| THE HISTORY OF THE REFORMATION
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 LIFE OF HENRY VIIITHE ORIGIN OF THE DIVORCE.
            
             
             Matrimonial discords have, from the days of Helen of Troy, been the
            fruitful source of public calamities; and one of the most decisive events in
            English history, the breach with the Church of Rome, found its occasion in the
            divorce of Catherine of Aragon. Its origin has been traced to various
            circumstances. On one hand, it is attributed to Henry's passion for Anne
            Boleyn, on the other, to doubts of the validity of Henry's marriage, raised by
            the Bishop of Tarbes in 1527, while negotiating a matrimonial alliance between
            the Princess Mary and Francis I. These are the two most popular theories, and
            both are demonstrably false. Doubts of the legality of Henry's marriage had
            existed long before the Bishop of Tarbes paid his visit to England, and even
            before Anne Boleyn was born. They were urged, not only on the eve of the
            completion of the marriage, but when it was first suggested. In 1503, when
            Henry VII applied to Julius II for a dispensation to enable his second son to
            marry his brother's widow, the Pope replied that "the dispensation was a
            great matter; nor did he well know, prima facie, if it were competent for the
            Pope to dispense in such a case". He granted the dispensation, but the doubts
            were not entirely removed. Catherine's confessor instilled them into her mind,
            and was recalled by Ferdinand on that account. The Spanish King himself felt it
            necessary to dispel certain "scruples of conscience" Henry might
            entertain as to the "sin" of marrying his brother's widow. Warham and
            Fox debated the matter, and Warham apparently opposed the marriage. A general
            council had pronounced against the Pope's dispensing power; and, though the
            Popes had, in effect, established their superiority over general councils,
            those who still maintained the contrary view can hardly have failed to doubt
            the legality of Henry's marriage.
             So good a papalist as the young King, however, would hardly allow
            theoretical doubts of the general powers of the Pope to outweigh the practical
            advantages of a marriage in his own particular case; and it is safe to assume
            that his confidence in its validity would have remained unshaken, but for
            extraneous circumstances of a definite and urgent nature. On the 31st of
            January, 1510, seven months after his marriage with Catherine, she gave birth
            to her first child; it was a daughter, and was still-born. On the 27th of May
            following she told her father that the event was considered in England to be of
            evil omen, but that Henry took it cheerfully, and she thanked God for having
            given her such a husband. "The King," wrote Catherine's confessor,
            "adores her, and her highness him." Less than eight months later, on
            the 1st of January, 1511, she was delivered of her first-born son. A tourney
            was held to celebrate the joyous event, and the heralds received a handsome
            largess at the christening. The child was named Henry, styled Prince of Wales,
            and given a serjeant-at-arms on the 14th, and a clerk of the signet on the 19th
            of February. Three days later he was dead; he was buried at the cost of some
            ten thousand pounds in Westminster Abbey. The rejoicings were turned to grief,
            which, aggravated by successive disappointments, bore with cumulative force on
            the mind of the King and his people. In September, 1513, the Venetian
            ambassador announced the birth of another son, who was either still-born, or
            died immediately afterwards. In June, 1514, there is again a reference to the
            christening of the "King's new son," but he, too, was no sooner
            christened than dead.
             Domestic griefs were now embittered by political resentments. Ferdinand
            valued his daughter mainly as a political emissary; he had formally accredited
            her as his ambassador at Henry's Court, and she naturally used her influence to
            maintain the political union between her father and her husband. The
            arrangement had serious drawbacks; when relations between sovereigns grew
            strained, their ambassadors could be recalled, but Catherine had to stay. In
            1514 Henry was boiling over with indignation at his double betrayal by the
            Catholic king; and it is not surprising that he vented some of his rage on the
            wife who was Ferdinand's representative. He reproached her, writes Peter Martyr
            from Ferdinand's Court, with her father's ill-faith, and taunted her with his
            own conquests. To this brutality Martyr attributes the premature birth of
            Catherine's fourth son towards the end of 1514. Henry, in fact, was preparing
            to cast off, not merely the Spanish alliance, but his Spanish wife. He was
            negotiating for a joint attack on Castile with Louis XII. and threatening the
            divorce of Catherine. "It is said," writes a Venetian from Rome in
            August, 1514, "that the King of England means to repudiate his present
            wife, the daughter of the King of Spain and his brother's widow, because he is
            unable to have children by her, and intends to marry a daughter of the French
            Duke of Bourbon.... He intends to annul his own marriage, and will obtain what
            he wants from the Pope as France did from Pope Julius II."
               But the death of Louis XII. (January, 1515) and the consequent loosening
            of the Anglo-French alliance made Henry and Ferdinand again political allies;
            while, as the year wore on, Catherine was known to be once more pregnant, and
            Henry's hopes of issue revived. This time they were not disappointed; the
            Princess Mary was born on the 18th of February, 1516. Ferdinand had died on the
            23rd of January, but the news was kept from Catherine, lest it might add to the
            risks of her confinement. The young princess seemed likely to live, and Henry
            was delighted. When Giustinian, amid his congratulations, said he would have
            been better pleased had it been a son, the King replied: "We are both
            young; if it was a daughter this time, by the grace of God the sons will
            follow". All thoughts of a divorce passed away for the time, but the
            desired sons did not arrive. In August, 1517, Catherine was reported to be
            again expecting issue, but nothing more is heard of the matter, and it is
            probable that about this time the Queen had various miscarriages. In July,
            1518, Henry wrote to Wolsey from Woodstock that Catherine was once more
            pregnant, and that he could not move the Court to London, as it was one of the
            Queen's "dangerous times". His precautions were unavailing, and, on
            the 10th of November, his child arrived still-born. Giustinian notes the great
            vexation with which the people heard the news, and expresses the opinion that,
            had it occurred a month or two earlier, the Princess Mary would not have been
            betrothed to the French dauphin, "as the one fear of England was lest it
            should pass into subjection to France through that marriage".
             The child was the last born of Catherine. For some years Henry went on
            hoping against every probability that he might still have male issue by his
            Queen; and in 1519 he undertook to lead a crusade against the Turk in person if
            he should have an heir. But physicians summoned from Spain were no more
            successful than their English colleagues. By 1525 the last ray of hope had
            flickered out. Catherine was then forty years old; and Henry at the age of
            thirty-four, in the full vigour of youthful manhood, seemed doomed by the irony
            of fate and by his union with Catherine to leave a disputed inheritance. Never
            did England's interests more imperatively demand a secure and peaceful
            succession. Never before had there been such mortality among the children of an
            English king; never before had an English king married his brother's widow. So
            striking a coincidence could be only explained by the relation of cause and
            effect. Men who saw the judgment of God in the sack of Rome, might surely
            discern in the fatality that attended the children of Henry VIII a fulfilment
            of the doom of childlessness pronounced in the Book of the Law against him who
            should marry his brother's wife. "God," wrote the French ambassador
            in 1528, "has long ago Himself passed sentence on it;" and there is
            no reason to doubt Henry's assertion, that he had come to regard the death of
            his children as a Divine judgment, and that he was impelled to question his
            marriage by the dictates of conscience. The "scruples of conscience,"
            which Henry VII. had urged as an excuse for delaying the marriage, were merely
            a cloak for political reasons; but scruples of conscience are dangerous
            playthings, and the pretence of Henry VII. became, through the death of his
            children, a terrible reality to Henry VIII.
             Queen Catherine, too, had scruples of conscience about the marriage,
            though of a different sort. When she first heard of Henry's intention to seek a
            divorce, she is reported to have said that "she had not offended, but it
            was a judgment of God, for that her former marriage was made in blood";
            the price of it had been the head of the innocent Earl of Warwick, demanded by
            Ferdinand of Aragon. Nor was she alone in this feeling. "He had
            heard," witnessed Buckingham's chancellor in 1521, "the Duke grudge
            that the Earl of Warwick was put to death, and say that God would punish it, by
            not suffering the King's issue to prosper, as appeared by the death of his
            sons; and that his daughters prosper not, and that he had no issue male."
               Conscience, however, often moves men in directions indicated by other
            than conscientious motives, and, of the other motives which influenced Henry's
            mind, some were respectable and some the reverse. The most legitimate was his
            desire to provide for the succession to the throne. It was obvious to him and
            his council that, if he died with no children but Mary, England ran the risk of
            being plunged into an anarchy worse than that of the civil wars. "By
            English law," wrote Falier, the Venetian ambassador, in 1531,
            "females are excluded from the throne;" that was not true, but it was
            undoubtedly a widespread impression, based upon the past history of England. No
            Queen-Regnant had asserted a right to the English throne but one, and that one
            precedent provided the most effective argument for avoiding a repetition of the
            experiment. Matilda was never crowned, though she had the same claim to the
            throne as Mary, and her attempt to enforce her title involved England in nineteen
            years of anarchy and civil war. Stephen stood to Matilda in precisely the same
            relation as James V. of Scotland stood to the Princess Mary; and in 1532, as
            soon as he came of age, James was urged to style himself "Prince of
            England" and Duke of York, in manifest derogation of Mary's title. At that
            time Charles V. was discussing alternative plans for deposing Henry VIII. One
            was to set up James V., the other to marry Mary to some great English noble and
            proclaim them King and Queen; Mary by herself was thought to have no chance of
            success. John of Gaunt had maintained in Parliament that the succession
            descended only through males; the Lancastrian case was that Henry IV., the son
            of Edward III.'s fourth son, had a better title to the throne than Philippa, the
            daughter of the third; an Act limiting the succession to the male line was
            passed in 1406; and Henry VII. himself only reigned through a tacit denial of
            the right of women to sit on the English throne.
             The objection to female sovereigns was grounded not so much on male
            disbelief in their personal qualifications, as upon the inevitable consequence
            of matrimonial and dynastic problems. If the Princess Mary succeeded, was she
            to marry? If not, her death would leave the kingdom no better provided with
            heirs than before; and in her weak state of health, her death seemed no distant
            prospect. If, on the other hand, she married, her husband must be either a
            subject or a foreign prince. To marry a subject would at once create discords
            like those from which the Wars of the Roses had sprung; to marry a foreign
            prince was to threaten Englishmen, then more jealous than ever of foreign
            influence, with the fear of alien domination. They had before their eyes
            numerous instances in which matrimonial alliances had involved the union of
            states so heterogeneous as Spain and the Netherlands; and they had no mind to
            see England absorbed in some continental empire. In the matrimonial schemes
            arranged for the princess, it was generally stipulated that she should, in
            default of male heirs, succeed to the throne of England; her succession was
            obviously a matter of doubt, and it is quite certain that her marriage in
            France or in Spain would have proved a bar in the way of her succession to the
            English throne, or at least have given rise to conflicting claims.
             These rival pretensions began to be heard as soon as it became evident
            that Henry VIII. would have no male heirs by Catherine of Aragon. In 1519, a
            year after the birth of the Queen's last child, Giustinian reported to the
            Venetian signiory on the various nobles who had hopes of the crown. The Duke of
            Norfolk had expectations in right of his wife, a daughter of Edward IV, and the
            Duke of Suffolk in right of his Duchess, the sister of Henry VIII. But the Duke
            of Buckingham was the most formidable: "It was thought that, were the King
            to die without male heirs, that Duke might easily obtain the crown". His
            claims had been canvassed in 1503, when the issue of Henry VII. seemed likely
            to fail, and now that the issue of Henry VIII. was in even worse plight,
            Buckingham's claims to the crown became again a matter of comment. His hopes of
            the crown cost him his head; he had always been discontented with Tudor rule,
            especially under Wolsey; he allowed himself to be encouraged with hopes of succeeding
            the King, and possibly spoke of asserting his claim in case of Henry's death.
            This was to touch Henry on his tenderest spot, and, in 1521, the Duke was tried
            by his peers, found guilty of high treason, and sent to the block. In this, as
            in all the great trials of Henry's reign, and indeed in most state trials of
            all ages, considerations of justice were subordinated to the real or supposed
            dictates of political expediency. Buckingham was executed, not because he was a
            criminal, but because he was, or might become, dangerous; his crime was not
            treason, but descent from Edward III. Henry VIII., like Henry VII., showed his
            grasp of the truth that nothing makes a government so secure as the absence of
            all alternatives.
             Buckingham's execution is one of the symptoms that, as early as 1521,
            the failure of his issue had made Henry nervous and susceptible about the
            succession. Even in 1519, when Charles V.'s minister, Chièvres, was proposing
            to marry his niece to the Earl of Devonshire, a grandson of Edward IV., Henry
            was suspicious, and Wolsey inquired whether Chièvres was "looking to any
            chance of the Earl's succession to the throne of England." If further
            proof were needed that Henry's anxiety about the succession was not, as has
            been represented, a mere afterthought intended to justify his divorce from
            Catherine, it might be found in the extraordinary measures taken with regard to
            his one and only illegitimate son. The boy was born in 1519. His mother was
            Elizabeth Blount, sister of Erasmus's friend, Lord Mountjoy; and she is noticed
            as taking part in the Court revels during the early years of Henry's reign. Outwardly,
            at any rate, Henry's Court was long a model of decorum; there was no parade of
            vice as in the days of Charles II., and the existence of this royal bastard was
            so effectually concealed that no reference to him occurs in the correspondence
            of the time until 1525, when it was thought expedient to give him a position of
            public importance. The necessity of providing some male successor to Henry was considered
            so urgent that, two years before the divorce is said to have occurred to him,
            he and his council were meditating a scheme for entailing the succession on the
            King's illegitimate son. In 1525 the child was created Duke of Richmond and
            Somerset. These titles were significant; Earl of Richmond had been Henry VII.'s
            title before he came to the throne; Duke of Somerset had been that of his
            grandfather and of his youngest son. Shortly afterwards the boy was made Lord
            High Admiral of England, Lord Warden of the Marches, and Lord Lieutenant of
            Ireland, the two latter being offices which Henry VIII. himself had held in his
            early youth. In January, 1527, the Spanish ambassador reported that there was a
            scheme on foot to make the Duke King of Ireland; it was obviously a design to
            prepare the way for his succession to the kingdom of England. The English
            envoys in Spain were directed to tell the Emperor that Henry proposed to demand
            some noble princess of near blood to the Emperor as a wife for the Duke of Richmond.
            The Duke, they were to say, "is near of the King's blood and of excellent
            qualities, and is already furnished to keep the state of a great prince, and
            yet may be easily, by the King's means, exalted to higher things". The
            lady suggested was Charles's niece, a daughter of the Queen of Portugal; she
            was already promised to the Dauphin of France, but the envoys remarked that, if
            that match were broken off, she might find "another dauphin" in the
            Duke of Richmond. Another plan for settling the succession was that the Duke
            should, by papal dispensation, marry his half-sister Mary! Cardinal Campeggio
            saw no moral objection to this. "At first I myself," he writes on his
            arrival in England in October, 1528, "had thought of this as a means of establishing
            the succession, but I do not believe that this design would suffice to satisfy
            the King's desires." The Pope was equally willing to facilitate the
            scheme, on condition that Henry abandoned his divorce from Catherine. Possibly
            Henry saw more objections than Pope or Cardinal to a marriage between brother
            and sister. At all events Mary was soon betrothed to the French prince, and the
            Emperor recorded his impression that the French marriage was designed to remove
            the Princess from the Duke of Richmond's path to the throne.
             The conception of this violent expedient is mainly of interest as
            illustrating the supreme importance attached to the question of providing for a
            male successor to Henry. He wanted an heir to the throne, and he wanted a fresh
            wife for that reason. A mistress would not satisfy him, because his children by
            a mistress would hardly succeed without dispute to the throne, not because he
            laboured under any moral scruples on the point. He had already had two
            mistresses, Elizabeth Blount, the mother of the Duke of Richmond, and Anne's
            sister, Mary Boleyn. Possibly, even probably, there were other lapses from
            conjugal fidelity, for, in 1533, the Duke of Norfolk told Chapuys that Henry
            was always inclined to amours; but none are capable of definite proof, and if
            Henry had other illegitimate children besides the Duke of Richmond it is
            difficult to understand why their existence should have been so effectually
            concealed when such publicity was given their brother. The King is said to have
            had ten mistresses in 1528, but the statement is based on a misrepresentation
            of the only document adduced in its support. It is a list of New Year's
            presents, which runs "To thirty-three noble ladies" such and such
            gifts, then "to ten mistresses" other gifts; it is doubtful if the
            word then bore its modern sinister signification; in this particular instance
            it merely means "gentlewomen," and differentiates them from the noble
            ladies. Henry's morals, indeed, compare not unfavourably with those of other
            sovereigns. His standard was neither higher nor lower than that of Charles V.,
            who was at this time negotiating a marriage between his natural daughter and
            the Pope's nephew; it was not lower than those of James II., of William III.,
            or of the first two Georges; it was infinitely higher than the standard of
            Francis I., of Charles II., or even of Henry of Navarre and Louis XIV.
             The gross immorality so freely imputed to Henry seems to have as little
            foundation as the theory that his sole object in seeking the divorce from
            Catherine and separation from Rome was the gratification of his passion for
            Anne Boleyn. If that had been the case, there would be no adequate explanation
            of the persistence with which he pursued the divorce. He was "studying the
            matter so diligently," Campeggio says, "that I believe in this case
            he knows more than a great theologian and jurist"; he was so convinced of
            the justice of his cause "that an angel descending from heaven would be
            unable to persuade him otherwise". He sent embassy after embassy to Rome;
            he risked the enmity of Catholic Europe; he defied the authority of the vicar
            of Christ; and lavished vast sums to obtain verdicts in his favour from most of
            the universities in Christendom. It is not credible that all this energy was
            expended merely to satisfy a sensual passion, which could be satisfied without
            a murmur from Pope or Emperor, if he was content with Anne Boleyn as a
            mistress, and is believed to have been already satisfied in 1529, four years
            before the divorce was obtained. So, too, the actual sentence of divorce in
            1533 was precipitated not by Henry's passion for Anne, but by the desire that
            her child should be legitimate. She was pregnant before Henry was married to
            her or divorced from Catherine. But, though the representation of Henry's
            passion for Anne Boleyn as the sole fons
              et origo of the divorce is far from convincing, that passion introduced
            various complications into the question; it was not merely an additional
            incentive to Henry's desires; it also brought Wolsey and Henry into conflict; and
            the unpopularity of the divorce was increased by the feeling that Henry was
            losing caste by seeking to marry a lady of the rank and character of Anne
            Boleyn.
             The Boleyns were wealthy merchants of London, of which one of them had
            been Lord-Mayor, but Anne's mother was of noble blood, being daughter and
            co-heir of the Earl of Ormonde, and it is a curious fact that all of Henry's
            wives could trace their descent from Edward I. Anne's age is uncertain, but she
            is generally believed to have been born in 1507. Attempts have been made to
            date her influence over the King by the royal favours bestowed on her father,
            Sir Thomas, afterwards Viscount Rochford and Earl of Wiltshire, but, as these
            favours flowed in a fairly regular stream from the beginning of the reign, as
            Sir Thomas's services were at least a colourable excuse for them, and as his
            other daughter Mary was Henry's mistress before he fell in love with Anne,
            these grants are not a very substantial ground upon which to build. Of Anne
            herself little is known except that, about 1519, she was sent as maid of honour
            to the French Queen, Claude; five years before, her sister Mary had accompanied
            Mary Tudor in a similar capacity on her marriage with Louis XII. In 1522, when
            war with France was on the eve of breaking out, Anne was recalled to the
            English Court, where she took part in revels and love-intrigues. Sir Thomas
            Wyatt, the poet, although a married man, sued for her favours; Henry, Lord
            Percy made her more honest proposals, but was compelled to desist by the King
            himself, who had arranged for her marriage with Piers Butler, son of the Earl
            of Ormond, as a means to end the feud between the Butler and the Boleyn
            families.
             None of these projects advanced any farther, possibly because they
            conflicted with the relations developing between Anne and the King himself. As
            Wyatt complained in a sonnet,
             
             There is written her fair neck round about
             Noli me tangere; for Cæsar's I am
             And wild for to hold, though I seem tame.
             
             But, for any definite documentary evidence to the contrary, it might be
            urged that Henry's passion for Anne was subsequent to the commencement of his
            proceedings for a divorce from Catherine. Those proceedings began at least as
            early as March, 1527, while the first allusion to the connection between the
            King and Anne Boleyn occurs in the instructions to Dr. William Knight, sent in
            the following autumn to procure a dispensation for her marriage with Henry. The
            King's famous love-letters, the earliest of which are conjecturally assigned to
            July, 1527, are without date and with but slight internal indications of the
            time at which they were written; they may be earlier than 1527, they may be as
            late as the following winter. It is unlikely that Henry would have sought for
            the Pope's dispensation to marry Anne until he was assured of her consent, of
            which in some of the letters he appears to be doubtful; on the other hand, it
            is difficult to see how a lady of the Court could refuse an offer of marriage
            made by her sovereign. Her reluctance was to fill a less honourable position,
            into which Henry was not so wicked as to think of forcing her. "I
            trust," he writes in one of his letters, "your absence is not wilful
            on your part; for if so, I can but lament my ill-fortune, and by degrees abate
            my great folly." His love for Anne Boleyn was certainly his "great
            folly," the one overmastering passion of his life. There is, however,
            nothing very extraordinary in the letters themselves; in one he says he has for
            more than a year been "wounded with the dart of love," and is
            uncertain whether Anne returns his affection. In others he bewails her briefest
            absence as though it were an eternity; desires her father to hasten his return
            to Court; is torn with anxiety lest Anne should take the plague, comforts her
            with the assurance that few women have had it, and sends her a hart killed by
            his own hand, making the inevitable play on the word. Later on, he alludes to
            the progress of the divorce case; excuses the shortness of a letter on the
            ground that he has spent four hours over the book he was writing in his own
            defence and has a pain in his head. The series ends with an announcement that
            he has been fitting up apartments for her, and with congratulations to himself
            and to her that the "well-wishing" Legate, Campeggio, who has been
            sent from Rome to try the case, has told him he was not so "imperial"
            in his sympathies as had been alleged.
             The secret of her fascination over Henry was a puzzle to observers.
            "Madame Anne," wrote a Venetian, "is not one of the handsomest
            women in the world. She is of middling stature, swarthy complexion, long neck,
            wide mouth, bosom not much raised, and in fact has nothing but the King's great
            appetite, and her eyes, which are black and beautiful". She had probably
            learnt in France the art of using her beautiful eyes to the best advantage; her
            hair, which was long and black, she wore loose, and on her way to her
            coronation Cranmer describes her as "sitting in her hair". Possibly
            this was one of the French customs, which somewhat scandalised the staider
            ladies of the English Court. She is said to have had a slight defect on one of
            her nails, which she endeavoured to conceal behind her other fingers. Of her
            mental accomplishments there is not much evidence; she naturally, after some
            years' residence at the Court of France, spoke French, though she wrote it in
            an orthography that was quite her own. Her devotion to the Gospel is the one
            great virtue with which Foxe and other Elizabethans strove to invest the mother
            of the Good Queen Bess. But it had no nobler foundation than the facts that
            Anne's position drove her into hostility to the Roman jurisdiction, and that
            her family shared the envy of church goods, common to the nobility and the
            gentry of the time. Her place in English history is due solely to the
            circumstance that she appealed to the less refined part of Henry's nature; she
            was pre-eminent neither in beauty nor in intellect, and her virtue was not of a
            character to command or deserve the respect of her own or subsequent ages.
             It is otherwise with her rival, Queen Catherine, the third of the
            principal characters involved in the divorce. If Henry's motives were not so
            entirely bad as they have often been represented, neither they nor Anne
            Boleyn's can stand a moment's comparison with the unsullied purity of
            Catherine's life or the lofty courage with which she defended the cause she
            believed to be right. There is no more pathetic figure in English history, nor
            one condemned to a crueller fate. No breath of scandal touched her fair name,
            or impugned her devotion to Henry. If she had the misfortune to be identified
            with a particular policy, the alliance with the House of Burgundy, the fault
            was not hers; she had been married to Henry in consideration of the advantages
            which that alliance was supposed to confer; and, if she used her influence to
            further Spanish interest, it was a natural feeling as near akin to virtue as to
            vice, and Carroz at least complained, in 1514, that she had completely
            identified herself with her husband and her husband's subjects. If her
            miscarriages and the death of her children were a grief to Henry, the pain and
            the sorrow were hers in far greater measure; if they had made her old and
            deformed, as Francis brutally described her in 1519, the fact must have been
            far more bitter to her than it was unpleasant to Henry. There may have been
            some hardship to Henry in the circumstance that, for political motives, he had
            been induced by his council to marry a wife who was six years his senior; but
            to Catherine herself a divorce was the height of injustice. The question was in
            fact one of justice against a real or supposed political necessity, and in such
            cases justice commonly goes to the wall. In politics, men seek to colour with
            justice actions based upon considerations of expediency. They first convince
            themselves, and then they endeavour with less success to persuade mankind.
             So Henry VIII. convinced himself that the dispensation granted by Julius
            II. was null and void, that he had never been married to Catherine, and that to
            continue to live with his brother's wife was sin. "The King," he
            instructed his ambassador to tell Charles V. in 1533, "taketh himself to
            be in the right, not because so many say it, but because he, being learned,
            knoweth the matter to be right.... The justice of our cause is so rooted in our
            breast that nothing can remove it, and even the canons say that a man should
            rather endure all the censures of the Church than offend his conscience."
            No man was less tolerant of heresy than Henry, but no man set greater store on
            his own private judgment. To that extent he was a Protestant;
            "though," he instructed Paget in 1534 to tell the Lutheran princes,
            "the law of every man's conscience be but a private court, yet it is the
            highest and supreme court for judgment or justice". God and his
            conscience, he told Chapuys in 1533, were on very good terms. On another
            occasion he wrote to Charles Ubi Spiritus
              Domini, ibi libertas, with the obvious implication that he possessed the
            spirit of the Lord, and therefore he might do as he liked. To him, as to St.
            Paul, all things were lawful; and Henry's appeals to the Pope, to learned
            divines, to universities at home and abroad, were not for his own satisfaction,
            but were merely concessions to the profane herd, unskilled in royal learning
            and unblessed with a kingly conscience. Against that conviction, so firmly
            rooted in the royal breast, appeals to pity were vain, and attempts to shake it
            were perilous. It was his conscience that made Henry so dangerous. Men are
            tolerant of differences about things indifferent, but conscience makes bigots
            of us all; theological hatreds are proverbially bitter, and religious wars are
            cruel. Conscience made Sir Thomas More persecute, and glory in the persecution
            of heretics, and conscience earned Mary her epithet "Bloody". They
            were moved by conscientious belief in the Catholic faith, Henry by
            conscientious belief in himself; and conscientious scruples are none the less
            exigent for being reached by crooked paths.
             THE POPE'S DILEMMA.
             
             
             In February, 1527, in pursuance of the alliance with France, which
            Wolsey, recognising too late the fatal effects of the union with Charles, was
            seeking to make the basis of English policy, a French embassy arrived in
            England to conclude a marriage between Francis I. and the Princess Mary. At its
            head was Gabriel de Grammont, Bishop of Tarbes; and in the course of his
            negotiations he is alleged to have first suggested those doubts of the validity
            of Henry's marriage, which ended in the divorce. The allegation was made by
            Wolsey three months later, and from that time down to our own day it has done
            duty with Henry's apologists as a sufficient vindication of his conduct. It is
            now denounced as an impudent fiction, mainly on the ground that no hint of
            these doubts occurs in the extant records of the negotiations. But
            unfortunately we have only one or two letters relating to this diplomatic
            mission. There exists, indeed, a detailed narrative, drawn up some time
            afterwards by Claude Dodieu, the French secretary; but the silence, on so
            confidential a matter, of a third party who was not present when the doubts
            were presumably suggested, proves little or nothing. Du Bellay, in 1528,
            reported to the French Government Henry's public assertion that Tarbes had
            mentioned these doubts; the statement was not repudiated; Tarbes himself
            believed in the validity of Henry's case and was frequently employed in efforts
            to win from the Pope an assent to Henry's divorce. It is rather a strong
            assumption to suppose in the entire absence of positive evidence that Henry and
            Wolsey were deliberately lying. There is nothing impossible in the supposition
            that some such doubts were expressed; indeed, Francis I. had every reason to
            encourage doubts of Henry's marriage as a means of creating a breach between
            him and Charles V. In return for Mary's hand, Henry was endeavouring to obtain
            various advantages from Francis in the way of pensions, tribute and territory.
            Tarbes represented that the French King was so good a match for the English princess,
            that there was little need for further concession; to which Henry replied that
            Francis was no doubt an excellent match for his daughter, but was he free to
            marry? His precontract with Charles V.'s sister, Eleanor, was a complication
            which seriously diminished the value of Francis's offer; and the papal
            dispensation, which he hoped to obtain, might not be forthcoming or valid. As a
            counter to this stroke, Tarbes may well have hinted that the Princess Mary was
            not such a prize as Henry made out. Was the dispensation for Henry's own
            marriage beyond cavil? Was Mary's legitimacy beyond question? Was her
            succession to the English throne, a prospect Henry dangled before the
            Frenchman's eyes, so secure? These questions were not very new, even at the
            time of Tarbes's mission. The divorce had been talked about in 1514, and now,
            in 1527, the position of importance given to the Duke of Richmond was a matter
            of public comment, and inevitably suggested doubts of Mary's succession. There
            is no documentary evidence that this argument was ever employed, beyond the
            fact that, within three months of Tarbes's mission, both Henry and Wolsey
            asserted that the Bishop had suggested doubts of the validity of Henry's
            marriage. Henry, however, does not say that Tarbes first suggested the doubts,
            nor does Wolsey. The Cardinal declares that the Bishop objected to the marriage
            with the Princess Mary on the ground of these doubts; and some time later, when
            Henry explained his position to the Lord-Mayor and aldermen of London, he said,
            according to Du Bellay, that the scruple of conscience, which he had long
            entertained, had terribly increased upon him since Tarbes had spoken of it.
             However that may be, before the Bishop's negotiations were completed the
            first steps had been taken towards the divorce, or, as Wolsey and Henry
            pretended, towards satisfying the King's scruples as to the validity of his
            marriage. Early in April, 1527, Dr. Richard Wolman was sent down to Winchester
            to examine old Bishop Fox on the subject. The greatest secrecy was observed and
            none of the Bishop's councillors were allowed to be present. Other evidence was
            doubtless collected from various sources, and, on 17th May, a week after
            Tarbes's departure, Wolsey summoned Henry to appear before him to explain his
            conduct in living with his brother's widow. Wolman was appointed promoter of
            the suit; Henry ) put in a justification, and, on 31st May, Wolman replied.
            With that the proceedings terminated. In instituting them Henry was following a
            precedent set by his brother-in-law, the Duke of Suffolk. In very early days
            that nobleman had contracted to marry Sir Anthony Browne's daughter, but for
            some reason the match was broken off, and he sought the hand of one Margaret
            Mortimer, to whom he was related in the second and third degrees of
            consanguinity; he obtained a dispensation, completed the marriage, and
            cohabited with Margaret Mortimer. But, like Henry VIII., his conscience or
            other considerations moved him to regard his marriage as sin, and the
            dispensation as invalid. He caused a declaration to that effect to be made by
            "the official of the Archdeacon of London, to whom the cognisance of such
            causes of old belongs," married Ann Browne, and, after her death, Henry's
            sister Mary. A marriage, the validity of which depended, like Henry's, upon a
            papal dispensation, and which, like Henry's, had been consummated, was declared
            null and void on exactly the same grounds as those upon which Henry himself
            sought a divorce, namely, the invalidity of the previous dispensation. On 12th May,
            1528, Clement VII. issued a bull confirming Suffolk's divorce and pronouncing
            ecclesiastical censures on all who called in question the Duke's subsequent
            marriages. That is precisely the course Henry wished to be followed. Wolsey was
            to declare the marriage invalid on the ground of the insufficiency of the papal
            dispensation; Henry might then marry whom he pleased; the Pope was to confirm
            the sentence, and censure all who should dispute the second marriage or the legitimacy
            of its possible issue.
             Another precedent was also forced on Henry's mind. On 11th March, 1527,
            two months before Wolsey opened his court, a divorce was granted at Rome to
            Henry's sister Margaret, Queen of Scotland. Her pretexts were infinitely more
            flimsy than Henry's own. She alleged a precontract on the part of her husband,
            Angus, which was never proved. She professed to believe that James IV. had
            survived Flodden three years, and was alive when she married Angus. Angus had
            been unfaithful, but that was no ground for divorce by canon law; and she
            herself was living in shameless adultery with Henry Stewart, who had also
            procured a divorce to be free to marry his Queen. No objection was found at
            Rome to either of these divorces; but neither Angus nor Margaret Mortimer had
            an Emperor for a nephew; no imperial armies would march on Rome to vindicate
            the validity of their marriages, and Clement could issue his bulls without any
            fear that their justice would be challenged by the arms of powerful princes.
            Not so with Henry; while the secret proceedings before Wolsey were in progress,
            the world was shocked by the sack of Rome, and Clement was a prisoner in the
            hands of the Emperor's troops. There was no hope that a Pope in such a plight
            would confirm a sentence to the detriment of his master's aunt. "If the
            Pope," wrote Wolsey to Henry on receipt of the news, "be slain or
            taken, it will hinder the King's affairs not a little, which have hitherto been
            going on so well." A little later he declared that, if Catherine repudiated
            his authority, it would be necessary to have the assent of the Pope or of the
            cardinals to the divorce. To obtain the former the Pope must be liberated; to
            secure the latter the cardinals must be assembled in France.
             To effect the Pope's liberation, or rather to call an assembly of
            cardinals in France during Clement's captivity, was the real object of the
            mission to France, on which Wolsey started in July. Such a body, acting under
            Wolsey's presidency and in the territories of the French King, was as likely to
            favour an attack upon the Emperor's aunt as the Pope in the hands of Charles's
            armies was certain to oppose it. Wolsey went in unparalleled splendour, not as
            Henry's ambassador but as his lieutenant; and projects for his own advancement
            were, as usual, part of the programme. Louise of Savoy, the queen-mother of
            France, suggested to him that all Christian princes should repudiate the Pope's
            authority so long as he remained in captivity, and the Cardinal replied that,
            had the overture not been made by her, it would have been started by himself
            and by Henry. It was rumoured in Spain that Wolsey "had gone into France
            to separate the Church of England and of France from the Roman, not merely
            during the captivity of the Pope and to effect his liberation, but for a perpetual
            division," and that Francis was offering Wolsey the patriarchate of the
            two schismatic churches. To win over the Cardinal to the interest of Spain, it
            was even suggested that Charles should depose Clement and offer the Papacy to
            Wolsey. The project of a schism was not found feasible; the cardinals at Rome
            were too numerous, and Wolsey only succeeded in gaining four, three French and
            one Italian, to join him in signing a protest repudiating Clement's authority
            so long as he remained in the Emperor's power. It was necessary to fall back
            after all on the Pope for assent to Henry's divorce, and the news that Charles
            had already got wind of the proceedings against Catherine made it advisable
            that no time should be lost. The Emperor, indeed, had long been aware of Henry's
            intentions; every care had been taken to prevent communication between
            Catherine and her nephew, and a plot had been laid to kidnap a messenger she
            was sending in August to convey her appeal for protection. All was in vain, for
            the very day after Wolsey's court had opened in May, Mendoza wrote to Charles
            that Wolsey "as the finishing stroke to all his iniquities, had been
            scheming to bring about the Queen's divorce"; and on the 29th of July,
            some days before Wolsey had any suspicion that a hint was abroad, Charles
            informed Mendoza that he had despatched Cardinal Quignon to Rome, to act on the
            Queen's behalf and to persuade Clement to revoke Wolsey's legatine powers.
             In ignorance of all this, Wolsey urged Henry to send Ghinucci, the
            Bishop of Worcester, and others to Rome with certain demands, among which was a
            request for Clement's assent to the abortive proposal for a council in France.
            But now a divergence became apparent between the policy of Wolsey and that of
            his king. Both were working for a divorce, but Wolsey wanted Henry to marry as
            his second wife Renée, the daughter of Louis XII., and thus bind more closely
            the two kings, upon whose union the Cardinal's personal and political schemes
            were now exclusively based. Henry, however, had determined that his second wife
            was to be Anne Boleyn, and of this determination Wolsey was as yet uninformed.
            The Cardinal had good reason to dread that lady's ascendancy over Henry's mind;
            for she was the hope and the tool of the anti-clerical party, which had hitherto
            been kept in check by Wolsey's supremacy. The Duke of Norfolk was her uncle,
            and he was hostile to Wolsey for both private and public reasons; her father,
            Viscount Rochford, her cousins, Sir William Fitzwilliam and Sir Francis Brian,
            and many more distant connections, were anxious at the first opportunity to
            lead an attack on the Church and Cardinal. Before the divorce case began
            Wolsey's position had grown precarious; taxes at home and failure abroad had
            turned the loyalty of the people to sullen discontent, and Wolsey was mainly
            responsible. "Disaffection to the King," wrote Mendoza in March,
            1527, "and hatred of the Legate are visible everywhere.... The King would
            soon be obliged to change his councillors, were only a leader to present
            himself and head the malcontents;" and in May he reported a general rumour
            to the effect that Henry intended to relieve the Legate of his share in the
            administration. The Cardinal had incurred the dislike of nearly every section
            of the community; the King was his sole support and the King was beginning to
            waver. In May there were high words between Wolsey and Norfolk in Henry's
            presence; in July King and Cardinal were quarrelling over ecclesiastical
            patronage at Calais, and, long before the failure of the divorce suit, there
            were other indications that Henry and his minister had ceased to work together
            in harmony.
             It is, indeed, quite a mistake to represent Wolsey's failure to obtain a
            sentence in Henry's favour as the sole or main cause of his fall. Had he
            succeeded, he might have deferred for a time his otherwise unavoidable ruin,
            but it was his last and only chance. He was driven to playing a desperate game,
            in which the dice were loaded against him. If his plan failed, he told Clement
            over and over again, it would mean for him irretrievable ruin, and in his fall
            he would drag down the Church. If it succeeded, he would be hardly more secure,
            for success meant the predominance of Anne Boleyn and of her
            anti-ecclesiastical kin. Under the circumstances, it is possible to attach too
            much weight to the opinion of the French and Spanish ambassadors, and of
            Charles V. himself, that Wolsey suggested the divorce as the means of breaking
            for ever the alliance between England and the House of Burgundy, and
            substituting for it a union with France. The divorce fitted in so well with
            Wolsey's French policy, that the suspicion was natural; but the same observers
            also recorded the impression that Wolsey was secretly opposing the divorce from
            fear of the ascendancy of Anne Boleyn. That suspicion had been brought to
            Henry's mind as early as June, 1527. It was probably due to the facts that
            Wolsey was not blinded by passion, as Henry was, to the difficulties in the
            way, and that it was he who persuaded Henry to have recourse to the Pope in the
            first instance, when the King desired to follow Suffolk's precedent, obtain a
            sentence in England, marry again, and trust to the Pope to confirm his
            proceedings.
             It is not, however, impossible to trace Wolsey's real designs behind
            these conflicting reports. He knew that Henry was determined to have a divorce
            and that this was one of those occasions upon which "he would be obeyed,
            whosoever spoke to the contrary". As minister he must therefore either
            resign—a difficult thing in the sixteenth century—or carry out the King's
            policy. For his own part he had no objection to the divorce in itself; he was
            no more touched by the pathos of Catherine's fate than was her nephew Charles
            V., he wished to see the succession strengthened, he thought that he might restore
            his tottering influence by obtaining gratification for the King, and he was
            straining every nerve to weaken Charles V., either because the Emperor's power
            was really too great, or out of revenge for his betrayal over the papal
            election. But he was strenuously hostile to Henry's marriage with Anne Boleyn
            for two excellent reasons: firstly she and her kin belonged to the
            anti-ecclesiastical party which Wolsey had dreaded since 1515, and secondly he
            desired Henry to marry the French Princess Renée in order to strengthen his
            anti-imperial policy. Further, he was anxious that the divorce problem should
            be solved by means of the Papacy, because its solution by merely national
            action would create a breach between England and Rome, would ruin Wolsey's
            chances of election as Pope, would threaten his ecclesiastical supremacy in
            England, which was merely a legatine authority dependent on the Pope, and would
            throw Clement into the arms of Charles V., whereas Wolsey desired him to be an
            effective member of the anti-imperial alliance. Thus Wolsey was prepared to go
            part of the way with Henry VIII., but he clearly saw the point at which their
            paths would diverge; and his efforts on Henry's behalf were hampered by his
            endeavours to keep the King on the track which he had marked out.
             Henry's suspicions, and his knowledge that Wolsey would be hostile to
            his marriage with Anne Boleyn, induced him to act for the time independently of
            the Cardinal; and, while Wolsey was in France hinting at a marriage between
            Henry and Renée, the King himself was secretly endeavouring to remove the
            obstacles to his union with Anne Boleyn. Instead of adopting Wolsey's
            suggestion that Ghinucci should be sent to Rome as an Italian versed in the
            ways of the Papal Curia, he despatched his secretary, Dr. William Knight, with
            two extraordinary commissions, the second of which he thought would not be
            revealed "for any craft the Cardinal or any other can find". The
            first was to obtain from the Pope a dispensation to marry a second wife, without
            being divorced from Catherine, the issue from both marriages to be legitimate.
            This "licence to commit bigamy" has naturally been the subject of
            much righteous indignation. But marriage-laws were lax in those days, when
            Popes could play fast and loose with them for political purposes; and, besides
            the "great reasons and precedents, especially in the Old Testament,"
            to which Henry referred, he might have produced a precedent more pertinent,
            more recent, and better calculated to appeal to Clement VII. In 1521 Charles V.'s
            Spanish council drew up a memorial on the subject of his marriage, in which
            they pointed out that his ancestor, Henry IV. of Castile, had, in 1437, married
            Dona Blanca, by whom he had no children; and that the Pope thereupon granted
            him a dispensation to marry a second wife on condition that, if within a fixed
            time he had no issue by her, he should return to his first. A licence for
            bigamy, modelled after this precedent, would have suited Henry admirably, but
            apparently he was unaware of this useful example, and was induced to
            countermand Knight's commission before it had been communicated to Clement. The
            demand would not, however, have shocked the Pope so much as his modern
            defenders, for on 18th September, 1530, Casale writes to Henry: "A few days
            since the Pope secretly proposed to me that your Majesty might be allowed two
            wives. I told him I could not undertake to make any such proposition, because I
            did not know whether it would satisfy your Majesty's conscience. I made this
            answer because I know that the Imperialists have this in view, and are urging
            it; but why, I know not." Ghinucci and Benet were equally cautious, and
            thought the Pope's suggestion was only a ruse; whether a ruse or not, it is a
            curious illustration of the moral influence Popes were then likely to exert on
            their flock.
             The second commission, with which Knight was entrusted, was hardly less
            strange than the first. By his illicit relations with Mary Boleyn, Henry had
            already contracted affinity in the first degree with her sister Anne, in fact
            precisely the same affinity (except that it was illicit) as that which
            Catherine was alleged to have contracted with him before their marriage. The
            inconsistency of Henry's conduct, in seeking to remove by the same method from
            his second marriage the disability which was held to invalidate his first,
            helps us to define the precise position which Henry took up and the nature of
            his peculiar conscience. Obviously he did not at this stage deny the Pope's
            dispensing power; for he was invoking its aid to enable him to marry Anne
            Boleyn. He asserted, and he denied, no principle whatever, though it must be
            remembered that his own dispensation was an almost, if not quite, unprecedented
            stretch of papal power. To dispense with the "divine" law against
            marrying the brother's wife, and to dispense with the merely canonical obstacle
            to his marriage with Anne arising out of his relations with Mary Boleyn, were
            very different matters; and in this light the breach between England and Rome
            might be represented as caused by a novel extension of papal claims. Henry,
            however, was a casuist concerned exclusively with his own case. He maintained
            merely that the particular dispensation, granted for his marriage with
            Catherine, was null and void. As a concession to others, he condescended to
            give a number of reasons, none of them affecting any principle, but only the
            legal technicalities of the case—the causes for which the dispensation was
            granted, such as his own desire, and the political necessity for the marriage
            were fictitious; he had himself protested against the marriage, and so forth.
            For himself, his own conviction was ample sanction; he knew he was living in
            sin with Catherine because his children had all died but one, and that was a
            manifest token of the wrath of Providence. The capacity for convincing himself
            of his own righteousness is the most effective weapon in the egotist's armoury,
            and Henry's egotism touched the sublime. His conscience was clear, whatever
            other people might think of the maze of apparent inconsistencies in which he
            was involved. In 1528 he was in some fear of death from the plague; fear of
            death is fatal to the peace of a guilty conscience, and it might well have made
            Henry pause in his pursuit after the divorce and Anne Boleyn. But Henry never
            wavered; he went on in serene assurance, writing his love letters to Anne, as a
            conscientiously unmarried man might do, making his will, "confessing every
            day and receiving his Maker at every feast," paying great attention to the
            morals of monasteries, and to charges of malversation against Wolsey, and
            severely lecturing his sister Margaret on the sinfulness of her life. He hopes
            she will turn "to God's word, the vively doctrine of Jesus Christ, the
            only ground of salvation—1 Cor. 3, etc."; he reminds her of "the
            divine ordinance of inseparable matrimony first instituted in Paradise,"
            and urges her to avoid "the inevitable damnation threatened against
            advoutrers". Henry's conscience was convenient and skilful. He believed in
            the "ordinance of inseparable matrimony," so, when he wished to divorce
            a wife, his conscience warned him that he had never really been married to her.
            Hence his nullity suits with Catherine of Aragon, with Anne Boleyn and with
            Anne of Cleves. Moreover, if he had never been married to Catherine, his
            relations with Mary Boleyn and Elizabeth Blount were obviously not adultery,
            and he was free to denounce that sin in Margaret with a clear conscience.
             Dr. Knight had comparatively little difficulty in obtaining the
            dispensation for Henry's marriage with Anne Boleyn; but it was only to be
            effective after sentence had been given decreeing the nullity of his marriage
            with Catherine of Aragon; and, as Wolsey saw, that was the real crux of the
            question. Knight had scarcely turned his steps homeward, when he was met by a
            courier with fresh instructions from Wolsey to obtain a further concession from
            Clement; the Pope was to empower the Cardinal himself, or some other safe
            person, to examine the original dispensation, and, if it were found invalid, to
            annul Henry's marriage with Catherine. So Knight returned to the Papal Court;
            and then began that struggle between English and Spanish influence at Rome
            which ended in the victory of Charles V. and the repudiation by England of the
            Roman jurisdiction. Never did two parties enter upon a contest with a clearer
            perception of the issues involved, or carry it on with their eyes more open to
            the magnitude of the results. Wolsey himself, Gardiner, Foxe, Casale, and every
            English envoy employed in the case, warned and threatened Clement that, if he refused
            Henry's demands, he would involve Wolsey and the Papal cause in England in a
            common ruin. "He alleged," says Campeggio of Wolsey, "that if
            the King's desire were not complied with... there would follow the speedy and
            total ruin of the kingdom, of his Lordship and of the Church's influence in
            this kingdom." "I cannot reflect upon it," wrote Wolsey himself,
            "and close my eyes, for I see ruin, infamy and subversion of the whole
            dignity and estimation of the See Apostolic if this course is persisted in. You
            see in what dangerous times we are. If the Pope will consider the gravity of
            this cause, and how much the safety of the nation depends upon it, he will see
            that the course he now pursues will drive the King to adopt remedies which are
            injurious to the Pope, and are frequently instilled into the King's mind."
            On one occasion Clement confessed that, though the Pope was supposed to carry
            the papal laws locked up in his breast, Providence had not vouchsafed him the
            key wherewith to unlock them; and Gardiner roughly asked in retort whether in
            that case the papal laws should not be committed to the flames. He told how the
            Lutherans were instigating Henry to do away with the temporal possessions of
            the Church. But Clement could only bewail his misfortune, and protest that, if
            heresies and schisms arose, it was not his fault. He could not afford to offend
            the all-powerful Emperor; the sack of Rome and Charles's intimation conveyed in
            plain and set terms that it was the judgment of God had cowed Clement for the rest
            of his life, and made him resolve never again to incur the Emperor's enmity.
             From the point of view of justice, the Pope had an excellent case; even
            the Lutherans, who denied his dispensing power, denounced the divorce. Quod non fieri debuit, was their just
            and common-sense point, factum valet. But the Pope's case had been hopelessly
            weakened by the evil practice of his predecessors and of himself. Alexander VI.
            had divorced Louis XII. from his Queen for no other reasons than that Louis
            XII. wanted to unite Brittany with France by marrying its duchess, and that
            Alexander, the Borgia Pope, required Louis' assistance in promoting the
            interests of the iniquitous Borgia family. The injustice to Catherine was no
            greater than that to Louis' Queen. Henry's sister Margaret, and both the
            husbands of his other sister, Mary, had procured divorces from Popes, and why
            not Henry himself? Clement was ready enough to grant Margaret's divorce; he was
            willing to give a dispensation for a marriage between the Princess Mary and her
            half-brother, the Duke of Richmond; the more insuperable the obstacle, the more
            its removal enhanced his power. It was all very well to dispense with canons
            and divine laws, but to annul papal dispensations—was that not to cheapen his
            own wares? Why, wrote Henry to Clement, could he not dispense with human laws,
            if he was able to dispense with divine at pleasure? Obviously because divine
            authority could take care of itself, but papal prerogatives needed a careful
            shepherd. Even this principle, such as it was, was not consistently followed,
            for he had annulled a dispensation in Suffolk's case. Clement's real anxiety
            was to avoid responsibility. More than once he urged Henry to settle the matter
            himself, as Suffolk had done, obtain a sentence from the courts in England, and
            marry his second wife. The case could then only come before him as a suit
            against the validity of the second marriage, and the accomplished fact was
            always a powerful argument. Moreover, all this would take time, and delay was
            as dear to Clement as irresponsibility. But Henry was determined to have such a
            sentence as would preclude all doubts of the legitimacy of his children by the
            second marriage, and was as anxious to shift the responsibility to Clement's
            shoulders as the Pope was to avoid it. Clement next urged Catherine to go into
            a nunnery, for that would only entail injustice on herself, and would involve
            the Church and its head in no temporal perils. When Catherine refused, he
            wished her in the grave, and lamented that he seemed doomed through her to lose
            the spiritualties of his Church, as he had lost its temporalties through her
            nephew, Charles V.
             It was thus with the utmost reluctance that he granted the commission
            brought by Knight. It was a draft, drawn up by Wolsey, apparently declaring the
            law on the matter and empowering Wolsey, if the facts were found to be such as
            were alleged, to pronounce the nullity of Catherine's marriage. Wolsey desired
            that it should be granted in the form in which he had drawn it up. But the
            Pope's advisers declared that such a commission would disgrace Henry, Wolsey
            and Clement himself. The draft was therefore amended so as to be
            unobjectionable, or, in other words, useless for practical purposes; and, with
            this commission, Knight returned to England, rejoicing in the confidence of
            complete success. But, as soon as Wolsey had seen it, he pronounced the
            commission "as good as none at all". The discovery did not improve
            his or Henry's opinion of the Pope's good faith; but, dissembling their resentment,
            they despatched, in February, 1528, Stephen Gardiner and Edward Foxe to obtain
            fresh and more effective powers. Eventually, on 8th June a commission was
            issued to Wolsey and Campeggio to try the case and pronounce sentence; even if
            one was unwilling, the other might act by himself; and all appeals from their
            jurisdiction were forbidden. This was not a decretal commission; it did not
            bind the Pope or prevent him from revoking the case. Such a commission was,
            however, granted on condition that it should be shown to no one but the King
            and Wolsey, and that it should not be used in the procedure. The Pope also gave
            a written promise, in spite of a protest lodged on Catherine's behalf by the
            Spanish ambassador, Muxetula, that he would not revoke, or do anything to
            invalidate, the commission, but would confirm the cardinals' decision. If,
            Clement had said in the previous December, Lautrec, the French commander in
            Italy, came nearer Rome, he might excuse himself to the Emperor as having acted
            under pressure. He would send the commission as soon as Lautrec arrived.
            Lautrec had now arrived; he had marched down through Italy; he had captured
            Melfi; the Spanish commander, Moncada, had been killed; Naples was thought to
            be on the eve of surrender. The Spanish dominion in Italy was waning, the
            Emperor's thunderbolts were less terrifying, and the justice of the cause of
            his aunt less apparent.
             On 25th July Campeggio embarked at Corneto, and proceeded by slow stages
            through France towards England. Henry congratulated himself that his hopes were
            on the eve of fulfilment. But, unfortunately for him, the basis, on which they
            were built, was as unstable as water. The decision of his case still depended
            upon Clement, and Clement wavered with every fluctuation in the success or the
            failure of the Spanish arms in Italy. Campeggio had scarcely set out, when
            Doria, the famous Genoese admiral, deserted Francis for Charles; on the 17th of
            August Lautrec died before Naples; and, on 10th September, an English agent
            sent Wolsey news of a French disaster, which he thought more serious than the
            battle of Pavia or the sack of Rome. On the following day Sanga, the Pope's
            secretary, wrote to Campeggio that, "as the Emperor is victorious, the
            Pope must not give him any pretext for a fresh rupture, lest the Church should
            be utterly annihilated.... Proceed on your journey to England, and there do
            your utmost to restore mutual affection between the King and Queen. You are not
            to pronounce any opinion without a new and express commission hence."
            Sanga repeated the injunction a few days later. "Every day," he
            wrote, "stronger reasons are discovered;" to satisfy Henry
            "involves the certain ruin of the Apostolic See and the Church, owing to
            recent events.... If so great an injury be done to the Emperor... the Church
            cannot escape utter ruin, as it is entirely in the power of the Emperor's
            servants. You will not, therefore, be surprised at my repeating that you are
            not to proceed to sentence, under any pretext, without express commission; but
            to protract the matter as long as possible." Clement himself wrote to
            Charles that nothing would be done to Catherine's detriment, that Campeggio had
            gone merely to urge Henry to do his duty, and that the whole case would
            eventually be referred to Rome. Such were the secret instructions with which
            Campeggio arrived in England in October. He readily promised not to proceed to
            sentence, but protested against the interpretation which he put upon the Pope's
            command, namely, that he was not to begin the trial. The English, he said,
            "would think that I had come to hoodwink them, and might resent it. You
            know how much that would involve." He did not seem to realise that the
            refusal to pass sentence was equally hoodwinking the English, and that the
            trial would only defer the moment of their penetrating the deception; a trial
            was of no use without sentence.
             In accordance with his instructions, Campeggio first sought to dissuade
            Henry from persisting in his suit for the divorce. Finding the King immovable,
            he endeavoured to induce Catherine to go into a nunnery, as the divorced wife
            of Louis XII. had done, "who still lived in the greatest honour and
            reputation with God and all that kingdom". He represented to her that she
            had nothing to lose by such a step; she could never regain Henry's affections
            or obtain restitution of her conjugal rights. Her consent might have deferred
            the separation of the English Church from Rome; it would certainly have
            relieved the Supreme Pontiff from a humiliating and intolerable position. But these
            considerations of expediency weighed nothing with Catherine. She was as
            immovable as Henry, and deaf to all Campeggio's solicitations. Her conscience
            was, perhaps, of a rigid, Spanish type, but it was as clear as Henry's and a
            great deal more comprehensible. She was convinced that her marriage was valid;
            to admit a doubt of it would imply that she had been living in sin and imperil
            her immortal soul. Henry did not in the least mind admitting that he had lived
            for twenty years with a woman who was not his wife; the sin, to his mind, was
            continuing to live with her after he had become convinced that she was really
            not his wife. Catherine appears, however, to have been willing to take the
            monastic vows, if Henry would do the same. Henry was equally willing, if
            Clement would immediately dispense with the vows in his case, but not in
            Catherine's. But there were objections to this course, and doubts of Clement's
            power to authorise Henry's re-marriage, even if Catherine did go into a
            nunnery.
             Meanwhile, Campeggio found help from an unexpected quarter in his
            efforts to waste the time. Quite unknown to Henry, Wolsey, or Clement, there
            existed in Spain a brief of Julius II. fuller than the original bull of
            dispensation which he had granted for the marriage of Henry and Catherine, and
            supplying any defects that might be found in it. Indeed, so conveniently did
            the brief meet the criticisms urged against the bull, that Henry and Wolsey at
            once pronounced it an obvious forgery, concocted after the doubts about the bull
            had been raised. No copy of the brief could be found in the English archives,
            nor could any trace be discovered of its having been registered at Rome; while
            Ghinucci and Lee, who examined the original in Spain, professed to see in it
            such flagrant inaccuracies as to deprive it of all claim to be genuine. Still,
            if it were genuine, it shattered the whole of Henry's case. That had been built
            up, not on the denial of the Pope's power to dispense, but on the technical
            defects of a particular dispensation. Now it appeared that the validity of the
            marriage did not depend upon this dispensation at all. Nor did it depend upon
            the brief, for Catherine was prepared to deny on oath that the marriage with
            Arthur had been anything more than a form; in that case the affinity with Henry
            had not been contracted, and there was no need of either dispensation or brief.
            This assertion seems to have shaken Henry; certainly he began to shift his
            position, and, early in 1529, he was wishing for some noted divine, friar or
            other, who would maintain that the Pope could not dispense at all. This was his
            first doubt as to the plenitude of papal power; his marriage with Catherine
            must be invalid, because his conscience told him so; if it was not invalid
            through defects in the dispensation, it must be invalid because the Pope could
            not dispense. Wolsey met the objection with a legal point, perfectly good in
            itself, but trivial. There were two canonical disabilities which the
            dispensation must meet for Henry's marriage to be valid; first, the
            consummation of Catherine's marriage with Arthur; secondly, the marriage, even
            though it was not consummated, was yet celebrated in facie ecclesiæ, and
            generally reputed complete. There was thus an impedimentum publicæ honestatis to the marriage of Henry and
            Catherine, and this impediment was not mentioned in, and therefore not removed
            by, the dispensation.
             But (p. 220) all this legal argument might be invalidated by the brief.
            It was useless to proceed with the trial until the promoters of the suit knew
            what the brief contained. According to Mendoza, Catherine's "whole
            right" depended upon the brief, a statement indicating a general suspicion
            that the bull was really insufficient. So the winter of 1528-29 and the
            following spring were spent in efforts to get hold of the original brief, or to
            induce Clement to declare it a forgery. The Queen was made to write to Charles
            that it was absolutely essential to her case that the brief should be produced
            before the legatine Court in England. The Emperor was not likely to be caught
            by so transparent an artifice. Moreover, the emissary, sent with Catherine's
            letter, wrote, as soon as he got to France, warning Charles that his aunt's
            letter was written under compulsion and expressed the reverse of her real
            desires. In the spring of 1529 several English envoys, ending with Gardiner,
            were sent to Rome to obtain a papal declaration of the falsity of the brief.
            Clement, however, naturally refused to declare the brief a forgery, without
            hearing the arguments on the other side, and more important developments soon
            supervened. Gardiner wrote from Rome, early in May, that there was imminent
            danger of the Pope revoking the case, and the news determined Henry and Wolsey
            to relinquish their suit about the brief, and push on the proceedings of the
            legatine Court, so as to get some decision before the case was called to Rome.
            Once the legates had pronounced in favour of the divorce, Clement was informed,
            the English cared little what further fortunes befell it elsewhere.
             So, on the 31st of May, 1529, in the great hall of the Black Friars, in
            London, the famous Court was formally opened, and the King and Queen were cited
            to appear before it on the 18th of June. Henry was then represented by two
            proxies, but Catherine came in person to protest against the competence of the
            tribunal. Three days later both the King and the Queen attended in person to
            hear the Court's decision on this point. Catherine threw herself on her knees
            before Henry; she begged him to consider her honour, her daughter's and his.
            Twice Henry raised her up; he protested that he desired nothing so much as that
            their marriage should be found valid, in spite of the "perpetual
            scruple" he had felt about it, and declared that only his love for her had
            kept him silent so long; her request for the removal of the cause to Rome was
            unreasonable, considering the Emperor's power there. Again protesting against
            the jurisdiction of the Court and appealing to Rome, Catherine withdrew.
            Touched by her appeal, Henry burst out in her praise. "She is, my
            Lords," he said, "as true, as obedient, and as conformable a wife, as
            I could, in my phantasy, wish or desire. She hath all the virtuous qualities
            that ought to be in a woman of her dignity, or in any other of baser estate."
            But these qualities had nothing to do with the pitiless forms of law. The
            legate, overruled her protest, refused her appeal, and summoned her back. She
            took no notice, and was declared contumacious.
             The proceedings then went on without her; Fisher Bishop of Rochester,
            made a courageous defence of the validity of the marriage, to which Henry drew
            up a bitter reply in the form of a speech addressed to the legates. The speed
            with which the procedure was hurried on was little to Campeggio's taste. He had
            not prejudged the case; he was still in doubt as to which way the sentence
            would go; and he entered a dignified protest against the orders he received
            from Rome to give sentence, if it came to that point, against Henry. He would
            pronounce what judgment seemed to him just, but he shrank from the ordeal, and
            he did his best to follow out Clement's injunctions to procrastinate. In this
            he succeeded completely. It seemed that judgment could no longer be deferred;
            it was to be delivered on the 23rd of July. On that day the King himself, and
            the chief men of his Court, were present; his proctor demanded sentence.
            Campeggio stood up, and instead of giving sentence, adjourned the Court till
            October. "By the mass!" burst out Suffolk, giving the table a great
            blow with his hand, "now I see that the old-said saw is true, that there
            was never a legate nor cardinal that did good in England." The Court never
            met again; and except during the transient reaction, under Mary, it was the
            last legatine Court ever held in England. They might assure the Pope, Wolsey
            had written to the English envoys at Rome a month before, that if he granted
            the revocation he would lose the devotion of the King and of England to the See
            Apostolic, and utterly destroy Wolsey for ever.
             Long before the vacation was ended, news reached Henry that the case had
            been called to Rome; the revocation was, indeed, decreed a week before
            Campeggio adjourned his court. Charles's star, once more in the ascendant, had
            cast its baleful influence over Henry's fortunes. The close alliance between
            England and France had led to a joint declaration of war on the Emperor in
            January, 1528, into which the English ambassadors in Spain had been inveigled
            by their French colleagues, against Henry's wishes. It was received with a
            storm of opposition in England, and Wolsey had some difficulty in justifying
            himself to the King. "You may be sure," wrote Du Bellay, "that
            he is playing a terrible game, for I believe he is the only Englishman who
            wishes a war with Flanders." If that was his wish, he was doomed to
            disappointment. Popular hatred of the war was too strong; a project was mooted
            by the clothiers in Kent for seizing the Cardinal and turning him adrift in a
            boat, with holes bored in it. The clothiers in Wiltshire were reported to be
            rising; in Norfolk employers dismissed their workmen. War with Flanders meant
            ruin to the most prosperous industry in both countries, and the attempt to
            divert the Flanders trade to Calais had failed. So Henry and Charles were soon
            discussing peace; no hostilities took place; an agreement, that trade should go
            on as usual with Flanders, was followed by a truce in June, and the truce by
            the Peace of Cambrai in the following year. That peace affords the measure of
            England's decline since 1521. Wolsey was carefully excluded from all share in
            the negotiations. England was, indeed, admitted as a participator, but only
            after Louise and Margaret of Savoy had practically settled the terms, and after
            Du Bellay had told Francis that, if England were not admitted, it would mean
            Wolsey's immediate ruin.
             By the Treaty of Cambrai Francis abandoned Italy to Charles. His affairs
            beyond the Alps had been going from bad to worse since the death of Lautrec;
            and the suggested guard of French and English soldiers which was to relieve the
            Pope from fear of Charles was never formed. That failure was not the only
            circumstance which made Clement imperialist. Venice, the ally of England and
            France, seized Ravenna and Cervia, two papal towns. "The conduct of the
            Venetians," wrote John Casale from Rome, "moves the Pope more than
            anything else, and he would use the assistance of any one, except the Devil, to
            avenge their injury". "The King and the Cardinal," repeated
            Sanga to Campeggio, "must not expect him to execute his intentions, until
            they have used their utmost efforts to compel the Venetians to restore the
            Pope's territories." Henry did his best, but he was not sincerely helped
            by Francis; his efforts proved vain, and Clement thought he could get more
            effective assistance from Charles. "Every one is persuaded," said one
            of the Emperor's agents in Italy on 10th January, 1529, "that the Pope is
            now sincerely attached to his Imperial Majesty." "I suspect,"
            wrote Du Bellay from London, in the same month, "that the Pope has
            commanded Campeggio to meddle no further, seeing things are taking quite a
            different turn from what he had been assured, and that the Emperor's affairs in
            Naples are in such a state that Clement dare not displease him." The Pope
            had already informed Charles that his aunt's petition for the revocation of the
            suit would be granted. The Italian League was practically dissolved. "I
            have quite made up my mind," said Clement to the Archbishop of Capua on
            7th June, "to become an Imperialist, and to live and die as such... I am
            only waiting for the return of my nuncio."
           That nuncio had gone to Barcelona to negotiate an alliance between the
            Pope and the Emperor; and the success of his mission completed Clement's
            conversion. The revocation was only delayed, thought Charles's representative
            at Rome, to secure better terms for the Pope. On 21st June, the French
            commander, St. Pol, was utterly defeated at Landriano; "not a vestige of
            the army is left," reported Casale. A few days later the Treaty of
            Barcelona between Clement and Charles was signed. Clement's nephew was to marry
            the Emperor's natural daughter; the Medici tyranny was to be re-established in
            Florence; Ravenna, Cervia and other towns were to be restored to the Pope; His
            Holiness was to crown Charles with the imperial crown, and to absolve from
            ecclesiastical censures all those who were present at, or consented to, the
            sack of Rome. It was, in effect, a family compact; and part of it was the
            quashing of the legates' proceedings against the Emperor's aunt, with whom the
            Pope was now to be allied by family ties. "We found out secretly,"
            write the English envoys at Rome, on the 16th of July, "that the Pope
            signed the revocation yesterday morning, as it would have been dishonourable to
            have signed it after the publication of the new treaty with the Emperor, which
            will be published here on Sunday." Clement knew that his motives would not
            bear scrutiny, and he tried to avoid public odium by a characteristic
            subterfuge. Catherine could hope for no justice in England, Henry could expect
            no justice at Rome. Political expediency would dictate a verdict in Henry's
            favour in England; political expediency would dictate a verdict for Catherine
            at Rome. Henry's ambassadors were instructed to appeal from Clement to the
            "true Vicar of Christ," but where was the true Vicar of Christ to be
            found on earth? There was no higher tribunal. It was intolerable that English
            suits should be decided by the chances and changes of French or Habsburg
            influence in Italy, by the hopes and the fears of an Italian prince for the
            safety of his temporal power. The natural and inevitable result was the
            separation of England from Rome.
             
 
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