opteyne the croune, in case that the kyng his brother whose life he loked that euyl dyet would sone shorten) should happē to disease (as he did in dede) his chyldrē beyng yoūg. And then y t if duke of Clarence had lyued his pretensed purpose had been farre hyndered. For yf the duke of Clarence had kept hym self true to his nephewe the yong kyng, or would haue takē vpō him to be kyng, euery one of these castes had been a troumpe in the duke of Gloucesters waye: but when he was sure that hys brother of Clarence was dead, then he knewe that he might woorke without ieopardye. But of these poyntes there is certentie, and whosoeuer deuyneth [Page xxxiii] or cōiectureth maye as well shote to ferre as to shorte, but this cōiecture afterward toke place (as fewe dooe) as you shall ꝑceaue here after. But afore I declare to you howe this Rychard duke of Gloucestre began his mischeuous imagened & pretenced enterprise as apꝑantly shalbe opened. I must a litle putte you in remēbraūce of a louyng and charitable acte no lesse profitable thē amiable to y t whole cōmynaltie (if it had been so inwardely thought as it was outwardly dissimuled) whiche kyng Edward did liyng on his deathe bedde not long before he dyed, for in his life althoughe that the deuision emongest his frendes somewhat greued & yrked hym, yet in his helth he lesse regarded & tooke hede to it, by reason y t he thought y t he was hable in all thynges to rule bothe ꝑties, were thei neuer so obstinate. But in his last sickenesse (whiche cōtinued longer then false & fantasticall tales haue vntruly & falsely surmised as I my self that wrote this pamphlet truly knew) whē he perceiued his natural strēgth was gone, & hoped litle of recouery by the artes of al his phicysyans whiche he perceaued onely to prolong his life. Thē he began to consider the youth of his children, howe be it, he nothyng lesse mistrusted then that that happened, yet he wisely forseyng and consideryng that many harmes might ensue by y t debate of his nobles while y e youth of his children should lacke discrecion and good counsaill of their frendes, for he knew well that euery part would woorke for their owne cōmoditee, and rather by plesaunt aduise to wynne theim selfes fauour, thē by ꝓfitable aduertismēt to do y t childrē good, wherfore, liyng on his [Page] death bed at Westminster he called to hym suche lordes as thē wer aboute hym whō he knewe to be at variaunce in especiall the lord marques Dorset soonne to the quene, & the lord Hastynges against whō y e quene especially grudged for y t fauor y t the kyng bare hym, & also she thought him familier w t the kyng in wāton cōpaignie, hir kynne bare hym sore, aswel for y t y e kyng made hym capitain of Caleys which office y e lord Riuers brother to y e quene claimed of y t kynges former promise, as of diuerse other giftes whiche he receaued y t thei loked for. & when these lordes w t diuerse other of both parties were come vnto y t kynges presens, he caused hymself to be raised vp w t pillous, & as I cā gesse saied The exhortacyō [...] kynge Edward [...] [...] [...] [...] [...] thus or muche like in sētēce to theim. My lordes & my dere kynsmē & alies, in what plight I nowe lye you se & I ꝑfectly fele, by y t whiche I looke y t lesse while to liue w t you, therfore y t more depely I am moued to care in what case I leue you, for suche as I leue you, suche are my children like to fynd you, whiche if thei shuld fynd at variaūce (as god forbid) thei theim felfes might hap to fall at werre or their discresiō wuld serue to set you at peace, you s [...] their youth, of whiche I rekē the onely suerty to rest in your concord. For it suffiseth not all you to loue theim, if eche of you hate other, if thei wer mē your feithfullnes might hap to suffice, but childhod must be mainteined by mēnes autorite & slipꝑ youth vnderprōpted w t elder coūsaill, whiche thei can neuer haue except you geue it, nor you geue it except you agre, for wher eche laboureth to breake that other maketh, & for hatred eche impugneth others coūsail: ther must nedes be a lōg tract or any [Page xxxiiii] good cōclusiō can forward. And ferther, while eche ꝑtie laboreth to be chief flaterer, adulaciō shall thē haue more place, thē plain & feithful aduise, of whiche must nedes ensue y t euill bringyng vp of y • prīce whose mynd ī tēder youth infecte shall redily fall to mischief & riot & drawe doune this noble realme to ruyne. But if grace turne hym to wisdome (whiche god sēd hym) thē thei which by eiuill meanes pleased hym best, shall after fal farthest out of fauour so y t at y e lēgth euell driftes driue to naught, & good plain wayes ꝓsper & florishe. Great variaūce hath euer beē betwene you, not alwais for great causes Some tyme a thyng right wel entēdid & miscōstrued hath been turned to y t woorse, or a smal displeasure dooē to you ether by your owne affeciō ether by instigaciō of eiuill toōges hath been sore agrauate. But this I wot well, you had neuer so great cause of hatred as you haue of loue, because we be men & y t we be all christē mē. This I will leaue to prechers to tell you, & yet I wot not whether any p̄chers wordes ought more to moue you, thē y t his gooyng by & by to y • place y t thei all preche of. But this shal I desire you to remēbre y t the one part of you beyng of my blod y t other of my alies, & eche of you w t other either of kynred or affinite, whiche is y t very spirituall affinitie & kynred in christ as all ꝑtakers of y t sacamentes of christes churche. The weight of whiche cōsanguynite if we did beare as would to god we did, then should we more be moued to spirituall charite then to fleshly cōsanguinyte. Our lord forbid y t you loue y t woorse together for y • self same cause y t you ought to loue y • better & yet y t oftē happeneth, for no wher fynd we so dedly [Page] as emōgest theim whiche by nature & lawe moost ought to agre together. Suche a serpent is ambiciō & desire of vanyne glory & souere ingtie, whiche emōgest estates when he is once entered he crepith foorth so ferre, till w t deuision & varyaunce he turneth all to mischief. First longyng to bee next to y t best, afterward egall w t the beest, & at the last chief & aboue y t beest. Of whiche immoderate appetite of woorship & the debate & discencion y t grewe there by, what losse, what sorowe, what trouble hath win these fewe yeres growen with in this realme, I praye God as well to forget as we well remēbre, whiche thyng if I could aswell haue forsene as I haue w t my more pane thē pleasure proued, by god des blessed lady (y t was his commō othe) I would neuer haue wonne the curtesyes of mennes knees with the losse of so many heddes. But sith thynges passed can not be called agayn, muche more ought we to bee ware, by what occasion we haue taken so great hurte before, that we eftsones fall not into y t occasion again. Nowe bee these greues passed and all is quiet thanked bee God, & likely well to prosper in welthfull peace, vnder your cousins my children, if God send theim life, and you loue and cō cord. Of whiche .ii. thynges y t lesse losse wer thei by whō all though God did his pleasure, yet should this realme alwayes fynd kynges, & ꝑaduētur as good kynges as thei. But if you emōgest your selfes in a childes reigne fall at debate, many a good manne shall innocently perishe, & happely he & you also, or it is long fynd peace & quiet again, wherfore in these last woordes y t euer I looke to speake to you, I exhort and require you all, for the loue [Page xxxv] that you haue borne to me, and for y t loue that I haue borne to you & for the loue y t our lord bereth to vs all. Frō this tyme forward all greues forgottē, eche of you loue other, which I verely trust you wyll, yf you any thyng regarde God or your kynges affinitee or kynred, this realme your owne coū tre or your owne suretie & wealthe. And there with al, the kyng for fayntnes no longer endurynge to syt vp, layde hym downe on his right side his face toward theim. And ther was none presente y t could forbeare wepyng, but y t lordes cōfortynge hym w t as good woordes as thei could, & answeryng for y t tyme, as they thought should stande with his pleasure. And there in his presence (as by theyr wordes appeared) eche forgaue other, and ioyned theyr hā des together, when as it after appeared by theyr dedes there hartes were farre asōder. And so with in a fewe dayes thys noble prynce dysceased at Westmynster the .ix. daye of Apryll, in the yere of our Lorde a. M .CCCC .lxxxiii. after that he had reygned .xxii. yeres one moneth and .viii. dayes, & was w t great funeral pompe conueyed to Wyndsore, leuyng behynd hym .ii. soonnes, Edwarde the prynce (of whom this story entreateth) a chylde of xiii. yeres of age, Richarde duke of Yorke .ii. yeres yonger then the prince, and fiue doughters, Elizabeth, which by goddes grace was maryed to kyng Henry the .vii. and mother to kyng Hēry y e eyght, Cycile not so fortunate as fayre, fyrst wedded to y e vycoūt Welles, after to one Kyne and lyued not in great wealth, Brydget professed her selfe a close nonne of Syon, Anne was maryed to lorde Thomas Hauwarde after erle of Surrey and duke of [Page] Norffolke, Katheryne y t yōgest doughter was maryed to lorde Willyā Courtney, sonne to y t earle of Deuōshire, which lōgtyme tossed in other fortune somtyme in welth after in aduersitee, tyl y t benignitee of her nephewe kyng Hērye y e .viii. brought he [...] into a sure estate accordyng to her degre & ꝓgeny. This kyng Edward was suche a prince of gouernaunce and behaueour in the tyme of peace (for in The desc [...]ipciō of Edward [...] fourth. tyme of warre, eche must be others enemye) y t ther was neuer any kyng in this realme, in attaynyng the croune by warre and battayle so hartely beloued with the more substaunce of his people, nor he hym selfe so specially fauoured in any parte of his life, as at y t tyme of his death, whiche fauoure and affeccion yet after his death, by the crueltie, myschiefe & trouble of the tempesteous world that folowed, highlye towardes hym more encreased. At suche time as he died, the displeasure of those that bare hym grudge for kyng Henry y t .vi. sake (whō he deposed) was wel assuaged & in effect quenched within y t space of .xxii. yeres (which is a great part of a mans life) and some wer reconsiled & growen into his fauour (of y • which he was neuer straūge) when it was with true harte demaunded. He was goodly of personage & princely to beholde, of hert couragious, politike in councell, and in aduersitee nothyng abashed, in prosperitee rather ioyful then proude, in peace iuste & mercyfull, in warre sharpe and fearce, in the felde bold and hardie, & yet neuer thelesse no farther then reason and policie woulde aduenture, whose warres whosoeuer circumspectly [...] aduisedly considereth, he shal no lesse cōmend his wisdome & policie where he auoyded theim. [Page xxxvi] then his manhode where he vanquished theim. He was of visage full faced & louelie, of bodie mightie, stronge & cleane made, with ouer lyberall and wātō dyet, he waxed somewhat corpulēt & bourly, but neuerthelesse not vncomely. He was of youth greatly geuen to fleshely wantōnes, from y t which health of bodie in great prosperitee & fortune with out an especiall grace hardlye refrayneth. Thys faulte litle greued his people, for neyther coulde any one mannes pleasure stretche or extende to the displeasure of veraye many, nor a multitude bee greued by a priuate mannes fantesie or volupteousnesse, whē it was doē w tout violēce. And in his latter dayes he left al wild daliaūce & fel to grauitee, so y t he brought his realme into a wealthie & ꝓsperous estate, al feare of outwarde enemies were clerely extinguished, & no warre was in hande nor none toward, but suche as no mā looked for. The people wer toward their prince not in a cōstrayned feare, but in a true louyng and wylfull obedience emongest theimselfe, and y e commons wer in good peace. The lordes whome he knewe at variaunce, he in his death bed (as he thought) he brought to good concord, loue and amytee. And a lytle before his death, he left gatheryng of mony of his subiectes, whiche is the only thyng that draweth y t heartes of Englyshmē frō their kynges & prynces, nor nothyng he ether entreprysed ndr toke in hād, by y t which he shuld be dryuē thereunto. For his tribute out of Fraūce he had a litle before recouered & obteyned. And y t yere before he dyed he recouered the toune of Berwike against y t kyng of Scottes. And albeit y t all y t tyme of his reigne he was so benigne [Page] courteous and famylyer, that no parte of his vertues was estemed more thē those high humilitees. Yet that condycion in thende of his last dayes decayed not, in the whiche many princes by a longe cōtinued souereingtie, declyne to a proude porte & behaueoure from theyr condicions accustomed at their begynnyng. Yet lowlynes and gentlenes so farre forth in hym encreased that the sōmer before died, he beyng at the haueryng at the bowre, sente for the mayre and aldermenne of London thyther only to hunte and make pastyme, where he made theim not so hartie but so famylyer and frendlye chere, and sent also to theyr wyues suche plentie of venyson, that no one thyng in many dayes before gatte hym eyther mo heartes or more hartie fauoure emongest the commen people, whiche often tymes more esteme and take for greate kyndnes a lytle courtesye, then a greate profyte or benefyte. And so this noble prynce deceassed, as you haue hearde in that tyme when his lyfe was mooste desyred, & whē his people moste desyred to kepe hym. Whiche loue of his people & their entiere affecciō towarde hym, had bene to his noble chyldren, (hauyng in theim selfes also as many gyftes of nature, as many princely vertues, as much good towardnesse as their age coulde receaue) a meruelous fortresse and a sure armoure, yf the deuysion and dissencion of their frendes had not vnarmed them & left them destitute, & the execrable desyre of souereingtie ꝓuoked him to their destrucciō, which if either kynd or kyndnesse had holdē place muste nedes haue beē their chiese defence. For Richarde duke of Glouceter, by nature their vncle, by office [Page xxxvii] their protectoure, to their father greatly beholden and to theim by othe and allegeaunce bounden all the bandes broken and violated, that bynde manne and manne together, withoute anye respecte of God or the worlde, vnnaturally contryued to bereaue theim not onely of their dignytee and preheminence, but also of their natural lyues and worldely felicytee.
And fyrste to shewe you that by coniecture he pretended this thing in his brothers lyfe, ye shall vnderstande for a trueth that the same nyght that king Edward died, one called Mistelbrooke, long ere the daye sprange came to the house of one Potier dwelling in Redcrosse strete withoute Creple gate of London, and when he was with hastie rapping, quickely let in, y • saied Mistelbrooke shewed vnto Potier that kyng Edward was y t nighte deceased: by my trueth ꝙ Potier, then wil my master the duke of Gloucetre be kyng and that I warrāt the. What cause he had so to thinke, harde it is to say, whether he being his seruaūt knewe any such thing prepensed or otherwise had any inklingther of, but of all likelihode he spake it not of naughte.
But nowe to retourne to the trewe history, wer it that the duke of Gloucetre had of olde sore practised this conclusyon, or was before tyme moued therunto and put in hope by the tender age of the young princes his nephewes, as oportunitee and likely of spede putteth a manne in courage of that that he neuer entended. Certen it is, that he being in the Northe partyes for the good gouernaunce of the countrey, being aduertised of his brothers deathe contriued the destruccion of his nephewes [Page] with y t vsurpacion of the roiall dignitee & croune And for asmuche as he well wyste, and had holpe to maynteine, a long continued grudge and harte burnynge betwene the Quenes kynred and the kynges bloodde (either parte enuiyng others authorytee) he nowe thought (as it was in dede) a fertherly beginning to the pursute of his entent and a sure grounde & situacion of his vnnaturall building, if he might vnder the pretence of remēbring of olde dyspleasures abuse the ignoraunce & angre of the one partie to the destruccion of y t other, and then to wynne to his purpose as many as he coulde, and suche as coulde not bee wonne, might bee loste or they looked therfore. But of one thing he was certaine, that if his intent wer once perceaued, he should haue made peace betwene both parties with his owne bloodde, but all his intente he kept secrete tyll he knewe his frendes, of y e whiche Henry the duke of Buckingham was the fyrste y t sent to hym after his brothers deathe a trusty seruaunt of his called Persall to the cytee of Yorke, where the Duke of Gloucetre kepte the kyng his brothers funeralles. This Persall came to Iohn Ward a secrete chaumberer to the duke of Gloucetre, desiryng that he in close and couerte manier might speake with the duke his maister: wherupō in the deed of the nyght the duke sente for Persall (all other beyng aduoyded) whiche shewed to the duke of Gloucetre that the duke of Buckingham his maister in this newe worlde would take suche parte as he woulde & woulde farther wayte vpon hym with a. M. good fellowes yf nede were. The duke sent backe y t messanger with great thankes [Page xxxviii] and diuerse preuey instruccions by mouthe, which Persall did somuche by his trauaile that he came to the duke of Buckyngham his maister into the marches of Wales, & eftsones with newe instruccions met with the duke of Gloucetre at Notingham, whiche was come oute of the Northcoūtrey with many knightes & gentylmenne to the noumbre of .vi. C. horse & more, in his iourney towarde London. And after secrete meting and cōmunicacion had betwene hym & the duke of Gloucetre he retourned with suche spede y t he brought the duke of Buckingham his master to mete w t the duke of Gloucetre not farre from Northampton with .iii. C. horsses, & so they twoo came together to Northampton where they fyrst beganne their vnhappy enterprice, and so the duke of Buckingham contynued stil w t the duke of Gloucetre till he was crouned kyng, as ye shall plainly perceaue hereafter.
The younge kyng at the deathe of his father kepte housholde at Ludlowe, for his father had sente hym thyther for Iustice to bee doone in the marches of Wales, to the ende that by the authoritee of his presence, the wylde Welshemenne and euell dysposed personnes shoulde refraine frome their accustomed murthers and outerages. The gouernaunce of this younge Prynce was cōmitted to Lorde Anthony Wooduile, Earle Riuers & Lorde Scales, brother to the Quene, a wise, hardye and honourable personage, as valyaunte of hande as pollitick of counsell, and with him were assocyate other of the same partye, and in effecte euery one as he was nere of kinne vnto the quene so was he planted nexte aboute the Prynce. [Page] That dryfte by the Quene semed to bee deuysed, whereby her bloodde myghte of ryghte in tender youth bee so planted in the prynces fauoure, that afterwarde it shoulde hardely bee eradicated oute of the same.
The duke of Gloucetre turned all this to their distruccion, and vpon that grounde sette the foundacion of his vnhappy building. For whome soeuer he perceaued to bee at varyaunce with theim, or to beare toward hym self any fauoure, he brake vnto theim, some by mouthe, some by writing and secrete messengers, that it was neither reason nor yet to bee suffered that the younge kyng their maister and kinsmanne should bee in the handes and custody of his mothers kinrede, sequestred in maner frome their company & attendaunce, of which euery one ought hym as faithfull seruice as they, and many of theim of farre more honorable parte of kynne then his mothers syde, whose bloodde ꝙ the Duke of Gloucetre sauyng the Kynges pleasure, was farre vnmete to bee matched with his, whiche nowe to bee remoued frome the kyng and the least noble to bee lefte aboute hym is, ꝙ he neyther honourable to his maiestie nor to vs, & also to hym lesse suretye, to haue the noblest and mightiest of his frendes frome hym, and to vs all no lytle ieopardye to suffer, and specially oure well proued euel willers to growe in too too greate authorytee w t the king in youth, namely whiche is light of belefe and soone perswaded. Ye remembre that kyng Edward hym self, albeit he was both of age and discrecion, yet was he ruled in many thinges by y t bende more then stoode either w t his honoure [Page xxxviii] or oure profyte, or wyth the commoditee of anye manne elles, excepte onely the immoderate aduaū cemente of theim selues, whiche whether they thristed sore after theyr owne wele or no, it were harde I thynke to gesse. And yf some folkes frendshype had not holden better place wyth the kynge then anye respecte of kynred, they myghte (paraduenture) easely haue trapped and brought to confusyon some of vs or thys, & why not as easly as they haue done some other or thys as nere of the blood royall, but oure lorde hathe wroughte hys wyll, and thanked be hys grace that perell is past, how beit, as greate is growing if we suffer this young kynge in his enemyes handes, whyche wythoute his wyttinge myghte abuse the name of hys commaundemente to any af our vndoing, which thynges God & good prouysion forbyd, of whych good prouysion none of vs hathe any thynge the lesse nede for the late attonemente made, in which the kynges pleasure had more place then the parties heartes or willes, nor none of vs is so vnwise ouersone to truste a newe frende made of an olde fooe, or to thynke that anye onely kyndenes so sodenly contracted in an houre, contynued scantlye yet a fortnyght, shoulde be deper set in our stomackes then a longe accustomed malice many yeres rooted.
With these perswasions and wrytinges, y t duke of Glouceter set a fyre theim whiche wer easye to kindle, & in especyall twayne, Henry duke of Buckyngham and Wyllyam Lorde Hastynges and Lorde Chamberlayn, both menne of honour and of great power, the one by lōg sucecessiō from his [Page] aunceters, the other by hys offyces and the kynges fauoure. These two not bearynge eache to other so muche loue as hatred, both to the quenes bloodde accorded together with the duke of Glouceter that they would remoue frome the kyng all his mothers frēdes, vnder the name of theyr enemyes.
Wherupon the duke of Glouceter beynge aduertysed that the lordes about the kyng entended to brynge him to London to hys coronation, accō panyed wyth such a nomber of theyr frendes that it shoulde be harde for hym to bryng hys purpose to passe wythoute the assemblinge and gathering of people and in maner of open warre, wherof the ende he wyst was doubtefull, and in the whyche, the kynge beynge on the other syde, he shoulde haue the name and face of rebellion.
He secretelye therefore by dyuers meanes, caused the quene to be perswaded that it was nether nede and shoulde also bee ieopardeous the kinge to come vp so stronge, for as nowe, euery lorde loued other and none other thynge studyed for, but the tryumphe of his coronation and honoure of y t kyng. And the lordes aboute the kyng, should assēble in the kinges name much people, they shuld geue the lordes betwyxte whome and theim there had bene some tyme debate, to feare and suspecte leaste they shoulde gather thys people, not for the kynges sauegarde, whom no man impugned, but for theyr destruccyon, hauynge more regarde to theyr olde varyaunce then to theyr newe attonemente, for the whyche cause they on the other part myght assemble men also for theyr defence, whose [Page xl] powres she wyste well farre stretched, and thus should al the realme fall in a roare, and of the mischiefe that thereof shoulde ensue (whiche was lykly to be not a lytle) the most harme was lyke to fal where she leaste woulde, and then all the worlde woulde put her and her kynred in the blame, saiynge that they had vnwselye and vntruely broken the amytie and peace whyche the kynge her husbande had so prudently made betwene her kinred & hys, whyche amytee hys kinne had alwaies obserued.
The quene beyng thus perswaded sente worde to the kynge and to her brother, that there was no cause ner nede to assemble anye people, and also the duke of Glouceter and other lordes of his bēd wrot vnto the kinge so reuerently and to the quenes frendes there so louyngely, that they nothing earthlye mystrustyng, broughte the young kyng toward London w t a sober compaignie in greate hast (but not in good spede) til he came to Northāpton, and frō thēce he remoued to Stony stratford On whyche daye, the two dukes and theyr bende came to Northampton, faynynge that Stonye stratforde coulde not lodge theim all, where they founde the Earle Ryuers, entendynge the nexte moruynge to haue folowed the kynge, and to bee wyth hym earely in the mornyng. So that nyght the dukes made to the earle Riuers frendly chere but assone as they were departed verye famylier wyth greate curtesie in opē syghte and the erle Riuers lodged, the .ii. dukes with a few of theyr pryuye frendes fell to councell wherein they spente a greate part of the nyght, and in the dawning of [Page] the daye they sente about pryuely to ther seruauntes in theyr lodgynges to haste to horsebacke for theyr lordes were in maner redy to ryde, wheruppon all theyr seruauntes were ready or the Lorde Ryuers seruauntes wer awake. Nowe had the dukes taken the keyes of the ynne in to theyr possession, so that none shoulde yssue oute wythout their concente. And ouer thys in the hygh way toward Stony stratforde they set certaine of theyr folkes that shoulde cause and compell to retourne again all persons that were passinge frome Nōrthampton to Stony stratforde, sayinge that the dukes theim selfes woulde be the fyrst that should come to the kynge from Northampton, thus they bare folkes in hande. But when the earle Ryuers vnderstode the gates closed and the wayes on euery syde beset, nether hys seruauntes, nether hym self suffered to goo oute, perceauinge so great a thing wythoute his knowledge, not begon for noughte, comparyng thys preasent dooynge wyth the laste nyghtes cherein so fewe houres, so great a chaūce marueleously myslyked it. Howbeit, syth, he could not get awaye, he determined not to kepe him self close, leaste he shoulde seme to hyde hym selfe for some secret fear of hys owne faute, wherof he saw no such cause in him selfe, wherfore, on the suretie of hys owne consience he determyned to go to thē and to inquire what thys matter myghte meane. Whome assone as they saw, they beganne to quarell wyth hym, affyrmyng that he pretended to set dystaunce betwene the kyng and theim to bryng theim to confucyon, whyche should not lye in his powre and when he began as he was an el oequēt [Page xli] manne) in godly wise to excuse hym self thei would not here his aunswer but tooke hym by force and putte hym to ward. And then he mounted on horsback and came in Stony stratford wher the kyng was goyng to horsbacke, because he would leaue y • lodgyng for theim, for it was to strayte for bothe the compaignies. And when thei came to his presence thei alighted and their compaignie aboute theim, and on their knees saluted hym, and he theim gētely receaued, nothyng erthely knowyng ner mistrustyng as yet. The duke of Buckyngham saied aloude, on afore gentlemenne and yomenne kepe your roumes, and therwith in y t kyng his presence thei picked a quarell to the lord Rychard Grey the quenes soonne and brother to the lord marques & halfe brother to the kyng, saiyng that he and the marques his brother and the lorde Ryuers his vncle had cōpassed to rule the kyng & the realme and sette varyaūce betwene thestates, and to subdewe and destroye the noble bloodde of the realme. And toward thaccomplishment of thesame, thei saied y • lord marques had entred into the toure of London, & thence had takē oute treasure and sent mēne to the sea, whiche thynges these dukes knewe well were dooen for a good purpose & as very necessary, appoincted by y t whole counsail at Londō, but somewhat thei must haue saied, vnto the whiche woordes the kyng aunswered: what my brother Marques hath dooen I cannot saie, but in good faith I dare well aunswer for myne vncle Ryuers and my brother here, that thei bee innocent of suche mattiers, yee my leege ꝙ the duke of Buckyngham, thei haue kepte y e dealyng of [Page] these matters farre from the knowledge of your good grace, and foorthwith thei arrested the lord Rychard and sir Thomas Vaugham and sir Rychard Hawte in the kyng his presence & brought the kyng and all to Northāpton, where thei tooke ferther counsaill in their affaires. And there thei sent from the kyng whom it pleased theim, and set aboute hym suche seruauntes as better pleased theim then hym. At whiche dealyng he wept, but it booted not. And at dynner the duke of Gloucester sent a dyshe from his owne table to the lorde Ryuers, praiyng hym to bee of good chere and all should bee well, he thanked hym and prayed the messenger to beare it to his nephiewe the lord Rychard with like woordes, whom he knewe to haue neede of conforte, as one to whom suche aduersite was straunge, but he hym self had been all his dayes ennured therwith and therfore could beare it. But for all this message, the duke of Gloucester sent the lord Ryuers, y e lord Rychard and sir Thomas Vaughm̄ and sir Rychard Hawte into the Northparties into dyuers prisones, but at last all came to Poumfrette where thei all foure were behedded without iudge [...]et.
In this maner as you haue heard, the duke of Gloucester tooke on hym the gouernaunce of the younge kyng, whom with muche reuerence he conueighed towardes London. These tidynges came hastely to the quene before mydnight by a very sore reporte, that the kyng hir soonne was taken and that her brother and her other soonne and other hir frendes were arested and sent, no manne wyst whither. With this heuye tydynges the [Page xlii] quene bewayled her childes ruyn, hir frendes mischaunce and her awne infortune, curssyng the tyme that euer she was perswaded to leaue the gatheryng of people to bryng vp the kyng with a greate powre, but that was passed, and therfore nowe she tooke hir younger soonne the duke of Yorke and hir doughters and went oute of the palais at Westminster into the sanctuary and there lodged in the abbotes place, and she and all her children and compaignie were regystred for sanctuary persones. The same night there came to docter Rotheram archebysshop of Yorke and lorde chauceloure a messenger from the lorde chambrelayne to Yorke place besyde Westminster, the messenger was brought to the bysshoppes bed syde and declared to hym that y t dukes were gone backe with the younge kyng to Northamptō, and declared ferther, that the lorde Hastynges his master sent hym woord that he should feare nothyng for all should bee well. (Well ꝙ the bisshop,) bee it as well as it will, it will neuer bee so well as we haue seen it, and then the messenger depar [...] ted. Whereupon the bysshop called vp his seruauntes before daye light, and tooke with hym the greate seale and came before daye to the quene about whom he founde muche heuynesse, rumble, haste, busynesse, conuerghaunce and caryage of hir stuffe into sanctuary, euery manne was busye to carye, beare and conueigh stuffe, chestes and ferdelles, no manne was vnoccupied, and some caryed more then thei were commaunded to another place. The quene sat alone belowe on the russhes all desolate and dysmaied, whom the archebisshop [Page] conforted in the best maner that he coulde, shewynge her that the matter was nothynge so sore as she tooke it for, and that he was put in good hope and oute of feare by the message sente to hym frō the lorde Hastinges. A wo worth him ꝙ the quene for it is he that goeth aboute to destroye me and my bloodde. Madame ꝙ he, be of good comforte and I assure you, yf they crowne anye other king then your soonne whome they nowe haue, we shal on the morowe croune his brother whō you haue here with you. And here is the greate seale, which in lykewise as your noble husbande delyuered it to me, so I deliuer it to you to the vse of your sōne and therewyth delyuered her the greate seale, and departed home in the dawnynge of the daye, and when he opened his windowes and looked on the Themys, he myghte see the riuer ful of boates of the duke of Glouceter hys seruauntes watchyng that no person shoulde goo to sanctuary ner none shoulde passe vnserched.
Then was there great rumoure and commocion in the citee and in other places, the people diuersly deuined vpō thys dealyng. And dyuerse lordes knyghtes and gentylmen, ether for fauour of the quene or for feare of them selues, assembled compaignies together and went flockyng together in harneyes And many also, for that they recompted thys demeanour attempted, not so especyallye agaynst other lordes as agaynst the kyng him self in the dysturbaunce of hys coronat ion, therefore they assembled by and by together to common of thys matter at London. The archebyshoppe of Yorke fearynge that it woulde be ascrybed (as it [Page xliii] was in dede) to ouermuche lightnes that he so sodeynly had yelded vp the great seale to the quene, to whome the custodie therof nothyng apperteigned without especiall commaundement of y t kyng secretly sent for the seale agayn & brought it wyth hym after the accustomed maner to mete with the lordes.
At this metyng was the lord Hastynges, whose truthe towarde the kyng no manne doubted nor neded not to doubte, perswaded the lordes to beleue, that the duke of Glouceter was faythfull & sure towardes his prince, and that y t lord Ryuers, the lorde Richard and other knyghtes apprehended, wer for matters attempted by theim agaynste the dukes of Gloucetre & Buckyngham put vnder arest, for their suretie, and not for the kynges icopardye, and that they were also in sauegarde there to remayne, tyll the matter were (not by the dukes only) but also by all the other lordes of the kynges councell indifferentlye examyned, and by their discrecions ordred and eyther iudged or appesed. And one thyng he aduysed theim to beware of, that they iudged not the matter to farreforth or they knewe the truthe, nor turnyng theyr pryuate grudges into the commen hurte, irrityng and prouokyng men vnto angre, and disturbyng the kynges coronacion, toward whiche the dukes wer cō myng, for that then might paraduenture bryng y t matter so farre out of ioynte, that it shoulde neuer bee brought in frame agayne, whiche yf it should happe as it were lykely to come to a felde, though all parties were in all other thynges eguall, yet shoulde the autoryte bee on that syde, where the [Page] kynge is hym selfe, with these persuasyons of the lorde Hastynges, whereof parte he hym selfe belcued, and of parte he wyste well the contrarye, these commocyons were somewhat appeased. But in especiall, because the dukes of Buckyngham and Glouceter wer so nere and came on so shortly with the kynge, in none other maner, nor none other voyce or sembleaunce then to his coronacion, causyng the fame to be blowen about that suche persones as were apprehended had contryued the distruccion of the dukes of Gloucetre and of Buekyngham and other of the noble bloodde of thys realme, to thentent that thei alone would rule and gouerne the kyng. And for the coloure therof, such of the dukes seruauntes as rode with the cartes of their stuffe which wer taken, amonge the which stuffe no maruayle thoughe some were harneyes whiche at the brekynge vp of suche an housholde muste be brought awaye or caste awaye, they shewed to the people, and as they went sayde: lo, here be the barrelles of harneyes that these traytoures hadde preuely conueighed in their caryages to destroye the noble lordes withall. This dyuerse, (although it made the matter to wise menne more vnlykely) well perceauyng that thentendoures of suche a purpose woulde rather haue had theyr harnesse on theyr backes, then to haue bounde theim vp in barrelles, yet muche parte of the commen people were therewith ryght well satisfyed.
When the kyng approched nere the cytie, Edmonde Shawe Goldesmythe then Mayre of the cytie with the aldremenne and shreues in skarlet, and fyue hundreth commoners in murraye receaued [Page xliiii] his grace reuerently at Harnesaye parke, and so conueighed hym to the cytee, where he entred the fourthe daye of Maye, in the fyrste and laste yeare of his reigne, and was lodged in the bisshoppes palayce, but the duke of Goucetre bare hym in open sight so reuerently, saiyng to all men as he rode, beholde youre prynce and souereygne lorde, and made suche sembleaunce of lowlynes to his prince, that frome the greate obloquy that he was in so late before, he was sodeynly fallen in so greate truste, that at the councell next assembled he was made the onlye chiefe ruler and thoughte mooste mete to bee protectoure of the kynge and his realme, so that, were it desteny or were it folye, the lambe was betaken to the wolfe to kepe. At whiche councell the archebyshoppe of yorke was sore blamed for delyueryng the greate seale to the quene, and the seale taken from hym and delyueto docter Iohn Russell byshoppe of Lyncolne, a wyse manne and a good and of muche experyence, and dyuerse lordes and knightes were appoynted to dyuerse roumes, the lorde chamberlayn and some other kepte the roumes y t they were in before, but not many.
Nowe were it so that the protectour (whiche alwayes you muste take for the duke of Gloucetre) sore thristed for the acheuyng of his pretensed entrepryse and thought euerye daye a yere tyll it were perfourmed, yet durste he no ferther attempte aslong as he hadde but halfe his praye in hys hande, well wyttynge that yf he deposed the one brother, all the realme would fall to the other, yf he remayned in sanctuary or should happely be [Page] shortelie cōueyghed to his farther libertee. Wherfore in continēt at the next metyng of the lordes in councell, he purposed to theim that it was an heynous thyng of the quene, & procedyng of great ma lyce toward the kynges councelers y t she shoulde kepe the kynges brother in sanctuarye from hym whose special pleasure & conforte wer to haue his brother w t hym, and that to be done by her to none other intēt but to bryng all y e lordes in an obloquy and murmoure of the people, as though they wer not to be trusted w t the kynges brother, which lordes wer by y t whole ass [...]t of the nobles of y t realme appoynted as y t kynges nere frendes to y e tuycion of his royall person, the prosperitee wherof (ꝙ he) standeth not alonely frō the kepyng of enemyes & euill dyate, but partely also in recreacion & moderate pleasure, whiche he cannot take in his tendre youth in the cōpany of old & auncient persons, but in the famylyer conuersacion of those that be not farre vnder nor farre aboue his age, & neuerthelesse of estate cōueniēt to accompany his maiestie wherfore w t whom rather then with his owne brothere and if any man thinke this cōsyderaciō light (I thynke no man so thinketh that loueth y e kyng) let hym cōsyder y t sometyme that w t out smal thynges, greater cannot stande, and verelye it redoundeth greatly to y e dyshonoure of the kynges highnes and of all vs that bee about his grace to haue it come in any mannes mouthe, not in this realme onely, but also in other landes (as euell woordes walke farre) y t the kynges brother should be fayne to kepe sāctuary. For euery mā wyl iudge that no man wil so do for nought, & such opiniōs fastened [Page xlv] in mennes hertes be harde to be wrested oute, and many growe to more grefe then any manne here can diuine. Wherfore me thinketh it were not the worste to sende to the quene some honourable and trustye personage, suche as tendereth the kynges weale and the honoure of his counsell, and is also in credite and fauoure with her, for whiche consideracions none semeth more meately to me then the reuerende father my Lorde Cardinall archbishop of Cauntourbury, who maye in this matter doo mooste good of all menne yf it please hym to take the paine, whiche I doubte not of his goodnesse he wil not refuse for the kynges sake & oures and wealth of the younge duke hym selfe the kyn ges moost honorable brother and for the comforte of my souereigne Lord hym selfe my moost derest Nephiewe, considering that therby shalbe ceassed the sclaunderous rumour & obloquy nowe goyng abroade, and the hurtes auoyded y t therof myght ensue, then must reste and quietnesse growe to all the realme. And if she percase bee obstinate and so precisely sette in her owne wyll and opynion, that neither his wyse and feithfull aduertysement can moue her, nor any mannes reason satisfye her, thē shal we by myne aduice by the kynges authoritee fetche hym oute of that prysone and bring hym to his noble presence, in whose continuall companye he shalbe so well cheryshed and so honorablye intreated that all the worlde shall to oure bonoure and her reproche perceaue that it was onely malyce, frowardnesse & foly, that causeth her to kepe hym there. This is my minde for this tyme, excepte that any of you my Lordes anye thinge per [Page] ceaue to the contrarye, for neuer shall I by Goddes grace so wedde my selfe vnto myne owne wyll but I shalbe redye to chaunge it vpon youre better aduice.
When the Protectoure had saied, all the coun cell affirmed that the mocion was good and reasonable, and to the kyng and the duke his brother honorable, and a thing that shoulde ceasse great murmoure in the realme yf the mother myght by good meanes bee induced to deliuer hym, whiche thing the Archbishop of Cauntourburye, whome they all agreed also to bee moost conuenient thervnto, tooke vpon hym to moue her, and therto to dooe his vttermoste endeuoure. How be it yf she coulde in no wise bee intreated with her good wil to delyuer hym, then thought he and suche of the spirytualtye as were presente, that it were not in anye wyse to bee attempted to take hym oute agaynste her wyll, for it woulde bee a thyng that should turne to the grudge of all menne and high displeasure of God, if the pryuiledge of that place should bee broken which had so many yeres been kepte, whiche bothe kynges and bishoppes had graunted and confyrmed, whiche grounde was sanctifyed by sainct Peter hym selfe more then. v hundreth yeres agone, and syth that tyme was neuer so vndeuoute a kynge that euer enterprysed that sacred priuyledge to vyolate, nor so holy a bishoppe that durste presume the churche of the same to consecrate, and therfore ꝙ the Archbysshoppe, God forbyd that any manne shoulde for any erthely enterpryse breake the immunyte and libertee of that sacred Sanctuary that hath bene [Page xlvi] the sauegard of so many a good mannes lyfe, but I truste ꝙ he, we shall not nede it, but for any maner of nede I would we should not doo it, I trust that she with reason shalbe contented & all thyng in good maner obteigned. And yf it hap that I bring it not to passe, yet shal I further it to my best power so that you all shall perceaue my good wyl diligence & indeuoure. But the mothers dreade & womannishe feare shalbe the let yf any bee.
Naye womannish, frowardnesse ꝙ the duke of Buckingham, for I dare take it on my soule y t she wel knoweth y t she nedeth no suche thyng to feare either for her sonne or for her selfe. For as for her, here is no manne that wyll be at warre with womenne, would God some menne of her kynne wer womenne to, and then should all bee sone in rest. How be it, here is none of her kynne the lesse loued for that they bee of her kynne, but for their owne euell deseruing. And put the case that we nether loued her nor her kinne, yet there were no cause why we should hate the kinges noble brother to whose grace we oure selues be kynne, whose honoure yf she desyred as oure dyshonoure, and asmuche regarde tooke to his wealthe as to her owne wyll, she coulde bee as lothe to suffer hym to be absente from the kyng as any of vs, yf she had any wytte as woulde God she had as good wyll as she hath frowarde wytte. For she thynketh her selfe no wiser then some y t are here, of whose feithful myndes she nothing doubteth, but verely beleueth & know legeth that they woulde bee as sorye of his harme as her owne selfe, and yet they woulde haue hym frome her, yf she abyde there.
[Page] And we all I thinke bee content that bothe her children bee with her if she came frome thence and bee in suche place where they maye bee with theyr honoure. Nowe yf she refuse in the deliueraunce of hym to folowe the wisdome of theim, whose wisdome she knoweth, whose approbate fidelitee she trusteth: it is easye to perceaue that frowardnesse letteth her, and not feare. But goo to, suppose that she feareth as who maye let her to feare her owne shadowe, the more she feareth to deliuer hym, the more we oughte to feare to leaue hym in her handes, for yf she caste suche fonde doubtes that she feare his hurte, then wyll she feare that he shall be fette thence, for she wyll soone thynke that yf menne were sette (whiche God forbydde) on so greate a mischief, the Sanctuarye wyll lytel lette theim whiche sanctuary good menne as me thinketh myghte withoute synne: somewhat lesse regarde then they dooe. Nowe then yf she doubte leaste he might bee fetched from her, is it not licklye that she will sende hym some where oute of the realme? verely I looke for none other. And I doubte not but she nowe as sore mindeth it, as we mind the let therof. And if she might hap to bring that purpose to passe (as it were no great mastery to doo we letting her alone) all y t world would say that we were a sorte of wyse councelers aboute a king to let his brother to bee cast away vnder our noses. And therfore I ensure you feithfully for my minde, I wyll rather maugre her stomacke fetche hym awaye, then leaue hym there tyll her feare or fonde frowarde feare conuey hym awaye, and yet wyll I breake no sanctuarye, for verely sithe the [Page xlvii] priueledge of that place & other of y t sorte haue so long contynued I woulde not go about to breake yt, but yf they were nowe to begynne I would not be he that shoulde make theim, yet wyl not I saye nay, but it is a deede of pitie, that such men as the chaūce of y • sea or theyr euil debters haue brought into pouertee, shoulde haue some place of refuge to kepe in theyr bodies out of the daūger of theyr cruel credytoures. And yf it fortune the croune to come in question as it hath done before thys time whyle eatch parte taketh other for traytoures, I thyncke it necessarye to haue a place of refuge for both. But as for theues and murtherers, whereof these places be full, and whyche neuer falle from theyr crafte after they once fall therunto, yt is pytee that euer sanctuarye shoulde saue theim, and in especyall wylfull murtherers, whom God commaundeth to be taken from the aulter and to be putte to death. And where it is other wyse then in these cases, there is no nede of sayntuaryes, apointed by God in the olde law. For yf necessite of his owne defence or mysfortune dryued hym to y t deed then a pardon serueth hym, whyche ether is graū ted of course, or the kynge of pytee and compassyon geueth. Nowe looke howe fewe sanctuary mē there be whom necessyte or mysfortune compelled together? And then see on the other syde, what a sorte there bee commonlye therin of suche, whom wylfull vnthryftines hathe broughte to naughte what a rable of theues, murtherers and malycyous heynous traytours bee, and that in two places specyallye, the one at the elbowe of the cytee, & the other in the very bowels, I dare wel a vowe it [Page] yf you waye the good that they do wyth the hurte that commeth of theim ye shall fynde it much better to lese both, then to haue both. And thys I say although they were not abused (as they nowe bee and so longe haue bene) that I feare me euer they wylbe while men be a feard to set to theyr handes to the a mēdement, as though God and saynt Peter were the patrons of vngratious lyuing. Now vnthryftes riot, and ronne in debte vpon boldnes of these places, yea, and rytch men ronne thyther with poore mens goodes, there they buylde, there they spende and byd theyr creditours go whystel. Mens wyues ronne thether with theyr husbādes plate, & say they dare not abide with theyr husbandes for beting, theues bring thether stollē goodes & lyue thereon. There deuise they newe robberies nightly & stele out & robbe, reue, & kyl men & come agayne into those places, as though those places gaue thē not only a sauegard for the harme y t thei haue done, but a licēce also to do more myschiefe, howbeit, much of this great abusion, (yf wyse mē woulde set theyr handes thereunto) myghte bee a mended, with great thankes of god and no breche of the priuiledge. The conclusion is, sythe it is so long a go I wote not what pope and what prynce more piteous then polityke, hath graunted it, & other men sence of a relygious feare haue not broken yt, let vs take a payne with it, & let it stande a Goddes name in hys force, as ferforth as reason wyl, whyche is not so ferfourth as maye serue to let vs of the fetchynge forth of thys noble manne to hys honoure and welth out of that place in the whyche nether is nether can be a sanctuary or priueledged [Page xxxliii] mā. A sanctuarye euer serueth to defend the bodye of that man that standeth in daungers abrode, not of great hurt only, but of lawful hurt. For agaynst vnlawful hurtes & harmes no pope ner kynge entended to priueledge anye one place wherin it is lawful for one man to do another mā wrong. That no man vnlaufully take hurte, that lybertye the kynge, the lawe and verye nature for biddeth in euery place and maketh to that regard for euery man euery place a sanctuarye: but wher a man is by lawful meanes in parel, there nedeth he the tuycion of some specyall priueledge, which is the only ground of al sanctuaries, from which necessitee thys noble prince is farre, whose loue to his kyng, nature and kynred proueth, whose innocentie to al the world, hys tender youth affyrmeth & so sāctuary as for him is not necessary ner none he cā haue. Men com not to sāctuary as they com to baptim to require it by his godfathers, he must aske it him self y t must haue it, & reason sith no mā hath cause to haue it, but whose consyence of hys own faut maketh him hauened to require it, what wyl thé hath yōder babe, which if he had discretiō to require it yf nede wer, I dare say wold be right angry w t theim y t kepe him ther. And I wold thīk w tout any scruple of consciēce, w tout any brech of priueledge to be sōwhat more homly w t them y t be ther sāctuary mē in ded y t yf one go to sāctuary w t another mās goodes, why shold not y e king leuīg his body at liberty satisfye y • party of his goodes euē w in y e sāctuary, for nether kyng nor pope can geue anye place such a priueledge that it shal discharge a man of his debtes beynge hable to pay.
[Page] And with that dyuerse of the clergie that were there p̄sēt, whether thei saied it for his pleasure or as thei thought, agreed plainly by y t lawe of God & of y e churche y t the goodes of a sanctuary manne should bee delyuered in paymēt of his debtes, and stollen goodes to the owner and onely lybertie reserued to hym to gette his lyuyng with the labour of his handes. Verely ꝙ the duke I thynke ye saie very truth. And what if a mannes wife take sanctuary because she list to ronne from hir husband? I would thinke if she cā alledge none other cause he maye laufully without any dyspleasure dooen to sainct Peter, take hir oute of sainct Peters churche by the arme. And if no bodye maye bee taken oute of sanctuary because he saieth he will abyde there, then if a chylde will take sanctuary because he feareth to goo to schoole, his master must lette hym alone, and as symple as that example is, yet is there lesse reason in oure case then in it, for there though it bee a chyldyshe feare, yet is there at the least some feare, and herein is no feare at all And verely I haue heard of sanctuary menne, but I neuer harde before of sanctuary chyldren, & ther fore as for the conclusiō of my mynde, whoso euer maye deserue to haue nede of it, if thei thinke it for their suretye let theim kepe it, but he can bee no sāctuary manne that hath nother discresion to desire it, ner malice to deserue it, whose life ner lybertie can by no laufull processe stande in ieoperdie, and he that taketh one oute of sanctuarye to dooe hym good, I saye plainlye he breaketh no sanctuarye.
When the duke had dooen, the temporall mēne wholy, and the mooste parte of the spirituall mēne [Page xlix] also thynke no hurte earthely mente towarde the baby, condiscended in effecte, that if he were not delyuered he should bee fetched out. Howbeit thei thought it best in aduoydyng of all maner of rumoure, that the cardynall should first assaye to gette hym with her good will. And therupon all the counsaill came to the starre chamber at Westmynster, and the cardinall leauyng the protectour and other lordes in the sterre chaumber departed into the sanctuarie to the quene accompaignied w t certain lordes, were it for y t respecte of his honour or that she should by the personnes of so many perceaue that his arrande was not onely one mānes mynde, or were it for that the protectoure entended not in this matter to trust one manne alone, or els if she finally were determined to kepe hym, some of the compaignie had paraduenture some secrete instrucciō incontinēt maugre her will to take hym and to leaue her no respyte to conueigh hym.
When the quene and the lordes were come together in presence, the Cardynall shewed vnto her that it was thought to the lord protectour and the whole caunsaill y t hir kepyng of y t kynges brother in that place highly soūded, not onely to y t grudge of the people and their obloquy, but also to the unportable greefe and displeasure of y t kyng his royall maiestie, to whose grace it were a synguler cō forte to haue his naturall brother in compaignie, and it was their bothes dishonoures and theirs & hirs also to suffre hym in sanctuarye, as though the one brother stoode in daungier and perell of the other. And he shewed her ferther that the whole counsaill had sent hym to requyre of her the delyuerye [Page] of hym that he might bee brought to y t kyng his presence at his libertie oute of y t place whiche meune reconed as a prisone, & there should he bee demeaned accordyng to his estate and degree, and she in this doyng should bothe dooe greate good to the realme, pleasure to the coūsaill, profite to her self, succoure to her frendes that were in destresse, & ouer y t, whiche he wist well she speciallye tendered, not onelye greate conforte & honoure to the kyng but also to the younge duke hym self, whose bothe greate wealthe it were to bee together, aswell for many greater causes as also for their bothe dysporte & recreacyon, whiche thynges the lordes estemed not sleight, though it semed light, well pōde ryng y t their youthe without recreacion and playe cānot endure, ner any estraunger for the conueniē cie of bothe their estates so metely in y t poinct for any of theim as the either of theim for theother.
My lorde (ꝙ the quene,) I saie not naye but that it were very conueniente y t this gentlemanne whom you requyre were in the compaignie of the kyng his brother, and in good faith me thynketh it were as greate commodite to theim bothe, as for yet a while to bee in the custodie of their mother the tendre age consydered of the elder of theim bothe, but in especiall the younger, whiche besydes his infancye that also nedeth good lookyng too, hath awhyle been so sore deseased with syckenesse and is so newlye rather a lytle amended then well recouered, that I dare putte no persone earthely in trust w t his kepyng, but my self onely, consyderyng there is as phisicians saie, and as we also fynde) double y t perell in the resylynacion y t was in [Page l] the first syckenesse, with whiche desease nature beyng sore laboured, forweried & weaked, waxeth the lesse hable to bear oute a newe surfett [...] And albeit there might bee foūden other that would happely dooe their best vnto hym, yet is there none y t ether knoweth better howe to ordre hym then I y t so lōg haue kepte hym, or is more tendrely like to cherishe hym then his owne mother y t bare hym. No māne denieth good madame (ꝙ y • cardinall) but y t your grace of all folke were moost necessarie aboute your chyldrē, & so would all y t coūsaill not only bee content but also glad y • it were if it might stand w t your pleasure to be i suche place as might stāde w t their honour. But if you apoinct your self to tarie here, thē thynke thei it more cōueniēt the Duke of Yorke were with y t kyng honorably at his lybertie to the cōforte of theim bothe, then here as a sanctuary māne to their bothe dishonoure and obloquy, sith there is not alwaie so greate necessite to haue y t childe with the mother, but that occaciō sometyme maye bee suche that it should bee more expediēt to kepe hym els where, whiche in this well apereth, y t at suche tyme y t your moost derest soonne thē prince & nowe kyng should for his honour & good ordre of the countre kepe houshold in Wales farre out of your kepyng, your grace was well cōtent therw t your self. Not very well content (ꝙ the quene) & pet the case is not like, for theone was then in helth & theother is nowe sicke, in whiche case I meruell greatly why my lord protectour is so desierous to haue hym in his kepyng, where if the childe in his sickenesse miscaried by nature, yet might he rōne into slaunder and suspicion of fraude. And thei [Page] call it a thyng so sore against my childes honoure and theirs also that he abideth in this place, it is all their honoures there to suffre hym abide wher no manne doubteth he shalbe best kepte, and that is here while I am here, whiche as yet entend not to come foorth and ieopard my selfe after other of my frēdes, whiche would God were rather here in suertie with me, then I were there in ieoperdie w t theim. Why Madame (ꝙ y e lord Hawarde) knowe you any thyng why thei should bee in ieopardie? Naye verely (ꝙ she,) nor why thei should bee in prisone neither as thei nowe bee, but I trowe, it is no greate maruell though I feare leaste those y t haue not letted to put theim in duraunce w t out coloure, will let as litle to procure their distrucion without cause. The cardinall made a countenaunce to the lord Haward that he should harpe no more vpon y t stryng, and thē saied he to the quene, y t he nothyng doubted but those lordes of her kynne the whiche remeyned vnder a rest should vpon the matter [...]ramined dooe well ynough, and as toward her noble persone, was, neither could bee any maner of ieopardie. Wherby should I truste that (ꝙ y t quene) in y t I am guyltlesse, as though thei were guyltie, in y t I am with their enemies better beloued then thei, whē thei hate theim for my sake, in that I am so nere to the kyng, and howe ferre bee thei of that would helpe, as God sēde grace thei hurt not. And therfore as yet I purpose not to departe hence, as for this gentlemanne my soonne, I minde he shall be wher I am till I se further, for I se some mēne so gredy whthout any substanciall cause to haue hym, whiche maketh me muche more afrayd and [Page li] scrupulous to delyuer hym. Truly madame (ꝙ the cardynall) the more afrayde that ye bee to delyuer hym, the more other menne feareth to suffre you to kepe hym, leaste youre causelesse feare, mighte cause you farther to conueye hym, & many thynke he can here haue no pryuiledge whiche can haue neyther wyll to aske it, nor yet malyce or offence to nede it. And therfore, they recon no priuiledge broken, although they fetche hym out of sanctuarye, whiche yf you fynallye refuse to delyuer hym, I thynke verely y e councel wil enfraunchese hym, so muche drede hathe my lorde his vncle, for the tēdre loue he beareth hym, least your grace should sende hym awaye. Ah (ꝙ the quene) hath he so tendre a zele to hym that he feareth nothyng, but least he should escape hym? Thynketh he that I would sende hym hence, whiche is neyther in the plight to sende oute? and in what place coulde I recone hym sure, if he bee not sure in sanctuarye? whereof was there neuer tyraunte yet so deuelyshe, that durste attempte to breake the priuiledge, and I truste God is nowe as stronge to wythstande his aduersaries as euer he was. But my soonne can deserue no sanctuarye (you saye) and therfore he cannot haue it, forsothe the lorde protectoure hath sente a goodly glose, by the whiche that place that may defend a these may not saue an innocent: but he is in no ieopardye nor hath no nede thereof, I woulde God he had not. Troweth the protectoure I praye God he maye proue a protectour, rather then a destroyer, whereunto his peynted processe draweth. Is it not honourable that the duke byde here? it were confortable to theim bothe that he [Page] were with his brother, because the kyng lacketh a playe feloe, yea bee you sure, I praye God sende hym better playefelowes then hym that maketh so hyghe a matter vpon suche a tryfleynge pretexte, as though there coulde none bee founde to playe with the kynge, but yf his brother whiche hathe no lu [...] to playe for syckenesse, muste come oute of Sanctuarye, oute of his sauegarde to playe with hym, as though that prynces so young as they be [...], coulde not playe without their peres, or chyldrē coulde not playe without theyr kynred, with whome for the more parte they agree muche woorsse then with straungiers. But the chyld you saye cannot require the priuiledge, who tolde the protectoure so? Aske hym and you shall here hym aske it and so shall he if ye wyll. Howebeit this is a straunge matter, suppose he coulde not aske it and thynke he woulde not aske it, and ymagene he woulde aske to go oute, yf I saye he shall not. Note if I aske the priuiledge, but for my selfe, I saye that he that agaynst my wyll taketh out hym, breaketh Sanctuarye. Serueth thys lyberty for my personne onlye or for my goodes too? you maye not frome hence take my horsse frome me, yf I stale hym not nor owe you nothynge, then foloweth it, that you maye not take my chylde from me, he is also my ward, for as farre as my learned councell sheweth me, he hath nothyng by dyssente holden by knyghtes seruage, but by socage, then the lawe maketh me his garden, then maye no manne lawfully (I suppose) take my warde frome me oute of thys place, wythoute the breche of [Page xiiii] Sanctuarye, and yf my pryuyledge coulde not serue hym, nor he aske it for hym selfe, yet sythe the lawe commytteth to me the custodye of hym, I maye requyre it for hym, excepte the lawe geue the infaunte a garden onelye for hys gooddes, dyschargynge hym of the cure and sauekepynge of his bodye, for whiche onely, bothe goodes and landes serue. Wherfore here entende I to kepe hym, sithe mannes lawe serueth the garden to kepe the infaunte, and the lawe of nature wylleth the mother to kepe y t chyld, and Goddes lawe priuiledgeth the Sanctuarye, and the Sanctuarye pryuyledgeth my soonne, sythe I feare to putte hym to the protectoures handes, that hathe his brother already, whiche is (yf bothe fayled) inheritoure to the croune as heyre male, as he sayth. The cause of my feare no man hath to dooe to examen, and yet feare I no further then the law feareth, whiche as learned menne tell me, forbyddeth euery manne the custody of theim, by whose death he maye enheryte lesse lande then a kyngdome, I can saye no more, but whosoeuer he bee that breaketh this holy sanctuary, I praye God sende hym shortelye nede of Sanctuary, when he maye not come to it, for I woulde not that my mortall enemie should be taken out of Sanctuary.
The Cardynal perceaued that the quene euer y t lenger the farther of, and also that she beganne to kyndle and chafe and spake sore bytynge woordes agaynst the protectoure, and suche as he neyther beleued & also was lothe to here, he sayd to her, for a finall conclusion, that he would no more dispute [Page] the matter, and if she were contente to delyuer the duke to hym and to the other lordes there present, he durste laye his owne bodye and soule bothe in pledge, not onlye for his suretie, but also for hys estate, and surely he knewe nor suspected no cause but he might so dooe (but he knewe not all.) And further he saide, if she would geue hym a resolute aunswere to the contrarye he would therewith departe incontinent, and shifte who so woulde wyth this busynesse afterwarde, for he neuer entended further to moue her in the matter, in the whiche he thought that he and all other also, saue her selfe, lacked eyther wytte or truthe. Wytte if they were so dull, if they nothyng coulde perceaue what the protectoure entended, and yf they should procure her soonne to bee delyuered into his handes, in whome they shoulde perceaue towardes the chyld any euell wyll entended, then she myghte thynke all the councell bothe euel aduysed and of lytle fydelyte to theyr prince.
The quene with these wordes stoode in a great studye, and forasmuche as she sawe the lord Cardynall more redyer to departe then the remanaūt, and the protectoure hym selfe redye at hande, so that she verelye thought that she coulde not kepe hym there, but he shoulde bee incontynente taken thence, and to conueye hym elles where, neyther had she tyme to serue her, nor place determyned, nor personnes appoynted to conueygh hym, and so all thyng was vnreadye, when this message came so sodenly on her, nothyng lesse lookyng for then to haue hym out of sanctuarye, whiche she knewe nowe menne to bee set in all places about [Page liii] that he coulde not bee conueyghed oute vntaken, and partely as she thought, it myghte fortune her feare to bee false: so well she wist it was ether nede lesse or botelesse. Wherfore, yf she should nedes go from hym, she demed best to deliuer hym, & specially of y t Cardinalles faith she nothing doubted nor of some other lordes whome she sawe there, which as she feared least, they might be deceaued, so well was she assured y t they woulde not bee corrupted, then thoughte she that it woulde make theim the more warely to looke to hym, and the more circum spectly to see his surety, yf she with her owne handes betooke hym theim by truste, and at the laste she tooke the young duke by the hande and saied vnto the Lordes, my Lorde ꝙ she and all my lordes, nether am I so vnwise to mistruste youre wittes nor so suspicyous to mistruste your truthes: of which thing I purpose to make such a proofe that yf either of bothe lacked in you, might turne both me to greate sorowe, the realme to muche harme and you to greate reproche. For lo, here is ꝙ she this gentilman, whome I doubte not but I could kepe salfe if I would, whatsoeuer any manne saye and I doubte not also but there bee some abrode so deedly enemies vnto my bloodde, that yf they wiste where any of it laye in theyr owne body they woulde lette it oute, we haue also experience that the desyre of a kingdome knoweth no kynred, the brother hath bene the brothers bane, and may the nephewes bee sure of the vncle? eache of these children are others defence whyle they bee a sunder, and eache of their liues lyeth in others body, kepe one salfe and bothe bee sure, and nothing to bothe [Page] more perylous, then bothe to bee in one place, for a wise marchaunt neuer auentureth all his good des in one shyp, all this notwithstanding, here I deliuer hym & his brother in hym to kepe, to your handes, of whome I shall aske theim bothe before God and the worlde. Feithfull you bee and that I wot well, and I knowe you be wyse and of power and strength if you list to kepe hym, for you lacke no helpe of your selues, nor nede to lacke no helpe in this case, & yf you cannot elles where, then may you leaue hym here. But onely one thing I besech you, for the trust that his father putte you in euer and for the truste that I put you in nowe, that as farre as you thincke that I feare to muche, ye bee well ware that you feare not to lytle. And therwith all she saied to y t childe, fare well myne owne swete soonne, God sende you good kepyng, let me once kysse you or you gooe, for God knoweth whē we shall kisse together againe, & therwith she kyssed hym and blessed hym and tourned her backe & wepte, gooing her waye, leauyng the poore innocent chylde wepyng as faste as the mother.
When the Cardinall and the other lordes had receaued the younge duke, they brought hym into the starre chaumbre, where y t protectoure tooke hym in his armes and kyssed hym with these wordes, nowe welcome my lorde with all my very hert and he saied in y t of likelihode euen as he inwardly thought, and therupon, forthwith brought him to the king his brother into the bishoppes palaice at Powles, and from thence thorowe the citee honourably into the towre, oute of whiche after that daye they neuer came abrode. Whenne the Protectoure [Page liiii] had bothe the chyldren in his possessyon, yee and that they were in a sure place, he then beganne to thryste to see the ende of his enterprise and to auoyde all suspicion, he caused all the Lordes whiche he knewe to bee feythfull to the kyng to assemble at Baynardes castell to cōmen of the ordre of the coronacyon whyle he and other of his complyces and of his affinitee at Erosbyes place contriued the contrary & to make the Protectours kyng, to whiche counsel there were adhibite very fewe, and they very secrete. Then beganne here & there some maner of muttering amongest the people as though all thing should not longe bee well though they wyste not what they feared nor wherfore: were it, that before suche great thinges mennes hertes (of a secrete instyncte of nature) misgeueth theim, as y t southwinde somtime swelleth of hym selfe before a tempeste, or were it that some one manne happely perceauing, fylled many men with suspicyon, thoughe he shewed fewe menne what he knewe, howbeit, the dealing it selfe made to muche on the matter, thoughe the counsayle were close, for lytle and lytle all folke drewe from the towre where the kyng was, and drewe to Cros byes place, so that the Protectoure had all the resorte, and the kyng in maner desolate, while some made suyte vnto theim that had the doyng, some of theim were by theyr frendes secetely warned, that it myghte happely tourne theim to no good to bee to muche attendaunte on the Kyng withoute the Protectoures apoyntmente, whiche remoued dyuerse of the kynges olde seruauntes frō hym, and set newe in theyr romes aboute hym.
[Page] Thus many thinges comming together, partly by chaunce and partely by purpose, caused at length, not cōmon people onely whiche wauer w t the winde, but wise menne also and some Lordes to marke the matter & muse therupon, in so much as the lorde Stanley whiche afterward was erle of Derby wisely mistrusted it and saied to y t lorde Hastinges, that he muche misiyked these two seueral coūselles, for while we ꝙ he talke of one matter at y t one place, lytle wot we wherof they talke in the other place. Well ꝙ the Lorde Hastynges, on my lyfe neuer doubte you, for whyle one man is there whiche is neuer thence, neither can there bee any thing once mynded that shoulde sounde amisse towarde me, but it shoulde bee in mine eares or it were well oute of their mouthes. This ment he by Catesby whiche was nere of his secret councell, and whome he familyerly vsed in his moost weightye matters, putting no manne in so speciall trust as hym, sith he wiste well there was no manne to hym so muche beholdyng as was this Catesbye, whiche was a manne well learned in the lawes of this lande, and by the speciall fauoure of the lorde Hastynges in good authorytee and muche rule bare in the countrees of Leicestre and Northampton where y t lorde Hastinges power laye. But surely greate pitie was it that he had not had either more trueth or lesse wit, for his dissimulacyon onely, kepte all that myschiefe vp, in whome yf the lorde Hastinges had not put so special trust, y t lord Stanley and he w t diuers other lordes had departed into their coūtrees & broken al y e daunce for many euel signes y t he sawe, which [Page lv] he now construed al for the best, so surely thought he that there coulde be no harme towarde hym in that counsayle entended where Catesbye was.
And of truth the protectour and the duke of Buckyngham made very good sembleaunce vnto the lorde Hastynges and kepte hym muche in theyre compaignie. And vndoubtedlie the protectour loued hym well, and lothe was to haue loste hym sauynge for feare least hys lyfe shoulde haue quayled theyr purpose, for the whyche cause he moued Catesby to proue wyth some wordes caste oute a farre of, whether he coulde thyncke it possible to wynne the lorde Hastynges to theyr part. But Catesby, whether he assayed hym or assayed hym not reported vnto hym that he founde him so fast, and heard him speake so terrible wordes that he durst no farther breake, and of a truth the lorde Hastinges of very truste shewed vnto Catesby the mystrust that other began to haue in the matter. And therfor, he fearyng least theyr mocyons myght w t the lorde Hastynges haue mynished his credence, wherunto only al the matter leaned, procured the protectour hastly to ryd hym, & muche the rather, for he trusted by hys death to obtayne much of y t rule whyche the lorde Hastynges bare in hys coū tree, the onelye desyre whereof, was the thynge that enduced hym to be procurer & one of the speciallest contriuers of al thys treason. Wherupon the lorde protectoure caused a counsayle to be set at the towre on the frydaye the .xiii. daye of Iune, were was much commonyng for the honourable solempnytee of the coronation, of the whyche the tyme appoynted aproched so nere that the pageaū tes [Page] were a making day & nyght at Westminster & vytayle kylled which afterwarde was cast awaye
These lordes thus sittyng commoning of this matter, the protectoure came in emong thē about ix. of the clocke salutynge theim curteously excusynge hym selfe that he had bene frome theim so longe, saiynge merely that he had bene a sseper y t daye. And after a lytle talkynge wyth theym he sayd to the bishop of Ely, my lorde you haue very good strawberies in your garden at Holborne, I requyre you let vs haue a messe of theim. Gladly, my lorde ꝙ he, I would I had some better thyng as redy to youre pleasure as that, and wyth that he sente his seruaunte in al the haste for a dysh of strawberyes. The protectoure set the lordes faste in commonynge and thereupon prayed theim to spare hym a lytle, and so he departed and came in agayn betwene. x, and .xi. of the clocke into the chā ber al chaunged with a sowre angry countenaūce knyttynge the browes, frownynge and frettynge and gnawynge on hys lyppes & so set him downe in hys place. All the lordes were dysmayed & sore marueyled of thys maner and sodayne chaunge and what thynge should hym ayle. When he had sytten a whyle thus he beganne. What were they woorthy to haue that compasse and ymagyne the dystruccyon of me beynge so neare of bloodde to the kynge and protectoure of this hys royal realme? At whyche questyon all the lordes sat sore astonned, musynge muche by whom thys questyon shoulde be ment, of whych euery man knewe hymselfe clere.
Then the lord Hastynges as he that for the familiaritee [Page lvi] that was betwene them, thoughte he myght be boldest wyth hym, answered & sayd that they were worthye to bee punyshed as heyneous traytours what so euer they were, and all the other affyrmed the same, that is ꝙ he yonder sorceces my brothers wyfe and other wyth her, meanynge the quene, at these wordes manie of the lordes were sore abashed whyche fauoured her, but the lorde Hastynges was better contente in hys mynde that it was moued by her then by anye other that he loued better, albeit hys hearte grudged that he was not afore made of councel in this matter as well as he was of the takynge of her kynred and of theyr puttynge to deathe, whyche were by hys assente before deuised to be behedded at Pomfrete, thys selfe same daye, in the whyche he was not ware y e it was by other deuysed that he hym selfe shoulde the same daye be behedded at London: then sayde the protectoure in what wyse that y e sorceresse and other of hys counsayle, as Shores wyfe wyth her affynitee haue by theyr sorcerye and wychcrafte thys wasted my bodye, and therewyth plucked vp hys doublet cleane to hys elbowe on hys lyfte arme, where he shewed a weryshe wythered arme and small as it was neuer other. And thereupon euery mannes mynd mysgaue theim, well perceauynge that thys matter was but a quarell, for well they wyste that the quene was boothe to wyse to goo aboute anye suche foly, and yf she woulde, yet woulde she of al folke make Shores wyfe leaste of councel whom of all womenne she most hated as that concubin [...] whom the kyng her husband most loued [Page] Also, there was no manne there but knewe that hys arme was euer such syth the day of hys byrth Neuerthelesse the lorde Hastynges whyche from the death of kyng Edward kept Shores wyfe, on whom he somewhat doted in the kynges, lyfe, sauynge it is sayd that he forbare her for reuerence towarde hys kynge, or elles of a certayne kynd of fydelitee towarde hys frende. Yet nowe his heart somwhat grudged to haue her whom he loued so hyghly accused, and that as he knewe wel vntrulye, therefore he aunswered and sayde, certaynlye my lord, yf they haue so doone, they be worthie of heynous ponyshemente, what ꝙ the protectoure, thou seruest me I wene wyth yf, and wyth and, I tell the they haue doone it, and that I wyll make good on thy bodye traytoure. And therewith (in a greate anger) he clapped his fyste on the boorde a great rappe, at whych token geuen one cryed treason withoute the chamber, and therewyth a doore claped, and in came rushing men in harneyes as many as the chamber coulde holde. And anone y t protectoure sayd to the lorde Hastynges, I arrest the traytoure, what me lord ꝙ he? yea the traitour ꝙ the protectour. And one let flye at the lord Stā ley, whyche shroncke at the stroake and fell vnder the table, or elles his hed had bene cleft to the teth for as shortly as he shrancke, yet ranne the blood aboute hys eares. Then was the archebyshoppe of Yorke and doctoure Morton byshoppe of Ely and the lorde Stanleye taken and dyuers other whyche were bestowed in dyuers chambers, saue the lorde Hastynges (whome the protectoure commaunded to spede and shryue hym apace) for by [Page lvii] saint Poull (ꝙ he) I will not dyne till I se thy hed of, it booted hym not to aske why, but heuilie he tooke a preeste at auenture & made a shorte shrift, for a lenger would not bee suffred, the protectoure made so muche haste to his dyner, whiche might not goo to it till this murther were dooen for sauing of his vngracious othe. So was he brought foorth into the grene beside the chapell within the towre, and his hed layde dowe on a logge of tymber that laye there for buyldyng of y e chapell, and there tyrannously stryken of, and after his bodye & hed were enterred at Wyndesore by his mayster kyng Edward the fourth, whose soules Iesu pardon, Amen.
A merueleous case it is to here, either the warnynges that he should haue voyded or the tokens of that he could not voyde. For the next nyght before his deathe, the lorde Stanley sent to hym a trusty messenger at mydnight in all the hast, requiryng hym to ryse and ryde awaye with hym, for he was disposed vtterlye no lenger for to abyde, for he had a fearfull dreame in the whiche he thought that a bore with his tuskes so rased theim bothe by the heddes that the bloodde ranne aboute bothe their shoulders, and for asmuche as the protectour gaue the bore for his cognisaunce, he ymagened that it should bee he. This dreme made suche a fearfull impressiō in his hearte, y t he was throughly determined no lēger to tarye but had his horsso readie, if the lord Hastynges would goo with hym So that thei would ryde so ferre that night, that thei should bee oute of daungere by the next daye. A good lord (ꝙ the lord Hastynges) to the messenger, [Page] leaneth my lord thy master so muche to suche trifles and hath suche faith in dreames, whiche either his awne feare fātesieth, or doo rise in y t nightes rest by reason of the dayes thought. Tell hym it is plaine witchcraft to beleue in suche dreames, whiche if thei were tokens of thynges to come, why thynketh he not y t we might as likely make theim true by our goyng if we were caught and brought backe (as frendes fayle flyers) for then had the bore a cause lykely to race vs with his tuskes, as folkes that fled for some falshed, wherfore either is their perell, nor none there is deede, or if any bee, it is rather in goyng then abydyng. And if we should nedes fall in perell one waye or other yet had I leuer that menne should se it were by other mennes falshed, then thynke it were either our awne faute or faynte and feble heart, and therfore goo to thy master and commende me to hym and I praye hym to bee mery and haue no feare, for I assure hym, I am assured of y t māne he wotteth of as I am of myne owne hande. God sende grace (ꝙ the messenger,) and so departed. Certen it is also that in rydyng toward the towre thesame mornyng in whiche he was behedded, his horsse that he accustomed to ryde on stombled with hym twise or thrise almost to the fallyng, whiche thyng although it happeneth to theim daylye to whom no myschaunce is towarde, yet hath it been as an olde eiuill token obserued as a gooyng toward myschief. Nowe this y t foloweth was no warnyng but an enuyous scorne, thesame mornyng ere he were vp from his bed where Shores wife laye w t hym all night, there came to hym sir Thomas Hawarde [Page lviii] soonne to the lorde Hawarde (the whiche sturryng that mornyng very earlye) as it were of courtesie to accompaignie hym to the counsaill, but forasmuche as the lorde Hastynges was not readye, he taried awhile for hym and hasted hym awaye.
This sir Thomas, while the lorde Hastynges stayed awhile commonyng with a preest whom he met in the towre strete, brake the lordes tale, saiyng to hym merely, what my lord I praye you come on, wherfore talke you so long with that preest, you haue no nede of a preest yet, and laughed vpon hym, as though he would saie, you shall haue nede of one sone. But lytle wist the other what he meant (but or night these woordes were well remembred by theim that heard theim) so the true lorde Hastynges litle mistrusted, and was neuer merier, ner thought his life in more suretye in all his dayes, whiche thyng is often a sygne of chaunge, but I shall rather lette any thyng passe me then the vayne suretye of mannes mynde so nere his deathe: for vpon the towre wharffe, so nere the place where his hedde was of so sone after, as a manne might well cast a balle, a pursyuan̄t of his awne called Hastynges mette w t hym, & of their metyng in y e place he was put in remembraūce of another tyme, in whiche it had happened theim to mete before together in y e same place, at whiche tyme y e lord Hastynges had beē accused to kyng Edward by y t lord Ryuers the quenes brother, in somuche y t he was for awhile which lasted not long highly in y t kynges indignacion & stode in great feare of hymself, & forasmuch as he nowe [Page] met thesame pursyuaunt in thesame place the ieopardy so well passed, it gaue hym greate pleasure to talke with hym therof, w t whō he had talked in thesame place of that matter, and therfore he saied Ah Hastynges, arte thou remembred when I met the here once with an heuy herte? Ye my lord (ꝙ he) that I remembre well, and thanked bee God thei gatte no good ner you no harme therby, thou woldest saie so (ꝙ he) if thou knewest so muche as I dooe whiche fewe knowe yet, and mo shall shortly, that meant he that the erle Ryuers and y t lord Richard and sir Thomas Vaughm̄ should y t daye bee behedded at Pomfrette, as thei were in deede, whiche acte he wyst well should bee dooen, but nothyng ware that y t axe honge so nere his owne hed. In feith manne (ꝙ he) I was neuer so sorye ner neuer stoode in so greate daungier of my life as I did when thou and I mette here, and loe the worlde is turned nowe, nowe stande myne enemies in the daungier as thou mayst happe to heare more hereafter, and I neuer in my life meryer nor neuer in so greate suertie, I praye God it proue so (ꝙ Hastynges proue ꝙ he? dowtest thou that,) naye naye I warraunt the, and so in maner dyspleased he entered into the towre, where he was not long on lyue as you haue hearde. O lord God the blyndenesse of our mortall nature, when he mooste feared, he was in moost suretie, and when he reconed hym self moost surest, he loste his life & y t within .ii. houres after. Thus ended this honorable manne a good knight and a gentle, of great autorite w t his prīce, of liuyng somewhat dissolute plain and open to his enemie, and sure and secrete [Page lix] to his frende, easye to beguyle, as he that of good herte and courage foresawe no perelles, a louyng manne and passyng welbeloued, verye faythfull & trustie ynough, but trustyng to much was his destruccion as you maye perceaue.
Nowe flewe the fame of this lordes death thorough the cytie and farther about like a wynde in euery mannes eare, but the protectoure immediatly after dynner (entendynge to set some coloure vpon the matter) sent in all the hast for many substanciall menne out of the cytie into the towre, and at their commynge, hym selfe wyth the duke of Buckyngham stoode harnessed in olde euell fauoured bryganders▪ suche as no manne woulde wene that they would haue vouchesalued to haue putte on their backes, excepte some sodeyne necessitee had constreigned theim. Then the lorde protectoure shewed theim, that the lorde Hastynges and other of his conspyracye hadde contryued to haue sodenly destroyed hym and the duke of Buckyngham there thesame daye in councell, & what they entended farther, was as yet not wel knowen of whiche their treason he had neuer knowledge before ten of the clocke thesame fornoone, whiche sodeyne feare draue theim to put on suche harnesse as came nexte to theyr hādes for their defence, & so God holpe theim, that the mischiefe turned vpon theim that would haue done it, and thus he required theim to reporte. Euerye manne aunswered fayre, as thoughe no manne mystrusted the matter, whiche of truthe no manne beleued. Yet for the farther appeasyng of the peoples myndes, he sent immedyatlye after dynner an Heralde of armes [Page] with a proclamacion through the citee of London whiche was proclamed in the kynges name, that the lord Hastynges with dyuerse other of his treyterous purpose had before cōspired, thesame daye to haue slain the protectoure and the duke of Buckyngham sittyng in counsaill, & after to haue takē vpon theim the rule of the kyng and the realme at their pleasure, and therby to pill and spoyle whom thei list vncomtrolled, and muche matter was deuised in thesame proclamacion to the sclaunder of the lord Hastynges, as that he was an eiuill counsaillour to the kynges father, entisyng hym to many thynges highly redoundyng to the minisshyng of his honoure and to the vniuersall hurt of his realme, by his eiuill compaignie and synister procuryng and vngracious exsample, aswell in many other thynges as in vycious lyuyng and inordynate abusyon of his bodye, bothe with many other and in especiall with Shores wife whiche was one of his secrete counsaill of this heynous treason, with whom he laye nyghtlye, and namely the nyght passed next before his deathe, so that it was the lesse maruell yf vngracyous lyuyng brought hym to an vnhappie ende, whiche he was nowe putte to by the commaundement of the kyng his highnes and of his honourable and faithfull coū saill, bothe for his demerytes beyng so openly taken in his false contriued treason, and also least the delaiyng of his execucion myght haue encoraged other myscheuous persones parteners of his conspiracye, to gather and assemble theim selues together in makyng so greate commocyon for his delyucraunce, whose hope nowe beeyng by hys [Page lx] well deserued deathe pollytickelye repressed, all the realme shall by Goddes grace reste in good quyet and peace. Nowe was this proclamacion made within twoo houres after he was behedded, and it was so curyously endited and so fayre wrytten in parchement in a fayre sette hande, and therwith of it selfe so long aprocesse, that euery chylde myght perceaue that it was prepared and studyed before (and as some menne thought, by Catesby) for all the tyme betwene hys deathe and the proclamacyon proclaymynge, could skante haue suffysed vnto the bare wrytynge alone, albeit that it had been in paper and scrybeled foorthe in haste at aduenture. So that vpon the proclaymynge therof, one that was schoolemaster at Paules standyng by and comparyng the shortenesse of the tyme wyth the lengthe of the matter sayed to theim that stoode aboute hym, here is gaye goodlye cast, fowle caste awaye for hast. And amarchaunte that stoode by hym sayed that it was wrytten by inspyracyon and prophesye. Nowe then by and by as yt were for anger and not for coueteous, the protectoure sent sir Thomas Hawarde to the hous of Shores wyfe (for her husbande dwelt not wyth her) whyche spoyled her of all y t euer she had, aboue the valure of twoo or thre thousande markes, and sente her bodye to pryson. And the protectoure had laide to her for the maner sake y t she entended to witche hym, and y t she was a coūsaill w t the lord Hastynges to destroye hym In conclucion, whē no coloure could fasten vpō these matters, the he leyed heinously to her charge that [Page] thyng that she coulde not denye, for all the worlde knewe that it was true, and that not wythstandyng euery manne laughed to here it then so sodeynly, so highly taken, that she was noughte of her body. And for this cause as a Godly continent prince clene and faultlesse of hym selfe, sent oute of heauen into this vicious worlde, for the amendement of mennes maners, he caused the byshop of London to put her to open penaunce, goynge before a crosse on sondaye at procession with a taper in her hande. In the which she went in coūtenaūce and pace so womanly, and albeit she was out of al her araye sauyng her kyrtell onelye, yet wente she so fayre and louely, and namelye when the wondryng of the people cast a comelye rud in her chekes of the whiche she before had moste mysse, that her greate shame wanne her muche prayse amongest theim that were more amorous of her bodye then curyous of her soule, & many good folke that hated her lyuyng and wer glad to see synne corrected, yet petied they more her penaūce then reioysed it, whē they consydred y t the protectour dyd it more of a corrupt mynde then any verteous affeccion.
This woman was borne in London, well frended, [...] [...]ion [...]h [...] [...]s wife. honestly brought vp, and verye well maryed, sauyng somwhat to sone, her husband an honest & a young citezen, godlye & of good substaunce, but forasmuche as they were coupled or she were well rype, she not very feruētly loued for whō she neuer longed, whiche was the thyng (by chaunce) that y t more easely made her to encline to y t kynges appetite, when he requyred her. Howbeit the respect of his royaltee, y t hope of gaye apparel, ease, pleasure [Page lxi] and other wantonne wealthe was hable soone to perce a softe tender harte, but when the kyng had abused her, anone her husbande being an honest manne and one that coulde his good, not presuming to touche a kynges concubyne lefte her vp to hym all together. When the kyng dyed, y t lorde Hastynges tooke her, which in the kynges dayes albeit that he was sore enamoured with her, yet he forbare, either for a pryncelye reuerence or for a certen frendely faythfulnesse. Propre she was & fayre, nothing in her bodye that you coulde haue chaunged, but if you would haue wished her somwhat hygher. This saye they that knewe her in her youthe, some saied and iudged y t she had bene well fauoured, and some iudged the contrarye, whose iudgement semeth lyke as menne gesse the bewtye of one longe before departed, by a scalpe taken oute of a chanell house, & this iudgemente was in the tyme of kyng Henry the eyghte, in the xviii. yere of whose reygne she dyed, when she had nothing but a reueled skynne and bone. Her beautye pleased not menne so muche as her pleasaunt behaueoure, for she had a propre wytte and could bothe reade and wryte, mery in compaignye, redy and quicke of aunswer, nether mute nor full of bable, sometime taunting withoute displeasure, but not without disporte. Kyng Edward woulde saye that he had thre concubines, which in diuerse properties diuerslye excelled, one, the meriest, y t other the wiliest, the third the holyest harlot in y • realme as one, whom no man could get oute of y • churche to any place lightlye, but yf it were to his bed, the other two were somwhat greater personages thē [Page] mastres Shore, & neuerthelesse of their humilyte were content to bee namelesse and to forbeare the praise of these properties. But the meryest was Shores wyfe in whome the kyng therfore tooke greate pleasure, for many he had, but her he loued whose fauoure to saye the truthe (for it were synne to lye on the deuel) she neuer abused to any mannes hurte but to many mennes comforte & releefe For where the kyng tooke displeasure she would mitigate & apeace his mynde, where menne were oute of fauoure, she woulde bring theim into his grace, for many that had highly offended, she opteygned pardone, and of greate forfeatures she gat remissyon, and finally, in many weightye sutes she stoode many mēne in greate steade, either for none or for very small rewardes & those rather gaye then ryche, either for that she was contente with the dede well done, or for that she delyghted to be sued vnto, and to shewe what she was hable to doo with the kyng, or for that that wanton wemenne and welthye bee not alwayes couetous. I doubte not but some manne wyll thynke this womanne to bee to slyghte to bee writen of, amonge graue & weightie matters, whiche they shall specially thynke y t happely sawe her in her age & aduersite, but me semeth y t chaūce so much more worthy to be remēbred, in howe muche after welth she f [...]ll to pouerte, & frō richesse to beggerie, vnfrēded oute of aquayntaunce, after great substaūce after so great fauoure w t her prince, after so great suite and seking to, as many other menne were in their times, whiche be nowe famous onlye by the infamye of theyr euell dedes, her doinges were not [Page lxii] muche lesse remembred because they were not so euell, for none vse to wryte an euell turne in marble stone, but a good turne they write in the duste, whiche is not worste proued by her, for after her welthe she wente begginge of manye that hadde begged theim selfes yf she had not holpen theim, suche was her chaunce.
Nowe was it deuysed by the protectoure and his counsayle, that the same daye that the lorde chaumberlayne was behedded in the towre of Lō don and aboute the same houre should be behedded at Poumfret the earle Riuers & the lorde Richard the quenes soonne, sir Thomas Vaugham and syr Richard Haute, which as you haue harde were taken at Northampton and Stonye Stratforde by the consent of the lorde Hastinges, which execucion was done by the ordre & in the presence of sir Richard Ratcliff knight, whose seruice y • protectoure specially vsed in the councell & in the execucion of suche lawlesse enterprises, as a manne y t had bene longe secrete wyth hym, hauynge experyence of the worlde and shrewed wytte, shorte & rude in speche, rough and boysterours of behaue oure, bold in myshiefe, as farre from pitie as from feare of God.
Thys knyghte broughte these foure persoonnes to the scaffolde at the daye appoynted, and shewed to all the people that they were traytoures, notsufferynge the lordes to speake, and to declare theyr innocencye, leaste their wordes myghte haue inclyned menne to pytie theym and to hate the protectour and hys part, and so wyth oute iudgemente and processe of the lawe caused [Page] theim to bee behedded withoute other erthly gylt but onely that they were good menne & true to the kyng and to nye to the quene, insomuche as Syr Thomas Vaughan going to his deathe saied, A wo woorth theim that tooke the prophecie that. [...] should destroy kyng Edwardes children, mea [...] that by the duke of Clarence lorde George which for that suspicion is nowe dead, but nowe remayneth Richard. G. duke of Gloucetre, whiche nowe I see is he that shall & wyll accomplishe the prophecye and destroye kyng Edwardes chyldren & all theyr alyes and frendes, as it appereth by vs this daye, whom I appele to the hygh tribunal of God for his wrongful murder and oure true innocencye, and then Ratclyffe saied, you haue well apeled, laye downe your hed, ye ꝙ Syr Thomas, I dye in ryght, beware you dye not in wrong, and so that good knight was beheded and y t other .iii. and buried naked in the monastery at Pomfret.
When the lorde Hastinges and these other lordes and knyghtes were thus behedded & ryd oute of the waye, then the Protectoure caused it to bee proclaimed that the coronacyon for dyuerse great and vrgent causes shoulde be deferred tyll the second day of Nouembre, for then thought he, that whyle men mused what the matter ment, & whyle the lordes of the realme were aboute hym, oute of their owne strengthes, and while no manne wyste what to thynke nor whome to truste, or euer they should haue tyme and space to digest the matter, and make partes, it were best hastely to pursue his purpose and put hym selfe in possessyon of the croune, or menne coulde haue tyme to deuise any [Page lxiii] wyse to resyst. But nowe was all the studye, thys matter beynge of it selfe so heynous myghte bee fyrst broken to the people in such wise as it might be well taken. To thys counsayle they tooke dyuerse suche as they thoughte metely to be trusted and lykelye to be enduced to that parte and hable to stande them in stede, ether by powre or by pollycy. Amonge who [...]e, they made a counsayle Edmounde Shaa then mayre of Londō, whych vpō truste of his owne auauncement, wher he was of a proude heart, hyghly desyreous, toke on hym to frame the cyte to theyr appetite. Of spirituall mē they tooke suche as had wyt and were in auctorytee emongest the people for opynion of theyr learnynge and hadde no scrupulous conscyence. Emongest these, had they tooke Raffe Shaa clerke brother to the Mayre, and Freer Pynkie prouyncyall of the Augustyne Freers, both doctoures in diuinitee, both great preachers, both of more learning then vertue, of more fame then learnyng, & yet of more lernyng then truthe. For they wer before greatelye estemed emonge the people, but after that, neuer none of these two were regarded Shaa made a sermonde in prayse of the protectour before the coronacion, and Pynky made one after the coronation, bothe so full of tedious flatterye, that no good mans eares coulde abyde thē Pynkye in hys sermonde so lost hys voyce that he was fayne to leaue of and come downe in the myddest. Doctoure Shaa by hys sermonde loste hys honestye, and soone after hys lyfe, for verye shame of the worlde, into the whyche he durst neuer after much come abrode, but the Freer forced [Page] for no shame, and so yt harmed him the lesse. How beit, some doubte and many thyncke that Pinkey was not of counsayl before the coronation but after the common maner fell to flattery after, namely, because his sermounde was not incontinente vpon it, but at Saynt Mary Spittle the Eastre after. But certayne it is that Doctoure Shaa was of counsayle in the begynnynge, in so muche that they determyned that he shoulde fyrst breke the matter in a sermōd at Paules crosse, in which he shulde by the authorytee of hys preachyng induce the people to enclyne to the protectoures ghoostly purpose. But nowe was all the laboure and studye in the deuyse of some conuenyent pretexte, for whyche the people shoulde be contente to depose the prynce and accepte the protectoure for kyng. In whyche dyuerse thynges they deuysed, but the chiefe thynge and the weyghte of all that inuention rested in thys, that they shoulde alledge bastardy in kynge Edwarde hym selfe, or in his chyldren, or both, so that he should seme disabled to enherite the crowne by the duke of yorke and the prynce by hym. To laye basterdy in king Edward sounded openly to the rebuke of the protectoures owne mother, which was mother to the bothe. For in that poynte coulde bee none other colour, but to pretend that hys owne mother was an auoutresse, but neuerthelesse he woulde that poynt should be lesse and more fynely and closely handled, not euen fully playne and dyrectlye, but touched a slope craftely, as though menne spared in that poynte to speake all the truthe for feare of his displeasure. But that other poynt concerning [Page lxiiii] the basterdy that they deuysed to surmise in king Edwardes children, that woulde he shoulde be openly declared and enforced to the vttermost. The coloure and pretexte wherof cannot be wel perceaued excepte we report some thynges longe before done aboute kynge Edwardes maryages.
After king Edwarde the .iiii. had deposed king Henry the .vi. & was in peasyable possession of the realme, determyning him selfe to mary (as was requisite) both for him self and for the realme, he set the earle of Warwike and diuerse other noble mē in ambassade to the Frenche kynge to entreate a maryage betwene y t kyng and Bona syster to the Frenche kyng. In whych the Earle of Warwike founde the parties so towarde and wyllinge that he spedely wythout anye dyfficultie according to hys instruccyons broughte the matter to a good conclusion. Nowe happened yt in the meane season, there came to make a sute to the kynge by petycyon dame Elyzabeth Greye (whyche after was hys quene) then a wyddowe, borne of noble blood specyallye by her mother, whyche was Duchesse of Bedforde, and she was maryed to syr Rychard Wooduyle, Lorde Ryuers her father.
Howebeit, thys Elyzabeth beynge in seruyce wyth quene Margarete wyfe to kynge Henrye the syxt, was maryed to one Ihon Greye Esquyre whome kynge Henrye made knyghte at the last hattayle of Saynte Albons, but lytle whyle he enioyed hys knyghtehoode for at that feelde he was slayne.
Afterwarde that kynge Edwarde was kynge & the Earle of Warwyke being on his ambassad [Page] this poore ladye made sute to the kyng to be restored to such small landes as her husbande had geuen her in ioyntour, whom when the kyng beheld and heard her speake, as she was bothe fayre and of a good fauoure, moderate of nature, well made and very wyse, he not alonlye pytied her, but also wexed enamored on her, and takynge her secretly a syde beganne to enter into talkynge more famylyerly, whose apetite when she perceaued, she vertuoslye denyed him, but that dyd she so wyselye & that with so good maner & wordes so wel set, that she rather kyndled hys desyre then quenched it. And fynally, after manye a metynge and muche wowynge and manye great promyses she well espyed the kynges affeccyon towarde her so greatelye encreased that she durstesomewhat the more boldly say her mynde, as to hym whose hearte she perceaued more feruently set then to fall of for a word. And in cōclusiō she shewed hym playn y t as she wyst her self to sīple to be his wife, so thought she her selfe to good to be hys concubyne. The kyng much maruelyng of her constancy, as he y t had not bene wont elles where so styfly sayd nay, so much estemed her continencye & chastitee, that he set her vertue in stead of possessiō and rychesse. And this taking councel of his owne desyre determyned in hast to mary her. And after that he was thus apoīted & had betwene thē twayn ēsured her thē asked he the coūcel of his secret frēdes, & that in such maner y t they myght easly perseaue y t it boted not to say nay, Notwythstandīg, the duches of york his mother was so sore moued ther w t y t she diswaded y t mariage as much as she possible might [Page lxv] Alledgyng that it was his honour, profite & suretie to marye in some noble progenie oute of the realme, wherupon depended greate strength to his estate by that affinitee and greate possibilite of encreace of his dominions. And y t he could not well otherwise dooe, consideryng the erle of Warwike had so ferfoorth entered into the matter all readie, whiche was not like to take it well if all his voyage were in suche wise frustrate & his apointment deluded. And she saied ferther that it was not princely to marye his owne subiect, no greater occaciō ledyng therunto, no possessions nor other commodyte dependyng therupon, but only as a riche mā would mary his maydē onely for a litle wāton dotage vpon her persone. In whiche maryage many menne commende more the maydens fortune then the mannes wysedome, and yet she saied that there was more honestye then honoure in this maryage forasmuche as there is not betwene a marchaunt and his mayde so greate a dyfference as betwene a kyng and his subiect, a great prince and a poore wydowe. In whose persone, although there were nothyng to bee mislyked, yet was there saied she, nothyng so excellent but that it might bee founde in dyuerse other that were more metely (ꝙ she) for your estate, yee and maydens also, the onely wydowhead of dame Elizabeth Grey (although she were in all other pointes and thynges conuenient for you) should suffise as me thynketh to refrayne you frō her maryage, sith it is an vnsittyng thyng and a greate blemishe to the sacred maiestie of a prince that ought as nere to approche prestehoode in clennesse, as he dooth in dignitee, to bee defiled [Page] w t bigamy ī his first mariage. The kyng made his mother an aūswere parte in earnest & parte in plaiemerely, as he y t wist hym self oute of rule, & albeit he would gladly y t she should take it well, yet was he at apoynct in his awne mynde, tooke she it well or otherwise. Howbeit, somewhat to satisfie her he saied, y t albeit maryage beyng a spirituall thyng ought rather to bee made for the respecte of God where his grace enclineth the parties to loue together (as he trusted it was in his case) rather then for y t regard of any tēporall aduaūtage, yet neuer thelesse hym semed this maryage well consydered not to bee vnprofitable, for he reconed the amytee of no earthely nacion to bee so necessary for hym as y t frendship of his owne, whiche he thought lykely to beare hym somuche y t more hartie fauoure in y t he disdayned not to mary w t one of his awne land, & yet if outward aliaunce were thought so requisite, he would finde y e meanes to enter therunto muche better by other of his kinne where all y t parties could bee contented, then to marye hym selfe wherein he should neuer happely loue, & for y e possibilite of possessiōs lese y t fruyte & pleasure of this that he had alreadie. For small pleasure taketh a māne of all y t euer he hath besyde, if he bee wiued against his appetite, and I doubte not (ꝙ he,) but ther be as you saie other y t bee in euery poinct comparable with her, & therfore I let not theim y t like theim to mary theim, no more is it reason y t it mislike any manne that I marye where it liketh me. And I am sure that my cousyn of Warwike, neither loueth me so litle, to grudge at y t that I loue, ner is so vnreasonable to look y t I should in choise [Page lxvi] of a wife rather bee ruled by his yie then by myne owne, as though I were a warde y t were boūdē to mary by a garden. I would not bee a kyng with y t cōdicion to forbeare myne owne libertie in choyse of myne awne maryage, as for possibylyte of more inheritaunce by newe affinite in straūge landes, is ofte y t occasiō of more trouble thē proffite. And we haue already title by y t meanes, as lustiseth to get & kepe well in one mannes daye. That she is a widowe & hath already children. By goddes blessed ladye, I am a bacheler & haue some too, & so eche of vs hath a proofe y t nether of vs is like to be barren. And therfore madame I praie you bee cōtēt, I trust to God she shall bryng foorth a yoūge prince y t shall please you. And as for the bigamy, let the bisshop hardely laie it to my charge whē I come to take ordres, for I vnderstād it is forbiddē a preest but I neuer wist y t it was forbidden a prince. The duches w t these woordes nothing apeased & seyng y t kyng so set on y t she could not plucke hym backe, so highly she disdeined it, that vnder pretext of her dutye to Godwarde she deuised to dysturbe this maryage, and rather to helpe that he should mary one dame Elizabeth Lucye, whom the kyng not long before had gotten with chylde, wherfore the kyng his mother obiected openlye against this maryage (as it were in dyscharge of her conscyence) that the kyng was sure to dame Elizabeth Lucye and her housbande before God, by reason of whiche woordes suche obstacle was made in that matter, that either the bysshoppe durste not or the kyng woulde not proceade to the solempnisacion of the mariage, till this fame were [Page] clerly purged, and the truth well and openly testified) wherupon dame Elizabeth Lucye was sent for, and albeit she was by the kynges mother and many other put in good comforte to affirme that she was assured to the kyng, yet when she was solemply sworne to saie the truthe, she confessed that thei were neuer ensured. Howbeit she said his grace spake suche louyng woordes to her, that she verely hoped that he would haue maryed her, and y t if suche kynde woordes had not been, she would neuer haue shewed suche kyndenesse to hym, to let hym so kyndely to gette her with childe. This examynacion solemply taken, it was clerely proued that there was no impedyment to lette the kyng to marye, wherfore he shortlye after at Grafton beside Stonye stratforde maryed the ladye Elizabeth Grey verey priuelye, whiche was his enemyes wife and had prayed hartely for his losse, in the whiche God loued her better then to graunte her bone, for then had she not been his wife. And alter that she was crouned quene, and her father was created Erle Riuers and her soonne created Marques Dorset. But when the Erle of [...]arwike vnderstoode of this maryage, he tooke it so highly, that therof ensued muche trouble and [...]ate blooddshed as is declared before in the storye of Edward the fourth.
I haue rehersed this mariage somewhat the [...] at length, because it might therby the better [...] vpon howe fleight aground the protectoure [...] coloure, by whiche he pretended kyng [...]ldren to bee bastardes, but the in [...]le as it was lyked theim to [Page lxvii] whom it suffyseth to haue somwhat to saye, whyle they were sure to bee compelled to no larger proffe then theim selues lyst to make.
Nowe to retourne where I lefte, as I beganne to shewe you, it was by the protectoure & his councell concluded that this doctour Shaa shoulde in a sermond at Paules crosse signifie to the people that neyther kyng Edward hym selfe ner the duke of Clarence were lawfullye begotten, nor were the very children of the duke of Yorke, but begotten vnlawfullye by other personnes by aduoutrye of the duches theyr mother. And dame Elizabeth Lucye was the very wyfe of kyng Edwarde, & so prynce Edward & all the chyldren begotten on the quene were bastardes. And accordyng to this deuyce, doctor Shaa y e sōday after at Paules crosse in a greate audience (as alwaye a greate nombre assembled to his preachyng) came into the pulpet takyng for his Theme. Spuria Vitulamina non dabunt radices altos. Sapiencie quarto. that is to saye: Bastarde slyppes shall neuer take depe rootes, whereupon when he had shewed the great grace that God geueth and secretlye infoundeth in right generacion after the lawes of matrymony: Then declared he that those chyldren commenlye lacked that grace (and for the punyshement of their parentes) were for the moste parte vnhappye whiche were gotten in baste, and speciallye in aduoutrye, of whiche (thoughe some by the ignorauncye of the worlde and the truthe hid from knowledge) haue enheryted for a season other mennes landes, yet God alwaye so prouydeth that it contynueth not in their bloodde longe, but the truthe commyng to [Page] lyght the rightfull enheritoures be restored, and the bastard slyppes plucked vp or it can bee rooted depe. And when he had layd for the proofe and confirmacion of this sentence, examples taken out of the olde testamente and other auncient historyes, then beganne he to discende to the prayse of lorde Richarde duke of Yorke, callyng hym father of the protectoure: and declared his tytle to the croune by inherytaunce, and also by an entayle autorysed by parliament after the death of kyng Henry the syxte. Then shewed he that the lorde protectoure was onlye the right heire of his body lawfullye begotten, then declared he that kynge Edward was neuer lawfully maryed to the quene but his wife before God was dame Elizabeth Lucye, and so his chyldren were bastardes. And besydes that, that neyther kyng Edwarde hym selfe nor the duke of Clarence (amongest theim y t wer secrete in the duke of Yorkes houshold) were neuer reconed surelye to bee the chyldren of the noble duke, as those that by their fauoures more resembled other knowen menne then hym, from whose verteous condicions he sayde also that kyng Edwarde was farre of. But the lorde pretectoure (ꝙ he) that veray noble prince, the specyall patrone of knightly prowes, aswell in all princely behaueour as in the lyniamentes and fauoure of his vysage representeth the veraye face of the noble duke his father. This is (ꝙ he) the fathers owne fygure, this is his owne countenaunce, y t very print of his vysage, the sure vndoubted ymage, y t playn expresse likenesse of y t nobble duke. Now was it before deuysed y t in the speakyng of these wordes, the [Page xlviii] protectour shuld haue come in amongest y e people to the sermond ward, to thende y t these woordes so metyng with his presence, might haue bene taken amongest the herers, as though the holye ghoste had put theim in the preachers mouthe, & shoulde haue moued the people euen there to haue cryed kyng Richard, that it might haue bene after sayde that he was specially chosen by God, and in maner by myracle, but this deuyce quayled eyther by the protectoures neglygence or the preachers ouer hasty dilygence. For whyle the protectoure founde by the waye tariynge leaste he shoulde haue preuented these woordes, the doctoure fearynge that he shoulde come or his sermon coulde come to those wordes hastyng his matter thereto, he was come to theim & paste theim, and entred into other matters or the protectoure came, whome when he behelde cōmyng, he sodenly left the matter whiche he had in hande, and without any deduccion therunto, out of al ordre and out of all frame beganne to repete those woordes agayne. This is the very noble prince, the especyall patrone of knyghtlye prowes, whyche aswell in all pryncely behaueoure as in the lyniamentes and fauoure of his vysage representeth the veraye face of the noble duke of Yorke his father. This is the fathers owne fygure, this is his owne countenaunce, the veraye prynte of his visage, the sure vndoubted ymage, the playne expresse lykenesse of that noble duke, whose remembraunce can neuer dye whyle he lyueth. Whyle these wordes were in speakynge the protectour accompanyed with the duke of Buckyngham, wente throughe the people vp into the [Page] place where the doctors stande and there hearde they out the sermond: but the people were so farre from cryenge kynge Richard that they stoode as they had bene turned into stones for wonder of this shamefull sermond, after whiche once ended the preacher gate him home and neuer after durst looke out, and when he asked any of his olde frendes, what the people talked of hym, although that his owne conscience well shewed hym that they talked no good, yet whē the other aunswered hym, that there was in euerye mannes mouthe of hym muche shame spoken, it so strake hym to his heart that in fewe dayes after he wythered awaye.
Then on the tuysdaye after nexte folowynge this sermonde, beeynge the. [...]vii. daye of Iune there came to the Guylde hal of London the duke of Buckyngham and dyuerse lordes and knightes mo then happely knewe the message that they brought. And at the east ende of the hall where the hoystynges be kepte, y t duke and the mayre and y e other lordes sate downe, and the aldermen also, all the commons of the cytee beyng assembled & standynge before theim. After sylence commaunded vpon a greate payne, in the protectoures name. The duke stoode vp, and as he was well learned and of nature meruel cously well spoken, he sayde The oration of y t duke of Buckynghā ▪ made [...]o the cy [...] of London. to the people wyth a cleare and a lowede voyce. Frendes, for the zeale and hertie fauoure that we beare you, we be come to breke of a matter ryghte great & weightie, and no lesse weyghtye then pleasyng to God and profitable to all the realme, nor to no part of y e realme more proffitable thē to you the cytezens of thys noble cytee. For why, the [Page lxix] thinge that you haue longe lacked and as we welknowe sore longed for, that you woulde haue geuen greate good for, that you woulde haue gone farre to fetche, that thyng bee we come hether to bring you, withoute youre laboure, payne, coste, aduentnre or ieopardy. What thing is that? Certes the suretie of youre owne bodies, the quiet of youre wiues and doughters and the sauegard of your goodes. Of all whiche thinges in times passed you stoode in doubte, for who was he of you al that coulde recone hym selfe Lorde of his owne good amongest so many gynnes and trappes as were set therfore, amonge so muche pilling & polling, amongest so many taxes and talliages, of y e which there was neuer ende, and oftimes no nede and yf any were, it grewe either of ryot or of vnreasonable waste then any necessarye honourable charge, so that there was daily plucked and pylled from good and honest menne great substaūce of goodes, to be lashed oute amonge vnthryftes, so farforth that fiftenes suffised not nor any vsual termes of knowen taxes, but vnder an easy name of beneuolence and good will, the cōmissioners so muche of euery manne tooke, as no manne would with his goo wyll haue geuen. As though y t name of beneuolence had signifyed, y t euery man should paye, not what he of hym self of his good will lust to graūt, but what y t Kyng of his good wyl lust to take, who neuer asked lytle, but euery thyng was haunsed aboue the measure, amercyamentes turned into fines, fines into raunsomes, small trespaces into misprision, misprision into treasō, wher of I thynke that no manne looketh that we shall [Page] remēbre of examples by name, as though Burder were forgotten that was for a woorde spoken, in hast cruelly behedded by the misconstruing of the lawes of the realme for the princes pleasure, with no lesse honoure to Merkam chiefe Iustice then (whiche loste his office rather then he would assēt to that iudgement) to the dishonestie of those that other for feare or flatterie gaue that iudgemente: what nede I to speake of Thomas Cooke Aldremanne & maire of this noble cytee, who is of you ether for negligence that wotteth not, or so forget full that he remēbreth not, or so heard harted that he petieth not that worshipful mannes losse? what speke I of losse, his wounderfull spoile and vndeserued distruccion, onely because it happed theim to fauoure hym whome the Prince fauoured not. We nede not reherse of these any mo by name, sith I doubte not y t here bee many presēt that either in theim selfes or their nyghe frendes, aswell their goodes as persones were greatly endaungered other by fained quarels or smal matters aggreued with heinous names, and also there was no crime so great of which there could lacke a pretexte. For sith the king preuenting y e time of his inheritaūce atteined the croune by battail, it suffised in a riche manne for a pretext of treason, to haue been of kinred or aliaunce, nor of familiarite or lenger of acquaintaunce w t any of those, y t wer at any time the kīges enemies, which was at one time or another more then halfe y e realme. Thus were nether your goodes, nether lādes, in suerte, & yet they brought your bodies in ieopardie, beside y t comen aduēture of opē war, which albeit, y t it is euer y t well & occasion [Page lxx] of much mischief, yet is it neuer so mischeuous as where any people fal in deuisiō, & at al distaūce among theim selues, & in no realme erthly so deadly and so pestylēt as when it happeneth amongest vs. And among vs neuer continued so long discē cion nor so many batailes in any season, nor so cruel nor so deadly foughtē, as wer in y t kinges daies y t dead is, god forgeue it his soule. In whose time and by whose occasiō, what about y t getting of the garland, keping it, lesing & winning again, it hath coste more English blood then hath the twise winning of Fraūce. In which inward war amongest our selues hath bene so great effusion of y • aunciēt noble blood of this realme, y t scacely the halfe remaineth, to y e great enfebling of this nobleland, beside many a good toune ransaked & spoiled by thē that haue been going to y t feld or retourning from thence, & peace after not much surer then war. So that no tyme was there in the which riche men for theyr money, & great men for their landes or some other, for some feare or for sōe displeasure wer out of perell. For whom mistrusted he y t mistrusted his owne brother? Whom spared he y t killed his owne brother? Could not such maner of folke y t he moste fauoured dooe somwhat (we shall for his honoure spare to speke) howbeit, this ye wote wel all, y t who so was best bare euer the least rule, & more suite in his daies was to Shores wife, a vile & abhominable strompet then to all the lordes in England, excepte vnto those that made her their Protectoure, which simple woman was yet wel named & honest tyll the Kynge for his luste and synfull affeceyon berefte her from her husband, a right honest man [Page] and substanciall amongest you. And in that point whiche in good fayth I am sorye to speake of, sauing that it is vayne to kepe in councell y t thyng that all menne knoweth, the kynges gredy appetite was insaciable, and euerye where ouer all the realme intollerable. For no womanne was there any where, younge or olde, poore or ryche, whome he set his iye vpon, whome he any thing liked eyther for persone or beautie, speche, pace or countenaunce, but without any feare of God, or respecte of his honoure, murmoure, or grudgyng of the worlde, he would importunately pursue his appe tite & haue her, to the great distruccion of many a good womanne, and greate doloure to theyr husbandes and frendes, whiche being honest people of theim selues, so much regarded the clennesse of their houses, the chastitee of their wiues and children, that theim were leuer to loose all y t they haue beside, then to haue suche a vilame done to theim. And albeit that w t this and other importable dealing, y e realme was in euery place anoyed, yet specially you the citezens of this noble citee, as for y t amongest you is moost plentie of suche thinges as minister matter to suche iniuries, as for y t you wer nerest hand, sith y t nere here about was his moost cōmon abidyng. And yet bee ye people whome he had as synguler a cause well and trewelye to intrete, as any parte of his realme, not only for that the Prynce by this noble citee, as of his speciall chaumbre and renoumed citee of this realme, muche honourable fame receaueth amongest all other nacyons, but also for that, you nowe withoute youre greate coste and sondrye fauoures [Page lxxxi] and ieopardyes in al his warres bare euer youre especyall fauoure to hys parte, whych your kynd myndes borne to y t house of Yorke, sith he hath no thīgworthely requited you, ther is of y t house now whyche by Goodes grace shall make you full recompence, which thyng to shew you, is the whole somme and effecte of oure errande. It shal not, I wote well nede, that I rehersed vnto you agayne that you all redy haue hearde of him that can bet ter tell it, and of whom I am sure ye wyll better beleue it (and reason it is that it so be) I am not so proude to loke therfore, that you shoulde receaue my wordes of so greate authorytee as the preachers of the worde of God, namely a man so connyng & so wyse, that no man wotteth better what he should do & say, and thereto so good and vertuous that he would not say the thynge, which he wyst he shoulde not saye in the pulpyt, namely, in to the whiche no honeste manne commeth to lye: which honourable preacher ye wel remember, substancyally declared to you at Poules crosse on sō daye laste past, the ryght and tytle of the most excellent prynce Rychard Duke of Glouceter nowe protectoure of thys hys realme whych he hath vn to the croune of the kingdome of the same. For y e worshipful man made yt perfytely and groundly open vnto you. The chyldren of kynge Edwarde the .iiii. wer neuer laufully begotten, for as much as the kynge (lyuyng hys very wyfe dame Elizabeth Lucy) was neuer laufully maried to y e quene theyr mother, whose blood sauyng he set hys volupteous pleasure before hys honour, was ful vn metely to be matched with his (the mynglyng of [Page] which two bloodes together hath bene the effusiō of a gret part of y e noble blod of this realme wher by it may well be sene, that mariage was not well made, of which ther is so much myschiefe growen For lacke of which laweful copulatiō & also of other thinges which y e sayd worshipful doctour, rather signified thē vtterly explaned, & which thing shall not be spoke for me, as the thing y t euery mā forbeareth to say y t he knoweth, in aduoiding y e dy spleasour y t my noble lorde protectour bearing as nature requireth a filiall reuerence to the duches his mother. For these causes before remembred I say y t for lack of yssue lawfully cōming of y e late noble prince Richard duke of york, to whose roial blod y e crownes of Englād & of Fraūce ar by high aucthoritee of parliament entayled, y e right & tytle of the same is by iuste course of enheritaūce according to y e comon law of this land, deuoluted & come vnto the moost excellent prince y e lord protectour, as to the very lawful begotten soonne of the fore remēbred noble duke of yorke, whiche thing wel cōsidered & y e knightly prowesse w t many vertues which in his noble person singulerly do habound: The nobles & comons of this realme, and specially of y t north partes, not willīg any bastard blood to haue the rule of the lād, nor the abusions in the same before vsed & exercised any lēger to cō tinue, haue fully condiscended & vtterly determyned to make hygh peticiō vnto y • puisaunt prince the lord protectour, y t it may lyke his grace at our humble request to take vpō him the guiding & go uernaūce of this realme, to y e welth & increase of y e same according to his very right & iust title, which [Page lxxii] thing I wote wel he wylbe loth to take vpon him as he whose wisdome wel perceueth, y e labour & study both of mynd & body y t shal come ther w t to hī, whosoeuer shal occupy y e rome. I dare say he wyl yf he take it (for I warrāte you y t that roome is no childes office) & y t the greate wise man wel perceaued whē he sayd Ve regno cuius rex puer est, wo to that realme whose king is a chylde wherefore, so much more cause haue we to thank god y t this noble personage, which is so righteously ētitled therto is of so sad age, & therto of so great wisdome ioyned w t so gret experiēce, which albeit, he wylbe loth to take vpon hī, yet shal he to our peticiō in y e behalfe y e more graciously encline, if ye the worshipful cytezins of this cite beyng the chefe cite of the realme ioyne w t vs the nobles in our sayd request, which for your owne weale we doubte not but y t ye wyll. And yet neuerthelesse, we pray you so to do, wherby ye shall do great profite to all this his realme. Beside that, in chosinge then so good a kinge, yt shalbe to your selfe a special commodite to whom his maiesty shal euer after, bear so much the more tender fauour, in how much he shal perceaue you the more prone and beneuolentlye mynded toward his eleccion, wherin dere frendes, what mynd you haue, we require you playnelye to shewe vs? Whē y e duke had said & loked y t the people whom he hoped y t the maire had framed before, should after this flatering p̄posicion made haue cryed kīg Richard, king Richard, all was styl & mute & not one word answered to: wher w t the duke was meruelously abashed and takyng the Mayre nere to him with other that were about hym preuy to the [Page] matter sayde vnto theim softelye. What meaneth this that the people be so styll? Sir ꝙ the Mayre percase they perceaue you not wel, y e shal we amēd ꝙ he yf that wyl helpe, & therwith somewhat lowder rehersed the same matter again, in other ordre & other wordes so well and ordinately, & neuerthelesse so euydently & plain, with voyce gesture and countenaunce so comely & so conuenient, that euery man muche marueiled y t heard hym, & thought that thei neuer hearde in their liues so euell a tale so well tolde. But wer it for wonder or for other, y e eache loked that other should speake fyrst, not one worde was there aunswered of all the people that stode before, but all were as styll as the midnight not so much as rounyng emong theim, by which they might seme once to commen what was beste to do. When the Mayre sawe this, he with other parteners of y e councel, drewe about the duke and said y t the people had not bene accustomed ther to bee spoken to but by the recorder, whyche is the mouth of the citee, & happly to hym they wyl aunswer. With that the recorder called Thomas Fize William a sad man & an honest, whiche was but newly come to the offyce & neuer had spoken to y e people before, & loth was with that matter to begyn, notwithstanding, therunto commaunded by the Mayre, made rehersall to the cōmons of that which the Duke had twyse purposed hys self but the recorder so tempered hys tale, that he shewed euery thyng as the Dukes wordes were, and no parte of his owne, but all this no chaūge made in the people, whych alwaye after one stoode as thei had bene amased. Whereupon the Duke rouned [Page lxxiii] with the mayre and said, this is a marueleous obstynate scylence, and therwith turned to the people again w t these woordes. Deare frendes, we come to moue you to that thyng whiche paraduenture we so greatly neded not, but that the lordes of this realme and commōs of other parties might haue sufficed sauyng suche loue we beare you, and so muche set by you that we would not gladly dooe with oute you, that thyng in whiche to bee parteners is your weale and honoure whiche as to vs semeth you se not or waye not. Wherfore we require you to geue vs an aūswer one or other, whether ye bee mynded as all the nobles of the realme bee, to haue this noble prince nowe protectoure to bee your kyng? And at these woordes the people beganne to whisper emong theim selfes secretlye, that the voyce was nether lowde nor base, but like a swarme of bees, till at the last at the nether ende of the halle a bushement of the dukes seruauntes and one Nashfeelde and other belongyng to the protectoure with some prentices and laddes that thrusted into the halle emongest the preace, began sodenly at mennes backes to crye, kyng Rychard, kyng Rychard, and there threwe vp their cappes in token of ioye, and thei that stoode before caste their heddes maruelyng therat, but nothyng thei saied. And when the duke and the mayre sawe this maner thei wisely turned it to their purpose, and saied it was a goodly crye & a ioifull to here euery manne with one voyce and no māne saiyng naye. Wherfore frendes (ꝙ the duke,) sith we perceaue that it is all your whole myndes to haue this noble manne for your kyng, wherof we shall make [Page] his grace effectuall report y t we doubte not but y t it shall redounde to your great wealth & cōmodite. We therfore requier you y t to morowe ye go with vs & we w t you to his noble grace to make humble peticiō & request to hym in maner before remē bred. And therwith the lordes came downe and y e cōpaignie dissolued & departed the more parte all sad, some with glad sembleaunce y e were not verye merie, and some of theim y t came with the duke, not hable to dissemble their sorowe, were faine euen at his backe to turne their face to the wall, while the doloure of their heartes brast oute of their y [...]es.
Then on the morowe the mayre & aldremen and chief commoners of y e citee in their best maner appareled, assēblyng theim together at Paules, resorted to Baynardes castel where y e ꝓtectour laye, to whiche place also accordyng to y e apointement repaired y e duke of Buckynghm̄ & dyuerse nobles w t hym, besydes many knightes & gētlemen. And therupon y t duke sent woord to y e lord protectoure of y e beyng there of a great honourable cōpaignie to moue a great matter to his grace. Wherupon y • protectoure made great difficultie to come downe to theim, excepte he knewe some part of their errād as though he doubted & partly mistrusted the commyng of suche a noumbre to hym so sodenly, w tout any warning or knowledge, whether thei came for good or harme Thē when y e duke had shewed this to y e mayre & other, that thei might therby se howe litle the protectoure looked for this matter, thei sēt again by y t messenger suche louyng message, & ther w t so humblie besought hym to vouchesalue y t thei might resorte to his presence to purpose their entēt [Page lxxiiii] of which thei would to none other persone disclose, at the last he came oute of his chaūbre, and yet not downe to theim, but in a galary ouer theim w t a bishop on euery hād of him, where thei beneth might se hym & speake to hym, as though he would not yet come nere theim till he wist what thei meant. And therupō the duke of Buckynghm̄ first made hūble peticiō to him on y e behalfe of theim all, y t his grace would pardone theim & licence theim to purpose vnto his grace thētent of their cōmyng w tout his displeasure, w tout whiche ꝑdone obteined, thei durst not bee so bold to moue hym of y t matter. In whiche, albeit thei meant asmuche honoure to his grace as wealth to al y e realme beside, yet were thei not sure howe his grace would take it, whom thei would in no wise offende. Then y e protectour, as he was verie gentle of hym self & also lōged sore apparaūtly to knowe what thei meāt, gaue him leaue to purpose what hym liked trustyng for y e good mind y t he bare theim all none of theim any thing would entend to hymward wherw t he thought to bee greued. Whē y e duke had this leaue & pardō to speake thē wexed he bold to shewe hym their entent & purpose, w t all y e causes mouyng theim therto as ye before haue hearde. And finally to beseche his grace y e it would like him of his accustomed goodnes [...]e & zeale vnto y e realme nowe w t his yie of pite to behold y e long cōtinued distresse & decaie of y esame, & to set his gracious hād to redresse & amēdemēt therof by takyng vpō hym y e croune & gouernaunce of y e realme accordyng to his right & title laufully discē ded vnto hym, & to y e laude of God, profite & surete of y e lād & vnto his grace so much y e more honour & [Page] lesse pain, in that that neuer prince reigned vpon any people that were so glad to liue vnder his obeysaunce as the people of this realme vnder his.
When the protectoure had hearde the preposicion, he looked very strangely thereat and made aunswer that albeit he knewe partely the thynges by theim alledged to be true, yet suche entiere loue he bare to kyng Edward and his children, and so muche more regarded his honoure in other realmes aboute, then the croune of any one, of whiche he was neuer desyrous, so that he could not fynde in his hearte in this poincte to incline to their desyre, for in all other nacions were y e truthe not well knowē, it should paraduenture be thought that it were his owne ambicious mynde and deuice to depose the prince and to take hym self y e croune, with whiche infamye he would in no wise haue his honoure steyned for any croune, in whiche he had neuer perchaunce perceaued muche more laboure & pain then pleasure to hym that so would vse it, as he that would not and were not worthy to haue it. Notwithstandyg, he not only perdoned theim the mocion that thei made hym, but also thāked theim for y e loue and hartie fauoure thei bare hym, praiyng theim for his sake to beare the same to y e prince vnder whome he was and would bee contente to liue and with his laboure and coūsaill as ferre as it should like the kyng to vse it, he would dooe his vttermost deuoyre to sette y e realme in good estate whiche was all readye in the tyme of his protectourship (lauded bee God,) well begonne, in that y e malice of suche as were before the occasion of the contrarie and of newe entended to bee, were nowe [Page lxxv] partely by good policie, partely more by Goddes specyall prouydence, then mannes prouysion repressed and put vnder.
Vpon this aunswer geuen, the duke of Buckyngham by the protectoures licence a lytle rounded, aswell with other noble menne about hym as with the mayre and recorder of Londō. And after that (vpon like perdon desyred & opteyned) he shewed alowde vnto the protectour, for a fynall conclusion that the realme was apoynted that kyng Edwardes lyne shoulde no lenger reygne vpon theim, bothe that they had so farre gone that it was nowe no suretie to retreate (as for that they thought it for the weale vnyuersall to take that waye, although they had not yet begon it.) Wherfore if it woulde like his grace to take the croune vpon hym, they would humbly beseche hym thervnto, and if he woulde geue theim a resolute aunswer to the contrarye (whiche they would bee lothe to here) then muste they seke and should not fayle to fynde some other noble man that would. These woordes muche moued the protectoure, whiche as euery manne of small intelligēce maye wyt would neuer haue enclyned thereto, but when he sawe there was none other waye but that he muste take it, or els he and his bothe to go from it, he sayde to the lordes and commōs, sith it is we perceaue well that all the realme is so set (whereof we be very sory) that they wyll not suffre in any wyse kyng Edwardes lyne to gouerne theim, whome no manne earthly can gouerne agaynste their owne wylles: And we also perceaue that no manne is there, to whome the croune can by so iuste tytle apperteyne [Page] as to our selfe, as very right heire lawfully begotten of the body of our moste dread and dere father Rychard late duke of Yorke, to which title is now ioyned your eleccion, the nobles & commōs of the realme, whiche we of all tytles possible take moste effectuall, we be content and agree fauourably to enclyne to your peticion & request, and accordyng to the same, here we take vpon vs the royall estate of prehemynence and kyngdome of the two noble realmes, Englande and Fraunce, the one frō this daye forwarde by vs and oure heyres to rule, gouerne and defende, the other by Goddes grace and your good helpe to get agayne, subdewe and establyshe for euer in due obedience vnto this realme of Englande, thaduauncement wherof we neuer as [...]e of God lenger to lyue then we entende to procure and set foorth. With this there was a greate crye and showte, criyng kyng Richard, and so the lordes went vp to the kyng, and so he was after y e daye called. But the people departed talkyng dyuersly of the matter, euery manne as his fantasie gaue hym, but muche thei merueled of this maner of dealyng, that the matter was on bothe partes made so straunge as thoughe neuer the one parte communed with the other parte therof before, whē they wyst that there was no man so dul that heard theim, but he perceaued well ynoughe that all the matter was made betwene theim: Howbeit, some excused that agayne, saiyng: all thyng muste bee done in good ordre, and men must sometyme for y e maner sake not be acknowē what thei knowe. For at the consecracion of a byshop, euery manne perceaueth by payment of his bulles that he entēdeth [Page lxxvi] to bee one, yet when he is twise asked whyther he wilbe a byshop, he must saye naye, and at the third tyme take it vpon hym as compelled therto by his owne wyll. And in a stage playe, the people knowe right well that he that playeth the sowdane is per case a sowter, yet yf one of acquayntaunce perchaunce of lytle nurture should call hym by his name while he standeth in his maiestie, one of his tourmentours might fortune breake his hed for marryng y e playe. And so they sayde, these matters be kynges games, as it were staige playes, and for the mooste parte played vpon scaffoldes, in which poore men be but lookers on, and they that wise be wyll medle no ferther, for they y e steppe vp w t theim whē they can not playe their partes they disorder the playe and do theim selues no good. ☞
¶ Rychard the third.
RYCHARD THE THIRDE of that name, vsurped the croune of England, and opē ly tooke vpō hym to be kyng the .xix. daye of Iune, in the yere of our Lord, a thousand foure hundreth and. lxxxiii, & in the .xxv. yere of Lewes the xi. then beyng Frenche kyng, and with greate solempnitee rode to Westmynster, and there sate in the seate royall, and called before hym the iudges of the realme, streyghtly commaundynge theim to execute the lawe without fauoure or delaye, with many good exhortacions (of the which he folowed not one) and then he departed towarde the abbaye and at the churche doore he was met with procession, and by the abbot to hym was delyuered the sceptre of saint Edward, & so went & offred to sant Edwardes shryne, whyle y e monkes sange Te deum with a faynt courage, and from the churche he retourned to the palayce, where he lodged tyll the coronacion. And to bee sure of all enemyes (as he thought) he sent for .v. thousande menne of y e north against his coronacion, whiche came vp euell apparelled and worsse harneyssed, in rustie harneys, neyther defensable nor scoured to the sale, whiche mustered in fynesoury felde, to the great disdayne of all the lokers on.
The fourth daye of Iuly he came to y e towre by [Page lxxvii] water with his wife, and the fyfte daye he created Thomas Lorde Haward, duke of Norffolke & syr Thomas Haward his soonne he created Earle of Surrey, and Willyam lorde Barkeley was then created erle of Notyngham, and Fraunces lorde Louell was then made Vicount Louell and the kynges chaumberlayne, and the lorde Stanley was deliuered out of warde for feare of his sonne the lorde Straunge, whiche was then in Lancasshyre gatheryng menne (as menne saied) and the saied lorde was made Stuard of the kynges hou sholde, like wyse the archbyshoppe of Yorke was deliuered, but Morton bishop of Ely was deliuered to the duke of Buckingham to kepe in warde whiche sent hym to his manoure of Brecknoke in Wales, from whence he escaped to kyng Richardes confusyon. The same nighte the kyng made .xvii. knightes of the bathe. The nexte day he rode throughe Londō with great pompe, & in especiall the duke of Buckinghā was richely appareled & his horse trapped in blewe veluet enbroudered w t y e naues of cartes burning of golde, whiche trapper was borne by footemē frō y e grounde, w t suche asolēpne fassyon y t all menne muche regarded it.
On y e morowe being the .vi. day of Iuly y e kyng came toward his coronaciō into Westminster hal where his chapell & all the prelates mytred receaued hym. And so they in ordre of processyon passed forward. After y e procession folowed therle of Nor thumberlād with a pointlesse sweard naked, & the lorde Stanley bare the Mace of y e constableship, The erle of Kent bare the second swerd on y e right hand of the kyng naked. The lord Louell bare an [Page] other swerd on y e lefte hand. Then folowed y e duke of Suffolke with the Sceptre, and therle of Lincolne with y e balle and crosse. After theim folowed the newe Erle of. Surrey with the swerd of estate in a riche skabard. On the ryght side of hym went the duke of Norffolke bearing y e croune, then folowed kyng Richard in a Circot and robe of purple veluet vnder a canable borne by the barones of y t fyue portes, going betwene y e bishoppes of Bathe and Duresme. The duke of Buckingham with y e rod of the high stuard of Englande bare the kynges traine. After hym folowed the erle of Hunting don, bearing the quenes sceptre, and the Vicount Li [...]e, bearing the rod with the doue. And the erle of Wilshere bare the quenes croune. Then folowed quene Anne doughter to Richard erle of War wike in robes lyke to the kyng, betwene two bysshoppes, and a canabie ouer her hed, borne by the Barones of the portes. On her hed a rich coronal set with stones and pearle. After her folowed the countesse of Richmond heire to y e duke of Somerset, whiche bare vp y e quenes traine. After folowed the duchesse of Suffolke and Norffolke with coū tesses baronesses, ladies, & many faire gentilwemē in this ordre they passed thorough the palaice & entred y e abbay at the west end, & so came to their seates of estate. And after diuerse sōges sol [...]ply song they both discended to the high altare & were shifted from their robes, & had diuerse places open frō the middle vpward, in whiche places they were anointed. Then both the kyng & the quene chaunged theim into cloth of gold & ascended to their seates, where the cardinal of Cauntourburie & other [Page lxxviii] byshoppes theim crouned according to y e custome of the realme, geuing hym y e scepter in the left hād and the balle w t the crosse in the ryght hand, & the quene had y e sceptre in her right hand, & the rod w t the doue in the left hand. On euery side of y e kyng stode a duke, & before hym stode therle of Surrey with the swerd in his handes. And on euery side of the quene stāding a bishop & a ladie kneling. The Cardinal song masse, & after paxe, the kyng & the quene discended, & before the high altare they wer bothe houseled w t one hoste, deuyded betwene thē After masse finished, they bothe offred at saint Edwardes shrine, & there the kyng lefte the croune of saint Edward, and put on his owne crowne. And so in ordre as they came, they departed to westminster hal, & so to their chambres for a ceasō, duryng which time the duke of Norffolke came into y e hal his horse traped to the ground in cloth of gold as high mershall, and voided the hall.
About .iiii. of y e clocke the kyng & quene entred the halle, and the kyng sate in the middle, and the quene on the left hand of the table, & on euery side of her stoode a countesse holding a clothe of pleasaunce, when she list to drinke. And on y e right hād of the kyng sat the byshop of Cauntourbury, the ladies sat all on one side in the middle of the hall. And at the table againste theim sat the Chauncelloure and all the lordes. At the table next the cupborde sate the Maire of London. And at the table behinde the lordes, sate the Barones of the portes And at the other bordes sate noble and worshypfull personages. When all persones wer sette, the the duke of Norffolke, earle Mershal, the earle of [Page] Surrey constale for that daye, the lorde Stanley lorde Steward, Sir willyam Hopton treasourer, and sir Thomas Percie comptroller came in and serued the kyng solemplye with one dishe of golde and another of syluer. And the quene all in gylte vessell, and the bishop all in siluer. At the seconde course came into y t hall, sir Robert Democke the kynges champion, making a proclamacion, that whosoeuer woulde saye that kyng Richarde was not lawfullye kyng, he woulde fight with hym at the vtteraunce, and threwe downe his gauntlet, & thē all the hall cried kyng Richard. And so he did in thre partes of the halle, and then one broughte hym a cup of wyne couered, & when he had dronke he caste oute the drinke, & departed with the cuppe After that the herauldes cryed alargesse thryse in the halle, & so went vp to their staige. At the ende of diner, the Mayre of London serued the kyng & quene with swete wyne, and had of eche of theim a cuppe of golde with a couer of gold. And by that tyme that all was done, it was darkenight. And so the kyng retourned to his chaumbre, and euery man to his lodging. When this feaste was thus fyneshed, the kyng sente home all the lordes into their countrees that woulde departe, excepte the lorde Stanley, whome he reteyned tyll he hearde what his soonne the lorde straunge wente aboute And to suche as wente home, he gaue streyghte charge and cōmaundement to see their countryes well ordred, and y t no wronge nor extorcion should bee done to his subiectes. And thus he taught other to execute iustice & equite, the contrary wherof he daylye exercysed, he also with greate rewardes [Page lxxix] geuen to the Northrenmenne whyche he sent for to hys coronation, sente theim home to theyre country wyth greate thanckes. Whereof dyuerse of theim, (as they all be of nature verye gredye of authoryte, and specyally whē they thynke to haue any conforte or fauoure,) tooke on them so hyghly and wroughte such mastreis, that y e kyng was fayne to ryde thether in hys fyrste yere, and to put some in execution, and staye the countrye, or elles no small myschechefe had ensued.
Nowe after thys tryumphante coronation, there fell myschiefes thycke & thicke, as the thing euell gotten is neuer well kepte, so through al the tyme of hys vsurped reygne, neuer ceased theyre quel, murder, death & slaughter tyll his owne destruccion ended it. But as he fynished w t the best deathe and mooste ryghtwyse, that is to saye hys owne, so beganne he wyth the moost pyteous and wycked, I meane the lamentable murther of his innocente nephewes, the yonge kynge and hys tender brother, whose death and fortune hath neuerthelesse so farre come in questyon that some remayned long in doubte whether they were in his dayes destroyed or not. For y t Parkin Warbek by many folkes malyce, & mo folkes folye so long space abusynge the worlde, was aswell w t prnceis as w t poore people reputed & taken for the younger of these two. But for that also that all thynges were so couertly demeaned, one thynge pretē ted and another mente, that there was nothynge so playne and openly proued, but that yet for the common custome of close and couert dealyng, mē [Page] had it euer inwardly suspect, as many well countrefet iewelles make the true mistrusted. Howbeit concernyng that opinion menne maye see the conueighaunce therof in the lyfe of the noble prynce kyng Henry the seuēth, in the processe of Parkyn. But in the meane ceason, for this present matter I shall reherse to you the dolorous ende of these two babes, not after euery way that I haue heard but after that waye that I haue so heard by suche menne and suche meanes as me thynketh it to be heard but it should be true.
Kyng Rychard after his coranacion, takynge Howe and after what maner the two sōnes of king Edward were destroyed. his waye to Gloucestre, to visyte in his newe honoure the toune, of whiche he bare the name of olde, deuysed as he roade to fulfyll that thynge which he before had intended. And forasmuche as his mynde gaue hym that his nephewes lyuyng, men woulde not recon that he coulde haue right to the realme, he thought therfore without delaye to ryd theim, as though the kyllyng of his kynsmen might ende his cause, and make hym kyndely kyng. Wherupon he sent Iohn Grene, whome he specially trusted, to syr Roberte Brakenburye constable of the towre, with a lettre and credence also, that the same Syr Robert in any wise should put the two chyldren to death. This Iohn Grene dyd his errand to Syr Robert Brakenbury knelyng before our ladye in the towre, who playnelye aūswered that he would neuer put theim to death to dye therfore. With the whiche aunswer Grene returned, recountyng the same to kynge Rycharde at Warwike yet on his iourneye, wherewith he toke suche displeasure & thought, y t the same night [Page lxxx] he sayed to a secrete page of his. Ah, whome shall a manne truste? they that I haue broughte vp my selfe, they that I went would haue moste surely serued me, euen those fayle me, and at my cōmaundement wyll doo nothing for me. Syr ꝙ the page, there lyeth one in y e palet chaumbre without, that I dare well saye, to dooe youre grace pleasure, the thing were ryght heard that he would refuse, meaning this by Iames Tirell, whiche was a manne of goodly personage, and for the gyftes of nature worthie to haue serued a muche better prince, if he had well serued God, and by grace obteyned to haue asmuche treweth and good wyll, as he had strengthe and wyll.
The manne had an hyghe hearte and sore longed vpwarde, not risyng yet so faste as he had hoped, beynge hyndred and kepte vnder by syr Rycharde Ratcliffe and sir willyam Catesbye, which longing for nō more parteners of the Princes fauoure, namely not for him, whose pride they knew woulde beare no pere, kept hym by secrete driftes oute of all secrete trust, which thing this page had well marked and knowen, wherfore, this occasion offred, of verye speciall frendshippe se his tyme to set hym forwarde, and by suche wyse to dooe hym good, that all the enemies that he had (excepte the deuell) coulde neuer haue dooen hym so muche hurte and shame, for vpon the pages woordes kynge Rycharde aroose, for this communicacyon had he sytting on a drafte, a conuenyente carpet for suche a counsaile, and came oute into the palette chaumbre, where he dyd fynde in bedde [Page] the sayd Iames Tyrell and syr Thomas Tyrell of persone like and brethren of blood, but nothyng of kynne in condicions. Then sayde y e kyng merely to theim, what syrs, be you in bed so sone? & called vp Iames Tyrrell, and brake to hym secretely his mynde in this myscheuous matter, in y e which he foūde hym nothyng straunge. Wherfore on the morowe he sent hym to Brakenburye with a lettre by the whiche he was commaunded to delyuer to the sayde Iames all the keyes of the towre for a night, to thende that he might there accomplyshe the kynges pleasure in suche thynges as he there had geuen hym in commaundement. After which lettre delyuered and the keyes receaued, Iames appoynted the nexte nyght ensuynge to destroye theim, deuysyng before & preparyng the meanes.
The prince assone as the protectoure tooke vpō hym to bee kyng, and left the name of protectoure, was therof aduertised and shewed, that he should not reygne but his vncle should haue the croune At whiche woorde the prynce sore abashed beganne to sighe and sayed: Alas I woulde myne vncle woulde lette my haue me lyfe althoughe I lese my kyngdome. Then he that tolde hym the tale vsed hym with good woordes and put hym in the best conforte that he coulde, but foorthwith he and his brother were both shut vp, and all other remoued from theim, one called blacke Wyll, and wyllyam slaughter only excepte, whiche were sette to serue theim, and .iiii. other to see theim sure. After whiche tyme, the prince neuer tyed his poyntes nor any thyng rought of hym selfe, but with that young babe his brother lyngered in thought and [Page lxxxi] heueuysse, till these trayterous death deliuered theim of that wretchednesse.
For Iames Tirrell deuised that thei should be murthered in their beddes, and no bloode shed, to thexecuciō wherof he apoincted Myles Forest one of the foure that before kepte theim, a feloe fleshe bred in murther before tyme: and to him he ioyned one Ihon Dighton his awne horskeper, a bygge broade square & strong knaue. Then all the other beyng remoued from theim, this Myles Forest & Ihon Dighton aboute mydnight the children beyng in their beddes, came into the chaumbre and The murtherynge of kynge Edward his chyldren. sodenly lapped theim vp emongest the clothes & so bewrapped theim and entangled theim, kepyng downe by force the fetherbed and pyllowes heard vnto their mouthes, y t within awhile thei smored and styfled theim, and their brethes faylyng thei gaue vp to God their innocent soules into y e ioyes of heauen, leauyng to the tourmētoures their bodyes dedde in the bed, whiche after y e wretches perceaued, first by y t strugglyng, with y e panges of dea the, & after long liyng still to be throughly dedde, thei laied the bodyes out vpon y e bed, and fetched Iames Tirrell to se theim, whiche when he sawe theim perfightly ded, he caused the murtherers to burie theim at the stayre foote metely depe in the grounde vnder a greate heape of stones.
Thē rode Iames Tirrell in great hast to kyng Rychard and shewed hym all the maner of y e murther, who gaue hym greate thankes, and as mēne saye, there made hym knight, but he alowed not their buriall in so vyle a corner, saiyng y t he would haue theim buryed in a better place, because thei [Page] were a kynges soonnes. Lo the honourable courage of a kyng, for he would recompence a detestable murther with a solempne obsequy. Wherupō a preest of sir Robert Brakenburyes tooke theim vp and buried theim in suche a place secretly as by the occasion of his death (whiche was verie shortlye after) whiche onely knewe it, the very truthe could neuer yet bee very well & perfighly knowen For some saie that kyng Rychard caused y t preest to take theim vp & close theim in lead & put theim in a coffine full of holes hoked at y e endes with .ii. hokes of yron, & so to caste them into a place called y e Blacke depes at y e thamis mouth, so y t thei shuld neuer rise vp nor bee seen again. This was y e very truth vnknowē by reason that y e said preste dyed so shortly & disclosed it neuer to any persone y e would vtter it. And for a truthe, when sir Iames Tirrell was in the towre for treason committed to kyng Hēry the seuenth: bothe he and Dighton were examined together of this poynte, & bothe thei confessed the murther to bee dooen in thesame maner as you haue hearde, whether y e bodies were remoued thei bothe affirmed thei neuer knewe. And thus as I haue learned of theim y t muche knewe and litle cause had to lye, wer these .ii. noble princes, these innocēt tēdre childrē, borne of y e moste royall blood & brought vp ī great welth, likely lōge to liue, to reigne & rule in y t realme, by treyterous tirāny taken & depriued of their estate, shortly shut vp in prison & priuely slain & murderd by y e cruell ambicion of their vnnaturall vncle & dispiteous tourmētours whiche thynges on euery part well pōdered, God gaue this worlde neuer a more notable exsample, [Page lxxxii] either ī what vnsurety stādeth this worldes weale or what mischief worketh y e proud entreprise of an high hearte, or finally what wretched ende ensueth suche dispiteous crueltie? For first to begynne w t y e ministres, Miles Forest, at s. Martines le graūd by peace meale miserablye rotted awaye, Ihon Dightō liued at Caleys long after, no lesse disdeined & hated then poynted at, & there dyed in great misery. But sir Iames Tirrell was behedded at the towre hill for treason. And kyng Richard hymself was slain in y e feelde hacked and hewed of his enemies handes, haried on a horsbacke naked beyng ded, his heare in dispite torne & tugged like a curre dogge. And the mischeif y t he toke w t in lesse then thre yeres, of the mischief y t he did in thre monethes be not comperable, & yet all y e meane tyme spēt in much trouble & pein outward, & much feare dread & anguish w t in. For I haue heard by credible persons of suche as were secret w t his chaūberers y t after this abhominable dede dooē he neuer was quiet in his minde, he neuer thought hymself sure where he wēt abrode, his bodie preuely feinted, his eyen wherled about, his hand euer on his dagger his countenaunce & maner like alwayes to stryke again, he toke eiuill rest on nightes, laye long wakyng & musyng, forweried with care & watche, rather slōbred thē slept, troubled w t fearfull dreames sodeinly some tyme stert vp, leapt out of his bed & and looked aboute the chambres, so was his restlesse hearte contynually tossed and tou [...]bled with the tedious inpression & stormy remēbraūce of his abhomynable murther and exreable tirannie.
And shortely after he was vnquieted by a conspiracie, [Page] or rather a confederacie betwene the duke of Buckynghm̄ & many other gentlemen against hym, as ye shall here the next yere. But the occasiō why the duke and the kyng fell oute, is of dyuerse folke dyuerse wyse pretended. This duke as you haue hearde before, assone as the duke of Gloucester after the death of kyng Edward was come to Yorke, & there had solempne funerall seruice dooen for kyng Edward, sent to hym a secrete seruaunt of his called Persall, with suche messages as you haue hearde before. And after y e duke of Buckyngham came with thre hundred horsse to Northampton and still continued with hym, as partener and chief organe of all his deuices till after his coronacion, thei departed to all semyng verye frendes at Gloucestre. From whence assone as the duke came home, he so highly turned from hym and so highly conspired against hym, that a māne would meruell wherof y e chaūge grewe in so shorte space. Some saie this occasyon was, y t a litle before y t coronacion, y e duke required the kyng emōgest other thrnges to bee restored to the Erle of Herffordes lāoes. And forasmuche as the title whiche he claymed by inherytaunce, was somewhat interlaced with the title of Lancaster, whiche house made a title to the croune, and enioyed thesame three dyscentes, as all menne knewe, till the house of Yorke depryued the third kyng, whiche was Henry the sixte. Kyng Rychard somewhat mistrusted & conceaued suche an indignacion that he reiected the dukes request, with many spitefull and minotary woordes, whiche so wounded the dukes hearte w t hatred and mistrust, that he could neuer after endure [Page lxxxiii] to looke ryght on kyng Rychard, but euer feared his owne lyfe, so farrefoorth that when the protectoure should ryde to his coronacion, feigned hymselfe sycke, because he would dooe hym no honoure. And the other takyng it in euell parte sente hym woorde to ryse and ryde or he would make hym to be caryed. Wherupō gorgeously apparelled and sumpteously trapped with burnyng carte naues of golde embrodered, he roade before the kyng through London with an euell wyll and woorsse heart. And y t notwithstandyng, he roase y e daye of the coronacion from the feaste, feignyng hym selfe sycke, whiche kyng Richarde sayde was dooē in hate and spight of hym. And therfore men sayd that eche of theim euer after lyued cōtynually in suche hatred and dystrust of other, that the duke looked verelye to haue bene murthered at Gloucestre, frō whiche he in fayre maner departed but surely suche as were right secrete with bothe, affyrme all this to be vntrue, and other wyse mēne thynke it vnlykely, the depe dyssymulyng nature of bothe these menne well consydered. And what nede in that grene world the protectoure hadde of the duke, and in what perell the duke stoode yf he fell once in suspycion of that tyraunte, that other y e protectoure would geue the duke occasyon of dyspleasure, or the duke the protectoure occasyon of mystrust. And surely menne thynke, that if kyng Rychard hadde any suche opynyon conceaued in hym, he would neuer haue suffred hym to aduoyd his handes or escape his power, but verye true it is, that the duke of Buckyngham was an high mynded man, & euell could beare the glorye of another, [Page] so that I haue hearde of some that sawe it y t he at suche tyme that the croune was set vpon the protectoures hedde, his yie could neuer abyde the sight therof, but wryed his hed another waye, but men sayde he was not well at ease, and that was both to kyng Richard well knowen and well takē nor any demaunde of the dukes request vncurteously reiected, but gentelye deferred, but bothe he with greate giftes and high behestes in moste louyng and trustie maner departed from the kyng to Gloucester. But sone after his commyng home to Brecknocke, hauyng there by kyng Richardes commaundemēt doctour Moorton byshop of Ely who before as you haue hearde was taken at the councell at the towre, waxed with hym very famylyer, whose onlye wysedome abused his pryde to his owne delyueraunce & the dukes dystruccion. The byshop was a man of great natural wyt, verye well learned and of honourable behaueoure, lackyng no wyse wayes to wynne fauour. He was fyrst vpon the parte of kyng Henry, whyle y t parte was in wealth, and neyther left it nor forsoke it in no woo, but fled the realme with the quene and the prince. And while kyng Edward had kyng Henry in pryson, he neuer retourned but to the felde at Barner. After whiche felde loste & vtterly subdued & al parte takynges extynguished, kyng Edward for his fast faythe and wysedome, was not onelye cōtent to receaue hym but also wooed hym to come and had hym frō thensforth both in secrete trust & specyall fauoure, whom he nothyng deceaued. For he beyng after kyng Edwardes death fyrst taken by the tyraunt for his truthe to the kynge, founde [Page lxxxiii] meane to sette the duke in his toppe, and ioyned gentlemen together in ayde of the erle of Richemounde, whiche after was named kyng Henrye the seuenth. Fyrst deuysyng the maryage betwene the ladye Elizabeth daughter to kynge Edwarde the fourthe, by the whiche, his faythfull & true seruyce declared to both his masters at once, was, w t infinite benefite to y e realme, by the coniunccion of the bloddes of Lancastre and Yorke, whose funerall tytles had longe inquyeted the realme. This manne afterwarde escaped from the duke and [...]d the realme, and went to Rome, neuer myndyng to medle with the worlde, tyl kyng henry the seuenth sent for hym, and after made hym archebyshop of Cauntorbury and chauncelour of Englande and after was made cardinall, and lyued well to all mennes iudgementes and dyed well. But to retourne to y e former purpose, he by the long & often alternate proffe, aswel of prosperytee as aduerse of fortune, had gotten by great experience the verey mother & mastresse of wysedome, a depe insight in pollytike worldlye driftes, whereby perceauynge nowe y e duke to cōmen with hym, fed hym w t fayre woordes and many pleasaunt prayses, and perceauyng by the grefe of their communicacions the dukes pryde nowe and then to balke oute a lytle brayde of enuye towarde the glorye of the kynge, and thereby feelynge hym easye to fall oute yf the matter were well handled, he craftely soughte the wayes to prycke hym forwarde, takynge alwayes the occasyon of hys commynge, and also keepynge hymselfe cloose wythin hys bandes, that he rather semed to folowe hym then to [Page] leade hym. For when the duke beganne fyrste to prayse and boaste the kyng and shewe how muche profite the realme should take by his reigne. Byshoppe Morton aunswered, surely my lorde, folye it were for me to lye, for I am sure yf I woulde swere the contrarye ye would not once beleue me, but yf the worlde would haue begone as I would haue wyshed, that kyng Henryes soonne had had the croune and not kynge Edwarde, then woulde I haue bene his true and faythfull subiecte, but after that God had ordeyned hym to lose it, and kyng Edwarde to reigne, I was neuer so madde with a dead manne to stryue agaynst the quycke, so was I euer to kynge Edwarde a faythfull and true chapeleyn, and gladde would haue bene that his chyldren shoulde haue succeded hym, howbeit yf the secrete iudgemente of God haue otherwyse prouyded, I purpose not to spurne agaynste the prycke, nor laboure to set vp that God pulleth downe. And as for the late protectoure and nowe kyng, and with that woorde he left, sauynge that he saide that he hadde alreadye medled to muche with the worlde, and would from that daye medle with his booke and bedes, and no ferther. Then longed the duke sore to heare what he woulde haue sayde, because he ended with the kynge, and there so sodeynlye stopped, and exhorted hym famylyerly, betwene theim bothe to bee bolde and to saye whatsoeuer he thought, whereof he faythfullye promysed there shoulde neuer come hurte, and paraduenture more good then he woulde were. And that he hym selfe entended to vse hys faythfull secrete aduyce and counsayle, which [Page lxxxv] he sayed was the onlye cause for the whyche he procured of the kynge to haue hym in hys custodye, where he myghte recon hym selfe at home, or elles he hadde bene putte in the handes of theim wyth whome he shoulde not haue founde lyke fauoure. The bishoppe right humblye thanked hym and sayed, in good faythe my lorde, I loue not muche to talke of prynces as of a thynge not all oute of perell, althoughe the woorde bee without faute, but as it pleaseth the prince to construe it. And euer I thynke on Isopes tale, that when the Lyon had proclaymed that on payne of deathe there shoulde no horned beastes come into the wood, one beaste that had a bonche of fleshe growing oute of his hedde, fledde a greate pace: y e Foxe that sawe hym flye with all the haste, asked hym whether he fledde? In fayth ꝙ he, I neither wote ne recke so I were once hence, because of the proclamacyon made agaynste horned beastes.
What foole ꝙ the foxe, the Lyon neuer ment it by the, for that whiche thou haste is no horne in thy hedde. No mary ꝙ he, I wote that well ynoughe, but yf he saye it is a horne, where am I then? The duke laughed merely at the tale & saied, my lorde I warraunte you, neither the Lyon nor the bore shall pycke any matter at any thyng here spoken, for it shall neuer come nere their cares. In good faythe syr saied the Byshoppe, yf it dyd, the thyng that I was aboute to saye taken aswell as before God I mente, it coulde deserue but thanke, and yet taken as I wene it would, myghte happen to turne me to lytle good and you to lesse.
Then longed the duke muche more to were what [Page] it was, wherupon the byshop saied. In good faith my lord, as for the late protectoure, [...]ith he is now kyng in possessyon I purpose not to dispute his title, but for the welthe of this realme, whereof his grace hathe nowe the gouernaunce, and wherof I my selfe am a poore membre, I was aboute to wysh that to those good habilitees wherof he hath already righte many, litle nedyng my prayse, yet mighte it haue pleased God for the better store to haue geuen hym some of suche other excellent vertues mete for the rule of the realme, as oure Lord hath planted in the persone of your grace, & there lefte of againe. Of whiche woordes the duke perceauyng that the byshop bare vnto hym his good hearte and fauoure, mystrusted not to entre more plaine cōmunicacion with hym, so farre, that at y e laste the byshoppe declared hym selfe to bee one of theim that would gladly helpe that Richard who then vsurped the croune mighte bee deposed, if he had knowen howe it myghte conuenientely bee broughte to passe y e suche a persone as had true title of inheritaunce vnto the same, might bee restored therunto. Vpon this the saied duke, knowing the bishoppe to bee a manne of prudence and fidelitee opened to hym all his whole hart and entent saying, my lorde I haue deuised y e waye howe the bloodde both of kyng Edward and of kyng Henry the syxte, that is lefte, beyng coupled by maryage and affinitee maye bee restored vnto y e croune being by iuste and true title due vnto theim both, (for kyng Richard he called not y e brother of kyng Edwarde the fourth, but his enemye and mortall fooe). The waye that the Duke had deuysed was [Page lxxxvi] this, that they shoulde with all spede and celerytee fynde meanes to sende for Henry earle of Rich mounte (whome the rumoure wente immediatlye vpon knowledge of kynge Edwardes deathe to haue bene deliuered oute of prysone with Fraunces Duke of Brytaine) & the same Henry to helpe with all their power and strength, so that the saied Henry woulde fyrste by his feithfull othe, promise that ymmediatly vpon obteigning the croune, he woulde mary and take to wyfe Elyzabeth the elder doughter of Edward the fourth. The byshop of Ely ryghte well alowed bothe the deuyce and purpose of the duke, and also the maner and waye howe the matter shoulde bee broughte to effecte, and founde meanes that Reynold Breye seruaūr with Margarete mother of the saied Henry, then maried to Thomas Stanley, came to the duke in to Wales, and the dukes mynde throughlye perceaued and knowen, with greate spede retourned to the saied Margarete, aduertisyng the same of all thinges which betwene the duke and hym concerning aswell the cōmon weale of the realme, as also the aduauncemente of her and her bloodde had been debated.
Nowe it came so to passe that the duke of Buckyngham and the ladye Margaret mother to the saied Henrye, had bene in communicacyon of the same matter before, and that the saied lady Margarete had deuised the same meane and waye for the deposycion of kynge Rycharde and bringyng in of Henry her sonne, the whiche the Duke nowe brake vnto the byshop of Ely, wherupon the [...]e rested no more, forasmuche as she perceaued y e duke [Page] nowe willyng to prosecute and further the sayed deuice, but that she should fynde the meanes that this matter myghte bee broken vnto Quene Elizabeth the wyfe of kyng Edwade the fourthe then beynge in the Sanctuarye. And hereupon she caused one Lewes that was her physicyan in his owne name, and as thoughe it came of hym selfe to breake this matter vnto the quene, saying, that yf she would consent and agree therunto, a meane might bee founde howe to restore agayne y e blood of kyng Edwarde and kyng Henrye the syxte vnto the croune, and to bee aduenged of kynge Rycharde for the murther of kyng Edwardes chyldren, and then declared that there was beyonde y t see Henry Earle of Richemounte, whiche was of the blood of Henry the sixte, whome yf she woulde be content y t he marye Elizabeth her eldest doughter, there shoulde of his syde bee made righte many frendes, and she for her parte myghte helpe in lyke maner, wherby no doubte it shoulde come to passe that he shoulde possesse the croune by moost rightfull inheritaunce. Whiche matter when she heard it, it liked her excedingly well, in so much as she counceled the saied phisicyan to breake y e same vnto his maistresse the ladye Margaret & knowe her mynde therein, promisyng vpon her woorde that she would make all the frendes of kyng Edwarde to take parte with the sayed Henrye yf he woulde be sworne that when he came to the possessyon of the croune, he woulde immediately take in maryage Elyzabeth her eldest doughter, or elles yf she lyued not that tyme, that then he would take Cicile her yongest doughter
[Page ixxvii] Whereupon the sayde Lewes retourned vnto the ladye Margarete hys maystresse declarynge vnto her the whole mynd and entent of the quene So that thē it was shortly agreed betwene these two wemen, that wyth al spede thys matter shold be set forwarde, in so much that the lady Margarete brake thys matter vnto Reynolde Bray wyllynge hym to moue and set forwarde the same w t all suche as he shoulde perceaue eyther hable to doo good or wyllynge thereunto. Then had the quene deuysed, that one Chrystopher (whome the foresayde Lewes the Physicyan had promoted into her seruyce) shoulde bee sente into Brytayne to Henrye to geue hym knowledge of theyr myndes here, and that he shoulde prepare and apoynt hym selfe redye and to come into Wales, where he shoulde fynde ayde and helpe ynonghe readye to receaue hym.
But then shortly after yt came vnto her knowledge that the Duke of Buckingham had of himselfe afore entended the same matter, whereupon she thoughte yt should be mete to sende some messenger of more reputacyon and credyte then was thys Chrystopher, and so kepte hym at home, and then sente Hughe Conewaye wyth a greate some of monye, wyllynge hym to declare vnto Henrye all thynges, and that he should hast hym to come and to lande in Wales as is aforesayde. And after hym one Rycharde Guilforde oute of Kente sente one Thomas Ramey wyth the same message, the whyche two messengers came in maner bothe at one tyme into Brytayn to the Earle Henrye, and declared vnto hym all theyr commyssiōs [Page] The whiche message when Henry had perceaued and throughly heard, it reioysed his harte, and he gaue thankes vnto God fully purposyng with al conuenyente spede to take his iourney towardes England, desiryng the aide and helpe of the duke of Brytayne, with promise of thanckfull recompence when God should sende hym to come to his ryghte. The duke of Britayne notwithstanding that he had not longe after been required by Thomas Hutton purposely sent to hym from kyng Richard in message with monye efte sones to imprisone the saied Henry erle of Richemoūt, and there continually to kepe and holde the same frome cō minge into Englande, yet with all gladnesse and fauoure inclined to the desyre of Henry and aided hym as he might with menne, monye, shypes and other necessaryes. But Henry whyle he might accordynglye appoynte and furnyshe hym selfe, remayned in Brytayne sendyng afore the foresayde Hughe Coneway and Thomas Ramney, whiche two were to hym very trewe and faithful to beare tidynges into Englande vnto his frendes of his commynge, to the ende that they myghte prouydentlye ordre all thynges aswell for the commodyous receauynge of hym at his comminge, as also foreseynge suche daungers as myghte befalle, and aduoydinge suche trappes and snares as by Rycharde the thyrde and hys complyces myght bee sette for hym and for all his other company that he should bryng with hym.
In the meane tyme, the frendes of Henrye with all care, studye, and dilygence wroughte all thynges vnto their purpose belongynge. [Page xxxviii] And thoughe all this were as secretlye wrought and conueyed as emonge so greate a nombre was possible to be, yet pryuye knowledge therof came to the eares of kyng Rychard, who althoughe he were at the firste hearynge muche abasshed, yet thought best to dyssemble the matter as thoughe he had no knowledge therof, whyle he myghte secretly gather vnto hym power and strengthe, and by secrete spyall emonge the people get more perfyght knowledge of the whole matters and chiefe autoures & contryuers of the same. And because he knewe be chiefe & princypal of theim, as vnto whō his owne conscience knewe that he hadde geuen moste iust causes of enemytee, he thought it necessary first of all to dyspatche the same duke oute of the waye. Wherfore, vnto the duke he addressed letters enfarced and replenyshed with all humanytee, frendshippe, famylyaritee and swetenesse of woordes, wyllyng and desyryng the same to come vnto hym with all conuenyent spede. And ferther gaue in commaundemente to the messenger that caryed the letters that he shoulde in his behalfe make many high and gaye promyses vnto y e duke & by all gentle meanes persuade the same to come vnto hym. But y e duke mystrustyng y e fayre woordes & promyses so sodenly offred of hym, of whose wylye craftes and meanes he knewe sondrye exsamples afore practised, desyred y e kynges perdon, excusyng him self that he was deseased & sicke, and that he might be asserteined y e if it possyble wer for hym to come, he would not absent hym self frō his grace. Thys excuse the kyng would not admitte, but eftsones directed vnto y e duke other letters of [Page] a more roughe sorte, not wythoute manacynge and threatenynge onlesse he woulde accordynge to hys dutye repayer vnto hym at hys callynge whereunto the duke plainely made aunswer that he woulde not come vnto him whom he knewe to be hys enemye. And immedyatelye the duke prepared hym selfe to make warre agaynst hym, and perswaded all hys complyces and partakers of hys intente wyth all possyble expedycion some in one place and some in another to sturre agaynste kynge Rycharde. And by thys meanes in maner at one tyme and houre, Thomas Marques of Dorcester reysed an armye wythin the country of Yorke, beyng hym selfe late come forthe of sāctuarye and by the meanes and helpe of Thomas Rowell preserued and saued frome perel of death Also in Deuonshyre, Edwarde Courtenay wyth hys brother Peter byshoppe of Excetter reysed in lyke maner an armye, and in Kent Rychard Guyl ford accompanied wyth certayn other gentylmen caysed vp the people as is a foresayde, & all thys was done in maner in one moment. But the king who had in y e meane tyme gathered together gret power & strēgth thynkyng yt not to be best by pursuyng euery one of hys enemyes to dysparkle hys cōpaygnie in smal flokes, determyned to let passe all the others, & withal his whole puisaunce to set vpon the chiefe heade, that is to saye the Duke of Buckynghm̄, so takyng his iourneye from Londō he went towardes Salisbury to thentent that he might sette vpon y e said duke in case he might haue perfight knowledge that y e same laye in any felde embatailed. And nowe was the kyng within twoo [Page lxxxix] dayes iourney of Salisbury when y e duke attempted to mete hym, beyng accompaignied with great strength of Welshmen, whom he had therunto en forced & coherted, more by lordly commaundement then by lyberall wages and hyre, whiche thyng in deede was y e cause that thei fell from hym and forsooke hym. Wherfore beyng sodenly forsaken of his menne, he was of necessite constrained to flee in whiche dooyng, as a manne cast in sodeine, and therfore greate feare, of this the sodeine chaunge of fortune, & by reason of thesame feare, not knowyng where to become, nor where to hyde his hed nor what in suche case best to dooe, he secretly conueighed hym self into the hous of Homffraye Banastar, in whom he had conceaued a sure hope and confidence to finde faithfull and trustie vnto hym because thesame had been & thē was his seruaunt, entendyng there to remayne in secrete, vntill he might either reise a newe armie or els by some meanes cōueigh hym self into Brytein to Henry erle of Rychemount. But assone as theothers whiche had attempted thesame entrepryse against y e kyng had knowledge that the duke was forsaken of his compaignie and fled and could not bee foūde, thei beyng stryken with sodein feare, made euery māne for hym self suche shift as he might, and beyng in vtter despayre of their health and life, either gotte theim to sāctuaryes or deserte places or els assaied to escape ouer sea, & many of theim in deede arryued sauely in Britain, emong whom were these whose names ensue. Peter Curteney bishop of Exceter with his brother Edward erle of Deuonshire, Thomas marques of Dorcestre with his [Page] soonne Thomas beyng a verye yoūg chylde, Ihō Bourshere, Ihon Welshe, Edward Wooduyle a stoute manne of armes and brother to Elizabeth the quene, Robert Willoughby, Gyles Dawbeneye, Thomas Harondell, Ihon Cheiny with his twoo brethren, Wyllyam Berkeley, Wyllyam Brandō with Thomas his brother, Rychard Edgecome, and all these for the moste parte knightes Also Ihon Halwell, Edwarde Poyntz an excellēt good capitain & Christopher Vrswicke, but Ihon Moorton bishop of Ely at theself same tyme together with sondrye of the nobles and gentlemen sailed into Flaundres.
But Richard the kyng, who was nowe come to Salisbury and had gotten perfight knowledge that all these parties sought to slie the realme, with all dyligence and hast that might bee, sent to all y e porte tounes theraboute to make sure steye that none of theim might passe vntaken, and made proclamacion y t whosoeuer would bryng hym knowledge where the duke of Buckynghm were to bee had, should haue for his rewarde, if he were a bō deman, his frebome, and if he were fre, his pardon and besydes that, a thousand pounde of moneye.
Furthermore because he vnderstode by Thomas Hutton newely retourned oute of Britein, of whom afore is mencioned, that Fraunces duke of Brytain, would not onelye holde Henry Erle of Rychmount in prisone for his sake, but also was readie to helpe thesame Henry with menne, money and shippes in all that he might against hym, he sette dyuerse and sondry shippes in places conuenyent by all the seacostes to Brytain ward, that if [Page xc] Henry should come that waye, he might either bee taken before his arriuall or els might bee kept frō landyng in any coaste of England. And furthermore in euerie coaste and corner of y e realme, laied wondrefull wayte and watche to take partely any other of his enemies, and specially thesaid duke of Buckynghm̄. Wherupon thesaid Homffrey Banaster (were it for mede or for losyng his life and goodes,) disclosed. hym vnto the kynges inquysy [...]ours, who ymediatly tooke hym and foorthwith all, brought hym to Salisbury where kyng Rychard was. The duke beyng dylygently examined vttred without any maner refusall or styckyng all suche thynges as he knewe, trustyng that for his plain confession he should haue lybertee to speake with the kyng, whiche he made moste instaūt and humble peticion that he might dooe. But assone as he had cōfessed his offence towardes kyng Rychard, he was oute of hande behedded. And this death y e duke receaued at the handes of kyng Rychard whom he had before holpen in his affayrs and purposes beyonde all Gods forbode.
Whyle these thynges wer in hand in England Henry Erle of Richmount made readye his hoste and strength to the nombre of fiue thousand Brytones and fiftene shippes, y e daye apoynted of his departure beyng nowe come, whiche was y e twelfe daye of the moneth of Octobre in the yere of our lorde God a thousand foure hundred .lxxxiiii. and the seconde yere of y e reigne of kyng Richard and hauyng a fayre wynde, hoysed vp the sayles & setforwarde, but towarde the night came suche a tempest that thei were dispersed one from another [Page] some into Britain and some into Normandy. But the ship in whiche Henry was with one other ship; tossed all the night with the waues of the sea and tempest, when the mornyng came, it waxed somewhat calme and faire weder, and thei were come toward the South parte of England by a hauen or porte called Poole, where thesaid Henry sawe all the shores or bankes sette full of harnessedmen whiche were souldyours apoynted there to wayte, by kyng Rychard as we haue saied before, for the comyng & landyng of the erle. While Henry there abode he gaue commaundement, that no manne should land before y t comyng of the other shippes. And in the meane tyme that he wayted for theim, he sent a litle bote with a fewe in it a lād to knowe what thei were that stoode on the shore, his frēdes or enemies. To whom those souldyours beeyng before taught what thei should saie, aunswered that thei were the frendes of Henry and were appoynted by y e duke of Buckynghm̄ there to abide his commyng and to conducte hym to those castelles and holdes where his tentes, pauylyons and ar [...]llary for the warre laie, and where remayned for hym a greate power that entended nowe with all spede to set vpon kyng Rychard while he was nowe sle [...] for feare and cleane without prouision, and therfore besought hym to come alande.
Henry suspectyng this to bee but fraude, after that he saw none of his shippes apered, hoysed vp the satles, hauyng a meruelous good wynde euen apoynted hym of God to delyuer hym from that great ieopardy, and sayled backe agayn into Nor mandy. And after his landyng there, he and his [Page xci] compaignie after their laboures, arested theim for the space of .iii. dayes, determynyng to go from thence afoote into Brytayne, & in the meane while sent messengers vnto Charles the Frenche kynge the sonne of Lewes that a lytle before departed, be sechyng hym of lybertee and lycence to passe thorough Normādy into Brytayn. The young kyng Charles beeyng sory for his fortune, was not onlye ready and well pleased to graunt his passage, but also sent hym moneye to helpe hym foorthe in his iourneye. But Henry before that he knewe the kynges mynde (not doubtyng of his great humanytee and gentlenes) had sent awaye his shippes towardes Britayne and had set hym selfe forwardes in his iourneye, but made no greate haste tyll the messengers retourned, whiche greate gentlenes when he receaued from the kyng, reioysed his hearte and with a lustye stomacke and good hope set forwarde into Brytayne, there to take ferther counsayle of his affayres.
And when he was in Brytayn, he receaued frō his frendes out of Englande knowledge that the duke of Buckyngham was behedded, and that the Marques of Dorcestre with a greate nombre of y e noble men of Englande had bene there a lytle before to seke hym, and that they wer now in Veneti a cytie in Brytayne. The whiche thynges beynge knowen to the erle, he on the one parte did greately lament the death and euel chaunce of his chiefe and princypall frende, but yet on the other parte he greatlye reioysed in that he had so many & noble menne to take his parte in the battayll. And therfore conceauynge a good hope and opinion [Page] that his purpose shoulde well frame and come to passe, determyned with hym selfe with all expedycion to set foorth warde, and therupon wente to a place in Brytayn called Rhedon, and from thence sent to the Marques with all the other noble men that they should come vnto hym. Then when they hearde that Henrye was safe returned into Brytayne reioysed not a lytle, for thei had thought he had landed in Englande, and so fallen into the handes of kyng Richarde, and they made not a lytle haste tyll they wer come vnto hym. The whiche when they met, after greatloye and gladnesse aswell of their parte as of his, they began to talke of their prepensed matters, and nowe was Christmasse come, on the whiche daye they altogether assembled in the churche and there sware fayth and truthe one to another. And Henry sware first, promysyng that assone as he should possesse y e croune of England, that he woulde marye Elyzabeth the doughter of Edward the .iiii. and after warde they sware feaultie & homage vnto hym euē as though he had already bene kyng, and so from that tyme foorthe dyd take hym, promysyng hym that thei would spende bothe their lyfes and goodes with hym, & that Richard should no lēger reigne ouer theim. When this was dooen, Henry declared all these thynges to the duke of Britayne, praiynge & desyryng hym nowe of helpe, and that he woulde ayde hym with a greater nombre of menne, & also to lende hym a frendly & honest somme of moneye that he might nowe recouer his right and enheritaunce of the croune of England, vnto y t which he was called & desyred by al the lordes & nobilitee of [Page xcii] the realme, & whiche (God wyllyng) he was moste assured to possesse, and after his possessiō he would moste faythfully restore the same again. The duke promysed hym ayde, vpon the truste wherof, he beganne to make redye his shippes that they might with all expedicion bee redy to sayle that no tyme should be loste. In the whiche tyme kyng Richard was agayn retourned to London, & had taken dyuerse of theim y t wer of this conspyracy, y t is to say George Browne, Roger Clyfforde, Thomas Selenger, knyghtes. Also Thomas Ramme, Robert Clyfford and dyuerse other whom he caused to be put to death.
After this he called a parliament wherin was deereed, that all those that were fled oute of the lande should be reputed and taken as enemyes to the realme, and all their landes and goodes to bee forfayte and confiscate. And not content with that preade which was no smal thyng, he caused also a great taxe and some of monye to be leuyed of the people. For y e large giftes and lyberalytee that he first vsed to buye the fauoures & frendshippes of many, had now brought him in nede. But nothing was more like then y t Thomas Stanley shoulde haue bene reputed & takē for one of those enemies because of the woorkyng of Margarete his wife which was mother vnto Henry erle of Richemoūt the which was noted for y e chiefe hed & worker of this cōspyracy. But for asmuch as it was thought that it was to small purpose that wemen coulde dooe: Thomas beynge nothyng fauty was dely [...]ed and cōmaūded that he should not suffre Margarete his wyfe to haue any seruaūtes about her, [Page] neither y t she should not go abroad but be shut vp and y t from thence foorth she should sende no message neyther to her soonne nor to any of her other frendes, wherby any hurte mighte be wrought agaynst the kyng, the whiche commaundemēt was accomplyshed. And by the authoryte of the same perliament, a peace was concluded with the Scottes, whiche a lytle before had skyrmyshed with the borderers. Which thyng brought to passe, y e kyng supposed all conspiracye to bee clene auoyded, for asmuche as the duke with other of his compaignie were put to death, and also certen other bannyshed. Yet for all this, kyng Richard was daylye vexed and troubled, partelye mystrustynge his owne strength, and partely fearyng the commyng of Henrye with his compaignye, so that he lyued but in a myserable case. And because that he would not so continue any lenger, he determyned with hym selfe to put awaye the cause of this his feare and busynesse, either by pollecye or elles by strength. And after that he hadde thus purposed with hym selfe, he thought nothyng better then to tempte the duke of Britayn yet once again eyther with money, prayer or some other speciall rewarde because y t he had in kepyng the erle Henry, & moste chiefly, because he knewe y t it was only he y t might delyuer hym from all his trouble by delyueryng or imprisoning the sayed Henry. Wherfore incontmentlye he sente vnto the duke certein Ambassadoures, the whiche should promesse vnto hym besyde other greate rewardes that they broughte with theim, to geue hym yerely all the reuenues of all the landes of Henry and of all the other lordes [Page xciii] there beyng with hym, yf he woulde after the receyte of the ambassadoures put theim in prysone. The Ambassadoures beynge departed and come where the duke laye could not haue communicacion with hym, for asmuch as by extreme sicknesse his wyttes were feble and weake. Wherfore one Peter Landose his Treasourer a manne bothe of pregnaunte wytte and of greate authoritee, tooke this matter in hand. For whiche cause he was afterwarde hated of all the lordes of Britain. With this Peter the Englishe ambassadoures had communicacion, & declaring to hym the kynges message desyred hym instantlye, for asmuche as they knewe that he might bring theyr purpose to passe that he woulde graunt vnto kyng Richardes request, and he shoulde haue the yerely reuenues of all the landes of the sayed lordes. Peter considering that he was greatly hated of y e lordes of his owne nacion, thoughte that yf he myght bring to passe thoroughe kyng Richarde to haue all these greate possessyons and yerely reuenues, he should then bee hable to matche with theim well ynough and not to care a rushe for theim, whereupon he aunswered the ambassadoures that he would doo that Richard dyd desire, yf he brake not promesse with hym. And this did he not for any hatred that he bare vnto Henry, for he hated hym not, for not longe before he saued his lyfe where the earle Henry was in greate [...]eoperdye. But suche was the good fortune of Englande, that this craftye compacte tooke no place, for whyle the letters and messengers ranne betwene Peter and kyng Kichard, Iohn Bishoppe of Ely beinge then in Flaundres [Page] was certifyed by a preest whiche came oute of England whose name was Christopher Vrswicke of all the whole circumstaunce of this deuyce & purpose. Wherupon with all spede the sayed byshop caused the saied preest the same daye to cary know ledge therof into Britayn to Henry erle of Richemounte willing hym with all the other noble men to dyspatche theim selues w t all possible haste into Fraunce, Henry was then in Veneti whē he heard of this fraud, without tariaunce sent Christopher vnto Charles the Frenche kyng desiring lycence that Henry with the other noble men myght safely come into Fraunce, the which thing being sone obteigned, the messenger retourned with spede to his lorde and Prince.
Then the earle Henry setting all his businesse in as good staye & ordre as he mighte, talked lytle and made fewe a counsail herof, & for the more expedicyon hereof, he caused therle of Penbrucke secretly to cause all the noble men to take their horses, dissembling to ride vnto the duke of Bretain, but when they came to the vttermost partes therof, they should forsake the waye that led theim toward the duke, and to make into Fraunce with all that euer they might. Then they dooing in euery thing as they were biddē loste no tyme but so sped theim that shortely they obteygned and gate into the coūtie of Angeou. Henry then within .ii. dayes folowyng, being then styll at Veneti tooke .iiii. or fyue of his seruauntes with hym, and feigned as thoughe he woulde haue ryden therby to visyte a frende of his, and forasmuche as there were many Englishmenne lefte there in the toune, no manne [Page xciiii] suspected any thynge, but after that he had kepte the ryghte waye for the space of fyue myles, he forsooke that and turned streyghte into a woode that was thereby, and tooke vpon hym his seruauntes apparell, and putte his apparell vpon hys seruaunte, and so tooke but one of theym with hym, on whome he waited as thoughe he had bene the seruaunte and the other the maister. And with all conuenyente and spedy haste so sette forthe on theyr iourney that no tyme was loste, and made no more tariaunce by the way then onelye the baitynge of theyr horses, so that shortly he recouered the coastes of Angeou where all his other companye was.
But within foure dayes after that the Earle was thus escaped. Peter receaued from kyng Richard the confirmacion of the graunte and promises made for the betreiyng of Henry and the other nobles. Wherfore the saide Peter sente oute after hym horses and menne with suche expedicion and spede to haue taken hym, that scacely the erle was entred Fraunce one houre but they were at his heles. The Englyshe menne then beyng aboue the noumbre of thre hundreth at Veneti, hearing that the Earle and all the nobles were fled so sodeinly and withoute any of their knowledge, were astonyed and in maner despaired of theyr lyues.
But it happened contrary to theyr exspectacyon for the duke of Britaine taking the matter so vnkyndely that Henry should bee so vsed with hym that for feare he shoulde bee compelled to flee his lande, was not a lytle vexed with Peter, to whom (althoughe that he was ignoraunte of the fraude [Page] and crafte that had been wrought by hym) yet he layed the whole faute in hym, and therfore called vnto hym Edward Poyninges & Edward Wood vile, deliuering vnto theim the foresayde monye y e Henrye before had desyred the Duke to lende hym towarde the charge of his iourney, and commaunded theim to conuey and conducte all the English menne his seruauntes vnto hym paying theyr expenses, and to deliuer the sayde some of monye vn to the earle. When the earle sawe his menne come and hearde this comfortable newes, he not a lytle reioysed, desiring the messengers that returned to shewe vnto the duke, that he trusted ere long time to shewe him selfe not to bee vnthankeful for this greate kyndnesse that he nowe shewed vnto hym. And within fewe dayes after, the earle went vnto Charles the French kyng, to whome after he had rendred thankes for the great benefites and kind nesse that he had receaued of hym, the cause of his comming fyrste declared, then he besought him of his helpe and ayde, whiche shoulde bee an immor tall benefite to hym and his lordes, of whome generallye he was called vnto the kyngdome, forasmuch as they so abhorred the tiranny of kyng Rychard. Charles promised hym helpe and bade him to be of good chere & to take no care, for he would gladly declare vnto hym his beneuolence. And the same tyme Charles remoued and tooke with hym Henry and all the other noble menne.
Whyle Henry remained there, Iohn Earle of Oxenford (of whome is before spoken) which was put in prisone by Edward the fourth in the castell of Hammes with also Iames Blounte Capteine [Page xcv] of that castell, and Iohn Forskewe knyghte Porter of the towne of Caleies, came vnto hym. But Iames the capitain, because he lefte his wife in y e castell, dyd furnyshe the same with a good garison of men before his departure.
Henry when he sawe therle, was out of measure glad y e so noble a man and of greate experience in battayl, and so valiaunt & hardie a knight, whom he thought to bee moste feithfull and sure, for somuche as he had in the time of Edward y e fourth, continuall battail with hym in defending of Henry the syxte, thought that nowe he was so well apointed that he coulde not desire to bee better, and therfore cōmunicated vnto hym all his whole affaires, to bee ordred and ruled only by hym. Not longe after Charles the Frenche kyng remoued again to Paris, whome Henry folowed, and there againe moued and besoughte the kyng as he had moste fauourably & kindely entreteigned hym all this time, not only in wordes, but also in dedes y t it would lykewise please hym yet so much further to extend his fauoure & beneuolence vnto hym that nowe he woulde ayde and helpe hym forwarde in his iourney, y t not onely he, but also all the lordes and nobilytee of Englande myghte iustely haue cause to knowlage and confesse that by the meane of his fauoure and goodnesse they were restored againe to the possessyon of their enherytaunces, whiche withoute hym they coulde not well bryng to passe.
In the meane while, his fortune was suche, y e many Englyshe menne came ouerdaylye oute of Englande vnto him, and many whiche then were [Page] in Paris, amonge whome were diuerfe studentēs that fell vnto his parte bothe more and lesse, and specially there was one, whose name was Richard Foxe a Preest, beyng a manne of a synguler good wytte and learning, whome Henry streyght waye reteigned and cōmitted all his secretes vnto hym and whome also afterward he promoted to many hyghe promocyons, and at the laste he made hym bishop of Winchester.
Richarde then hearyng of all this conspiracye and of the greate ayde that dayly wente ouer vnto Henry, thought yet for all this, that if he might bring to passe that Henry should not couple in maryage with the blood of king Edwarde, that then he shoulde dooe well ynoughe with hym and kept hym from the possessyon of the croune. Then deuysed he with hym selfe all the wayes and meanes that myghte bee howe to bryng this to passe. And fyrste he thoughte it to bee beste with fayre woordes & large promesses to attempte the quene whose fauoure obteygned, he doubted not but shortelye to fynde the meanes to haue bothe her doughters oute of her handes into his owne, and then rested nothynge but yf he hym selfe myghte fynde the meanes after warde to marye one of the same doughters, whereby he thought he shoulde make all sure and safe to the vtter disapoyntinge of Henrye. Wherupon he sente vnto the Quene then beynge in the Sanctuarye dyuerse and sondrye messengers that shoulde excuse and pourge hym of his facte afore dooen towardes her, settynge forthe the matter with plesaunte woordes and hye promyses bothe to her and also her sonne [Page xcvi] Thomas lorde Marques of Dorset, of all thynges that coulde be desyred. These messengers beyng men of grauitee, handled the quene so e [...]ftly that anone she beganne to bee alured and to herken vnto theim fauourably, so that in conclusion she promysed to be obedient to the kyng in his request (forgettyng the iniuries he had dooen to her before, and on the other parte not remembryng y e promesse that she made to Maigarete Henryes mother.) And first she delyuered both her doughters into the handes of kyng Rychard, then after she sent preuely for the Lorde Marques her sonne beyng then at Parys w t Henry (as ye haue heard) wyllyng hym to forsake Henrye with whome he was, and spedely to returne into Englande for all thynges was perdoned and forgeuen, & she again in fauoure and frendship of y e kyng, and it should be highly for his aduauncement and honoure.
Kyng Richard (whē quene Elizabeth was thus brought into a fooles paradyce) after he had receaued al his brothers doughters from the sanctuary into his palayce, thought there nowe remayned nothyng to be dooen, but only the castyng awaye and destroiyng of his owne wife, whiche thynge he had wholy purposed and decreed within hym selfe. And there was nothyng that feared hym so much from this mooste cruell & detestable murder as the losyng of the good opynion y e he thought the people had conceyued of hym, for as ye haue heard before, he faigned hym selfe to be a good mā and thought the people had estemed hym euen so. Notwithstandyng shortly after, his foresaide vngracious purpose, ouercame al this honest feare. [Page] And first of all, he absteyned from beddyng or lyyng with her: and also found him self greued with the barrēnesse of his wife, that she was vnfruteful and brought hym forth no chyldren, complamyng therof very greuously vnto y e nobles of his realme and chieflye aboue other vnto Thomas Rotherame then archebishoppe of Yorke (whome he had delyuered a lytle afore oute of pryson) the whiche byshop did gather of this, that the quene should be rid out of the waye, ere it were long after (suche experience had he of kyng Richardes complexciō who had practised many lyke thynges not longe before) & thesame tyme also he made dyuerse of his secrete frendes preuy of thesame his coniecture.
After this, he caused a rumoure to ronne amōg the commen people (but he woulde not haue y e autoure knowen) y t the quene was dead, to thentent y t she hearyng this meruelous rumour, should take so greueous a conceyt that anone after she should fall into some great disease, so that he would assay that waye, in case it should chaunce her afterward to be sicke, dead or otherwyse murdred, that then y e people might impute her death vnto y e thought she tooke or els to y e sickenesse. But whē the quene heard of so horryble a rumour of her death sprōge abroade among the commen people, she suspected the matter and supposed the worlde to be at an ende with her, and incontinently, she wente to the kyng with a lamentable countenaunce, and with wepyng teares asked hym, whether she had dooen any thyng whereby he might iudge her worthy to suffer death. The kyng made aunswere with a smilyng and dissimulyng countenaūce and with flatteryng [Page xcvii] woordes, byddyng her to bee of good comforte and to plucke vp her heart for there was no suche thyng toward her that he knewe. But howe so euer it fortuned, either by sorowe or els by poysonyng, within fewe daies after, the quene was dedde and afterwarde was buryed in the abbay of Westminster. This is the same Anne, one of Rychard the earle of Warwikes doughters whiche once was cōtracted to prince Edwarde kyng Hē ry the sixt his soonne.
The kyng beyng thus delyuered of his wife fantasied a pace ladye Elizabeth his nice, desiryng in any wise to mary with her: but because that all menne, yee and the mayden her self abhorred this vnlawfull desire, as a thyng mooste detestable, he determined with hym self to make no greate hast in the matter, chiefly for that he was in a pecke of troubles, fearyng least y t of the noble menne some would forsake hym & runne vnto Henry his part, the other at the leste would fauoure the secrete conspiracy made again hym, so that of his ende there was almoost no doubte. Also the more parte of the commen people were in so greate dispeare, that many of theim had rather to bee accompted in the noumbre of his enemies, then to put theim selfes in ieopardy bothe of losse of body and goodes in takyng of his parte.
And emongest those noble menne whom he feared, first was Thomas Standley and Wyllyam his brother, Gylbert Talbote, & of other a greate noūbre, of whose purpose▪ though kyng Rychard was ignoraunt, neuerthelesse he trusted not one of theim, and lest of all Thomas Standley, because [Page] he had maryed Henryesanother, as it maye well appeare by this that fol oweth. For when the sayd Thomas woulde haue departed from the courte vnto his owne mansion for his recreacion (as he saide) but y e truthe was, because he woulde bee in a readynesse to receaue Henry and ayde hym at his commyng into the realme. But the kyng did let hym, and would not suffer hym to departe, vntyll suche tyme he had left in the courte behynde hym George Strange his soonne and heyre for a pledge. And whyle kynge Richarde was thus wrapped in feare and care of y e tumulte that was to come, lo, euen then tydynges came that Henrye was entred into the lande, and that the castell of Hammes was prepared to receiue Henry, by the meanes of the erle of Oxenforde whiche then was fled with Iames Blunte keper of the castell vnto Henry.
Then kyng Rychard, thynkyng at the begynnyng to stey all this matter, sent forth with all hast [...]he greater parte that were then at Calyce to recouer the said castell again. Those that were in the castell, when thei sawe their aduersaries make towardes theim, spedely thei armed theim selfes to defence and in al hast sent messengers to Hēry, desyryng hym of ayde. Henry forthwith sent the erle of Oxenforde with a chosen sorte of menne to assist theim, and at their first commyng they laid siege not farre from the castell. And whyle kyng Rychardes menne turned backe hauyng an yie towardes theim: Thomas Brandon with thirty valeaunt menne of the otherside gate ouer a water in to the castell, to strength theim that were [Page xcviii] within. Then thei that were within laid heard to their charge that were without, on y e otherside, the erle of Oxenford so valiantly assayled them of the backeside that thei were glad to make proclamaciō to theim that were within, that if thei would be content to geue ouer the castell, thei should haue free liberte to departe with all that euer thei had. The erle of Oxenforde hearyng this, whiche came onely to saue his frendes from hurte, and namely Iames Bluntes wife, was contented with this condicion and departed in saufgarde with all his frendes returning backe to Henry, whiche was at Paris. After this, kyng Rychard was informed y t the Frenche kyng was wery of Henry & his compaignie, and would doo nothyng for hym, wherby Henry was nowe not hable in maner to helpe him self, so that it was not possible y t he shuld preuaile or goo forwarde in thenterprise that he thoughte to haue taken in hande agaynst kynge Rycharde.
Kynge Rycharde beeyng brought thus into a false paradice, thought hym selfe to bee out of all feare, and that there was no cause why he should beynge so sure, ones to wake oute of hys slepe or trouble hym selfe any furder, and therefore called backe hys nauye of shyppes that then was redy vpon the sea, whyche was fullye furnyshed to haue scoured the seas. But yet for the more suretie least he should bee sodenly oppressed, he gaue commaundemente to the greatte men dwellynge by the sea syde (and specyally the Welshemen) to watche nyghte and daye, leaste his aduersaries shuld haue eny oportunitee to entre into the lande. As the fashyon is in time of warre that those that [Page] dwell by the sees side should make bekyns in the highest places there about, whiche might bee sene afarre of, so that when it should chaunce their enemyes to aryue towarde the lande, by and by they should fyre theyr bekyns and rayse the countreye, to thentent that quickely from place to place they might be ascerteyned of all the whole matter and also to arme theim selfes spedelye agaynste theyr enemies.
And so to come to our purpose agayn, kyng Richard thorough the aforesaide tydynges, beganne to bee more carelesse and rechelesse, as who saye, he had no power to withstand the desteny that honge ouer his hedde. Suche is the prouydent iustyce of God, that a manne dooeth leste knowe, prouyde & beware when the vengeaunce of God is euen at hande for his offences. And to go forth, at y e tyme when Henry the earle of Richemounte remayned in Fraunce entretyng and suyng for ayde & helpe of the Frenche men, many of the chiefe noble men, which had the realme in gouernaunce (because of the young age of Charles the kyng) fel somewhat at dissencion, of the whiche variaunce, Lewes the prynce of Orlyaunce was the chiefe and hedde, whiche because he had maryed Iohanne the kynges syster looked to haue bene chiefe gouernoure of all the realme. By the which meanes it came to passe, that no one man had the princypall gouernaunce of the realme. And therefore Henry the erle was constraigned to sue vnto all the nobles seuerallye one after another desyrynge and praiynge theim of aide and helpe in his purpose, and thus the matter was prolonged. In the meane tyme [Page xcix] Thomas the Marques of Dorcet (of whome we spake afore) was preuely sent for to come home by his mother, partely mystrustynge that Henrye should not preuayle, and partly for the greate and large promesses that kyng Richard had made to her for hym before. Whiche letters when the sayd Marques had receaued, he beleuyng all thynges that his mother wrote vnto hym, and also thynkyng that Henry should neuer preuayle, and that the Frenchemen did but mocke and daylye with hym: he sodeynly in the night tyme conueyed hym selfe out of Parys and with great spede made towardes Flaūders. The whiche thyng when y e erle and other of the Englishe lordes heard of, thei wer sore astonned & amased, & with all spede purchased of Charles the kyng a lycence and commaundement that the Marques might by steyed whersoeuer he wer found w t in the dominion of Fraūce chiefly for that he was secrete of their councel and knewe all there purpose. The cōmaundemēt was quickly obteyned & postes made forth euery waye, emōgest whom one Humfrey Cheyncy plaiyng y e parte of a good blooddehounde so truely, smelled out and folowed the trace, that by and by he found out and toke the Marques: and so handled & persuaded hym with gentle and good woordes, that shortely after he was content to retourne.
Then Henry beyng delyuered of this chaunce, thought it best to prolonge the matter no farther least he should loose both the present oportunytee and also wery his frendes that looked for hym in Englande. Wherfore he made haste and set forewarde with a small army obteyned of the Frenche [Page] kyng, of whom he also borowed some money, and some of other of his frendes, for the whiche he left the Marques and Ihon Burchere behynde for a pledge. And so setting forward came to Roan, and whyle he taryed there and prepared shippyng at y e hauen of Seyne, tydynges cam to hym y e kyng: Richardes wyfe was deade, & purposed to mary with the lady Elysabeth, kyng Edwardes eldest doughter being his nice, & that he had maried Cycile her syster to a mannes sonne of the lāde far vnderneth her degre. At the whiche thyng, Henry was sore amased and troubled, thynkyng that by this meanes al his purpose was dashed, for that there was no other waye for hym to come to the kyngdome but only by the maryage of one of kyng Edwardes doughters. And by this menes also, he feared least his frendes in Englande would shrynke frō hym for lacke of an honest title. But after thei had consulted vpon the matter, thei thought it best to cary a lytle to proue if they might gette more helpe and make mo frendes. And among all other, they thought it best to adioyne the lord Harbarte vnto theim, whiche was a mā of great power in Wales and y t should be brought to passe by this meanes, for that the lorde Harbarte had a syster maryable, whō Henry would be content to mary, if he would take their part. And to brīg al this matter to passe messengers were sent to Henry the erle of Northhumberlande, whiche had maryed the other syster so that he should bryng this matter about, but the wayes were so beset that the messengers could not come to hym.
And in the meane season, came veray good tydynges [Page C] from Ihon ap Morgan a temporall lawyer, whiche signified vnto theim that syr Ryce ap Thomas a noble and valiaunt man and Ihon Sauage, fauoured his parte earnestlye and also syr Reynolde Braye had prepared a greate summe of mony to wage battayl on his parte and to helpe hym, and therfore he woulde they should make hast with all that euer they could, and make towarde Wales.
Then Henry spedely prepared hym selfe because he would lynger his frendes no lenger. And after that he had made his prayer vnto almightye God that he might haue good successe in his iourney, only with two thousande menne and a fewe shyppes in the calendes of August he sayled from the hauen of Seyne, and the seuēth daye after whiche was the .xxii. daye of August, he aryued in Wales aboute sonne set & lāded at Wilforde hauen, & in y e parte whiche is called the Dale, where he hearde y t there was dyuerse layde in wayte for hym, to kepe hym backe. From thence, in the mornyng betymes he remoued towarde a towne called Harford with in tēne myle of the Dale, where he was very ioyfully receyued. Here he had contrarye tydynges brought to that he hearde in Normādy afore, that syr Ryce ap Thomas and Ihon Sauage wythal that euer they coulde make, were of kyng Richardes parte.
Notwithstandynge, they had suche tydynges sent theim frō the menne of Pembruche by a valiaūt gentlemā, whose name was Arnold Butteler, that it reioysed all their heartes, whiche was, that [Page] yf all former offences might bee remitted, they woold bee in a redynesse to sticke vnto there owne Gespare the erle. Then Henryes company by this meanes beeyng encreased, departed frō Harforde fyue myle towarde Cardygane, and then while he refreshed his menne, sodenly came a rumoure vnto hym that the lorde Harbarte whiche dwelled at Carmerdyne was nye at hande with a greate armye of menne. At the whiche rumoure there was a greate sturre amongeste theim, euerye manne tooke hym selfe to his weapon and made theim selfes redye if nede were, to fight, and a lytle while they were all afrayed, tyl such tyme as Henrye had sent out horsemen to trye y e truthe, whiche when thei came agayn, declared that all thynges was quiet and that ther was no suche thyng. But moste of all master Gryffythes a verye noble man did conforte theim and gladden their heartes, whiche although before he had ioyned hym self to the lorde Harberte, at that very tyme he cleued to Henry with suche companye as he had, although they were but fewe, and thesame tyme came Ihon ap Morgā vnto hym. Henry went styll forward & caried almoste in no place, because he would make suer woorke and the better spede, he inuaded suche places afore that thei were armed against hym, y e whiche places he bette downe w t very litle strēgth But afterward hauyng knowlage by his spyes y e the lorde Harbert & syr Ryce were in a redynes to geue hym battail he determyned to set vpō theim, & either to put theim to flight orels to make theim sweare homage and feaultee vnto hym, & to take theim w t hym in his hoste against kyng Richard. [Page Ci] And because he woulde ascertayne his frendes in Englande howe all the matter went forwad with hym, he sent of his moost trustye frendes to ladye Margarete his mother, to Standely, to Talbot, and to other of his most especial frendes with certain commaundementes. The effecte of the commaundementes were, that he intended with the helpe of hys frendes to passe ouer Seuerne and by Shrewesbury to make toward London. Ther fore he desyred theim with those that were of their councell in tyme & place conuenient to mete hym. So the messaungers going forth with these commissyons: Henry went forward toward Shrewesbury, and in the waye mette with syr Rice ap Thomas with a great noumber of menne which came vnto hym and was of his parte. For two dayes afore Henry promysed hym to bee chiefe ruler of all Wales as soone as he came to the croune (yf he would come vnto hym) which afterward he gaue to hym in dede. In the meane time the messengers executing the message, diligētly returned back agayne with large rewardes of theim, to whome they were sent and came to Henry the same day he entred into Shrewesburye and shewed howe all his frendes were in a redynesse to dooe the vttermoste that laye in theim. This tidynges put Henry in suche greate hope, that he went forth with a courage and came to the towne of Newporte and there set vp his tentes vpon a lytle hyll, and there laye all night. That night came to hym syr Gylberte Talbot with aboue two hundreth menne.
After that they went forthe to Stafforde & whyle they were there, Willyam Standley came to hym [Page] with a fewe after hym, and when he had talked a litle with him, retourned backe again to his hoste whiche he had prepared. From thence he went to Lichfelde, and that nyght laye without the toune, but in y e morning betime he entred into y e citee and was receiued honourably. A daye or .ii. afore, Thomas Standley was there with fyue. M. men armed, whiche when he knewe of Henries cōming, forthwith went afore to a village called Aderstone there to tarye tyll Henrye came. This he dyd to auoide suspicion, beyng afraid least kyng Richard knowing his intent would haue put his soonne to deathe, whiche as I telled you before was lefte w t hym as a pledge for his father. But kynge Rychard in the meane tyme, which then was at Nottingham, hearing that Henry with a fewe more of banished men was entred into Wales, so lightly regarded the matter, that he thoughte it was not muche to bee paste vpon, for that he came in with so fewe in noumbre, and that the lorde Harbart & sir Rice, which wer rulers of all Wales, would other kyll hym, or elles take hym and bring hym aliue. But afterward, when he remembred him self that oftentimes a smal matter in batel if it bee not looked vnto betymes, would make at the laste a great sturre: he thought it best to remedy the matter betimes and commaunded Henrye the earle of Northumberlande with other of the nobles of the realme (whome he thoughte had set more by hym then by their owne goodes) to rayse vp an army & to come to hym with speede. Also he sente dyuers messengers with letters to Robert Brakenburye keper of the Towre of London, commaundynge [Page Cii] hym to come vnto hym in all haste, and to brynge with hym as felowes in battell, Thomas Burschere, Walter Hungerforde and dyuerse other knyghtes, whome he dyd not a litell suspecte.
In this tyme it was shewed that Henrye was come to Shrewisburye without any hurte. With the which tidinges, y e kyng beganne to rage and made exclamacion againste theim, that contrary to their faithes they had vtterly deceiued hym, & then he beganne to mistrust all menne, and wiste not whome he mighte truste, so that he thoughte it best to sette forthe hym selfe ageinst his aduersaryes. And forthwith he sent out spies to knowe which waye Henry did take. They when they had dooen their diligence retourned backe again and shewed hym howe that Henry was come to Lichfeld. The which thing after he knew, because now there was a greate noumbre of souldyours come together, by and by his menne set in araye, he commaunded theim forwarde, and to gooe foure and foure together, and by that waye which they kept they hearde saye, their enemies were commynge. The suspecte persones he putte in the myddes, he hym selfe with those he trusted came behind, with winges of horsemen running on euery syde. And thus keping their order, aboute sonne sette came vnto Leicestre.
When Henrye in the meane season had remoued from Lichefelde vnto the nexte village called Tamworth, in the mydwaye he mette with Walter Hungerforde, Thomas Burschier and many other more which had promised to aide hym afore And forbecause they perceyued that they were susspected [Page] of Richard, & least they should be brought violentlye vnto hym beyng their enemye they forsooke Robert Brakenbury their capitaine, and in the nyghte tyme stale priuely awaye and wente to Henry. Vnto whome there chaunced by the waye that was worthy to bee marked, whiche was that Henry, althoughe he was a manne of noble courage and also his companye dyd dailye encrease, yet for all that he stoode in great feare because he was vncertayne of Thomas Standly whiche as I telled you before, for the feare of puttynge his soonne to deathe, inclyned as yet vnto no parte, & that the matter was not so slēder of kyng Richard as reporte was made to hym of his frendes.
Wherfore, as all afrayde withoute a cause, he tooke onely twenty menne with him, and steyed in his iourney as a manne in dispaire and halfe musynge with hym selfe what was beste to bee dooen, and to aggrauate the matter, tidinges was broughte hym that kyng Richard was comming nere to mete hym with a great and houge hoste of menne. And while he thus lyngered for feare behinde, his hoste came afore to the toune of Tham worth, and because it was then darke night, he lost bothe his company and also his waye, then wandryng frome place to place, at laste came to a lytle village .iii. myle from his hoste being full of feare and leste he should fall into the daunger of scoute watche he durste not aske a questyon of any man, and partly for the feare that was presente, partely for that was to come he laye there that nyght and tooke this for a sygne or a pronosticacyon of some greate plage that was to come, and of the other [Page Ciii] parte his hoste was no lesse abashed seyng his absence for that tyme. When in the morning Henry came to theim in the light of the daye he excused y e matter that he was not absent because he had lost his waye but rather of purpose, because he would commen w t his preuy frendes which would not be sene in the daye. After y t he went priuely to Aderstone where Thomas Standley & Willyam his brother dyd dwell. Here Henry, Thomas, & Willyam mette and tooke other by the hande with louing salutacions and were glad one of an other. Then after, they counceled together of their metyng with kyng Richard whome they perceyued then not to bee farre from theim. That day when it drewe toward night, in the euening Ihon Sauage Brytanne Sanforde, Simon Digby with many other had forsaken, kyng Richarde & came to Henry w t a great power of men, whiche thyng both with power and strengthe sate Henry alofte again. In the meane season kyng Richard which purposed to go [...] thorow thicke and thinne in this mater came to Bosworthe alitell beyond Leicestre where the place of batell should bee (as a manne would saye the hye iustice of God, whiche coulde not bee auoided hanging ouer his hed, had called hym to a place where he should suffer worthy punyshemente for his detestable offenees) and there he sette vp his tentes and rested that night. Afore he went to bed he made an oration to his companye with greate vehemence, perswading & exhorting manfully to fight. And afterward, as it was saied he had a terrible dreame in his slepe seming that he sawe horrible deuilles appere vnto hym & [Page] pulling and haling of hym that he coulde take no rest, which visyon fylled hym full of feare & also of heuy care when he waked. For by and by after, being sore greued in his minde, he did prognosticate of this dreame the euill luke & heuy chaunce that after came to hym, and he came not with so cherful a countenaunce vnto his company as he was wonte to dooe. Then leest they should thinke that he had this heauinesse for the feare of his enemies he stoode vp & rehersed vnto theim all his dreame. But I thinke that this was not a dreame, but rather his conscience pricked with the sharpe stynge of his mischeuous offences, which although they dooe not pricke alwaye, yet most cōmenly they wil byte moste towarde the latter daye, representyng vnto vs not onely them selfe, but also the terryble punyshement that is ordeined for the same, as the syghte of the deuill tearyng and haling vs, so that therby (if we haue grace) we may take an occasyon to bee penitēt, or elles for lacke of the same dye in desperacyon. Nowe to come to my purpose again, the nexte daye after, kyng Richard hauing all thynges in a redynesse went for the with the army oute of his tentes, & beganne to sette his men in araye: fyrst the forward set forth with a meruelous lengthe bothe of horsemen and also of footemen, a veray terrible companye to theim y t should see theim a farre of: and in the formost parte of all he ordered the bowmen as a stronge fortresse for theim that came after, and ouer this Iohn y e duke of Norffolke was hedde capitaine. After hym folowed the kyng with a mightye sorte of menne. And in this while, Henry beyng departed from y e [Page Ciiii] communicacion of his frendes without any tariyng pytched his tentes nere his enemies and laye there all nighte and cōmaunded his men to bee in a redinesse, in the morninge he sente also to Thomas Standley being then in the middes, betwixt bothe hostes that he should come nere with his armye. He sent hym woorde again that he should set his menne in an ordre tyll he came, with the which answer otherwise then he had thought or then the mater dyd require, he was not alitel abashed and stoode as it were in doubte. Yet for all y t he taryed not but with all spede set his menne in an ordre, y e forward was but slender, because his noūber was but fewe, the archers were set in the formost parte Ouer theim Iohn the earle of Oxford was hedde capitain. In the ryght wing he sette Gilbert Talbot. In y e lefte he put Iohn Sauage. And he him selfe with y e helpe of Thomas Standley folowed with one companye of horsemen and a fewe footemen, for all his whole company were scāt fyue. M besides y e bothe Stanleys with their company, of the which Willyam Standley had thre. M. The kinges army was double to all this. And so when bothe armyes were all in a redinesse and beganne for to come within the sight of other they bragged forth theim selfes of bothe parties, looking onely for the sygne and token of striking together. Betwyxte bothe hostes, there was a marresse whiche Henrye lefte on his ryghte hande purposelye as a defence of his menne, he found the meanes also to haue the bryght sunne on his backe, that it myght dasyll the eyes of his enemyes.
But the Kyng when the sawe Henry passe ouer [Page] the marras cōmaunded his men with all violence to set vpon theim. They by and by with a sodein clamour lette arrowes flee at theim. On the other syde they paied theim home manfully again with the same. But when they came nere together they laied on valeauntly with swerdes. The earle of Oxforde fearing least in the meane time kyng Richardes multytude should haue compassed in his menne whiche wer but a fewe, he cōmaunded theim by fyues they should not moue forwarde paste ten fote the whiche cōmaundement knowen when they knitte theim selfes together and seased not in fyghting: their aduersaries beyng afrayed suspected som crafte or guyle & began to breake of and many of the same parte wer not much greued therwith, because they wer as glad y e king should be loste as saued, & therfore they fought with lesse courage. Then the erle of Oxford with his menne thicke together stroke on more freshlyer. The other of the other parte dyd likwyse the same. And while the firste wardes of the batell had fought so manfully. Richard perceiued by his spies Henry a farre of with a fewe companye of armed menne. Afterward, cōming nere, Richard knewe hym by sygnes and tokens, then being inflamed with anger, furiouslye stroke the horse with the spurres and ranne out of the one syde of the hoste, and like a Lyon ranne at hym. On the other syde, Henry perceiuing hym commyng, was very desyrouse to mete hym. Richard at the fyrste setting forth, kylled diuers that stode, again he threwe doune Henry his banner and Willyam Brandon the bearer also, he ranne at Cheyny a manne of great mighte [Page Cv] whiche came for to mete hym, and with greate violēce ouerthrewe hym to the grounde, and this he made hymself awaie through theim, for to come to Henry. But Henry kept better tacke with hym thē his men would haue thought, whiche thē was allmoste in despayre of the victory. And euē at y e tyme lo there came Wyllyam Stanley to aide theim w t .iii. M. mēne, and euen at the verie same tyme the residue of kyng Richardes men were put to flight Thē Richard fightyng alone in the middest of all his enemies was ouerthrowne & slain. In y e meane tyme therle of Oxēford in y e foreward after he had fought māfully a litle while, put y e residue to flight of whō he slewe a greate nōbre. But agreate nombre more whiche folowed Richard more for feare then for loue, helde their handes from fightyng & went awaie without hurte, for that thei loked not for his safegard, but rather for his destruccion. There were slain at this conflicte not many more then one thousand, of the whiche these were noble menne. Ihon duke of Norffolke Walter Feris Robert Brachyngbury, Richard Radcliffe and many other more. And within twoo daies after Wyllyam Catisby lawyer with certain other of his felowes was put to death at Leicestre, and emonges those y e ranne awaie, was Fraunces Louell, Humfray Stafford, with Thomas his brother and other more that ranne into sanctuary at Colchestre in Essex. There was of the captiues a greate nombre, because that when Richard was slain, euery manne cast doune his wepon and yeld hymself to Henry, of y e whiche y e more parte would haue dooen so at the begynnyng, if it had not been [Page] for feare of kyng Richardes spies, whiche thē wā dered in euery place. And emongest these the nobles, were the erle of Northumberlande the erle of Surrey of the whiche therle of Surrey was put in prisone, this other as a frend was receiued in to fauour. Henry at that felde loste not aboue an hū dred menne, emongest whom the chief was Wyllyam Brādone whiche bare Henryes bāner. This battaill was fought in the .xxii. day of the moneth of Auguste, inthe yere of oure Lorde a thousand cccc .lxxxvi. y e conflict indured more then .ii. howres Richard might (as the fame went) asaued hymself if he would afled awaie, for those that were about hym when thei sawe his menne from the begynnyng fight but faintly and that some were ronne awaie vnto the other parte, suspected treason and willed hym to flie and when the mater was manifest that all hope of victory was past, thei brought hym a swi [...]te horse. He puttyng a sied all hope and trust that was in fleiyng, made (as it was saied) this aunswere that this daie he would haue ether an ende of battaill orels of his life, suche was his greate audacite and manfulnes whiche because he did se certainly that in this daie he should ob [...] the kyngdome quietely all daies of his life or [...]s lose bothe for euer he entred in emōgest theim as it was declared before intendyng vtterly ether to lose all orels to wynne all. And so the wretehe dyed hauyng the ende that all suche were wont to haue whiche in the stede of lawe, honestie, and all godlynes folowe their owne appetite vyllanye and all wyckednes. And plainly this is an example whiche cannot be expressed, to feare theim whiche [Page Cvi] will not suffer one howre to bee otherwyse spēt then in cruelte mischief and all deuillishe fasshiōs Henry when he had thus obtained the victorye he fell downe on his knees and with many praiers & thankes, referred all to the goodnes of God. Thē after he stode vp beyng wounderfully replenished with ioye, & went vp vpō alitle hill and there gaue two greate comendacions to his souldyours commaundyng theim that were hurte to be heled and the dede to bee buryed, afterward he gaue immortall thankes to his noble capitains promisyng theim that he would neuer forgette their benifite The multitude in y e meane tyme with one voyce & one mynd proclaimed hym kyng. Whē Thomas Stanley sawe y e, he toke kyng Richardes croune whiche was founde emongest the spoyle, and by & by putte it vpon his head as though he had been then created kyng by the eleccion of the people as it was wonte to bee in the olde tyme, and this was the first token of his felicite. After this, kyng Hēry with his compaignie and carriage went to Lecestre toward night to bed, whether after he had refresshed his compaignie well for the space of twoo daies, that thei might the better goo toward London: Kyng Richardes bodye was brought naked ouer a horse backe, the hed and the armes hāgyng on the one side and the legges on y e other, & caried in to the grey freres of Lecester, and surely it was but a myserable sight to loke vpō, yet it was good inough cōsideryng his wretched leuyng, and there without any solempnite was buryed twoo dayes after. He raygned twoo yeres twoo monethes & one daie, he was but of a small stature hauyng [Page] but a deformed bodie, y e one shoulder was higher then the other, he had a shorte face & a cruell looke whiche did betoken malice, guyle and deceite. And while he did muse vpō any thing stāding, he would byte his vnder lippe continually, whereby a māne might perceiue his cruell nature within his wreched bodie striued and chaffed alwaie with in hym self, also the dagger whiche he bare aboute hym, he would alwaies bee choppyng of it in and out he had a sharpe and pregnaunt witt, subtill and to dessimule and fayne verie mete. He had also a proude and cruell mynde, whiche neuer went from him to the houre of his death, whiche he had rather suffer by y e cruell sworde, though all his compaignie did forsake hym then by shamefull flight he would fauoure his life, whiche after might fortune by sickenes or other condynge ponyshemēt shortely to perishe.
¶ Henry the seuenth.
HENRY THE SEVENTH OF that name kyng of England.
First after y t he had obteined his kyngdome and heritage by force of armes, entended to stablishe all thynges & extynguish sediciō, and before he departed from Leycester, caused ser Robert Willoughby knight to bryng y e yoūg erle of Warwike y e duke of Clarēces soōne before his presence (whom kyng Richard to that tyme had kept at Sheryhuttō in Yorke shire) fearyng muche, least that by this young erle some occasiō might bee taken of renuyng battaill, whiche entended nothyng more then to liue in peace and quietnes. And so this erle was brought to hym, & at his commaundement conueighed to London, and there cast in holde,
In the self same place also of Yorke shire, was Ladie Elizabeth eldest doughter to the fornamed kyng Edwarde, whom kyng Rychard her vncle would haue maried sore against the mynde and consent of y e same ladie. In so muche also that the people were sore against it, and accompted it not onely as a reproche & infamie to the kyng hymself, but also to his counsaill y e did agre to his naughtie purpose. Albeit, God of his infinite mercy preserued the ladie, whiche shorte tyme after was brought to London to her mother. [Page] In this time the kyng drawing nighe to London, was there accepted of his citezens streyghte after his cōming moste roially, & of all parties saluted after the moste louing fassion y e they could deuyse geuing thankes to God with solempne procession for y t he had sent theim a king to gouerne y e realme which before was ruled by a cruel & hateful Tirāt
After this gratulacion and thank esgeuing, y e kyng at a daye appointed assembled his counsail, to the ende he mighte marie the Ladie Elizabeth, thorowe the which mariage aswell y e nobilitee as cōmunes of y e realme wer brought in good hope y t all thinges should bee redressed, & an end made of all sedicion and strife for euer. And at this Parliament holden & kept at Westmīster he was created kyng the day of October, in the yere of oure Lorde a. M. foure C .lxxxvi. Whiche kyngdome he enioyed as of god enointed, for as menne doo [...] reporte aboute seuen hundreth foure score and seuentene yeres paste Cadwallader laste Kynge of Englande prophecied that his progenye shoulde beare rule and dominion again. So that by this meanes, men did fully perswade theim selfes that he was p̄ [...]estinate to it. And y e rather also they did beleue it because that kyng Henry y e sixte did foresaye the same, and in like maner prophecy of hym. Therfore he being thus proclaimed as true enheretour of the crowne, and at the same Parliament created kyng, did first cause to bee published, that all suche should bee pardoned that would submit theim selfes to his grace, & as faithful people doo to hym due allegiaunce, other that absented theim selfes, to bee takē as rebelles & traitours. After the [Page Cviii] whiche proclamacion hard, many y e were in holde and sanctuaries, came for pardō and safetie of life to him, which persones so submitting theim selfes [...]er pardoned & enhaunced to honoure, euery man after his owne deserte as the kyng & his counsaile thought best. And first considering his chiefe frendes and nyghe kinsemen, made Gaspar his vncle Duke of Bedforde, sir Thomas Stanley knight Earle of Derby, Giles Dabeney, sir Robert Willoughby, and Robert Brooke Lordes, & Edward his eldest sonne duke of [...], [...] wholy to all that king Richard had depriued hym of at what tyme he with other wer banished. Also actes, & statutes stablished & confirmed by Richard as thought expedient and veray necessary at that time for the publike weale, wer by hym aboundoned & infringed euery one. After these thinges doen he prouided w t all scelerite and expedicion to redeme the Lorde Marques Dorcet, & Iohn Burscher, whome he had lefte at Paris as a pledge & suertie for certaine money y t he had borowed there and Iohn, bishop of Ely for like det out of Flaunders. Furthermore, to the ende y e his realme might bee in a better staye, he cōmaunded that if any mā had iniury shewed at any tyme, the same persone shoulde putte vp his matter to hym, of whome he should both haue and finde redresse. And for these matters and causes to bee hearde, he made of his councell the Erle of Oxford, the duke of Bedford therle of Derby, the Lorde Strange w e his sonne and william the lorde his brother chief of the priuie chaumber, the lorde Broke chief steward, and lord graund maister of his house Renould Braye [Page] Iohn Morton Byshoppe of Ely, Richarde Foxe Iohn Dinham, whome after he made treasourer of Englande, Giles Dabeney, Richarde Gildeforde, Lorde Cheiny, Richarde Tunstall, Richard Edgecombe, Thomas Louell, Edwarde Poninges, with other wise men, as Richard ap Thomas a Welsheman, aswell circumspecte as wise, Morgane Kidnel, Lord Gray Marques Dorcet, Lord Talbot, Erle of Shrewesbury, Iohn Risley, lord Thomas Earle of Ormonde, an Irisheman, Henry Warney, William Say, William Ody, Gilbert Talbot, Willyam Vdall, Thomas Troys, Richarde Naufaute Capitaine of Calis, Roberte Point, Iames Hubert, Charles Somerset, Thomas Hawarde Earle of Surrey, a manne of wisdome, grauitee, and constantnesse most cōmendable, The earle of Essex descending of an high and noble parentage, Lorde William Blounte, Iohn Burscher, Iohn Fineux, Peter Edgecombe, Hew Conuey, Thomas Terell, Sir Henry Wiat, Robert Throgmorton, Thomas Brandon, sir Iohn Winkefelde, sir Edmond Dudley, Edward Belknape, Richarde Hemson. Also bishoppes, Henry Deney bishoppe of Cauntourbury, Oliuer kyng byshoppe of Bathe and Welles, William Barōs bishop of London that dyed shortely after he was bishoppe. Also William that succeded nexte after, Henry Archebyshop of Cauntourbury, Richarde of London, and Richarde Bishop of Norwiche.
When the kyng had taken these menne to bee of his councell for y e wealth of his realme, he maried Ladye Elizabeth doughter to kyng Edward as he had promised for the which, he had the heartes [Page Cxi] of many menne. So that afterwarde he had no nede to feare the assaultes of any persones or y e coniuracions of rebelles. Neuerthelesse, considering the chaunce he had before, and the falshode y e is in many menne from their youth, made yomen of the garde for his bodye, the whiche he firste of all Englyshe Kynges caused to bee, and as it is thought he did take it of the Frenche kyng. Also The garde fyrste ordeined by kīge Henry the vii. after this he caused a parliament to bee had, wher in was made and decreed certayne lawes, actes & statutes for the wealthe of his realme.
In this yere a newe sickenesse did reigne, and is so sore and painfull, as neuer was suffered before, the whiche was called the burning sweate. The sweating sickenesse. And this was so intollerable, that men coulde not kepe their beddes, but as lunatike persons & oute of their wittes ranne about naked, so that none almoste escaped y e wer infected therwith. At y e length after the great death of many a thousande menne they learned a presente remedye for the same dysease, that is, yf he were sycke of that sweate in the daye, that he should streyghtelye downe with his clothes and vestures, yf in the nighte, y t he should not rise for the space of .xxiiii. houres, and eate no meate at all, yf he coulde forbeare, and drinke as litle as he mighte.
This disease reigned throughout all England wherof also ensued a plague, as a token, and as y e people iudged, a plaine argument that kyng Henrye shoulde neuer bee oute of feare and dreade of some mischaunce, seing that he was in suche great vexacyon at the sedicyous tumulte that was rysen al the claimynge of the crowne.
[Page] Whē all thynges wer apeaced in London, and ordered after his owne mynd, he rode Northward in progresse to pacifie all his realme, and especially those partes where the firste commocion was, and where also wer priuie and cloked frendes of his aduersaries. But because it was nigh Easter, he tooke his waye to Lincolne, and there tariyng was certified that the Lorde Louell and Humfre Stafforde were gone from the sanctuary in Colchester, but to what place or whether, no mā could tell, whiche message the kyng litle regardyng, wēt foorth as he apointed to Yorke, and when he came The cōmocion made by the lord Louell and the lorde Stafforde. there, it was shewed hym that the lorde Louell was at hand with a strong power of menne, and woulde inuade the cytie, also that the said lorde Stafforde and his brother wer in Glocestre, and there had made an insurreccion, and set menne on euery parte to defende the gates and walles of the citie.
At the first hearyng of this, the kyng was but litle moued, but after that he was certified by the letters of his frendes that it was true, he was in greate feare, for that he had neyther an armye prepared, nor harnyes for theim, but because the mattier required haste, least that by long taryeng, his aduersaries power might bee encreased and multiplyed, he commaunded the Duke of Bedforde to mete theim with three thousande mēne, whiche were harnysed but barely, for theyr breste plates were for the moste parte lether. And he hym selfe in y t meane tyme would gather vp an hoste, where he might in euery place. The duke hauyng his mē nigh to y e tētes of his enemyes, cōsulted w t certain [Page Cx] of his cōpaignie, by what waye he mighte traine theim to peace, withoute bloodde shedyng. After the whiche deliberation & aduisement had, it was decreed that certaine shoulde proclaime openly, y t all thei should haue their pardonne, that woulde leaue battaile. The whiche proclamation auayled muche,, for the Lorde Louell, eyther for some feare, or mystrust that he had in his people,, or feryng hym selfe of his owne behalfe, fledde pryuely in a night from his compaignie, to Lankeshire & ther remained a space with syr Thomas Broghton knight. And when hys army had knowledge therof, thei also submittyng theim selfes all to the Duke, asked pardonne for their heinous offence. The Lorde Stafforde also hearyng this, was in a great agony, and for feare dyd take sanctuarye at Colname .ii. miles from Abindon. But because that sanetuary was not a defence for traytours, he was taken from that place and behedded, and his brother was ꝑdoned because he was thought not to haue done it of his owne will, but thorowe the counsaill and perswasion of his brother.
After this businesse was asswaged and Yorke shyre set in peace and quietnes, the Kyng went to London, and shortelye after that to Wynchester, where the Quene his wyfe, was deliuered of a Prynce called Arthure, and from Wynchester he retourned agayne to London.
Sone after it chaunsed that one syr Richard Symond preest, borne by nature to be a traytour and sedicious personne, and yet well learned, had a chyld called Lambert Symenel to bee hys scholar, by whome he inuented this crafte and disceat [Page] that he woulde make the chyld kyng of England and hym selfe archebyshoppe, or some hygh potestate in the realme, for he knewe verely, that many menne supposed kyng Edwardes chyldren to bee fled into some straunge place, and that Edwarde the Erle of Warwyke, sonne to the Duke of Clarence ether was or should bee put to death shortly And to the ende he myght y e better bryng hys purpose about, he taught the chyld bothe learnyng & good maners, and also to order hym selfe, as one linially descendyng from a hygh progenie. Sone after the rumoure was, that the younge Earle of Warwyke was dead in prysonne. And when the preest heard of this, he intendyng therby to bring his matters aboute, chaunged the chyldes name and called hym Edwarde, after the younge Earle of Warwyke, the whiche were boothe of one age, and then sayled into Irelande, there opening his mynde to certain of the nobilitee, whome he knew to beare but lytle fauoure to Kyng Henry, where he was promysed ayde of the Lorde Gerardine chauncellour of all that countree, and all that he coulde dooe. Whyche Lorde, fyrst callyng all hys frendes and louers together, desyred their helpe in restoryng the yong Earle to his herytage. And dyd sende certain into Englande to desire theym that were kynge Rychardes frendes to continue in their loue and faythfulnes towardes hym, and helpe hys nephiewes chylde to his ryghte.
And that hys power myghte bee the stronger to ouercome hys enemyes, he desyred Lady Margarete syster to kynge Edwarde, and wyfe to the Duke of Burgondy, to further hys purpose with [Page Cxiii] her helpe, whyche lady beyng then in Flaunders, promised him by the messaungers, that she would not onely maintaine his entente with large mony and substaunce, but with all the laboure and peynes that she myght occasion other, to be of y e same conspiracie.
When kynge Henrye was certified of thys, he was sore greued, that by the meanes of suche a myscreaunte personne, so great sedicion should bee, neuerthelesse, the kynge consideringe that it shoulde bee to the destruccion of manye menne, yf that he shoulde fyghte with his enemies in open feelde, called hys counsayle together at the Charter house besyde Rychemounde, and there consulted to pacifie thys matter wythoute anye more dysturbaunce. Where fyrste it was decreed, that all thei shoulde bee pardoned for their offences and treasons latelye commytted, whiche hath frome that tyme, borne theim selfes vpryght towardes their kinge, leaste that syr Thomas Broghton whyche kepte the Lord Louell from the king a great tyme, wyth other despeyring of theyr pardon shoulde haue made some sodaine insurrection agaynst hym. Further more, that men shoulde not thyncke, but that the Duke of Clarence was in Englande, it was appoynted that he shoulde showe hym selfe abrode, wherby the opynion that he was in Ireland myghte bee frustrate, and accompted as a lye. Also it was further determyned that the Ladye Elysabeth wyfe to kyng Edward the .iiii. shoulde lose al her landes, because she had submitted her selfe and her doughters wholye to the handes of kynge Rychard, contrary to the promyse [Page] made to the Lordes and nobles, whyche at her desyre lefte al that they had in Englande and fledde to kynge Henrye in Brytayne, and there dyd sweare hym to marye her eldeste daughter, as she wylled theim to dooe.
But her purpose did not frame as (God would) Thys quene buylded a Collage in Cambrydge, and gaue landes to the maynteyning of the same whiche at thys houre is called y e quenes Collage.
When thys order and determynacion of the kynge was ended, he wente to London, and the nexte Sondaye folowynge he caused the young Earle to bee broughte out of the Tower through the streetes to Poules. And there to shewe hym selfe to euerye bodye, and taske with the chiefe and noble menne that were thoughte to haue conspyred agaynste kynge Henrye, for thys cause that they myghte perceaue the Iryshe menne to moue battayle vnaduysedly, and cause stryfe vppon no iuste occasion, howebeit, all thys nothyng auayled, for the Earle of Lyncolne, the Duke of Suffolkes soonne, and nephewe to kynge Edwarde, coulde not suffer kynge Henrye thus to reygne, but as a traytoure sayled into Flaūders to the Ladye Margarete, takynge wyth hym Syr Thomas Broghton, with certayne other, Where also, the Lorde Louell landed twoo or three dayes before.
And there they beynge all together, determyned that the Earle of Lyncolne and the Lorde Louell shoulde goo to Irelande, and there attend vpon the counterfeyte Earle, and brynge hym to Englande with all the power they myghte agaynste [Page Cxii] kynge Henrye.
So that yf their dooynges had good successe that then the foresayde Lambarte (misnamed the Earle) shoulde by the consente of the counsayle be deposed, and the true Earle to bee delyuered oute of pryson and enherite his right, and iuste tytle of his dominion. But the kyng, not mistrusting any man to bee so foolysh hardy as to fyght in such a cause, or anye so vndyscrete (especiallye of hys realme) as to beleue it, dyd onelye mynde the suppressynge of the Iryshe menne, and theyr enterpryse to subdue. Yet hearynge that the Earle of Lyncolne with other were fledde, and gooen to hys aduersaries, he caused the borders to bee dilygentlye kepte that none other myghte escape or geue theym socoure, and commynge to the abbaye of Sayncte Edmundes Burye, it was certified that the Lorde Thomas Marques was come to excuse and pourge hym selfe before hym, for certayne thynges that he was suspected, to whome the kynge dyd sende the Earle of Oxford to take him commynge, and conueyghe hym to the Towre of London, for thys cause, that yf he were his frende, as he was in dede, that he should not bee myscontented to suffer a lytle imprysonmente for the safetie of hys kynge, yf he were not hys frende, there to tarye that he myghte haue no damage or hurte by hym.
And so the kynge wente forthe to Norwyche and tariynge there Christemas daye, went after to Walsingham, and from thence to Cambridge and so streyght to London. In this tyme the erle of Lincolne, & the lord Louell had got about two [Page] thousande Germaynes, wyth Martyn Swarte to be theyr captayne, and so saylynge to Ireland came and made the fornamed Lambarte kyng of Englande at Deuelynge. And so wyth the greate multitude of Iryshe menne aswell naked and vnarmed personnes, as other that the Lorde Gerardyne had vnder hym, they sayled into Englande, and landed for a purpose wythin a lytle of Lancastre, trustynge there to bee ayded of Syr Thomas Broghton the chiefe authoure of thys conspiracie.
The kynge not slepynge hys mattiers, but mystrustynge that such thynges shoulde chaunce sente certayne Knyghtes, throughe all the Easte parties to attende the commynge of hys enemyes, and gatherynge all hys hooste together, went hym selfe to Couentree, where he beynge, it was certified hym that the Earle of Lyncolne was landed at Lancastre wyth the newe kynge. Whome the kynge appoynted to meete after the consente and agremente of hys counsayle, and to goo vppon theym wythoute anye farther delaye least that theyr power by long sufferaunce should bee augmented and multiplyed.
And so after suche aduisemente taken, he went to Notingham, and there by a lytle woodde called Boures he pytched hys tentes. To whome shortelye after came the Lorde Talbote Earle of Shrowesburye, the Lorde Straunge, the Lorde Cheiney wyth a greate armye of menne, and manye other noble menne, whose names here after ensue.
- [Page Cxiii]Rauff Longforde
- Ihon Montigomery
- Henry Vernone of Pek
- Rauff Shurley
- Godfrey Folgehan
- Thomas Gryfley
- Edwarde Sutton
- Humfrey Stanley & an other Humfrey Stāley,
- Wyllyam Hugton
- Wyllyam Meryng,
- Edward Stanope
- Geruase Clifton
- Brian Stapulton
- Henry Wylloughby
- Wyllyam Perpoyntes
- Ihon Babyngton
- Wyllyam Bedyll
- Robert Brundell
- Ihon Markham̄
- Wyllyam Merbury
- Edwarde Aborogh
- Wyllyam Tyrwite
- Ihon Hussey
- Robert Shefilde
- Wyllyam Newporte
- Roger Ormeston
- Thomas Tempest
- Wyllyam Knyuett
- Henry Wyllaybet
- Lord Edward Hastyngges. Ihon Dygby
- Simō Digby Haringtō
- Richarde Sachenerell
- Ihon Vyllers
- Edwarde Fyldyng
- Thomas Polteney
- Nicholas Vaux
- Thomas Gryne
- Nicolas Griffin
- Edmund Lucy
- Edwarde Belknap
- Robert Throgmarton
- George Graie of Ruthin
- Guide Wolstone
- Thomas Fynderye
- Dauid Phillips
- Thomas Cheiney
- Robert Cotton
- Ihon Saint Ihon
- Ihon Mordant
- Thomas Terell
- Ihon Raynsford
- Robert Paynton
- Robert Danyell
- Henry Marney
- Edmunde Aroundell
Also there came frō y e ferdest partes of his realme other noble men, as these.
- George Oglye
- Rauff Neuill
- Richard Latemere
- Wyllyam Bulmere
- Ihon Langforde
- Wyllyam Norrys
- [Page] Ihon Neuill of Thortinbridge and
- Ihon Wyllyams.
The erle of Lyncolne in the meane season went forth softely with his compaignie into Yorkeshire without hurte or discommoditie of any māne that dwelt therabout, trustyng partely therby, & ꝑtely also bycause he was well knowen and acquainted emong theim, that he should get greate ayde and socour there. But when he perceiued very few or none to folowe hym, and that he could not (seyng his enemies were so nigh hand and he also so far entred) in safegard with his hoste returne bacward yet he thought it best to abyde & taste the chaunce of battaill, and so muche y t rather, because he sawe Henry within twoo yeres before accompaign [...]ed but with a fewe and small sorte of souldiers ouercome kyng Richard whiche brought with hym a greate hoste of well armed menne. Wherfore he, beeyng now in a greate hope of victory, toke his iorney thens towarde Newarke, there to sette his souldyours in araye and mete the kyng, whom he knew well though not to bee paste .ii. dayes iorney from hym. But before he could come thither, kyng Hēry whiche was surely certified of all thynges y t he did or wēt about, came to Newarke alitle before the euen that thei should fight on y t morowe other wyse then the erle loked for, and there tariyng not long, went forth three myles ferther and sette his tentes and taryed all night. Of whose commyng although therle knewe, yet he went foorth lustely of his tourney and came that night to a village nigh to his enemies, which is called Stooke, and there pitched his tentes.
[Page Cxiiii] The next daie, the kyng so sone as he had sette his souldyours in due ordre and araye, went forwarde w t all spede to the place where the erle with all his laye. To the whiche place, when he was come, & had appointed the felde, which was moste mete for the battaill to bee fought in, by & by gaue place for his enemies to come foorth and prouoked theim to battaill. But as ready as he was to prouoke, so readie wer thei of their owne courage to come foorth: so that of bothe parties thei ranne to battaill and fought moste egerly, in whiche tō flicte it did euidently appere that the Germaines whiche were sette in the forewarde, whose capitain was Martine Swarte, were nothyng woorse in manlynesse and cheualry (which thei gotte chiefly by daily and long exercise) then the Englishemen. And the Ireshmen although thei fought verie lustely, yet by the reason that thei ware not harnes (accordyng to their fasshiō and custome) were discomfcited and beate downe bothe more in nōbre, and soner then all the other. Yet was this battaill so earnestlie, & boldly fought for a whyle of bothe parties, that it could not bee wel discerned to whiche syde the victorie would incline. But at the last, the kynges forewarde which there abode all ieoperdie, so lustely & couragiously ranne vpon their enemies, y t they were none hable to resist or abyde their power: so y t all aswell Germaines as Irish men were there slain orels made to flie, of y e whiche none at all could escape awaie. Whiche battaill, whē it was thus dooen, all mēne might se of what boldnes & audacitie these rebelliōs were. For their capitaines Ihon erle of Lincolne, Frācis Louell [Page] Thomas Broghtō, Martine Swart, & Thomas Gerardine neuer gaue backe one foote but were slaine all in the same place where thei began first to fight. There were kylled at that vattaill with their fiue capitaines spoken of euen now of that partie about foure thousand. Of the kynges part there were not halfe of theim whiche fought in y e forewarde slain.
Thē was Lambert, the child whiche was falsly reported to bee the Dukes soonne of Clarēce, and his maister sir Richard Simond preest, both taken, but neither of theim putte to death, because Lambert was yet but a child and did seme to dooe that, more by compulsion of his maister thē of his owne will, and the other was a preest whiche for his defaulte was cast into perpetuall prisone. But this Lambert was taken into the Kynges kechin and after was made one of the kynges faukeners and is yet a lyue. And thus was all y t Margarete went about at this tyme, turned to naught and to none effecte, whiche thyng whē she heard tell of in Flaūders, she was verie lory at the hearte & made greate mone. And yet could she not bee contēt, but immediately after, inuēted an other thyng to vexe and trouble kyng Henry, as it shalbe shewed here after.
Kyng Henry when he had all thynges brought thus to passe, and vtterly vanquisshed these his enemies, thought hymself at one tyme deliuered from twoo eiuils together, that is to saie, from bothe feare that was present, and also that was to come. For it was not to bee thought y t thei whiche were so fewe in nombre durste bee so bold to entre [Page Cxv] into the realme and make battaile against y e kyng whom they knewe wel ynough would bryng with hym a great and well armed hooste, but that they had other felowes of the same coniuracion whiche would mete and ayde theim all that they could in tyme and place conuenient. Therefore when the kyng sawe the hoste of his enemies manifestly before his eyes, he commaunded that no mā shoulde kyll the earle of Lincolne, but that he should bee brought to hym alyue, to the entent that he might shewe and bewraye all the other whiche were of y e conspiracie. But that the sowdyers would not do, least the sauyng of hym, should bee the destrucciō (as it should haue been in dede) of many other. This battayle was fought in the yeare of oure Lorde a thousande foure hundreth, foure score, & the secōde yere of this Hēryes reigne. In y e whiche yere also Thomas Burscher archebyshop of Cā terburye died, into whose roume succeded Iohn Morton late bishop of Ely, whome Alexander of that name the sixte bishop of Rome made Cardinall. Now to retourne to my purpose.
After this, the kyng, when he had gathered al the prayes and spoyles together, and had buryed theim that there wer slain, went forth to Lincolne and there taryed three dayes, and had euerye daie one procession to thanke God almightie that he had the ouerhande of his enemies. And incontynently sent his banner to Walsyngham to be consecrate to our Lady, there to bee kepte for a perpetuall mo [...]ument of victorie. Then did he execuciō of suche rebellions as were there taken, & shortely after tooke his iorneye foorth to Yorke, and there [Page] likewyse suche as were founde gyltye dyd he punyshe strayghtlye. When all this was dooen, he wente vnto Newcastle, and frome thence sente into Scotlande Richarde Foxe whiche not longe before was made bishop of Exeter, and Richarde Edgecombe knight as Ambassadoures to kynge Iames for a league of peace. For this Henrye thought it a great pleasure and cōmoditee, to bee in peace and concorde with kinges & gouernours whiche laye aboute this his realme, and specially and before all other with kyng Iames, because y t there no rebellions might trust (whiche otherwise perchaunce woulde haue trusted) to haue ayde or succoure at his hande: so that thereby there durste none againe take weapon against hym. The ambassadoures, when they wer come into Scotland to the kyng, were of hym both gently and after the moste louing fashion receiued and heard, and then dyd he plainlye declare and open to theim y t he hym selfe loued kyng Henrye and his, no man [...]: but that y t moste parte of his Scottes and subiectes could in no case agree with the English menne. Wherfore, excepte that he should offend or [...]se theim, he desired y e legates to bee contēt with truce for .vii. yeres in promesse, but in dede, he sayed, that peace betwene theim on his parte shoulde neuer bee broken, and or euer those seuen yeres should bee passed, that he would geue truce for seuen yeres lenger: so that kyng Henry and he would euer bee in peace and moste assured amytie And this did kyng Iames, because he knewe that no facte of his people, shoulde bee alowed. When the Ambassadoures hearde this, they tooke the [Page Cxvi] yeres that were offered theim, as concernynge peace, and by and by retourned home to kyng Hē ry againe, and shewed hym all the mattier in ordre. With the whiche tydynges he was veraye well contented.
Shortely after, the kyng departed thence towarde London, and in the waye at Leicetre mette hym Abassadoures from the Frenche kyng which shewed hym, that their kyng Charles had recouered many tounes and cyties, whiche before were possessed of kyng Maximilian, and that he kepte battayle nowe with Fraunces the duke of Brytayne, because he kepte and socoured in his dominion certaine that were traytours and rebellions against hym, of the whiche the chief was Lewes duke of Orlyance, and therfore he desyred hym of his frendship & familiaritie, that either he would helpe hym orelles medle of neyther partie. But kynge Henrye, althoughe he had founde muche frendship at the Frenche kynges hande, yet for as muche as he spyed whereof this stryfe beganne, with this message was not well contente. For the cause that the Frenchemenne tooke battayle, was because they sawe that the Duke was an olde manne and had neuer a chylde, and thereby that they myghte brynge that Dukedome into their subieccion.
When kyng Henrye perceiued this, and also howe louyng the Brytaynes had been euer to Englande, and finally remembred the tendre loue which was betwene the duke and hym, thought it best, if nede wer, to helpe the Britaynes, Yet for as [Page] muche as he had founde the Frenche kyng veray kynde in tymes past, and had partely by his helpe recouered his kyngdome, he was veraye lothe to medle: in so muche that he coulde not well tell what was best in this mattier to bee dooen. But at the laste he fully purposed, if necessitie shoulde require, to helpe the duke in all that he might. Yet, least he should make of his highe frende hys extreme enemie, his aunswere was to the ambassadoures, that he did intende to make their kyng and the duke frendes again. Wherfore assone as the Frenche kynges ambassadoures were dimissed, he sent on message Christopher Vrswycke to Charles the kynge of Fraunce. Firste to certifye hym, that he was veraye glad of the victorye that he had vpon Maximilian, secondarely what tumulte and insurreccion was made here in Englād thyrdly and especially to desyre hym to bee at one againe with the Duke of Brytayne. And then he commaunded this Vrswycke, that if the kyng of Fraunce shoulde bee so contente, to go foorthe immediatlye to the Duke, and desyre hym lykewyse of the same.
But when the kyng was come againe to London, there was ioye and myrthe for the victorye y e he had on euery syde. For not onely the kyng, but also euerye one of his cytezyns reioysed veraye muche. Wherfore the kyng shewed hym selfe both beraye humane and courteous toward all menne, and also rewarded all theim that tooke paynes in that battaile moste bountefully. And not long after delyuered Lord Thomas Marques out of the [...]oure, and loued hym veraye well.
[Page Cxvii] In the meane season Christofer Vrswicke was come to the frenche kyng, & of hym, after the most louing fassion y t coulde bee, receiued. And as sone as he had shewed his message, y e kyng shewed him selfe to bee there w t veray well pleased. Then went y e ambassadour streight thence, as it was cōmaunded hym, into Britain, and shewed the duke what kyng Henry would haue dooen. But the duke (because hym self had been sicke a great while, & therby his memory & wit was d [...]aied) called to hym to heare the message bothe Lewes the duke of Orleaunce and other of his councell, whiche Lewes in no wyse woulde haue any peace to bee made, but saied that it was more mete that kyng Henrye (seing he had founde suche kyndnesse at the Dukes hande, and Britaine was suche a good defence to England) to helpe to kepe battayle all y t he might against the frenchmen. Then retourned this Christofer againe into Fraunce, & declared to the king Charles what aunswer was made of y e Britains, and shortely after came into Englande againe. But still in the meane time, y e Frenche kyng went aboute busely to ouercome the Brytains, and the more he was nigh of his purpose, so much y e more did he exhorte & desire kyng Henry to make peace betwene theim, wherfore he sēt Bernarde Daubeney knighte in all the haste to kyng Henrye to desire hym in any wise to make some ende of this cō trauersy. And therupon the kyng being desirous of the same, chose thre oratours, y e Abbot of Abindon, Iohn Lilie the bishop of Romes collectoure and Richard Tonshal a knight and a veray wise man, to gooe firste to the Frenche kyng, and then [Page] to the duke to make amitee and frendshyp againe betwene theim. But or euer these ambassadoures proceded on their iourney, Iohn Lilye fell sicke of the goute: therfore for hym was chosen Christofer Vrswycke, and they together wente (as they were cōmaunded) Firste into Fraunce to the kyng, and thence withoute delaye into Britain. But Fraunces the duke in no case would take suche condicyons as wer there offered, wherfore they came back againe into Fraunce without their purpose, and there tarieng, signified to kyng Henry by their letters all that was dooen. But or their letters came to the kynges handes, Edward Woodilile, a bold Champion came to hym & desired veraye earnestly that he myght haue an host of men to helpe the Britains, and leasire it should cause any dissencion betwene the Frenche kyng and hym, he saied that he would gooe priuely and without a pasporte, to thentent it might bee thought that he stole out of the land. But the kyng, for as much as he trusted that peace shoulde bee made, woulde in no wyse graunt his peticion. Wherfore this Edward wēt streight into the ysle Veches, which was in his dominacion, & there so sone as he had gathered his menne together about foure. C, sayled ouer to the Britaines, & ioyned hym selfe with theim against the Frenchmē, whiche thing when it was knowen in Fraunce, made y e ambassadours greatly afraid of their liues. But whiles they were in this feare, and the Frēchemen thought it dooen maliciously of Kyng Henry, there came other Ambassadours frome hym to the Frenche kyng, certifieng hym & declaring (by most euident tokēs) that it was nothing [Page Cxviii] in dede as it was thought to haue been. To the which message, albeit y e kyng had lytle credēce yet he made as thoughe he had not bene angry at all. So y e Ambassadours renewed peace betwene their king & hym for .xii. monethes and retourned home again, & shewed the kyng all such thinges y t they had either hearde or sene there, wherof he gathered that y e Frenchmen did nothing lesse entend then to haue peace made. Wherfore without delay he called a parliament & there consulted of the aidyng of the Brytains: then of the exspence that should bee therin made, & after of other mattiers.
And assone as the parliament was broken vp, he caused musters to bee taken in euery toune thorowoute his realme. Yet leaste peraduenture he might seme willingly to breake the amitee whiche was betwene the Frenche kyng and hym, he sent Ambassadours into Fraunce to certifye the kyng that of late he had kepte a parliament, and there y t it pleased all the nobles that he should sende helpe to y e Britains, because they at all times had dooen more benefites to Englande then all other naciōs and therfore that he should either leaue of battail orelles that he shoulde not bee greued if he dyd obey y e mindes of his Lordes and prelates, and yet that he woulde promise hym this one thing, y t his should medle w t hym no lēger then he was in Britain & kepte battaile vpon theim. With these commaundementes y e ambassadours went foorth and declared to y e French kyng all the minde and wyll of their kyng which thyng he litle cared for, and thought as it came to passe in dede, that the Englishemen there coulde lytle auayle.
[Page] In the meane season the Britains fought one felde at a place called sainte Albanes & there sped beray euel. For of theim Lewes duke of Orleaūce with many mo were taken, and Edwarde Wooduile, Iames Galeot an Italian and a veray good warryer, with diuers other noble menne slaine. Whiche thing when kyng Henry heard tell of, he thinking it tyme to make haste, sente spedely Roberte Brooke Lorde, Iohn Cheinye, Iohn Midelton, Raufe of Helton, Richarde Corbet, Thomas Leightō, Richard Lacon, & Edmond Cornewell, all lustye capitaines with .viii. thousand wel armed men to y e Brytains to helpe theim in theyr nede, whiche by reason y e wind serued theim, came thither so sone as they could desire. But when the Frenche menne knewe of their comming (whome they knewe so longe as they were freshe and lusty to bee in a maner inuincible) at y e firste wer blanke all, and durste scarsely looke oute of their tentes, but afterwarde trusting y t they might wery theim they went many of theim together into diuers places, and kepte many bikeringes with the English menne, but they theim selfes euer bare the worste away, howsoeuer the Englishmen sped, they sped naught. Whiles they this kynde of warre did exercise, the Duke Fraunces died, and then was all dasshed. For the chyefe rulers of the Brytains being some of theim corrupted with money, & some sturred vp with ambicyon, fell into deuisyon amonge theim selues, and semed nomore to endeuoure to defende their commune weale, but rather to destroy and vtterly extinguishe it Which thing the englishe menne perceiuing, and also suffering [Page Cxix] muche colde, were compelled of necessitee within fyue moonethes that their wente thyther, to come backe agayne into Englande.
Then Charles the French kyng maried Anne the Dukes doughter, and gat al Britayn by that meanes into hys hādes. But of this it shalbe spoken more here after.
It was decreed here in Englande before there were any souldyours sent into Brytayne, that for the expence of that warre, euery man should paye as thei were hable, a tribute, whyche the mooste parte of theim that dwelte in the byshopryke of Durhā and Yorke shyre, dyd vtterly refuse to pay, and complayned of the matter to their Lorde the Earle of Northumberland. And he immediately signified to the kyng by his letters that the people dyd greatly lament and was sory saiyng, that thei were neuer put to so muche coast, as thei had been of late dayes, & nowe that ther was so much requyred of theim, that neither thei were hable to pay so great a summe, nor would pay it. Yet for al that the kyng cōmaunded the Erle to get it on thē and make theim pay it whether thei would or not least peraduenture it myght be a cause, that yf at any time a tribute agayne should bee required of thē, to make an insurreccion. Which thyng when the people hearde of, by and by they ranne vnto the earle and as the authoure of the tribute paiyng Themurde ryng of the erle of Northūberland kylled hym out of hande. And when thei had so done, thei chase Ihon Egremonknight a verey dicious personne to bee their captayne, and so arraied them selfes, and went agaynst the kyng, makyng cries in euery towne, that thei came to fight [Page] for no nother cause but to defēde y t cōmon libertie.
But when the mattier shoulde come to blowes thei waxed colde all the sorte of theim, and euerye one wished that this tumulte wer retracted which was nowe alredy begonne, so that at the cōclusiō not one scacely scaped without his great discommodite. For the kynge assone as he hearde of this insurreccion, went downe with an hoost to Yorke wherof these slaues and traitours beyng greatly afraied, fledde some hether and some thether and durst not abide and sustaine the power of y e kynges army. Wherfore thei wer sone taken and punished greuousely, accordyng to their deseruyng euery one of theim. But Ihon Egremont whiche was their captain fledde into Flanders to Margarete of whome we spake before.
And the kyng so sone as this busines was quē ched, tooke his iourny back again vnto London and committed the tribute whiche was in Yorke and about Yorke to bee taken vp, holy to Richard Toustal. And this was y e yere of our lord a thousand foure hundred .xc. and the fourth yere of the reigne of this kyng Henry.
And in thys yere also the kynge of Scottes [...]. was sore vexed. For his subiectes roase agaynst hym and made his sonne Iames whiche was as yet but a chylde, their capitain. Wherfore, he sent to the kynge of Englande, to the Frenche kyng, and to the byshoppe of Roome Innocentius to desire theim to make some end of thys ciuile battayle and contencion whiche was betwene hys people and hym. Whiche afterwarde sente theyr ambassadours as they were desired, but all in [Page Cxx] vayne. For y e rude sort would nedes fight onlesse The kyng of Scottes slain of his subiectes. he would resygne his crowne, wherfore shortely after, thei fought, and in that battayle kylled the kyng and gaue his sonne Iames whiche was the fourth of that name the crowne.
But the byshoppe of Romes legate Hadrian came to late. For whyles he was in Englande w t kyng Henry, worde came that the kyng of Scottes was slayne in battayle and hys soonne made kyng. And therfore, he taried here in England for a space, and was veray muche made of, and hyghly commended to the kyng by Ihon Mortō archbyshop of Canterburie. Whereby he came into so high fauour with kyng Henry, that he made him bishoppe of Herforde, and shortly after, that least gaue hym the bishopprike boothe of Welles and Bathe. And not longe after he retourned w t these honours to Roome, and there of Alexander was made Cardinall.
There beganne also of freshe, certayne businesse as concernynge Brytaine before this geare was appeased: whiche was, that Maximilian beyng at that tyme without a wyfe, would haue maried the duke of Briteines doughter, and had one that wowed for hym, which lady promisyng hym fayth & trueth, to the entent that she might not go from her word, he vsed this way w t her, when she went to her bed the night after, as to the bedde of wedlocke, the wower that was hired, putte one of his fete into y e bed to the knee in y e sight & cōpany of many noble matrōs & ladies, for a token & testimony y t the mariage was consūmate, & thei .ii. as mā & wife. But this did nothing auaile, for Char [Page] the Frenche kyng was desireous to marye her & hearyng that Maximiliā was sure to her, dyd the more busely set vpon the Britaynes, to thentent he might both haue the ladye and the countree also at his wyll, for he estemed that mariage to bee of no strength or force. Neuerthelesse, he feared kyng Henry muche, least that he would stoppe his purpose, whiche kyng had made a league, and Ferdinande also the kyng of Spayne, had made y e same with the Britaynes, to assist theim in all their ieoperdies and perilles that should chaunce to theim by foren countrees, wherfore he sent in al post hast Francese Lucemburgense, Charles Marignane and Roberte Gaguine, to kyng Henry for a peace to bee confirmed and hadde, desyrynge hym, that their kyng might ordre the mariage of the Ladye Anne as wer thought best without any let or hynderaunce of it by hym, but kyng Henry would not agree to theim, that the lady should bee maried to hym, consyderyng she was made sure to the kyng Maximilian, for that it was against all right and lawe bothe of God and manne. Albeit the kynge would gladly make a peace betwene theim bothe, and so demissyng y e kynges Ambassadoures with a large and ample rewarde, sent Thomas Goldestone abbot of Cantorbury and the lord Thomas of Ormondye ambassadours streight after theim.
In this meane space, Alexander B. of Rome the sixt of that name after Innocētius sent the bishop of Cōcordiense legate to the Frenche kyng for certayne mattiers, and emong other for a peace and vnitee to bee confederate betwyxt hym and kyng Henry, the whiche when he had easely obteyned, [Page Cxxi] he came to Englande and there beyng entretained moste roially of the kyng, had his purpose and desire of hym. The Englishe ambassadours then beyng with the Frenche kyng, purposed to haue a peace concluded, whiche first demaunded certain thynges of the kyng ere that it should bee made, albeit the kyng would graūt theim nothyng, and was sore moued with their request & askyng. So y e shortly after, the Frenche kyng sent to the noble menne of Britain greate giftes and rewardes to the entent thei might moue the ladie Anne to giue her troweth to hym, and also sent to herself many princely giftes & tokens, y e she would beare loue to hym. And y t she might not feare but that she might lawfully marie to hym, certified her y e the promise was of none effecte y t she had gyuē to Maximiliā for y t it was geuē & made w tout his cōsent whiche had y e gouernaunce & dominion ouer all y e countre And this was the cause that no concorde or peace could bee kept betwixt theim. And where as that the kyng had taken Maximilians doughter ladie Margaret to bee his wife, he saied that it might bee lawfully dissolued because y e ladie was vnder age, and not ripe to bee maried. This ladie Anne of Britain through the persuasion of many noble menne of that countree, was contented to bee his wife and ladie. And when the kyng was certified of this, he hastened the mariage with all the expedicion and celeritee that he could. So that the Englishe ambassadours returned again to their countree, and nothyng dooen or agreed vpon in their matter. When the kyng was certified of this by his ambassadours, he purposed to make battaill [Page] against hym, and to reuenge the naughtie entent of his, with the swerde, and assemblyng his counsaill together, showed theim the matter, and the iuste cause he had to fight, desteryng theim for the maintenaunce of thesame warres to helpe hym with money, neuerthelesse that menne should not thynke it to bee extorte of theim, he willed euery māne to gyue as muche and as litle as he would, and theim to bee estemed and taken as his moste beste and assured frendes that gaue y e most money When this somme was gatheryng and preparaunce made for battaill, Maximilian the kyng warred sore with the Frenchemen, whiche kyng was taken a litle before at a certain brunt and skirmishe made, and cast in prisone, after the whiche tyme kyng Henry sent to hym Giles Dabeney capitain of Calais to aide hym with three thousād harnissed mēne. At y e length Maximilian hauyng the better hand of the Frenchemen, entēded to reuenge hymself of the Frēche kyng, for that he had repudiate his doughter ladie Margarete, and taken to hym as wife quene Anne, but because he was not fully hable of hymself to sustein that battaill, he sent Iames Conti [...]alde ambassadour to kyng Henry for helpe, whiche Iames when he had dooen his message, the kyng promised that he would dooe for hym all that he could in mainteinyng his warres.
In this tyme, Charles the Frenche kyng maried ladye Anne, chalengyng by this mariage the dominion and gouernaunce of y e Brytaines. Maximilian the kyng beyng certified of this, was greately moued, for that he did not onely forsake [Page Cxxii] and repudiate his doughter ladye Magarete, but also receiued in mariage y e ladye and quene Anne to his wife, and in this furie he sent to kyng Hēry desieryng hym to prepare an armie, for he would goo vpon the Frenche menne, and kepe open battaill with theim, whiche kyng Henry gathered an hoste of menne, and proclaimed battaill in all his realme, after the whiche proclamacion there came to London an houge armie of menne, with their capitaines, whiche herafter ensewe and folowe.
- Rycharde Thomas with a greate compaignie of Welshe menne.
- The erle Thomas of Derbie.
- George erle of Shrowesburie.
- Thomas erle of Harundell.
- Edmunde duke of Suffolke.
- Edwarde erle of Deuenshire w t his noble young soone.
- Thomas erle of Ormō dye.
- George erle of Kent.
- Lorde Thomas Dorcet Marques.
- Ihon Cheyney.
- Gyles Dabeney
- Richard Gylforde
- Ihon Raynsforth
- Iames Terell
- Ihon Sauage
- Thomas Baro of Heltō
- Wyllyam Bulmerey
- Edwarde Stanley, with other.
After that all this armie was araied, the kyng sent sir Christopher Vrswycke, and sir Ihon Ryseley knyghtes to the kyng Maximilian, to certifye hym that thei were all in a redynesse to kepe battaile when he would haue theim. When they had dooen their message thei returned backe again [Page] to their kyng, certifiyng hym, that Maximiliā was so poore and nedye of monye and menne, that he could not be hable to susteyne any battaile neuerthelesse his mynde and will was good, if his power and habilitee had been correspondent to it. The kyng after the receipte of these letters, was displeased muche with hym, albeit consyderyng he had gooen so farre in it, and had suche furnyture of all thynges prepared, least that menne shoulde impute it to hym as cowardnesse to faynt frō battaile, he proceded forth towarde Fraunce, and about y e .vi. daye of Septēbre he landed at Calise, & there rested his armye. Wher worde was brought to all the hoste (for thei did not knowe of it before) that Maximilian could make no preparaunce for lacke of mony. At y e whiche thei maruailed greatly, consideryng that he had suche vilanye shewed hym not longe before at the kynge of Fraunce hand. Yet thei wer neuer discoumfeyted at it, but like stoute and valiaunt warryars had great confidence in their owne power and strengthe, wyth whō the kyng of Fraunce (after y t he perceaued it best for his profite & ease) would gladly haue been reconciled, although he had a ready hoste to fight against theim & withstāde their power. And especially he desyred peace for this cause, y t he might haue the loue of his neighboures, to the entent his realme might bee in better sauegarde and quietnes, whē he should warre against Ferdinād kyng of Napels, at y e desyre of Ludouike Sfortia duke of Millayn, whiche at that present tyme did inuite hym to it, wherfore he did sende Philip Desquerd chief of Annonye to desyre kyng Henrye of peace, [Page Cxxiii] whiche Philip did send y e letters to hym, before he came into the countre hymself, wherin he signified that he would take suche paines in bryngyng his purpose about, that he would if it should so please his grace, reconcile bothe hym and their kyng to loue eche other as thei haue dooen heretofore, and saied that it should bee for his honour to take thesame condicion, whiche condicion if he would send certain of his capitains to mete with hym in any parte of Fraunce, and there to determine of it he should haue it there promised & hereafter duely to bee performed. The kyng after he had red these letters, did send the bishop of Exceter, and Giles Dabeney to the forenamed Philip for peace to be agreed vpon & concluded, the whiche after a space determyned vpon certain condicions whiche here after shalbee shewed, that peace should bee had on bothe parties. When thei were thus consultyng, y e kyng hauyng his hoste at Caleis, remoued from that place to Bononye, & there pitchyng his tētes beseeged the toune with all the power he might, whiche toune because it was strongely defended & furnished with all thynges necessarye for warre, it could not bee ouercome without greate labour, & before y t he either could or did ouercome any parte of it, woord was brought, that a peace was cōcluded and made, whiche heard, as it was pleasure to the Frenchemen, so it was sorowe to the Englishe men, for thei cried out of the kyng and saied it was not for his honour so to dooe, but the kyng as a wise manne & moste prudent prince, saied it should be the death of many noble & puisaunt capitaines if he should continue thesame battaill, & therefore [Page] it might be to his sore reproche, if it wer in his power, not to tendre as well the health of his cōmons as his owne, whiche saiyng did somewhat coule & pacifye their grief. And after this dooen, the kyng returned backe to Calise, for because it was enformed hym y t one Richard y e named hym self y e sonne of kyng Edwarde had made an insurreccion in Flaūders, through y e counsaill of lady Margarete y e quene, to fight against hym, which thyng, kyng Henry consyderyng did the more spedely hasten to conclude a peace. And the condicion of this peace to bee made was this, y t the Frenche kyng should paye to kyng Henry, a certain summe of meny, the whiche was leauyed by the ambassadours, for the cost and charges that the kyng was put to in that battayll, and also should yerely for a certain space paye or cause to bee payde to the kyng of Englād for a full recompence. x [...]v. thousand crounes. The whiche Frenche kyng after that beyng in warre with the Italians, payd the said tribute to y e most noble prince and our souereigne lorde kyng Hērye the. v [...]. sonne to Henry the seuenth, for a full recō [...]cion and frendship to bee had for euer. This was the yere of our Lorde a thousand foure hundreth foure score and thirtene, and the seuēth yere of his reigne. Also in this inuadyng & besiegyng [...]. of Bonony (whiche we spake of before) there was none killed, sauyng onely syr Ihon Sauage, whiche goyng out of his tent w t syr Ihō Riseley, was taken priuely rydyng about the walles of y e toune and there because he would not yelde was slain of the Frenche men, albeit the other syr Ihon Rysely fled and escaped their daunger.
[Page Cxxiiii] After this the kyng went frō Calis to England again, & yet that he might not be w tout some trouble or busynes, quene Margaret of Spaine (whiche euer watched to do hym a displeasure) perceauyng y t the erle with his cōpaignie could not haue suche successe in their businesse as she would haue wished theim, she inuēted a new way to worke treason against him. There was a certain yoūg mā of Tornace, very beautiful & faire in coūtenaunce, & of a pregnaunt witte, whiche yoūg mā was called Peter & surnamed Warbecke, & for his cowardnes nycknamed of the Englishe men & called Perkyn, Perkyn warbeck. which yoūg mā trauaylyng many countrees could speake many lāguages & for his basenes of stocke & birth was knowen of none almost. Therfore y e quene thynkyng this yoūg man to bee mete whō she might feigne to be the duke of Yorke, and sōne to her brother kyng Edward, kept hym a certain tyme w t her priuely, and tellyng hym what he should be, y t he might the rather persuade mē to be the kynges sonne did send hym into Irelāde, after what time she knewe that kyng Henry had apointed to fight against the Frenche kyng, where he was honorably receaued & taken of euery manne as a prynce, for whose right, they promysed all to fight, and helpe hym in all y t they could. After this it came to y e Frēche kynges eare y t such an one was in Ireland, for whō the kyng did send to see & caused hym to be brought before him, & when he came into his p̄sence, y e kyng accepted hym gladly, & after a princely fashiō intreteined hym. But after y e he came in loue w t the kyng of England, the sayd Charles did dimisse y e yoūg mā, & would no lōger [Page] kepe hym, least that some inconueniencie or cause of strife should chaunce thorough it. Wherfore y e young manne went to Flaunders agayne to the quene Magarete, whiche quene did receaue hym with suche gladnesse, that she coulde not well rule her selfe, & for this cause onely she dyd shewe her selfe so ioyfull and merye, that menne mighte perswade theim selfe that this was Richard the kynges soonne, and vpon that cause truely, men did y e more reuerence to the younge manne, and y t more firmely beleue hym to bee the righte heire & sonne to kyng Edwarde. Also after this rumour blased abrode, aswel in England, Fraunce, as Flaundres there beganne great sedicion to spryng, and firste they that were long in sanctuary for the greate offences that they had commytted, and other that wer cast in pouertie, gathered a compaignie of mē and sayled ouer into Flaunders to the counterfaicte Edwarde, otherwise named Peter, also many of the noble men conspired together, and to the entent they might bryng their purpose wel about, they did send certain to the Quene Margarete, to knowe when thesame Edwarde might come conueniently into Englande, y e thei beyng certified of thesame might y e more easely receaue & bryng hym into y e realme. So y t by the consent and agrement of theim all, syr Robert Clyfforde knight & Wyllyam Barley wer sent to shewe all their myndes & aduyce as concernyng the newe founde duke, to the Quene Margarete. Whome the Quene did accepte gladlye, and persuaded theim, that it was true that was publyshed of Rycharde the duke, and streight vpon shewed theim thesame [Page Cxxv] Peter, whiche was muche lyke Richarde, praysyng his vertues and qualitees that he had, wonderfullye.
The said Robert, whē he had seen thesame yoūg manne, beleued surely that he was of the kynges bloode, and wrote to Englande to his coumpaignye and felowes of his conspiracie, that he knewe hym to bee the kynges soonne by his face & euery proporcion of his body. And when these letters came vnto Englande, the chief capitaynes of this businesse did openly diuulgate and publyshe, that it was trewe that was spoken and saied abroad of the Duke, but it was dooen by suche a crafte, that no manne coulde tell who was the authoure of that rumoure.
When the kyng perceiued that many men did geue credence to his vaine fable, he thought beste for his owne safegard to prouide a remedy for it, & also mystrusting that some conspiracye had bene made bicause that sir Robert Clifford had fled priuely into Flaundres, commaunded certain knightes that were chosen and piked menne of warre w t a bonde of menne to kepe the borders surely y e no manne might escape or sayle ouer the sea without a pasporte or licence geuen by hym. Also that men myghte not contynue in the false perswasion and belefe that they had conceyued of the duke, he caused certain spies to search in all the citees of Belgike, to knowe of what progenie this mysnamed Richarde was, and to geue theim highe rewardes that would shewe the verite and truth of the same matter. So that they sailynge into Fraunce, euerye manne dyd gooe into a contraye quarter, [Page] and enquired diligently for hym, and at y e length, certain of theim came to a towne called Tornace and there were certifyed by the testymonye of many honest menne that he came but of a lowe and course parentage, and he was named Peter War becke, whiche thing also the kynges frendes certified hym by their letters and writynges to hym more plaine and euidentelye. Therfore when the kyng had knowen the matter wholy, aswel by his frendes as by his spies sent foorth purposelye for the same, he caused it to bee proclaimed openly aswell in other regions & countrees as in England that the disceate and deuelish crafte might appere euident to euery manne. And firste he sent ambassadours to Philyp the chiefe capitaine in Flaundres, and to his councell, because he was but of a younge age, whiche were sir Edward Poninges knight, and sir William Varame preest and lawyer, that they might shewe euidently howe falsely the younge manne hath vsurped the name of Richarde duke of Yorke whiche was kylled with his brother Edward in the Towre of London, at the cōmaundement and will of kyng Richard his vncle, as euery man coulde testifye and affirme most surely.
Also that he was borne of a poore stocke, and an obscure famulie in Tornace, and there named Perkin Warbecke, and therfore that it woulde please hym & his councel not to suffer theim selfes to bee blynded or seduced with suche mere impostures and craftie illusions, nor yet to aide hym at any hande to cause sedicion or strife, consideryng that he had no iuste title to the enheritynge of the [Page Cxxvi] same. And that they would the rather bee his frendes nowe, because y t he helped Maximilian theyr kyng the yere before againste the power and violencye of the Frenche menne, where as he of hym selfe was not hable to refyste theyr myghte and stronge power. When the Ambassadours had dooen their message, they were gentely entretayned of hym, and had their request, that he woulde not (for the loue that he oughte vnto the kynge) no nor any of his counsaile helpe thesame Perkin any thinge at all.
Neuerthelesse, yf the quene Margaret would persiste and continewe in her malice towardes the kyng (whome the Ambassadour sir William Varame had reproued and checked sore, for bringing vp of suche monsters and commune plagues, to the publike weale in his oration that he made vnto Philippe and his counsayle) it was not in their power to withstande it, for because that she might doo in her owne herytage all thinges at her owne wyll and pleasure. Whiche quene entended fully to arme this Perkin with a stronge compaignye of menne against kyng Henry.
After that kynge Henrye dyd heare of this, he purposed to pacyfye all this busynesse that was like to chaunce, by wytte and policye, and streight dyd sende foorthe certaine spies, whiche shoulde fayne theim selfes to haue fledde vnto the Duke, and by that meanes searche foorthe and knowe the whole entente of theyr coniuracion, and after what waye they framed theyr matters.
Other also shoulde promyse a pardon and remyssyon vnto syr Roberte Clyfforde, and Willyam [Page] Barley for their offence cōmitted to the kyng. And when they had so dooen, many of theim returned to Englande, and broughte the names of certayne that were chief of the same conspiracye, Other taried vntyll suche tyme that sir Robert Clifforde came to Englande agayne. And when the kyng had knowen the chief capitaines of this tumulte by his spyes that were there with theim, he caused all them to bee attached & brought to London before his presēce, whose names wer sir Iohn Ratclyffe, syr Simon Monforde, syr Thomas Thwarte knightes, William Dabeney, Roberte Ratcliffe, Richard Lesey, w t many other. Also certaine preestes and religious menne, as sir William Richeford, and Thomas Poynes bothe monkes of sainct Dominikes order, sir William Sutton, sir William Vrseley Deane of Poules, & Robert Layborne. Other that were giltie of the same crime, hearing that many of their compaignie wer taken, fledde and did take sanctuarye. And the other that were taken wer condempned all of treason, of y e whiche there was heded sir Simon Monford, sir Robert Ratcliffe, and William Dabeney as authours & chiefe capitaines of this busines. The other were pardoned, and the Preestes also for their order that they had taken. Also sir Iohn Ratcliffe was pardoned of his lyfe, but after that he came to Calisse, & there caste in prisone, he was behedded, because he corrupted the kepers w t many promises to haue escaped out of the same. Shortly after, sir Robert Clifford trusting to find fauour & grace at the kynges hande, came to England, of whose cōming when y e kyng was certified [Page Cxxvi] he went streight to y e towre of London, & there taryed tyll suche tyme y e syr Robert Clyfford came whiche thyng he vsed vnder this pretence, that yf sir Robert Clifford had accused any man to hym of y e treason, that then euerie suche person mighte bee called thether withoute anye suspectiō of anie euel, and there streight to bee cast in holde, but before I goo furder, I wyll shewe the opinion that many men conceaued of the knightes goynge to Flaunders. Some men helde this opinion, that kyng Henrye dyd sende hym as a spye to Flaunders, and therfore he came the soner into his fauoure. Neuerthelesse, this is not lyke to bee true by diuerse reasōs. Fyrst that it tourned to y e great infamye and hurt, both of hym selfe and his frendes. Secondarly that he was not in so greate fauoure with the kyng, as he had ben in tymes past for because that he was giltie in that part. Therfore the saied sir Robert now comming to the king after his retourne into England, kneled mekelye downe at his feet, and desired pardō of his grace and after that beyng enquired of the coniuration and examined who wer the authours of this mischiefe, he pronounced & saied that William Stā ly whome the kynge made Earle, was one of the chief, when he had so saied, the kyng was greatly dismayed & greued, that he should offend, whō he had made chief of his priuie chamber, considering also that he had founde great kindenes hertofore at his hande, and that he dyd ouercome kyng Rychard chiefly by his helpe and meanes. So that the kyng coulde not bee perswaded, that he was any suche offender, had not it bene shewed him after [Page] by manifest tokens and apparēt argumentes y e it was true as he saied. Whom the king thē caused to be taken and examined of the matter, after the which examinacion he was proued to be an offender. Then the kynge doubtynge what to dooe with him, dyd consult and breath a lytle with him selfe, for he feared, that his brother lord Thomas by whom he had shewed great kyndnesse woulde take it greuously, also & yf he shoulde remitte that faulte, other would abuse his lemtee, and trespace more highly. Albe it, at the laste he wylled that he shoulde suffer for his offence, and so caused hym to bee behedded. The cause that their loue (as mē reporte) dyd chaunge into hatred was this. The lorde Wylliā consideryng that he saued the kyng and brought hym to this realme to be gouernour thought he could neuer bee recompensed for hys so doyng, and wher as the kyng also remembring this benefyte, dyd make hym his chiefe chamberlayn, and gaue hym the hyghest promocions that he had, he lytle regarded them and loked for some greater rewarde, wherfore, the king perceauynge that, was sore greued with hym, and so thei bothe dyd fall at debate and hatred eche wyth other.
Also at this time the king thought best to vse some asperite in correcting the offēces of his subiectes, because y e some had taken suche heart and audacitee to them, y e thei feared not to speake euel of his maiestie with most spiteful and contumeleous wordes, trusting euer that y e fayned Rychard duke of York, now lately rysen from death to lyfe on gods name, should claime the crowne, & enheret his counterfeted fathers possessions, & when [Page Cxxvi] such persōs had suffered due ponishment for their offences, other learning by their neighbours mischaunce to beware, dyd frome y e tyme beare theim selfes as true & faithfull subiectes, & assysted him with al their power, at what time he required help of thē. After the death of this William Stanley, Giles Dabeney was chosen and made chiefe chā berlain. And now y e kyng was in a good staye for his realme, sauyng y t Ireland was not wel weded of the pernicious sede y e was sowed by the young mā Perkin Warbeck and his secte. Wherfore, he sent sir Henry Deny late abbot of Lanktō abbey thither, & made him chauncellour ouer al that Ile and Edward Ponyng to serch all places that the forenamed Perken was in, to punish thē extremely in the example of other, y e were giltie of y t crime but when thei heard of this, thei fled for the most part into woddes & marysh places for the defence & safgard of them selfes, there consultyng to kepe open warre agaynst hym, whiche Edwarde after that he persued theim many times, and coulde neuer try it wyth them because thei wer so disparsed as foren and wilde people, he returned backe, and suspectinge that the earle of Kyldare was the occasion of this, attached him at the counsayl of the erle his euel willers, and brought him as prisoner to England. Wher when he was arained, and certain matters of treason laied to his charge, he aduoided thē all, & clerly quite him selfe: whome the kynge dimissed, and sente hym to Irelande there to bee gouernour and captayne ouer theim as he was before. So that now the kyng beeyng oute of all feare of battayle, dyd take hys progresse to [Page] shyre, there to recreate his spirites and solace him selfe with his mother lady Margarete, wyfe and countesse to the Earle of Darby. Yet when y e king was thus delityng hym selfe, Perken Warbecke could not moderate or rule hym selfe, although so manye suffered and were put to execucion for his mischife but to proue again the chaunce of battel gathered a great armye of men aswell prisoners, slaues, sānctuary men as other & came into Kent, because the wind so serued, & ther caused certayne to land, & to enquire yf y e Kentish men would bear with him, with whō the Kentish mē working guiles promised y e thei would assist him, yf he & his cō panie would land ther. Albeit, the same Perkē fearing y e thei meaned falshode and craft, would not descende him selfe, but caused certain of his souldiours to lande, whiche persones beynge a pretye way from their shippes, wer sore beatē and put to flight, and many of theim taken prisoners & after wer condempned to dye. Wherfore Perkē failing of his purpose fled backe to Flaunders, and there consulted with his frendes vntyll suche time he had been better prepared bothe of men and counsayle. The kynge herynge that hys enemyes had made ētraūce into his realme, left of his progresse & purposed to go to London, but beynge certified the next day after, how wel thei had sped, continued & went forth of his progresse, sendyng to theim Richard Gilford, to geue thankes and promise of a good turne herafter, for y e good seruice that thei had done him in those tumultes and assaultes of his enemies. Also that thei might not haue any accesse herafter into those parties the king commaū ded [Page Cxxix] y e lordes to bee defēded strōgely w t bulwarkes & other sure munimētes & fortresses, of the whiche this same Perken beyng certified, hastened y e more to renue battaill against the kyng, y t he might not haue longer space, through his delaye, to dooe all these thynges for the defence of his realme and so came to Irelande with all his armie, and there tariyng a space, sailed to Scotlande for ayde and succour of kyng Iames, trustyng to finde grace at his hand, to whom he spake after this maner. I thinke it is not vnknowē to you moste noble kyng in what ruine the stocke of Edwarde the fourth of that name is now of late, whiche if you dooe not know, and it please your grace so to take me I am his soonne, & by the power of God, preserued a liue at this houre from the mightie hand of a tiranne. For my father when he died, apointed his brother Richard duke of Gloucestre to bee our gouernour & ꝓtectour. Albeit he was rather a destroyer of our progenie then a mainteiner of it, for he wyllyng to be kyng hymself, and depriue vs of our right and title, commaunded that we should bothe bee slain, and dispatched out of this worlde. Therfore he hauyng then full power to ordre vs at his will, did cause my brother to bee destroyed, and because y t he might bee without some parte of that offense, and not shewe hymself all a tirāne, he caused me to bee conueighed to some straunge and foren countree, and there to bee desolate of all comforte and helpe. And so kyng Richard did hold his croūe by dispatchyng away of vs two, so that I could not tell by the reason of my tendre age, what I was, vntill now of late that myne aunte ladie Margarete [Page] beyng in Flaūders did shewe me what I was after she had seen me, and to the entent I might recouer again my fathers possessions, she hath geuen me for her power a bonde of mēne, wyllyng me y e I should desire the helpe of externe nacions and countrees. And so I am come to you for succoure, whō as it is reported will helpe at all tymes euery manne in his right, and in case bee I shall finde you fauorable to me, you shall binde me and all myne, neuer to thynke ourselfes hable to make you amendes. When he had thus saied, the kyng promised hym that it should neuer repente hym of his commyng to hym, and bad him to take a good hearte, & after this the kyng assemblyng his counsaill together, asked what thei thought best in that matter, and whether any deliberacion should bee takē of it, or no. To whom some of theim that were w [...]sest, aunswered that it were folishenes to go fur [...] in suche a matter, consideryng that he was but a painted and feigned duke and had no right to England. Other also saied that it was for diuerse causes moste profitable to the cōmen wealth, partely that this Parkyn, if his matters goo well forwarde, would rewarde theim, as thei would desire and enriche their realme moste plentefully by his liberalite, partely also that Henry the kyng perceiuyng their kyng to assist hym, would gladly paie tribute to hym for a peace and concord to bee had. When this counsaill was gyuen, the kyng did gladly folowe it, and that his loue might bee more apparent to the people, he caused ladie Katherine doughter to therle of Hūtley, his nigh kinsemā, to be maried to hym. After this was dooen, the kyng [Page Cxxx] willyng y t this Perkyn should reigne in Englāde, hastened his iourney towarde the borders, & there cōmyng, proclamed openly y e all should bee pardoned y e would beare with the duke of Yorke, & fight in his quarell: and that mēne might for feare submitte theim selfes, thei burned, spoyled, & killed w t out all mercie as ferre as thei did go, but the kyng perceiuyng y t no Englishemen came to aide this young duke, & that his souldiours wer so loden w t praies & spoiles y t thei would not gladly go further he returned backe to Scotlād cariyng w t hym infinite goodes & riches. And when this duke came to Scotlande again, consideryng the greate distruccion and losse of the Englishmen, & that none came to aide hym, to the entēt that his iuglyng of his countrefeict dignite might not be perceiued, he saied verie craftely with a loude voice. Oh wretch and stonie hearte, that I am not moued with the losse and death of so many Englishemen of myne, and at that woorde he desired the kyng y t he would not molestate his realme herafter with suche cruel tormentyng, and fieryng. To whom the kyng shaped hym this aunswere right shortely. Truely sir me thynke you take charge and thought of an other mannes realme and not of your owne, because that I coulde se no manne that woulde take your parte, and helpe you with his power, whē you were now last emong theim. And for this cause y e kyng did litle esteme hym after that tyme, countyng hym incōstant, vnstable, and speakyng woordes not agreyng to his promise. When y e English lordes and captaines hearde of this busines thei wer in greate feare, & fled for safegade of their [Page] lifes euery manne to his castell and holde, and gatheryng an axmie to withstand their enemies certified the kyng in all post haste of the Scottes enterprise, whiche hearyng, prepared an armie in all the hast to fight against theim. But the Scottes beyng lodē with their praies and spoiles that thei had, were gone backe to their countre, ere the Englishe menne could bee readie. And this was the first commocion & busines of the Scottes against the Englishemen. When the Scottes were thus gone, and the kyng certified of it, he thought not to suffer theim lenger, leste that by long tariyng & deferryng of y e matter, thei should take heart, and so with more fearsenes inuade the realme again.
And assemblyng his counsaill together, shewed theim that it was for the proffite of the publique weale to warre against his enemies, to whom thei all agreed right gladly, and for the mainteinyng of this battaill, there was leuyed a certain summe or tribute to be paid on euery mannes hed, whiche paiment although it was but easie and small, yet many of the commen people grudged to paie it. At this parliament also and conuocacion there was certain lawes, actes and statutes confirmed and made, as thought moste expediēt for the publique weale. And after this was dooen, the kyng prepared to fight in all the haste, and gatheryng an armie, made Giles Dabeney graund capitain ouer theim, and in his goyng to Scotlande, there beganne sodenly ciuile battaill in the realme, whiche was for the paiment of this money, for that y e Cornishemen, (whiche made this insurreccion) beeyng but poore, could not well paie this tribute. [Page Cxxxi] And so they gatheryng all together, one Michael Ioseph Smyth and Thomas Flāmoke, did take * The blacke Smyth. vpon theim the gouernaunce of all this compainie. And seyng theim greued sore that they should paye so muche, did more and more incense theyr myndes againste their prynce. Albeit they layde this faulte, and cause of exaction, to Ihon Mortō bishoppe of Cātorbury, and Ruigenald Braye because they were chief of the kynges house.
Thus they preparyng theim selues to warre, whē they had aswell sufficiente viandrye as all other thynges ready, they tooke theyr iourney to Welles, and from thence entended to go to London, When the kyng was shewed of this by his auditours, that they wer vp, and that the lorde Twychet, and the lorde Audely with other of the nobylitee had taken their partes, he thought fyrste to scoure his realme of suche rebelles and traytours ere he would fight against the Scottes. And therfore he caused Giles Dabeney to returne backe agayn then goyng vpon the Scottes, whose armye he encreased and multiplyed with many pycked and freshe warryers, that he might the better with lesse laboure ouercome these rebelles. Also least that the Scottes might nowe (hauyng good oportunite) inuade the realme again (in this time of ciuile battyle) he caused lorde Thomas erle of Surrey, a puissaunt and most redoubted warryer whome he had taken prysoner, at the ouerthrowe of kyng Richard, and a litle before that, had set at libertie, and made treasourer of Englāde, after the death of Iohn Dynham, to gather a bond of men at Durham, & there to kepe of y e Scottes, yf they [Page] should chaunce to come, vntyll suche tyme that y t Cornyshe menne beyng pacified and subdued, he might send to theim the forenamed Giles agayne with all his power and armye. When as the nobles hearde of this busynes, they came to London euery mā, with as many as they could make, to ayde the kyng, yf nede shoulde be. In the which compaignie there was the erle of Essex, the lorde Mongey, the erle of Suffolke, Richard Thomas, William Say, lorde Haward the erle of Surrey his sonne a noble young man & of stoute courage
- Robert Lytton
- Thomas Bande
- Robert Clyfforde,
- Wyllyam Dauers,
- George Verye,
- Thomas Terell,
- Richard Fizlewes,
- Ihon Baynsforth
- Thomas Mōtigomery,
- Ihon Wyngfilde
- Roberte Brougthon,
- Iames Terell,
- Iames Huberte,
- Ihon Wyndham,
- Robert Fenys
- Wylliam Carye
- Robert Drurye,
- Ihon Audely,
- Robert Wyngfild with his brother Richarde,
- Robert Brandon,
- Thomas west de lauare
- Thomas Fenis Dacres
- Dauid Owen,
- Henry Rosse,
- Ihon Deuenysse,
- Henry Selenger,
- Ihon Paulet
- Ihon Burshere
- Thomas Woode
- Mathewe Broune,
- Thomas Troys,
- Wylliam Sandes.
- Edmūde Graye of Wiltone,
- Ihon Verney
- Thomas Brian
- Richard Poole,
- Thomas Harecourte,
- Ihon Hampden
- Edward Barkeley
- Willyā Bolongue with his sonne Thomas.
- Henry Haydon,
- [Page Cxxxii] Robert Clarence,
- Philip Calthorpe,
- Robert Louell,
- Ihon Shaye
- Thomas Frouwike with many other of lower degree that wer moste noble & cunnyng warryers.
In this meane space, Charles y e Frenche kyng commyng from the warres that he had at Naples with Ferdinande, sente Ambassadours to the kyng for a peace and league of amitee to bee confirmed. When the kyng was enformed of their cō myng, and that they were at Caleis, he sente certayn of his nobilitie to mete theim commyng, and to kepe theim purposely at Douer, vntyll suche tyme that this busynesse were ended, that they might not knowe of it in any wise.
And nowe the Cornyshemenne gooynge from Welles (where they had theyr graunde capitayne lorde Audeley) went to Saulisbury and frō thence to Wynchester, and so to Kent, where they looked for helpe, but they were deceaued, for the earle of Kent, and the lorde of Burgone Poole, the lorde Cobham, Thomas Burcher, Edwarde Ponyng, Richard Gilforde, Wyllyam Scotte, Iames Cromer, Ihon Peche, Iohn Darel, Henry Wyat Rychard Haulte, Ihon Fogge, and other were ready to withstande theyr power, and to cause the people to beare trewe heartes to theyr kynge. For the whiche, many of the Cornyshe men faynted and had lesse mynde to fight, and for feare fled priuely in the nyght from their compaignie. But the captaynes perceauyng they coulde haue no helpe at theyr handes, trusted to theyr owne power, and brought theim to Blackeheath feld nigh London, and there pytched theyr tentes in the [Page] playn to byd battail to the kyng, if he would mete theim, or els to inuade the cytie, whome the kynge perceauyng to be there readye to fight, he caused Henry Burschere erle of Essex, Edmunde Polam erle of Suffolke and Richard Thomas, three noble warryers to besiege theim on both sydes wyth two wynges, and so came hym self in the myddest sendyng before, Giles Dabeney with a greate power. And after his commyng thus to the felde, bothe the erles and Richard Thomas sette vpon theim violently, and at the first brunt put theim to flight and killed aboute two thousande that res [...] sied, and tooke prisoners more then could bee told and emonges theim y e Captaynes which shortely after wer put to death. But this Michael Ioseph was a mā of suche stoute courage & valiaūtnesse, y t he neuer fainted or once gaue backe vntyll such tyme he was stryken downe, and kylled openly.
When this battaile was ended the kynge loste but thre hundreth in all his compaignye that wer kylled at that presente. Also the prysoners that were taken he pardoned, sauyng the captaynes and first autours of that mischief, whose quarters he would haue to bee put on stakes and set in dyuerse places of Cornewell, that theyr naughtie dooynges and foolishe entrepryses might bee a document for other hereafter to beware: but because there were many of that coūtree that would gladly haue renewed battaile, yf they might haue had some Capitayn, and y t they wer nothyng abashed for y e ouerthrowe of theyr late insurreccion, he turned his mynd, so y t thei wer not had thither nor their quarters set vpō any stakes there. Whē this [Page Cxxxiii] busines was in hād, y e kyng of Scottes being certified of it by certain spies, thought best to inuade Englande againe, and burned all the waye as he did before, lest that the kyng should prouoke hym to it of force, because he had dooen so muche hurte to it before, and thus came to Durham and there burned all aboute, entending also to wynne Norham Castle, whiche the Bishoppe had furnished a litle before with menne and vitaile sufficiently, so that he coulde haue none accesse into that castell. And this was the bishop Foxe, that was bishop of Exeter, and for his godlines and verteouse liuing after that, made bishoppe of Welles and Bathe. Whiche bishop nowe being in this businesse, certified the kyng of it in all the haste, and also therle of Surrey, that was then in Yorke shyre with a greate army of menne. To whome the Erle came shortly after, with his compaignye, and after hym folowed other noble menne of all quarters, euery one bringīg for his habilitee as many as he could to aide the bishop, and fight in the defence & quarell of theyr kyng. And in this compaygnie was there many Lordes therle of Westmerland, Thomas Dacres, George Graunge, Rafe Neuel, Richard Latimer, George Lumley, Iohn Scroppe, George Oglie, Thomas Baron of Hilton, Henry Clifford, William Coyners, Thomas Dercy.
Also knightes.
- Sir william Percy, and thre other of y t name as
-
Percy.
- Bulmery,
- Gascogne,
- Penington,
- Sir Rauffe Bigot,
- Sir Rauffe Bowes
- Sir Rauffe Elaker,
- Sir Thomas Appar,
- Sir thomas Thwarton
- [Page] Sir Thomas Stranguishe,
- Sir Ihon Constable
- Sir Ihon Ratcliffe
- Sir Ihon Sauell
- Sir Ihon Gouer
- Sir Musgraue
- Sir Iohn Waller
- Sir Iohn Aloder
- Sir Iohn Euerinham
- Sir Brian Stapelton
- Sir Thomas Vortell
- Sir Marduke Constable
- Sir Christopher Pikeringe,
- Sir Christopher ward
- Sir Walter Stringlande,
- Sir Roger Bellinghā
- Sir William Heron
- Sir Rauffe Graye
- Sir Nicholas Ridley
- Sir Walter Griffit
- Sir Ihon Heron
- Sir Rauffe feneuike
- Sir Thomas Graye
- Sir Christo Curwen
- Sir Robert Varcoppe
- Sir Rouland Tempest
- Sir Iames Medcalfe
With many other Capitaynes, althoughe not so noble in degree, yet as valiaunte in martiall feactes and prowesses of warre. The Scottes hearing of the Earle of Surrey that he was cōming and at hande with a greate power, then beseging this forenamed Castell, whiche they coulde by no meanes ouercome, they fledde streighte backe to Scotlande, whome the Earle folowed as longe as his vyttailles serued, and after that returned backe to Durham, theyr abiding vntyll such time he knewe furder of the kynges pleasure.
And in this meane space, one Henrye Hailes was sente Ambassadoure frome Ferdinand vnto the kyng of Scottes for a generall peace to bee had with hym and the Kyng of Englande, for he loued hym well, and kyng Henrye also to whose soonne the younge Prynce Arthure, he woulde haue geuen his doughter Ladye Katheryne in [Page Cxxxiiii] mariage that by affinytee and kyndered of blood their loue might continue for euer.
So this Henrye entreated hartelye the King of Scottes for a peace, and when he had some hope in it, he wrote vnto the kyng of Englande, that it would please hym to sende one of his nobles to helpe to conclude this matter with hym and the Scottes. The kyng because he had been in greate trouble and then veraye desierous of peace, he sent the byshoppe of Durham to hym in all the haste. So that this Henrye and the bishop reasoned with the Scottyshe ambassadours as concernyng this peace to be had, albeit thei could not agree, because that kyng Henrye desiered to haue Perkyn Warbecke that was the cause of all this busynes, and had so greatly disquieted his realme, whome the kyng woulde not delyuer, although he might of ryghte, consideryng his falsehode and deceyte that he had vsed with hym.
Therfore, after that they had reasoned much of this matter, & could bring it to no ende, yet a truce was taken for certain yeres of this condicion, that the same Perkin Warbecke should bee conueyghed oute of Scotland, & not to tary there longer. Whyle this was dooinge, kyng Henry caused the Ambassadours of y e Frenche kyng to bee brought to hym, which as it is shewed before, wer stopped at Douer of their iourney, vntill suche tyme y t the insurreccion of the Eornish men was ceassed, and hearing y t they came for a peace and league to bee made, graūted theim it right gladly. So y t nowe beīg reconciled w t .ii. kynges, & thesame his neighbours, he thanked Fernand & his wife Elizabeth [Page] for y e they caused this peace to bee made betwixte hym and the Scottes, and rewarded the Ambassadoure moste worthely after a princely maner.
And the tyme that this vnitee and concorde was made, it was the yere of oure Lorde a thousande foure hundreth foure score and eighten, and y e .xii. yere of kyng Henry his reigne.
And the kynge of Scottes kepte his promesse The .xii. pere of Hē ry the .vii. well ynoughe. For when he perceiued manifestly that he was deluded, he called vnto hym Perkin Warbeck, and first declared his benefites & pleasures that he had dooen vnto hym, and then counsailed hym to gette hym vnto some place where he mighte byde in safegarde, and come againe another time when he shoulde haue more oportunitee But neuer after to looke for any helpe at his hād, partely because he had made peace with the kyng of Englande, and partely because he sawe that no Englishemen came to take his parte, wherfore he desired hym not to bee misgreued that he did thus leaue hym, & also counsailed hym to goo into some other place or regyon, wherfore this Perkin was veraye sorye & (as the kyng had counsailed hym) departed thence with his wife, and went into Ireland, determining with hym selfe if he might haue no helpe of the menne of Cornewale, to retourne thence as faste as myghte bee home to his greate mailres & aunte Margaret into Flaundres. But he was no soner come thither, then he heard by diuers messengers y t they of Cornewale were as ready to fyght against kyng Henry as euer they wer before, of hoope of the whiche he went streyght in to Cornewall & there dyd sturre vp their heartes [Page Cxxxv] with gyftes and promyses, that all immediatelye called him their capitain & saied that thei woulde folow hym and in all thinges obey promptly hys commaundementes. Thē was Perkē in as good hoope as euer he was, and (because he would do nothynge rashelye and withoute aduisemente) he purposed fyrste to ouercome citees and all wel defēded places that lay in his way, and so to get as many as he coulde to folowe hym and to take his part, and incontinently, to buckle with y e kynges host. Whē he had thus deliberate, he wēt streight to Exeter which was the next citee that he coulde come vnto and besieged it, and because he had no gunnes to breake downe the walles, he laboured all that myght bee to breake the gates, but when he saw that thei could not easely be betten downe with any thyng, streight with he set fyre on theim.
Whereof, the citezins were veray, sore afraied and priuely in the night let downe diuerse ouer y e walles with ropes to go certifie the kyng of their trouble, and in the meane tyme whē thei saw that their enemies had almost brēt vp the gates of the one side, tooke great blockes and set them on fyre on the other side, for none other cause but that aswell their enemyes therby might be excluded, as thei them selfes included. And thei not trusting to this only, made also w tin great ditches & other thī ges to defend thē from the inuasiō of the rebelles When Perkē saw this, he got ladders, and would by that meanes haue come into the citee, but they came not so sone vp, but thei were beate downe again, and by this meanes many were there slayne þet would he not thence depart, but trusted surely [Page] at the laste that thei should be glad to yelde theim selfes al that wer within for lack of viandrie. But as sone as the kyng hearde of this, he hasted with his hoost toward Exeter as faste as was possible and sente dyuerse souldiours beefore to certifie all menne of his commyng and preparaunce, for at that tyme there was set forth to helpe theym of Exeter, Thomas Trencherd, William Corteney Walter Cortney, Edmond Carre, Ihon Halemel Peter Eggecomb Thomas Fulford, Ihō Crook William Saintmaur, with a great host whose capitain was Edward Corteny erle of Denshire, & his sonne William, whiche was a young man of mooste noble courage, whiche thyng when Peter heard tell of, he left besiegyng of Exeter and went to y e nexte towne whiche is called Taūtun & there vieued his hoost and set it in aray redye to fyght, howbeit,, he had but lytle affiaunce in the same, because many of his souldiours were so slenderly harneissed, and no better skylled in warre. When the kyng sawe he was gone to Taūtun he hasted thither after him with all spede. Thether came also Edward y e duke of Buckingham a young mā veray valiaunt and of lustie courage, and hym folowed a greate compaignye of noble men as Giles Brigge, Alexander Brayhā, Moryshe Barkeley, Robert Tame, Ihon Sapcot, Ihon Wadhā, Hugh Lutrel, and Nycholas hys sonne, William S [...]orton, Thomas Lynde, Ihon Semar, Wylliam Norris, Thomas Blunt, Ihon Guyse Roberte poynte, Harry Vernon, Ihon Mortimer Ihon Speke, Rychard Beaucāp, Fraunces Chenie, Roger Tokete, Roger Wenburg Henry Roger, [Page Cxxvi] Edwarde Darell, Ihon Langforde, Richard Lacon, Thomas Tremaile, Edwarde Sutton, Amis Paulet, Ihon Byknell, Wyllyam Sayntemaur, Thomas Longe, Nycholas Latimer, Ihon Turbaruyll, Wylliam Martyne Walter Hungorforde, Moryshe Barons, Rycharde Corbet Thomas Cornuall, and many other besydes these.
But the king when he came nygh to the towne sente before to begynne battayle, Roberte Broke, Lorde Rycharde Thomas, and Giles Dabeney with a great and stronge hoost, to the entent that he hym selfe with his souldiours myght set vpon them behynd. But this deuise and purpose of the kyng was al superfluous. For Perkin, so sone as he espyed that the kyng was redie to fight, fledde priuely in the nyght into a sanctuary at Bellylo abbey, and there lurked. But whether this Perkē so dyd for feare least his men should forsake hym or for the timeditie of hym selfe, it is as much vncertayne, as it is probable and sure that the kyng tooke by hys flyght greate commoditee.
For the Corneshe menne were surelye purposed eyther to wynne and ouercome theyr enemies or elles not one of theim to haue lyued anye daye lenger. When kynge Henrye knewe that Perkin was gone, he sente after hym many horse menne that yf it myghte bee, they shoulde ouertake hym in hys iourney and brynge hym backe.
But Perkyn Warbecke made suche spede, that he was not seene before he came into the Sanctuarie, but his petie capitaines coulde not scape so clene. For of theim, the moost part were ta [Page] ken and brought backe againe to the kyng. The residue of the souldiours when thei vnderstode y e Perkyn their chief capitain was fled and y e other taken, gaue vp theim selfes by and by to the king without any more busines, and of hym most gently wer forgeuen. When all was dooen, the kynge went again to Ereter and there both gaue great thankes to such as wer worthy, and punished the authoures and sturrers vp of this insurrection moost straitlye. And in y e meane tyme many of the souldiours road to s. Mighels mounte & there (as chaunce was) found Katherin Perking wife, and brought her streight like a bond woman and captiue to the kyng. And the kyng sent her by and by accompanied with a goodly sort of matrons (because she was so goodly a young woman) to London to the quene as a true and sure token of vyctorie. And whiles he taried there at Exeter supposyng with him selfe, that he could haue no perfect victory vntyl he had gottē Perkin him self, which was the beginner of all this sedicion and strife, sent forth two companies of menne to besiege the sanctuarye wher Perkin was, that by no meanes he myght scape away, and sent him worde also by certain trustie messengers that yf he would humblie submit him selfe, he should be forgeuen of all that was committed. Wherfore, Perkin now seynge and ponderynge the state of miserie, that he was in, wēt voluntarily out of the sanctuary and commytted hym selfe to the kynges pleasure.
Then was the kyng weray glad and toke his iourney immediatly after towarde London, not without the great metyng of people whych came [Page Cxxxvii] out of euery quarter to se this feloe as he were a monstre, because he beyng but an aliente durst bee so bold to come in to this so noble a realme to make battaill, and delude noble menne after suche a fassion. But whē the kyng was come to London he appointed certain menne to kepe hym bothe night & daie verie vigilantly, to thentent that he might neither conueigh hymself out of the lande, ner goo any whether within this realme to make any like perturbacion and disquietnes.
After this the kyng perceiuyng y e there were many as well in Somerset as in Deuēshire, whiche were helpers of the rebelles greatly, bothe goyng foorth & commyng homeward, thought it good to punishe theim also, least peraduenture thei might be y e more bold to dooe a like thyng after. And therfore he committed this busines to Amis Paulet knight, and Robert Sherburne deane of Poules to be dooen. Which in serchyng out all suche thoroweout bothe the shires, wer verie exacte and diligent, but thei wer fauorable to al such as did it for feare or compulsion. Yet were thei to none so fauorable but thei were thought for their defaultes indifferently to be punished. So that equitie therin was verie well executed.
In the same yere of a small matter befell greate strife betwene kyng Henry and Iames kyng of Scotlande, whiche strife beganne of this fassion. Certain younge menne of y e Scottes came armed vnto Duresme castell, & beheld it wonderous circumspectly as though thei had been desierous to know what was there dooen. But whē the kepers of the castle could not perceaue y t thei went aboute [Page] any hurte or displeasure, & seing theim go awaie of their owne accorde, thei made no woordes but let theim alone. But when thei came again the nexte daie & vieued it likewise, the kepers of y e said castel demaunded of theim what was their intent. Thei aūswered theim (like rude and vnmanerlie ientlemenne) as frowardly as could bee thought, in so muche y t at the laste through muche altercacion of bothe parties, thei fell together by the eares, and there were some of the Scottes slain & the residue put to flight. Which whē thei came home certified their kyng of thesame. Wherwith he beyng sore moued to angre, sēt woorde to kyng Henry that he would w tout doubt reuenge his querell, wherfore kyng Hēry being verie sorie, not so much forfeare, as for to liue in quietnes & peace in his age, made him aūswere y t it was not doē through his default or coūsaill, but rather by the rashenesse of his subiectes whiche if thei could bee ꝓued guiltie should be accordyng to the faulte punished. Wherfore he desired him moste louingly to be cōtēted. But this was not hable to mitigate or swage the Scottes angre & outrageousnesse. For the whiche cause Richard bishop of Duresme whiche was more heuie then all other, because his seruūates were y e beginners of this discord, wrote many letters to kyng Iames to desire hym to kepe peace & bee at quiet. With the whiche letters the kynges rage was so quenched, y t he bothe sent verie kynd letters again to hym, and desired hym hartely to come ouer and talke with hym. Of y e whiche tydynges the bishop was verie glad, and went streight to kyng Henry to shewe hym the matter and had leaue of hym incontinenly [Page Cxxxviii] to go ouer to hym.
When he came into Scotlāde, he was receiued as louyngly as coulde bee thought of the kyng hymself, at an abbey called Melrose, and there after that he had complained muche of the crueltie that was vsed toward his menne here in Englāde he beganne to commen secretly of other matters, and especially of the amitie betwene kyng Henry and hym, the whiche to bee for euer stablished and confirmed, he desired y t kinges doughter Margaret in mariage. Of the whiche thyng albeit the bishop was glad in his heart, yet he would make no perfect aunswere or sheweforth any sure hope of y e same, but saied that when he came home, he would dooe the best in the matter that laie in hym. Wherfore the kyng shortly after dimissed hym, and desired hym ernestly to breake y e same matter to kyng Hēry. And whē he was come home, so he did, and y e proffer pleased y e kyng verie well, because he was a manne whiche was alwaies more delited w t peace & quietnes then w t the troublesomnesse, of battaill.
And now did approch y e death of Perkin Warbeck, and of Edwarde erle of Warwicke whiche had so long lyen all readie in the tower. But Perkē thought that he would saue hymself, and therfore on a tyme he tooke his leggues and ranne awaie, but so sone as the kyng harde tell therof, he made menne after hym with all the spede y e might bee, w t whose clamours and shoutes Perkyn was so feared, y t of necessitie he was compelled to go to an abbaie which was called Bethelē, & ther intreacted y e abbot of the place to desire the kyng of his pardon that he might not dye. Whiche thyng the [Page] abbot did for hym and obteined it. Wherfore Perken was brought bounde & feitered, to Westminster and there stoode an whole daie in the sight of all menne to the great shame and reproche of hym self. And after (partely because the kyng had promised hym his life, and partely because he should no more renne awaie) he was cōmitted to y e towre. Where his wickednes boylong so hote within his breit, would not suffre hym to escape the vēgeaūce & punishemēt of God, but shortly after was moste iustly & worthely put to deathe as herafter shalbe shewed. Then it chaunsed y e a monke whose name was Patricke had a scholer, whome he promised if he would folowe his counsaill, should easely come to the kyngdome of Englande. Whiche scholer when he had ones heard his maisters mynd, was verie instaunte in the matter and desired his maister, not to forget his purpose, but rather begynne it as sone as was possible. Wherfore, when thei be twene theim selfes had taken deliberacion and counsailled of the thyng how it should be brought to passe, thei went bothe together into Kent. And there beganne this young feloe to tell priuely to many that he was the erle of Warwicke, and had gotte out of the tower by the helpe of this monke. To the whiche, when he perceiued credence geuen he declared it openly, and desyred al men of helpe.
But or euer this sedicion beganne to goo foreward, the heddes and principalles of thesame wer taken and casle into prysone. Of whiche the one was condempned to death, and the other condēpned to perpetuall pryson and darkenesse. For at that tyme here in Englande was so muche attrybuted [Page Cxxxi] to prestes, and al religious mē, that though they had committed felonie, murder, yea or treason, they should not haue bene therfore condempned to death. Moreouer, whosoeuer could reade, though it wer neuer so lytle, what crime soeuer he had committed (saue treason) should by his booke bee saued, and therfore it was inuented, that if the default wer so great, that another manne shoulde suffer death for thesame, he should onely be burnt in the hande, wherfore he y e had committed thefte, should bee marked in the hand with this letter T. if he had committed murdre, with M. and after that, yf he were deprehended in lyke cryme, then there should no fauour at all, more then to other menne, bee shewed. Whiche acte was made and confyrmed, by this kyng Henry in the second yere of his reigne, and takē of the Frenchemen, whiche are wonte if thei take any suche, to cutte of one of his cares and let hym go. Whiche priuiledges of bookes made thefes both bolde, & plentie thorowe out all the coastes and parties of this his realme of Englande.
But nowe to my matier again. Perkyn, of whom we spake muche before, whyles he was in y e towre corrupted many of the kepers, partly with giftes and partely with fayre promyses, so that they were all agreed (saue the leuetenaunt, whome he fully determined to kyll) that he and the erle of Warwike should gooe theyr waye out of the toure and afterwarde to make the best shyfte that they could for theim selfes. But this his purpose came not to full effecte. For it was knowne within shorte tyme after, for the whiche he and his felowes all of the [Page] same counsayle were hanged by the neckes. And the earle of Warwike, because he was foundegyltie in thesame defaulte, was behedded, whiche was dooen in the yeare of oure Lorde a thousand foure hundreth and .xcix. and in the .xiii. yeare of this kyng Henry his reigne.
The nexte yere after, was here in Englande a [...] [...] a greate plague wherof menne died in many places vereye sore, but especiallye and mooste of all in London. For there died in that yere aboue thyrtye thousande. Wherfore the kynge sayled ouer to Caleis and there taryed a greate while. In his beyng there came ouer to hym Philippe Erle of Flaunders, and was receaued of hym as louyngly as could bee thought, and also or euer they departed, the league whiche was made betwene theim two not longe before was renewed.
Sone after, when the plague was slaked, the kyng returned agayne into Englande, and was no soner come thyther, but there met him one Gasper Pons sente from Alexander the byshoppe of of Roome, which brought with hym indulgences and perdo [...]es whereby he made the kyng beleue that he and his should flye streight to heauen, but those could not bee graunted withoute a greate somme of money, the whiche the rather that he might obteyne, he promysed parte of it to the kyng hymselfe, so deceauyng both y e kyng and y e people. In this same yere was burnt a place of y e kynges, whiche he after buylded vp againe and named it Richemount.
Aboute this tyme died three bishoppes here in England, Ihon Morton bishop of Cantourbury [Page Cxl] Thomas Langton bishop of Wynchester, and Thomas Rotherham bishoppe of Yorke.
Also in this yere, there were greate maryages made, for kyng Henry had geuen his doughter ladye Margarete to the kyng of Scottes, and his sonne prince Arthur to Ladie Katherine doughter to Ferdinande kyng of Spayne, whiche mariages were made specially for this cause that he might liue in peace with those kynges in his olde age.
After this, prynce Arthure that came to Londō purposely to bee maryed, went to Wales agayne with his lady and wife to ouersee all thynges well there, and to the entente he might not miscarye or go out of the waie in rulyng his domimon, he had with hym many noble mē, as first Richard Poole his nighe kynsman which was made chief of his priuie chaumbre, and Dauid Philippe husher of his halle. Also he had of his counsaill certayne knyghtes as Wyllyam Vdall, Richarde Croft, Peter Neuton, Henrye Varnam, Thomas Englefelde. And other besides theim, as Ihon Walestone, Henry Marine, Wyllyam Smyth preest chief of his coūsayle late bishop of Lincolne, & syr Charles Booth a lawer, then byshop of Herforde.
A litle before this mariage, Edmūd Poole erle of Suffolke sonne to ladye Elizabeth the sysler of kyng Edward, was accused for killyng of a mā, & although the kyng pardoned hym, whō he might iustely haue condē [...]ed for that offence, yet because he was rayned at the barre, whiche he thought a great main and blemishe to his honoure, tooke it heuely, and shortely after fled to Flaunders w tout [Page] any passeporte or licēce of the kyng, to quene Margarete his aunte, but he returned again, & so excused hymselfe before the kynge, that he was founde fautles in any thyng y t was obiected vnto hym. Also when this mariage was kepte at London, with great pompe & solēnitee, this Edmunde fled again to Flaunders w t his brother Richard, either for y t he had been at great charges at thesame mariage and so farre cast in debte that he was not hable to paye, either because y e quene Margarete his aunte had allured hym, orels for eiuill will & enuie that the kyng should prosper so well. Whē it was knowen y t he was gooen, & the kyng certified there of, he feared y t some busynes should ryse by his meanes & was sory y t he had pardoned hym for his offēce lately cōmitted. But sone after, y t the erle came from Flaunders, syr Robert Cursone knight & capitaine of Hāmes castel, feignyng hym selfe to bee one of that conspiracye, wente purposely to espye what the quene entended against kyng Henrye, whyche afterwarde for his so doynge was in greate fauoure wyth hym. For the kynge was so vigylaunte and circumspecte in all his matters, that he dyd knowe theim namelye that either bare hym eiuill will, or woorked any in theyr mynde, whom he caused to bee attached and caste in holde. And emong theim Wyllyam the erle of Deuonshyres sonne, whiche maried ladie Catheryne daughter to kyng Edward was taken, and another Wyllyam brother to Edmonde earle of Souffolke, Iames Tyrell, Ihon Wyndham. But these two wylliams were taken rather of suspection then for any offence of gyltines. Wherefore [Page Cxli] Wylliam this Earles sonne of Deuonshyre after the death of kynge Henrye, was deliuered & had in great fauour wyth the kinges sonne Henrye the eyght, but shortly after whan he beganne to exercyse hym selfe agayne in marciall feates of warre, he sickened of a dysease called (Plureses) and died therewith, whyche because it was straunge and vnknowen to the phisiciās, it was incurable. He lefte one sonne behynde hym alyue to vphold the name of that auncetree. The other Wyllyam brother to Edmunde the earle of Suffolke had also greater fauoure showed hym in pryson, then he had before. And as for Iames Terel, and Ihō Wyndham, because they were traytours, and manifestly accused of the same, wer put to death, and behedded. But when the earle of Suffolke heard of thys, he was in great despayre wyth hym selfe that he should neuer frame hys matters wel, and so wente all aboute Germanye and Fraunce for ayde and socour, prouyng yf he coulde fynde any helpe at their handes, whom when he perceaued to showe no token of loue towardes him in that behalfe, he made hym subiect to y t prynce of Flaū ders, but hys brother Rychard beyng an experte man, dyd so wysely order and behaue hym selfe in that businesse, that he was not greatlye founde gyltie in any poynt of that matter. The kyng not yet beyng out of all feare of his enemyes, perceauyng that many sanctuary men loked for a fayre daye, desired of Alexander byshop of Roome that all traytours and banished men should not be saued by any sanctuary, and that such as were ther in holde, should take theim herafter as no refuge [Page] and socoure to them, yf thei once gooe out, whych thyng, after the byshoppe had graunted it, was to the ease and quietnes of al the realme.
When the kynge had all hys busines so well ended, and broughte in a good staye. Prynce Arthure dyed halfe a yeare or lesse, after that he had maried ladie Katheryn, for whose death ther was great lamentynge. It is reported also that ladye Katherine feared suche lyke chaunce euermore, for because y t after she had taken her leaue of her parentes, and sayled towardes England, she was tossed lōg in y e sea, wyth the violence of the water & the wynd, ere the shyppe coulde haue any lādyng
Not longe after, the quene was broughte ni bedde with a doughter, and died vppon the same, which daughter also taried but for a season after her mother. Ther departed also within short space after, Reynalde Bray, a man for iustice so commē dable, that yf any thyng had bene done agaynste good lawe or ryght, he would streyghte reproue y e kyng for it. Of the same vertue was Ihon Mortō bishoppe, & would do in al thinges as he did in reprouing the kinge for the reformation of thinges amisse, which bishop died .ii. yeres before. About y e tyme also dyed Henry bishop of Cāterbury whose roome Williā Warrā bishop of Lōdon supplied, and in the byshop of Londons place was elected William Barons, after whose deathe succeded Rychrde Fiziames byshop of Chichester
In this yere, which was the .xvi. of hys reygne and of our lorde. M .ccccc. and .ii. yeres, the kynge dyd [...] kept his parliament, wherin manye thynges were dereed, and made for the publike commodytee, [Page Cxlii] and emong other thynges it was determyned that theues and murderers duly conuicted by the lawe to dye, should be burned in y t hand and quit yf thei could read on the booke any one worde
Furdermore, it was decreed y t the people should paye certain mony to the kyng, and that the goodes of theim that were banished and fled, should be disparsed and set to sale. Also the preestes were commaunded to pay mony for the maintenaunce and sustentacion of the common weale.
And now the kyng drawyng nigh to age, and consideryng the great battayles that he had in tymes past, which (as it was thought) came of ouer muche welthines, prouided a remedy ryght shortly for it. And to the entent that menne shoulde not thynck y t he would oppresse them or do thē wrong for of all people he hated oppressours, therfore he deuised with hym selfe, by what honeste meane he might do it, & thus deuising called to minde y t English mē dyd litle passe vpō the obseruaciō of any lawes y t were made, in so much, y e yf such a thynge should be called to accompte, he thoughte manye men as well lordes, as other of the lay fee, would bee founde fautie. And so searchyng ouer the statutes that he had made, punished them a lytle by the pursse that had transgressed theim. After that he appoynted two commyssioners to receaue the forfeictes, the one Richarde Hempson, and the other Edmunde Dudley booth lawers of the temporaltee, whiche personnes for the desire to please their king had no respect how thei got the monye so thei myght haue it ether by ryght or wrong. Albeit, y e kyng hauyng pitee of his people, after that [Page] he perceaued they were sore punyshed and polled vnknowyng to hym restored to them their mony, of whom it was exacted vniustlye, and depryued thē of their offyce that had so vniustly executed it.
In this yere, dyed quene Elisabeth of Castell wyfe to Ferdinand kyng of Aragone without any yssue of mā chyld, so that the heritage dyd fall to lady Iohan her eldest daughter, by Ferdinand whiche after was maried to the Earle of Flaunders, thē made by this mariage also chiefe gouernoure ouer all that countree.
Shortly after about the .xiii. day of Ianuary which was the yere of our lord. M .ccccc. and fyue thys Earle hauyng a nauye prepared sayled out of Flaunders with his wyfe to Spayne, but he had not set forth longe, ere the wether beganne to chaunge, and tempestes to ryse so, that at the last fearsenes of the wynde, dyd dryue them to the coastes and borders of Englande, wher he landed at an hauē or porte called Wynmouth, sore againste the mynd and consent of all his companie, which knewe well that the same landyng should bee the occasion of long tariyng there. When it was kno [...]n that he was thus landed, there came agreate nomber of harnissed men to proue yf he were the kynges frende or no, whiche when thei perseaued hym to bee his frende, and entended nothing but loue and frendeshippe, Thomas Trencharde the chiefe of that compaignie went to the kyng, desyring hym (yf it would witesalfe) hym to take a lodging at his house, whiche was euen nigh at hand trusting therby to haue thāke of. y e kynges master whom he certifyed in al the haste of his commyng
[Page Cxliii] Also Iohn Caroe desired hym that he woulde not gooe vntyll suche tyme that he had spoken w t the kyng his louing and feithfull frende, consideringe that he was within two or thre dayes iourney of hym. So that at length although he layde many excuses to haue been gooen and departed, at their instance taried there with theim. And when y e kyng was enfourmed of his cōminge, he reioyced highly and sente certaine of his nobilitee to bring hym where he was. Wherfore this Erle seing no remedy but y t he must nedes tary, he went streight to Windesore where the kyng dyd lye. And shortlye after folowed his wife quene Iohan. After they two had cōmoned of many thinges together at the laste they beganne to treate of a league and perpetuall amitee to bee had.
And firste Kynge Henrye desired to haue Edmonde Poole banished man vnder his captiuitee and bondage. To whome the Earle aunswered & saied that it was not in his power to restore hym, yet after muche entreating and praiyng, the kyng graunted at the laste that he shoulde hee sente to hym righte shortly. After thus for prolonginge of time y t he might haue his desyre, he brought Philyp the Earle to London, and there shewing hym his citie, retourned frome thence with hym.
Then Edmonde Poole, seyng that there was no more hope to bee had in foren Princes, and trusting that kyng Henry would put hym at libertee came to Englande willingly to proue his gentlenes, that yf vpon this expectacyon and hope, he were deceiued, yet he might at the laste dye and be buryed in his natiue countree. [Page] weare, when he had receyued this garment, he did send Balthesar Castillio a Mantuan borne vnto kyng Henry, whiche receiued of y e knightes a garter, in token y t he should be a knight of the same ordre. When this busines was dooen, Lewes the Frenche kyng mistrustyng that he shoulde neuer haue manchild, maryed his eldest doughter Lady Anne to Frances Valese Dolphine Duke of Engosye, which was sure a litle before to Charles the kyng of Castell. And when kyng Henry knewe of this, he thought beste to mary his doughter Lady Mary to this Charles kyng of Castell which mariage was confirmed and made at Calise by y e byshop of Winchester & the ambassadours of Flaunders, the Ladye beyng but .x. yeres of age.
And now were the thre yeres expired, at whiche tyme kyng Henry thought his fatal daye to draw nyghe. Therfore to the entente that the people myghte wyshe and praye for hym after his deathe for his kindnesse that he shewed to theim, he caused a generall pardon to bee geuen vnto all offendours, [...]all [...]done. sauinge onely theues and murderers, because that they dyd not offende hym, but another manne. For this goodnesse shewed to the people, processyon was in euerye place of the Realme for the safegarde of the kyng.
Neuerthelesse his time was come, y e God would haue hym, so that he died the .xxi. daye of Apryll, in his palaice of Richemoūde, the whiche was the yere of oure Lorde a thousand fyue hundreth and eyght. His corps was buryed at Westminster in a chappell the whiche he caused to bee buylded. He reigned thre and twentye yeres, and more then [Page Cxlv] seuē monethes, & liued .lii. Also he had by his wife the quene .viii. children .iiii. menchildren, & .iiii. women children, of y e whiche .iii. remained aliue, Hēry prince of Wales, ladie Margaret, & ladie Marie. He was a manne of bodie but leane & spare, albeit mightie & strong therwith, of personage & stature some what higher then y e meane sorte of menne be, of a wondrefull beautie and faire complexion, through al his bodie, of a merie & laughyng countenaunce, especially in his cōmunicaciō, thinne tethed, & thinne heared, of witte in all thynges like Salomon, of a princely & redoubted stomake, and in greate affaires and matters of weightie importaunce verie wittie For suche thynges as he went aboute, he did theim warely & not without greate deliberacion & breathyng. Besides this, he was sobre, moderate, buxome, & bounteouse, & without all pride & highnes of stomake, in so muche, y t he was hard & rough with theim y e were noted of y t crime for no man had so great autorite with him, y t either durst or could dooe any thyng as his owne fātasie did serue hym, without y e consent & agrement of other. Yea he kept this point so wel, y t he would not suffre his owne mother to haue her will. For this was his saiyng * y t a kyng was a ruler that should rule & not be ruled. He was also verie iust, & defended The noble & wise saiyng of Hēry the seuenth. y e matters & causes of many poore people frō the power of greate menne. And so liuyng all his tyme in vertue, renowne, glorie, and valiauntnes of merciall prowesses, gaue vp his ghoste at the laste, whiche vndoubtedly is in that place, where euerlastyng ioye and gladnes remaineth for euer and euer.
¶ Henry the eyght.
OVRE MOSTE GRACIOVS souereigne lorde kyng Henry the eyght, the soonne of Henry y e seuenth, beganne his reigne the .xxiiii. daie of Appryll, in y e yere of our Lorde. M .ccccc. ix & was crouned at Westminster in the feast of the natiuite of sa [...]net Ihon Baptist then nexte folowyng.
Aboute the midle of the moneth of Iuyn the [...]nges highnes was maried, and the .xxi. daie of thesame moneth he came frō Grenewiche by land, & so roade through Graschurch strete to the towre with whom came many noblemen and gentlemen well apareled, but specially the duke of Buckyngham̄ whiche roade in a goune of goldsmythes woorke, a thyng of greate richesse, and so the kyng [...]ested there from Thursdaie till Saterdaie, in the whiche season he created certain knightes of the Bathe.
And vpon Saturdaie aboute foure of y e clocke at after noone, the kyng came ridyng through cornehill in moste honourable wise, before whom roade thesaid knightes of the Bathe in blewe lōg gounes with hoodes vpō their shoulders, spreade after the maner of masters of arte, and tasselles of white and blewe silke fastened vpon one of their shouldres. The duke of Buckyngham̄ roade next before the kyng, except the mayre of London & certain sergeauntes and herauldes. The whiche [Page Cxlvi] duke roade in a long goune of nedle woorke right costly and riche, & bare a litle white staffe of siluer in his hand in signe and token y t he was high and chief steward of y e feast of coronacion. And thesaid duke had aboute his necke a broade and flat close chein of a newe deuise not before vsed, fret w t precious great rubies and other stones of greate value. And ouer the kyng was borne a riche canapie by the foure barones of the foure portes, and there folowed seuen foloers, wherof the first was trapped in the armes of sainct Edwarde, the second in the armes of sainct Edmond, the third in y e armes of. S. George, the fourth in the armes of Englād, the fifth in the armes of Fraūce, the sixth & the. vii in sondry trappors of riche cloth of gold w t costely deuices. After the foloers came a gentlemā ledyng a spare horsse moste richely garnisshed. And after hym sir Thomas Brandon then maister of y e kynges horsse, right well & goodly apointed and well horssed and richely trapped, the whiche horsse with the apparell was to the kyng belongyng.
And when y e cōpaignie was thus w t all honoure passed, ymediatly ensued a goodly compaignie of gentlemen & well apointed. And after theim came the quene sittyng in a horsse litter alone, clothed in a riche mantell of tissue in her heare w t a circulet of silke, golde and perle aboute her head. But whē her grace was a litle passed the signe of the cardinalles hat in cornehill, suche a sodein showre there came, & fell w t suche force & thicknesse, y t the canapy borne ouer her was not sufficient to defend her frō wetyng of her mātell & furre of powderd e [...]mines win y e same, but y e she was fain to be cōueighed vnder [Page] the houell of the Drapers stalles till y e shower were ouer passed whiche was not long. And then she passed on her waie, whō folowed .vii. chariotes with ladies. In the first was two ladies, & vpon y e chariot waited .vii. gentlewomē ridyng on palfreyes, y t is to saie, foure in one suyte & thre in another And vpon y e secōd chariot waited also seuen gentle women. And vpon y e other thre sixe, whiche all wer clothed in silke, and .iiii. of the first chariottes were couered w t cloth of gold, & all y e horsses trapped in sondrie couloured veluettes to y e heard pauement. And after all theforsaid chariottes & gentlewomē, came ridyng vpon a bushement .ccc. of the garde, y e more parte of theim hauyng bowes & arowes and theother hawberdes & other weapōs. And ye shall vnderstand y t all the side of Cornehill, from sainct Mighelles to the stockes was hanged w t gremed clothe of sondrie coloures, as scarlettes, crimosing sanguines, murries, light & browne, & beuties and violetes. And vpon theotherside, all w t riche tapet [...]es & clothes of arras. And as for Chepe was garnished with clothes of golde, of veluet & of silke in moste richest wise, wheron was dooen no litle hurte with theforsaid showre.
Vpō the morow, beyng Midsomer daie, y e kyng & the quene, about .viii. of y e clocke in the mornyng on foote, came frō their palaies through y e greate hail & the palais courte vnto the churche of Westminster. In whiche progresse, passed before theim eight and thirty bishopes & abbottes mitered in procession, and so were conueighed to a space betwene y e high aulter and the quere, where, by y e Bishop of Cauntourbury, the kyng & the quene were [Page Cxlvii] set in honorable seates vpon a scaffold in the forenamed place, made of a competent heigth, & there of the archbishop was gloriouslye crouned to the great comforte of all y e lande. And after that longe and honorable solempnizaciō was done, the kyng and quene wer again cōueighed vnto Westmynster hall, & there set to dynner, where was that daie holden a tryumphant & plenteous feast w t all honorable seruyce to suche a feaste apperteignynge. And for the ordre of y e settyng, the kyng sate in the myddle of the table, & the quene vpon his lift hāde by the space of two yardes length from hym. And vpon the right hand, at y e tables ende sate y e archebishop of Caūtourbury alone, & no mo at y e table. After whiche thre estates thus set, all their .iii. seruyces wer brought together till they came vnto y e steppes of the deyse, where a while rested y e quenes and archebishoppes seruyces, till y e kyng was serued, and then the quenes and tharchbishoppes set forwarde together, but the quene was first serued and her seruyce set downe before the other.
Here I wyll passe ouer the orderyng of the hall with the offyciers & garnyshyng of the side tables with many noble menne & women, & many other ceremonyes executed there that day by lordes and other hed officers, as the lorde stewarde the duke of Buckyngham, the chief buttler the erle of Arū dell, the lorde marshall with many other. The exceadyng rychesse of the cupboorde garnished with weightie & massy flagonnes, pottes and cuppes of golde, syluer & gilte, with the gifte of .ii. cuppes of gold geuē by y e kyng & the quene vnto y e Mayre of Londō, as his accustomed fee at euery coronaciō. [Page] Al y e which actes with many mo I here passe ouer
Then vpon the tuesdaye next ensuyng was begonne a merciall iustes, within y e paleys of Westmynster. Of y e which y e lord Haward & sir Edward his brother, w t sir Richard brother to y e lord Marques & Gyles Capel & two other wer chalēgours. And syr Ihū Pechy, Master Carre, Master Charles Brandō & syr Rowland with other. ii, wer defē dours. Vpō the which day, two of y e chief of y e said chalengers enclosed in a moūtayne goodly & curiously garnished, wer by a lyon made of glitteryng golde conueighed out of Westmynster hall into y e paleys, & so led about the tylt, tyll they came right agaīst y e kyng & quenes stāding. And there y e moū tain opened, & the said two chief chalēgoures road to the, clene armed vnto y e tiltes ende with y e other foure folowyng theim, wher they houed til the defendours wer fet in. The which sone after came in at the gate by the kynges strete, but syr Ihon Pechy as chiefe defendour, came enclosed in a castell drawen with a lyonesse garnished with glytteryng syluer. And vpō the forpart of this castel was set a pomegranate tree wel & curiously brought, and so cunnyngly y t it semed to y e people to be very pomegranades that honge on y t tree. And vpon y e toppe of this sayd castell stoode a fane, w t the armes of Saynt George theron paynted. The which castel was so drawen about y e tilt, & whē it came right again y e kynges tent, it was opened by a vyce, & out roade y t said defēdour, & after his obeysaūce made to the kyng & quene, & in like maner did all his feloes, then he roade vnto y t ende of the tilt nexte the gate wher he entred before, & then y e said syr Ihon [Page Cxlvi] Pechy as chief chalengour receaued a speare, as y e lorde Hawarde before had done, & ranne together v. coursses cōtinually, to y e great prayse & laude of theim both. And then rāne y e other as thei wer called vpon & assigned sondry tymes by y e kyng, & specially y e kynges highnes cōmaūded master Gyles Capel to rōne, howbeit his horsse y t daye did hī not moste plesaūt seruice. And thus thei cōtinued their disporte .iiii. houres, to y t greate cōforte of y e beholders & to y t honour of them al. Howbeit, y e most speres wer brokē by y e lord Haward & syr Ihō Pechy.
Then vpon y e thursday next foloyng, y e said chalengeours & defendours made a goodly disporte, as first y e said chalengeours cōmyng out of Westmynster hal, caused to be cōueighed before them a pageaūt like to a forest, pitched full of grene boughes, within the which sate a virgyn appareled after the Spanishe guise, & semblaūtes of buckes & dooes aboute her. And whē the said chalengeours w t their said pageaūt came before the kynges standyng, sodeynly rāne out of y e said forest a pryket, & after him a brase of grehoūdes, y e which courssed y e said pricket & there shortly after slewe it. And after y t a foster blewe a moote for y e death therof, & smote of y e hed quickly & presented it vnto y e quene. And y e done the said chalēgeours passed ouer to thend of the tilt & there houed a while. And then shortly after y e trōpettes & many of the said gētlemē wel horssed & apointed, y t before had cōueighed into y e place the chalēgours, cōueighed in also y e defēdours, the which comyng in w t a like pageaūt before thē (except that the maidē in their forest was atired after thenglish fassiō) & demeaned theim in all thynges [Page] like as before y e chalēgers had done. And whē thei wer come to y e other ende of the tylt, anone was cō maūded y t the turney should begynne, whereupon swordes wer brought to either of theim. And then first turneyed y t lorde Haward & master Pechye a good season & after theim y t residue two & two tyll either of theim had furnyshed y e full of .xii. strokes that by sondry tymes y e fyre sprange out of the helmettes. And when thei had finished y t fearte of armes, not without many sore strokes & often departyng by the marshalles seruauntes & some of the kynges garde. Thei then wer cōmaūded to ronne together all .xii. & so to Turney til either had smitten a certē nombre of strokes, but then was peces of harneyste hewen into the felde, & swordes brokē and bowed, y e wonderfull it was & fearefull to beholde. The which cōtinued w t such egernesse, that their nōbre of strokes passed, & that the power of y e marshals seruaūtes suffis [...]d not to depart thē, til y e kynges highnes called to his gard to helpe to disseuer theim, whiche was not dooen without great pam, & although y e euerie of theim quite theim ful manfully, yet Charles Brandō y t daye was greatly auaunced & furthered by his horsse, the whiche y t day faught w t his teth & feete like a serpent, & ther vnto was so pleasaunt & light of head, that he had his aduersarye euer at greate aduauntage, in so muche y t he euer strake .iii. strokes before he receaued one. This day also was shewed diuerse deuyces of armour, as some of white & grene chekered, some of blacke paled with gold, some al red & some all grene. And the harnayes the whiche the sayde Charles Brandon then turnayed in, was all ouer [Page Clv] gylte frome the heade peece to the sabattons. And thus with all honoure and worshyppe to them selues & great pleasur to the beholders, thei brought thys marciall playe and dysporte to an ende.
Shortly after this, was Hempson and Dudley commytted to the towre, and Dudley was arreigned the .xvii. daye of Iulii, in the Guldehall and there before the Mayre, and other the kynges cō myssioners, was condempned and iudged to bee drawen, hanged and quartered, and then commaū ded agayne to the towre, where he laye longe after And the Myghelmasse folowynge was Hempson conueyghed into Northampton shyre, and there a reigned, and lastly iudged to bee drawne hanged and quartered, and then broughte agayne to the towre, and there remayned tyll such season as shal be shewed here after. In thys yere also, was holdē at Westminster the .xxi. daye of Ianuarii a parlyament, wherin was made dyuerse and sondrie actes and statutes.
In the seconde yere of the kynge, and the .xvii. daye of August was Hempson & Dudley brought vnto the scaffolde vppon the towre hyll, and there were behedded. And the fyrst daye of Ianuary folowinge, Henry the kynges sonne was borne. And vpon a wednisdaye beyng the .xii. daye of Februarii next folowyng was holden atriumphant iustes within the palayes of Westminster. Of the which was chefe chalengeoure the kinges maiestee with iii. other, whose names shalbe mynded in the ende of thys declaracion.
And fyrst for a conuenyencie of the shewyng of thys moost excellent feates of armes. Ye shall vnvnderstande [Page] that the kynges grace with the other thre chalengeours enclosed in a mountayn whych was passyng connyngly and curiously wroughte with rockes, trees and dere, whereof on ether syde sat a foster clad in grasse grene satin, with eyther a bent bowe in his hande, and abrode arrowe, and a horne aboute eyther of their neckes. And bi the sydes of eyther of the sayde fosters, laye certeyn spe [...]es. And in the front of the sayde mounte betwene the two corner pyllers sat a fayre vyrgyn, clothed in blewe and lyght tawny satin, makyng of a garlande of rosemary and other herbes. Thys pageaunt or mount was drawen vpon wheles by a leoparde all of beaten gold, and an Antlop of beaten flat siluer, the which two beastes were led with .ii. myghtie and high woodwoses by two strynges of sylke, and so conueyghed out of Westminster hall about the tylt, vntyll such tyme as the same mountayne came ryght agaynst the quenes tent. About the whiche was attendaunte manye gentilmen on foote cladde in coates of whyte and grene satyn.
But yf I shoulde here reherse the straunge and costly apparell which the fore ryders were clothed in, with theyr ryche trappers and other deuyses, I shoulde here make a long tariynge. Wherefore to procede as I beganne. When thys mount as is a [...]oue sayde was before the quenes tente, eyther of the fosters blewe a moote, and that doone the kynges maiestie first issued out of the mount and another with hym at one dore, & at another doore rode out the other two chalengeours, all .iiii. hauyng in their handes eyther of theym a small scochion, the whiche thei offered vnto the quenes grace. [Page Cl] and al .iiii. chalengeours had cotes beneth y e wast of blewe sylke garnished with portcolyes of Venise gold without difference, sauynge the kynges graces coate was of blewe veluet, and the other were of blewe satin. And where the kynges away ters were in coates of whyte and grene, the other wer in iackettes of blewe satyn. And after the chalengeours had thus offered vp their scochiōs and made their obeysaūce vnto the quene. The kinges grace with y e other roade vnto the ende of the tylt ouer agaynst Westmynster hall gate, and there houed tyll y e defēdours were brought into y e place
Then the foresayde gentylmen whyche before had brought in the kyng, road for the defendours the whyche anone came in at the weste gate of the palais in sondry pageauntes and goodly deuices whyche here I wyll ouerpasse, for as much as the daye folowyng they ferre exceded, wherof the declaration wyll aske a long leysoure. Wherfore to procede further, when the sayd defendours accordyng to the lawe of armes had bene conueighed about the tylte, and were come to their standynge nere vnto the west ende of y e tylte: Anone the kynges maiestee called for a speare, and so ranne .vi. courses before he lefte, and brake in those .vi. courses .iiii. speares as well and as valyantly as any man of armes myght breake theim, & such as wer broken vpon hym, he receaued thē as thoughe he had felt no dynt of anye stroke. In so muche, that where at y e beginnyng, in y e felde was many a fear full & timerous heart for him, consideryng his excellencie and his tendernes of age. After thei had sene the sayde coursses ronne and his manfull deliuer [Page] chargynge and dischargynge, he reioysed so the peoples heartes that a man myght haue sene a thousande wepyng iyen for ioye And then suche as were in moost feare sawe by his marcial feates that by the ayde of God, he was in no daunger
And whē the other chalēgeours had rōne a few courses, he wēt to it a fresh, & thē ran .x. or xii. courses instātly or he would ceasse, & brake many speaces, & gaue so many teintes, y t euery man maruay led at his wōderfull feates. For none y e there was chalēgeour or defēdour, might attain to halfe the ꝓwesse y t he accōplished y t daye, so y t the pryce was geuē to him of all mē, aswell of thē y t were deputed iudges of those feates of armes for y t day, as of al other. And whē he had thus passed his time to his great laude & honour, he then at y e request of sōdry lordes, which y t daye gaue their attendaunce vpō his grace, went into a pauilion whiche nere vnto the tiltes ende at y t tyme was prepared for hym, & there taried while the other chalēgeours ranne a certain coursses w t such of the defēdours as had not bene assaied y t day, the which demeaned theim right valiantly & knightly, & made full marciall disport. And whē this had cōtinued vpō an houre or more. The king came then out of his pauiliōry dynge vpon a graye coursser, betrapped wyth a crappoure of clothe of golde, and wroughte wyth goldsmithes woorke, which was litle ouer an hād breadthe, and garnysshed in sondrye places wyth white roses made of fine gold. And vpon the pai [...]rell of the horsse breste, stoode a rose of a greate bredth, and another like vpon the crupper behind Which .ii. roses as a goldsmith reported that had [Page Cli] y e ouersight of y e making of y e horsse harneisse, said that theiweied either of thē aboue .l. onces in gold
The kynges maiestee was in a streight coate of moste rychest clothe of golde made close vnto his bodye and streighte sleues, after the proportion of his armes, and in two or thre places the saied sleues were cut and fastened together againe with a plunket ryband, thewhiche garment became hym wonderously well. And thus beyng apointed with his legge harneys being styll vpon his legges he rode vnto the tyltes ende, and there houed whyle the Herauldes made their monicion and criyng a [...]still, a lhostill, and conueyghed the defendours oute at the gate whiche they firste came in at. And that dooen, the gentlemen firste setting forwarde next vnto the trompettes, and then knightes, barnes, and Lordes as they wer of degrees folowing in their goodly apparelles: lastly next vnto y e king came the Lord Haward, bearing vpon a tronchion the kynges helmet. After whom the kyng then cōming, tooke vp his horse in so semely and lusty maner, that shortly to conclude, no man could doo better nor sytte more close nor faster, nor yet kepe his stiroppes more surely. For notwithstandinge that the horse was veraye courageous and excellente in leaping and tornyng and excedyngg flinging, he moued no more vpon hym, then if he had helde a plain and softe trot. And thus passyng the compasse of the felde, when he came ouer againste the quenes Tent, he then beganne of newe, & leaped and coursed the horse vp and downe in wonderful maner. And finally, he turned the feete of y e horse againe the tylt, and caused hym to fling and [Page] beate the boordes with his fete, y e it redounded aboute the place as it had been shotte of gunnes. And when he had thus with all cōmendacion and honoure perfourmed this lustye and courageous feacte, he turned hym vnto the quene and made a lowlye obeysaunce, and so passed in a demure maner into Westminster hall.
Vpon the daye nexte foloyng, being thursdaye and the .xiii. daye of February was holden a more excellent iustes, not for the more valiaunt actes y t daye done of armis, but for y e inestimable richesse and costely apparell whiche that daye was worne wherof I entende to touche a parte, for the whole passeth my conning and memory. But for a note after the capacite of my dul witte. Aboute the season of halfe an houre after one of the clocke, the quenes grace being in her tente. Immediatly issued oute of Westminster hall the trompettes, and after theim the Herauldes, the Trompettes being [...]ad in red cloth, & the Herauldes in scarlet, all on horsebacke. Nert after theim came riding gentlemen in right proper and goodly deuises of apparell, and their horses decked with sylke & brodering woorke right costly. Next whome a compaignie of knightes in more costly apparel folowed, amonge the whiche sir Edward Gilford then mershal, & hauing the rule of thorderīg of the felde w his manifold tipped staues was bothe those daies right goodlye and richely appareled. And also sir Morice Barkeley & sir Fraunces Cheiney roade those .ii. daies in one liuerey, both of their owne aray & also of their horses, which .ii. knightes vpon the first day road in cotes parted half on crimosin [Page Clii] veluet, and y e other halfe of grene veluet, y e crimosin veluet side being ouerlaid w t flat beaten siluer like vnto flat wire, hanging in length y t the veluet was litle or nothing seen. And y e grene veluet syde was fret w t plates of gold of goldsmithes woorke in righte sumpteous wise. And their horses were garnished in one sute, not withoute clothe of gold and other costly deuices.
Vpon the second day, or this thursday, their cotes wer halfe clothe of gold, & thother halfe of purple veluet. The veluet garnished w t skalop shelles and pilgrimes staues of massy golde, & their horse trappours of y e same. Thē came Banerettes, Barones & Lordes, eache of theim more richely appareled then other. For y e lordes, many of theim road in long gounes of cloth of gold exceding riche of y e newe making, wherin is moste substaunce of gold and litle silke. So y e where of old time they wer vsed to buye of y e beste & richest tissue for .v. [...]i. a yard now thei pay .x. [...]. & .xx. marke for y e best. And beside this, their horses, some trapped in cloth of gold to the grounde. Amonge the whiche were specially noted the Lorde of Burgeinie and the Lorde Fizwater, whiche were in one suyte of clothe of golde with their trappers lyke, & .ii. large & massy bauderikes about their neckes, whiche wer estemed at a. M. marke a pece. There was also sir Henry Bolein & another Baneret, which y t daye road in purple veluet, veluet, garnyshed with plates of golde of exceding value. And emonge theim roade also sir Nicholas Vaus in a goune of goldesmithes woorke to the knees, and therein a furre of ryght browne and fyne sables of greate value.
[Page] Then emong theim that roade nexte to y e kyng came my Lorde Henry of Buckinghm̄ in a goune of nedle werke, which was more costly thē some of clothe of gold & more alowed for the curiositee of y e werke therof. And though here I make no memory of the lustye leaping, bounsyng, mounting and flinging of the iolye and lusty foreryders, no man thynke the contrarye but there was aswell doyng horse as any might bee, and aswell wer they tasted and proued, to the great comforte of many a noble manne and woman that day. Then when all this lusty compaignie was thus passed by, Immediatly ensued a pauilion or tente of blewe & purple satine paled, and after that two other of y e same fassyon, all thre beyng garnished with letters of brodery werke. And laste of all came in the fourth te [...] made of clothe of golde and purple veluet paled, whereof the panes of veluet were poudered with these two letters H. and K, as H. for Henry, and K for kyng, and the skirtes of the said pauilion was borne vp rounde aboute with .xxxvi. or .xl. gentlemē, as esquiers for y e body, all beyng clad in short Iackettes of blewe and purple sylke, the whiche were conueighed aboute the tylte, tyll they came before the quenes tent. Where euery chalengeour according to their roomes rode oute of their tentes, & after obeisaunce made vnto the quene, roade vnto the tiltes ende, and there taried the cōminge of the defendours. Howbeit, the kynges highnesse roade into the pauilyon, where the daye before he chaūged his apparell, and there taried their comming. The whiche shortely after were brought in, but or I procede any ferther, I must of a conueniency [Page Cliii] bring in a matter necessary to bee reherced, y e which negligētly I haue ouerpassed, and y e is this.
When the kynges pauilion was as is aforsaid come out of the hall, immediately folowed thesaid pauilion nyne folowers or henchemen, all clothed in clothe of golde and purple veluet parted, the veluet side beyng garnisshed with theforsaid letters of golde as the pauilion was. Of the whiche folowers, the first courser was trapped with the armes of Englande, the second with the armes of Fraunce, the third with the armes of Castell, the fourth with a riche trapper poudered with red roses and white, the fift with cloth of golde furred w t poudered armines, y e sixte with cloth of siluer and purple veluet parted, the seuenth of purple veluet garnished wtth massy plates of gold, a parte wher of was an arme from the elbowe armed with an hearte of golde whiche was of greate weight and value, thewhiche arme and heart were sette vpon either side of the brest of the horsse, and again in y e trapper vpō bothe sides of the crupper. The eight with a trappoure of chaungeable sarcenet after blewe and white full of gold belles. The [...]nthe & last was trapped in cloth of golde and blewe veluet paled. After whiche folowers, ensued the yoman of the horsse vpō a faire double horsse ledyng in his hande the self same horsse whiche the kyng roade out of the felde vpō, as before I haue reherced, and then as last and hynmoost came rydyng vpō a lustie courser sir Mathew Baker as master of the kynges henchemenne, right well and sadly apoincted and like a manne of good age and sadnes, & thus repaired through the felde with suche [Page] demeanour as before is reherced.
Then to retorne vnto the defendoures. Trouth it is that sir Charles Brandō as first came into the felde enclosed in a tower and led by a iaylour holdyng a greate keye in his hande, the whiche pageaunt when it came ouer against the quenes standyng, the iaylour with his keye made a countenaunce as though he had opened the gate of the tower, oute of the whiche issued a manne on horsebacke clad in a long course and prisoners weede, with a pylgrymes long staffe in his hande and a pylgremes hat vpon his heed with a long and forgrowen bearde reachyng to his sadell bowe. He also had hangyng vpon the hooke of his staffe apayre of bedes of gold, and vpon the top of y t staffe was fas [...]ened a lettre, the whiche staffe with the bedes and letter were sent and deliuered vnto the quenes grace, vpon the whiche when she had awhile looked, she sent suche aunswer that the prisoner cast from hym hastely his clothyng, beard and hat, and shewed hym self in bright harneys, and soorth with smote his horsse with the spurres, and made a lustie pace vnto the tiltes ende, and from thence tooke his course and ranne aboute the tilt all moste lusty wise.
And after the said Charles was thus come in, there ensued tenne mo of the said chalengeoures, of the whiche if I should wryte all the apparell and circumstaūce of their cundite vnto their place assigned, it would aske a long tracte of tyme, but shortely to procede to the effect of this matter. So sone as all the defendours were come vnto their place assigned. The kynges grace issued oute of [Page Cliiii] his pauilion and called for a spere, the whiche whē he had receiued, he ranne and brake right vigorously, & so ranne seuen coursses more or he would stynt, in the whiche at euery coursse he brake aspeare or gaue a taynt. And one thyng was greately noted in hym, that at euerie coursse that he ranne he would neuer charge hym with his speare in the rest, till he came nere vnto the copyng. Then by exhortaciō of suche lordes as were aboute hym he rested for a season. And when the other chalengeours had disported theim a while with suche defendours as the kyng had not before tasted: The kyng then came foorth agayne and ranne many and sondry coursses, the whiche he performed to his greate laude and honoure. And albeit that the other chalengeours did full knightely and well and likewise the defendours, as the lorde Marques, sir Charles Brandon and other, yet the feates of the kyng so ferre excelled theim that none was spoken of but his alone, whiche so continued duryng the tyme of their disporte till foure of the clocke at after none, at whiche season, so sone as the defendours wer cōueighed out of the felde, he called for a speare, the whiche he settyng vpon his thigh, roade w t his hed pece vpon his head roūde aboute the tylt, and at twoo tymes when he came ouer against the quenes stādyng, he made as lowe obeysaunce as his sadle would licence hym, and so roade into his pauilyō & there vnarmed hym. And anone after came out of the same pauilion sittyng vpon the same spare horsse whiche the yoman of y t horsse brought in his hād into y e feld when y e kyng first entred. And then he was chaunged into a demy [Page] gowne of clothe of golde furred with sables, the whiche when thei were shewed defaced, so theother that sir Nicholas Vaus ware, that thei semed matyrns in comparison of the other.
Then the gentlemenne sette forward, and after folowed the three chalengours rydyng bare heded, and their three helmettes borne before theim by three lordes, and last of all came the kynges grace, whose helmet was borne by y e lorde of Burgeyny. And in like maner as his folowers folowed hym into the feelde, so in like wise thei folowed hym in his gooyng oute, at whiche season as then he stured his horsse nothyng, but suffered hym to goo a softe trot through all the felde. And at the twoo tymes that his grace came before the quene, his grace forgate not his humble obeysaunce, to the crudicion and learnyng of all well nurtered and gentle wedded menne. And thus w t all honour, ioye and triumphant actes, to the principall laude of this our moste excellent and christen prince, and after to y e worship of all the other, aswell chalengeours as defendoures, and greate comforte of all the beholders, ended these moste excellyng iustes that euer was before that daie seen in Englande, and that for twoo causes specially, as first y e present deede of the excellencie of the kynges personne, whiche neuer before that daie as I thynke was seen in propre personne. And secondarely for the excedyng coste of apparell whiche these twoo daies was shewed, with other manifolde charges of pageauntes and other sumpteous thynges, the whiche by wise mennes estimations coste not so litle by the space of these two dayes [Page Clv] as .xx. M. [...]i. Whiche two marciall dayes were accomplyshed by the actes of these foure chalengeours, y e is to saye: The moste redoubted prince Henry the eyght of that name, kyng of Englande Fraunce & Irelād. &c. Syr Thomas Kneuet, lord Wyllyā of Deuonshire, and master Edward Neuell. And of the defendours there were .x. in nombre, whose names came not al into my handes and therfore haue I omytted theim.
After these royall iustes, was made a solempne and sumpteous banket, the order of whiche I ouerpasse because it would bee to long to reherce.
The .xxiii. daye of Februarij nexte foloyng dyed at Richemounte Henrye the kynges soonne which was borne there, vpon newe yeres day last past as before is shortelye touched.
In the thirde yere of his reigne, aboute the monethes The .iii. yere. of Iune and Iulij, the Scottes made sondrie entres vpon the borders of England, and had out certain shippes wel manned and vitayled and kepte with theim the narowe sees, to the great displeasure of the kynges grace and hurte of some of his subiectes, specially of his merchauntes, the whiche rouers were named to be bannyshed men. But the kynges highnes, consyderyng the daylye hurte that thei did vnto his subiectes and frendes as takyng of vitaile at Sandwich & other places vpō the see coastes, and that no remedye was purueyed by the kyng of Scottes to call theim home. His grace in all goodly haste manned and vitayled certain shippes, and vnder the gouernaunce of the lorde Hawarde as hed and chief capitain sente the saide shippes to scoure the see, the whiche in [Page] shorte processe after aboute thende of Iulij mette with the saide Scottes, and gaue vnto theim a sharpe and fearce fight, in so much that in thende thenglyshe menne drowned one of the Scottishe shippes, and tooke two of the chiefest shippes of that [...]lote, and in theim one hundreth and fourtie Scottes with their hedde capitayne named Hob of Barton. The whiche Scottes with theyr sayd capitayne were caste into sondrye prysonnes, and as the fame wente, in the foresayde fighte was slayne as many of the saide Scottes as were taken prysoners, and of thenglyshe menne fewe or none. And vpon the seconde daye of August wer y e forsayde two Scottishe shippes brought vnto the blacke walle within Thamys. But afterward the saide Scottes were by the kynges commaundement brought vnto tharchbyshoppes palays besyde Westmynster, and there kepte at the kynges coste.
Aboute this season or lytle before, the Frenche kyng that had moste parte of this yere kept warre again Iulius the secound of that name byshop of Rome, forced thesaid bishop to forsake the cytie of Bonony, & to fle for his safegarde toward Rome, not withoute losse of some of his people. This bishoppe had deputed one Iherome Bonuise a Lukener borne, and before tyme had bene a merchaūt and factoure for merchauntes of his nacion in London, the whiche by his insolencie and exercysyng of dice wyth lordes and other, he brake and came so behynde the hande that he was compelled to aduoyde the citie & also the realme. In the tyme of whiche absence he purchased suche grace of the [Page Clvi] fornamed bishop y t he made hym a lorde, & after sent hym into this lāde as his proctour, hauyng a trayne after hym lyke vnto a byshop: & by the [...]auourable letters whyche the byshoppe wrote for hym vnto the kyng, his grace had hym in good fauoure, and dayly resorted vnto his grace for mattiers touchyng the bishoppe, by meane wherof he had knowledge of the bishops councell and also of the kynges.
In this tyme also were here certeyne ambassadours of the Frenche kynges, the whiche lay here a long ceason for matters concernyng their prince to whom this forenamed Iherome, secretly drewe by nyght tyme, and innaturally and falsely dyscouered vnto theim all the byshoppes, and kynges councell. For the whiche he was awaited and lastly takē in the companie of one of the sayd Ambassadours vpon Londō wall about mydnyght, and so brought vnto the counter of the pultrye, frome whence by the kynges cōmaundement on the morowe he was remoued vnto the Towre, where he remayned styll as a prysoner.
In this time also was wonderfull warre betwene the byshop of Rome Iulius the seconde of that name, and the French kyng, in so muche that he wanne from the sayd B. the citee of Bonony, & put the B. to flight, & layed such articles agayne hym y t he entēded to put him downe & make another bishop, y e circūstaunce wherof I passe ouer, cō syderyng y e manyfolde tales and writynges sente vnto the merchaūt straungers of thesame, in the which letters were variable and diuerse reportes.
In the later ende of this yere, the Scottes before [Page] taken by the knyghtly prowes of the lord Hawarde and syr Edward his brother were delyuered fre and franke, to whome the kyng of his boū teous largesse gaue vnto euery of theim competēt sommes of money, to cōueigh theim home to their owne countrey.
In this yere also was holden a parlyament at Westmynster the .iiii. daye of Februari [...], wherein were made and ordeined dyuerse statutes and ordynaunces. Duryng the whiche parlyament a seruaunt of the kynges & yomanne of the croune and one of his garde named Newbolt slewe within y t palayce of Westmynster a seruaunt of one master Willoughby, in the begynnyng of the moneth of Marche. For the which offence, notwithstandyng that the kyng had hym in his synguler fauour for that he was a speciall archer of all other, yet for y t [...]eynous and detestable murder, the kynges grace comaunded a newe payre of galoes to be set vp in thesame place, wher the said seruaunt left his life, and vpon thesame shortlye after was there put to death, and to y e feare of other, suffred hym to hāge there by the space of two dayes & two nightes af [...]r for whiche iudgement the kyng wanne greate honoure and fauoure of his commons.
By the autoryte of this parlyament was graunted vnto the kyng two fyftenes of the temporaltee, and by the conuocacion holden by the clergye two dismes. Vpō good friday, which this this yere fell vpon the .ix. daye of April was a cruell and sterne battaile betwene the bishoppe of Romes hoste & the Frenche kynges partie, which continued from the saied fridaye by sondry encoū tres [Page Clvii] and metinges, by occasyon wherof, much people on bothe parties wer distressed and taken prisoners, and aboue the nombre of thirty. M. slaine.
In the .iiii. yere was Edmond de la Poole behedded, The .iiii. yere. and aboute the moneth of Auguste Syr Thomas Kneuet beynge chyefe capytaine of the kynges greate shippe called the regent, and a few shyppes mo, sette vpon a great Caricke and other shippes of the Frenche kyngs, liyng then nere vnto a toune of Britaine named Brest, where after a longe and cruell fight, thesaide Caricke & regent being clasped together with hookes and cheynes (as the maner of fyghtinge vpon the see betwene enemies is) sodeynly thesaied shippes with other were set on fyre, and brent so feruently, that before they mighte bee losed or disseuered, y e shippes with the men vpon bothe parties were consumed with violence therof, so that fewe escaped whiche were of the poraill. But thesaide sir Thomas Kneuet with many other gentlemen of this land and also of fraunce were brent, on whose soules Iesu haue mereyt.
This yere also after haruest, wheate roase sobeinly The .v. yere. of pryce, for where for the more parte of the yere it was not solde aboue sixe shillīges .viii. d. a quarter. After haruest for so muche as wheat was so sore blasted and striken, & was of so smal yelde, it was solde for .xii. s. and .xiii. s .iiii. d. a quarter.
In the .v. yere the kyng besieged Turwin and discomfited the power of Fraunce at Boemy, and tooke the citees of Turwyn, and Turney.
But in the meane season, the kyng of Scottes espiyng his tyme, inuaded Englande with an hoste [Page] of an hundred thousande menne, with whome the Earle of Surraye, beynge the Kynges Leuetenaunte encountred, and by the helpe of the Lorde Hawarde his soonne, slewe the sayde kynge with a leuen Earles, and wanne the felde. For the whiche noble facte, the kynge created hym afterwarde Duke of Norffolke, and his soonne Earle of Surrey.
In the .vi. yere a peace was concluded betwene Englande and Fraunce. And on saincte Denis The .vi. yere. daye the Frenche kyng maried the Lady Mary y e kynges sister. And he died on newe yeres daye after. And therfore the kyng sente for her againe by the duke of Suffolke and other.
In this yere, in the moneth of Februarye was [...]. borne Lady Mary y e kynges doughter at Grenewiche.
In Aprill, the Frenche Quene came in to Englande, and was maryed to Lorde Charles duke of Suffolke.
This yere Ladye Margarete quene of Scottes and syster to the kynge fledde into Englande, and laye at Harbottell. And she was deliuered of a doughter named Margaret. And came to London in Maye, and taried there a hole yere.
In this yere was suche a froste, that all menne [...] myghte passe with cartes betwene Westmynster and Lambeth.
This yere on Maye euen was an insurreccyon of younge persones against Aliens, of whiche diuers were put to execucion, and y e residue came to Westmynster Halle with halters aboute their neckes, and were pardoned.
[Page Clviii] And the .xviii. daye of Mayeyquene of Scottes, retourned into her countree againe.
This yere in Octobre. the admiral of Fraunce The .lx. yere. came into England, and Tourney was deliuered to the Frenche kyng.
In this yere at Frankforde Charles the fyfte The .x. yere. was chosen Emperoure.
And the Earle of Surrey was sent to Ireland
In this yere, the kyng and the Frenche kynge met at the campe betwene Arde & Guines, where The .xi. yere. were greate triumphes. And after the kynge and the Emperoure mette, and the kyng went to Graueling with the Emperoure. And the Emperoure came to Caleys with the kyng, & had greate chere and the kyng retourned.
This yere the duke of Buckyngham was beheaded The .xii. yere. at the toure hyll the .xvii. daye of Maye. And in Iune, the Cardinall wēt to Calays to entreate a peace betwene themperoure & the French kyng, and [...]aried there to Decembre, without any thinge concluded.
This yere the fridaye before Penthecoste, that The .xiii. yere. is to wytt the sixte daye of Iune, Charles the emperoure was honourably receiued into the Cytee of London of the Maire, Aldermenne, and cominaltye, oure saied soueraigne Lorde accōpaignieng hym. And fro London he went to Windesore and sat in his stall of the Garter. And from thens went to Hampton, and sayled into Spaine.
Duringe whiche tyme, the Earle of Surrey Lorde Admirall brent Morleys in Brytaine, and after landed at Caleys, and entred Picardye, and brent tounes and castelles, and besyeged Hesdyn, [Page] but because of wynter he reysed his syege and retourned.
This somer, the duke of Albany was entring England with a greate armye, but when he heard that the Earle of Shrewisburye was comminge to fyghte with hym, he tooke a truce for, vi. monethes.
In this .xiiii. yere, Christian Kynge of Denmarke The .xiiii. yere. came into Englande in Iune.
Also the Earle of Surrey brent Iedworth and many other townes in Scotlande.
This yere also the Turke besieged the Rhodes and on Christmas daye he tooke it.
The Duke of Suffolke wente into Fraunce The .xv. yere. with ten thousand menne, and passed the water of Som̄e withoute battayle, and tooke and destroyed many townes, and in Decembre retourned.
The same yere the duke of Albanye besieged y e castell of Warke, and hearing of therle of Surreys comming, with a greate armye he cowardely sledde.
In the .xvi. yere, there came oute of Scotlande [...] the byshop of Dunkell, and other ambassadours vnto y t kynges maiestie. And on saynt Mathews daye was the French kyng taken by themperour. A mutyng in Norffolk and Suffolke for paymēt of mony. A peas concluded betwene Englād and Fraunce. And the French kyng was deliuered in Marche. This yere was the coyne enhaunced.
In the .xviii. yeare, the citee of Roome by the [...]viii viceroy of Naples, and the duke of Burbon (the same dake beinge fyrste slaine) was taken and almost distroied. And Clemēt the .vii. than byshop [Page Clix] of Rome & diuers Cardinalles there found were taken and broughte in captiuitee, and vnder the rule of Charles the Emperoure. This yere also y e Cardinall went into Fraunce with greate pompe In October the great master of Fraunce came to London with great triumphe. The .xix. yere.
In this xix. yere, was the sweatyng sickenesse for y e which cause ther was no watch at midsomer
In the .xx. yere, was the Cardinall deposed of y e The .xx. yere chauncellourshyp, and a peace betwene the Emperour and the kyng concluded. The .xxi. yere
In y e .xxi. yere, was holden a parlyament wher was refourmed diuerse enormitees of the clargye
In the .xxii. yere, was a man boyled in Smith The. xxii yere feeld for poysoning. The cardinal dyed on saynct Andrewes euen. The .xxiii. yere
In the .xxiii. yere, Gryffeth Rice was behedded for treason. In October the kyng wente ouer the sea, and met the Frenche kyng at Caleis.
In the .xxv. yere, in Apryll was a Nonne called The. xxv yere. the holy mayde of Kent, ii. Monkes and two Freers hanged and behedded for treasō, blasphemye, and ypocrysie. This yere a peace was concluded wyth Scotlande.
In this xxvi. yere was holden a Parlyamente at Westminster, wherin emong other moost godly The. xxvi yere. and necessary statutes, it was ther decreed and enacted that the kynges maiestie should be from thensforth accordyng to the lawe of God, taken & reputed as supreme heed of this his realme, nexte and immediatly vnder Chryst. This yere the erle of Kyldare died in the Towre, and his sonne rebel led and slewe the byshop of Dubelyn, wherfore y e [Page] kyng dyd send sir Wylliam Skeuynton thether This yere was graunted to the king the fyrst frutes, and the tenthes of all spirituall possessyons. In Iune was the byshoppe of Rochester and sir Thomas Moore behedded, for deniyng the kyng to be supreme hed of y e church of Englande. This yere, wer .iii. Monkes of the Charterhouse executed for the same offence.
In this .xxvii. yere, in Ianuary dyed lady Katheryn The. xxvii yere. princesse dowager, and is buryed at Peter borowe. This yere, quene Anne was attaynted of treason, and was beheded. And the kynge maried lady Iane Seymer. And in October beganne a fololyshe commocion in Lyncolnshyre, & another in Yorke shyre, by y e meanes of Lord Darey, lord Husey sir Robert Cōstable, & Robert Aske. Which only by the kynges wysedome & his discrete counsayle were appeased withoute bloode shedynge.
In this .xxviii. yere, the Thamis was ouer fro [...] in December, wherfore the kyng and the quene rode throwe London with a goodlye companye. [...] xviii [...] This yere also, syr Fraunces Bygot, lord Darcy, syr Robert Constable, and other, beganne a newe co [...]spyracie, and thei were attaynted, and putte to death in Iune. In February was Thomas Fytzgarred, and fyue of his vncles hanged, drawen & quartered. And on saynt Edwardes euen Prynce Edwarde was borne at Hamptō court. The. xxiii daye of October dyed quene Iane, and is buryed at Wyndsore.
In this .xxix. yere, in Maye was Frere Foreste hanged and brente in Smithfeelde for treason & [...] xxix. yere. heresy, with the Image of Daruell Gathern. In [Page Clx] thys yere, all ydolatry was forbyddē. And dyuers ymages that had engynnes to make their eyes, & other lymmes to styre, wyth many other disceates wer destroyed. And all Freers and Monkes chaū ged their garmentes.
In this .xxx. yere in Decēber was the Marquis of Ereter, the Lord Montacute, and syr Edward Neuell behedded for hygh treasō duly proued. In The. xxx yere. May the cytesyns of Londō mustred al in bright harneisse, with coates of whyte clothe, and whyte sylke, wyth chaynes of golde, in thre great armyes, to the great wonder of straungers.
Nowe for a fynal cōclusiō as touchīg this most noble & exellēt prince and for the closing vp of this presēt werke. If y t his highnes had by al y e space of his reigne heretofore, whiche hath bene .xxxiiii. yeres, done no more but only these three thynges (as in dede his grace hath done a great & infinite nō bre of moste prudente & beneficial thynges, bothe for the quietnes of his realme & wealth of his subiectes) y t is to saie: the extirpyng & abholyshyng of the vsurped authoritee of the B. of Rome out of all his dominions, and restoring vnto vs the holy & most blessed worde of God y e is to saie the whole scripture in our Englishtongue, to thentent chiefly that we mighte knowe oure dutie to almightie God, oure obedyence to our prince and hys successours kynges of thys realme, & lyue a godlye and Christen life one with another. Secondarely, in takynge a waye all supersticion and ydolatrye whiche was a thyng moost detestain▪ the sight, of God. And thirdlye and laste of all the dissoluynge of cloisters and suppressynge all conterfete and [Page] false religion, which so long as thei cōtinued, wer not only teachers & preachers of false and supersticious doctryne, but also wer euer the autours & begynners of all mischiefes & commocions. For reformacion I saye of which thynges, who is hable to rendre woorthy thankes and prayses to his highnes? And therfore to conclude, infinite thankes be geuē to almightie God y t so hath wrought by his speciall grace, in the hearte & mynde of his hihgnes, & let earnest prayers and supplicaciōs incessantly be made of all his faythful subiectes for the preseruacion of his highnes in mooste triumphant honoure and wealth and ouer vs longe to reigne & rule. And that when nature shall geue place to death in his grace, that then thesame giftes of prudence, pollecie, and godly iudgement y t his highnes is so plentifully endewed with, maye yet be planted in y e personne of that goodly ympe and mooste flory shyng braūche prynce Edwarde, that the same maye finishe & mainteine that whiche his noble father and our souereigne lord kyng Henry y e eyght hath moste graciously begōne. To this all true Englishe heartes saie
Amen.
LONDINI. In officina Richardi Graftoni, Cmm priuilegio ad imprimendum solum per septennium.