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CHAPTER XXXIX
A DOMESTIC TRAGEDY.
At the opening of the
year 1477, Charles the Rash, Duke of Burgundy, fell at Nanci,
before the twohanded swords of the Swiss mountaineers, leaving, by his first
wife, Isabel of Bourbon, a daughter, Mary, the heiress of his dominions. About
the same time, George, Duke of Clarence, and Anthony Woodville, Earl Rivers,
happened to become widowers. The Duke
and the Earl, in other days rivals for the hand of the heiress of Lord Scales,
immediately entered the arena as candidates for that of Mary of Burgundy (1457 –1482); and their rivalry produced one of the darkest domestic tragedies
recorded in the Plantagenet annals.
Clarence appears to have been the first to urge his claims. Almost ere
the dust had time to gather on the coffin of his departed wife in the Abbey of
Tewkesbury, the bereaved husband of Isabel Neville applied to his sister, the
widow of Burgundy, to forward his suit with her step-daughter.
The widowed Duchess was the reverse of unfavourable to a matrimonial project so
likely to advance the fortunes of her family; and the heart of Clarence for a
moment glowed with anticipations of a great matrimonial success.
But the hopes which Clarence cherished of a marriage with the heiress of
Burgundy were rudely dispelled. The Duke, whose
shallow brain was muddled with Malmsey, soon found that he was no match for
veteran courtiers. Experienced intriguers, the Woodvilles were prompt in their
measures to defeat any project that jarred with their interests; and Elizabeth instilled
into her husband’s mind such suspicions as to Clarence’s intentions, that
Edward not only refused to hear of an alliance that “might enable Clarence to
employ the power of Burgundy to win the crown,” but even let down his dignity
so far as to propose a marriage between Anthony, Earl Rivers, and the daughter
of Charles the Rash. The Court of Burgundy, treating the proposal with the
disdain it deserved, gave the heiress to the Emperor Maximilian; and the Woodvilles, finding their presumption checked and resolved
to console themselves by making Clarence a victim., bent all their energies to
effect his ruin.
Circumstances were unfavourable to Clarence; for, since the Duke’s confederacy with Warwick, no love had existed between
him and the King. Edward deemed that he owed his brother an injury; and that,
at least, was a kind of debt which Edward of York was never sorry to have an
opportunity of paying. The King’s dislike was judiciously humoured by the
Queen’s kindred; and a prophecy, that the crown should be seized and the royal children murdered
by one, the first letter of whose name was G, took possession of his
imagination. A fair excuse only was wanting to get rid of Clarence; and a
pretext was orc long found.
Among the Anglo-Norman families who during the fifteenth century
maintained territorial state in that county which had come with an heiress of
the Beauchamps to Richard Neville, and with the
eldest daughter of the King-maker to the royal Duke by
whom he was betrayed, few were of higher consideration than the Burdets. One of the Burdets had
accompanied the Conqueror to England; another had sat as member for
Warwickshire in the parliaments of the second Edward; and a third, Sir
Nicholas, had fought with high distinction in the wars carried on by the Duke
of York in France. Falling at Pontoise, on that day
when King Charles of France stormed the town, Nicholas left a son Thomas, who
resided at Arrow, the seat of his family, and held an office in Clarence’s
household.
Burdet had figured as a
Yorkist and fought for the White Rose. Being a follower of Clarence, however,
he was regarded with some degree of suspicion; and, having domestic troubles,
his temper was probably too much the worse for the wear to admit of his being
suspected without manifesting impatience. An accident, according to
chroniclers, occurred, which exasperated him to language so indiscreet as to
cause his own death and that of his patron.
Burdet had, among the
deer in his park at Arrow, a white buck, of which he was exceedingly proud. This buck, was destined to be the cause of much mischief:
for one day when Burdet was from home, the King,
making a progress through Warwickshire, went to Arrow, and entered the park to
divert ‘himself with hunting. Unfortunately, Edward killed the favourite buck
of all others; and Burdet, being informed on his
return of what had happened, was enraged beyond measure. Indeed, it was said
that the worthy squire, regarding the whole affair as a premeditated insult,
lost his patience so completely as to express a wish “that the buck’s horns had
been in the King’s belly.”
But however that may have been, there lived at
that time, under Clarence’s protection, an ecclesiastic named John Stacey,
famed for his learning and skill in astrology. Having been denounced as a necromancer, and accused of exercising his unlawful art for
the destruction of Richard, Lord Beauchamp, Stacey was put to the rack and
tortured into naming Thomas Burdet as his accomplice
in some treasonable practices. Burdet was,
accordingly arrested on the charge of conspiring to kill the King and the
Prince of Wales by casting their nativity, and of scattering among the people
papers predicting their deaths.
Having been taken to Westminster Hall, Burdet and Stacey were tried before the Court of Queen’s Bench. But that Court was no
longer presided over by a Fortescue or a Markham; and it was in vain that Burdet pleaded his innocence, declaring that so far from
having any design against the King’s life he was ready to fight for the King’s
crown, as he had done before. His fate was sealed: the jury returned a verdict of
Guilty; the knight and ecclesiastic were sentenced to death; and, having been
drawn from the Tower, they were executed as traitors at Tyburn.
The matter did not rest here. On learning the result of his adherents’
trial, Clarence, who was in Ireland, naturally felt somewhat dismayed. Recollecting
how the proceedings against Eleanor Cobham had served as a prelude to the
destruction of Duke Humphrey, and apprehending in this case a similar result,
he determined to stir in his own defence, and rushed into the snare which his
enemies had set. Hurrying to England, and reaching Westminster in the King's
absence, he entered the Council Chamber, showed the Lords there assembled
private confessions and declarations of innocence made by Burdet and Stacey, and protested vehemently against the execution that had taken
place.
At Windsor the King received intelligence of the step Clarence had
taken; and the affair being reported to him in the worst light, he appears to
have been seized with something like temporary insanity, and to have regarded
Clarence’s destruction as essential to his own safety and that of his children.
No sooner, in any case, was news convoyed to him that Clarence was “flying in
the face of all justice,” than he hastened to Westminster, summoned the Duke to
the Palace, and ordered him to be committed to the Tower.
Having pushed matters to this crisis, the Woodvilles did not allow
Edward’s passion to cool. It was in vain that the Lord Chancellor attempted to
reconcile the King and the captive. A parliament was summoned to meet about the
middle of January; and when, on the appointed day, the English senators
assembled at Westminster, the judges were summoned to the House of Lords, and
Clarence was brought to the bar to be tried by his peers—the young Duke of
Buckingham, who had married the Queen’s sister, presiding as Lord High Steward,
and Edward appearing personally as accuser. Absurd as some of the charges
were, Clarence had no chance of escape. He was charged with having dealt with
the Devil through necromancers; represented Edward as illegitimate and without
right to the throne; plotted to dethrone the King and disinherit the King’s children;
retained possession of an Act of Parliament, whereby, in the reign of Henry, he
had been declared heir to the crown after Edward of Lancaster; purchased the
support of the Lancastrians by promising to restore their confiscated estates;
and warned his own retainers to be ready to take up arms at an hour’s notice.
Clarence indignantly denied every charge; but his protestations of innocence
were as vain as those of Burdet had been. Edward
appeared bent on a conviction; and the Peers had not the courage to resist such
a pleader. The royal brothers, indeed, would seem to have had all the talk to
themselves—“no one denying Clarence but the King, and
no one answering the King but Clarence”. Even the self-sufficient Buckingham
contented himself with asking the Judges whether the matters proved against
Clarence amounted in law to high treason. The opinion of the Judges was
altogether unfavourable to the Duke. The legal
functionaries answered the Lord High Steward’s question in the affirmative; and
the Peers returned a unanimous verdict of “Guilty.” On the 7th of February,
Buckingham pronounced sentence of death.
When matters reached this alarming stage, the Duchess of York
interfered; and the King, in a somewhat relenting mood, delayed sending his
brother to the block. The Woodvilles, however, were not to be baffled of their
prey; and the House of Commons, acting under their influence, petitioned for
the Duke’s immediate execution. But the son-in-law of
Warwick, with all his failings, was still the idol of the populace; and the
policy of having him beheaded on Tower Hill was more than doubtful.
Ere this, Clarence had been reconducted to the Tower, and lodged in that
part of the metropolitan fortress where resided the Master Provider of the
King’s Bows. In a gloomy chamber of “The Bowyer Tower” the Duke,
sad and solitary, passed several weeks, while his enemies decided what should
be his fate. At length, about the beginning of March, it was rumoured that the
captive had died of grief and despair. The populace immediately raised a shout
of indignation on hearing of the death of their “Good Duke,” and sternly
refused to believe that he had not had foul play. Ere long the story which Shakespeare
has made so familiar was whispered about.
The execution of Clarence having been determined on—such was the popular
account—he was allowed the privilege of choosing what death he should die; and
having an objection to appear on the scaffold, he elected to be drowned in that
liquor with which he had so often washed down care and remorse. A butt of
Malmsey was accordingly introduced to the gloomy chamber in which he was
lodged; and one end of the cask having been knocked out, he was plunged into
the wine, with his head down, and held in that position till life was extinct. His
body was carried to Tewkesbury and laid beside that of his Duchess in the Abbey
Church.
Having accomplished their revenge on the King’s brother, the Queen’s
kinsmen looked out for something wherewith to gratify their avarice. On this
point, the Woodvilles were, as usual, successful. To Earl Rivers was given part
of the estates of Clarence; and to the Marquis of Dorset, the wardship of the
son of the murdered Duke. The King, however, was the reverse of satisfied. He
never recalled the name of Clarence without a feeling of penitence; and afterwards,
when sued for any man’s pardon, he was in the habit of exclaiming mournfully—"Ah!
I once had an unfortunate brother, and for his life not one man would open his
mouth.”
CHAPTER XL.
king Edward’s death.
For some
years after the treaty of Picquigny, Edward of York,
trusting to the friendship and relying on the pension of King Louis, passed his
time in inglorious ease; and Elizabeth Woodville, elate with the prospect of
her daughter sharing the throne of a Valois, persisted in pestering the crafty
monarch of France with inquiries when she was to send him her young Dauphiness.
Meanwhile, Louis, who had no intention whatever of maintaining faith with the
King of England one day longer than prudence dictated, was looking about for a
more advantageous alliance for the heir to his throne.
After appearing for some time utterly unsuspicious, Edward, in 1480,
resolved on sending an ambassador to Paris; and Sir John Howard was selected as
the man to urge a speedy celebration of the marriage. The plans of Louis were
not then quite ripe; but his statecraft did not desert him; and, at length,
after Howard had for some time boon silenced by bribes, and Edward deluded by
flattering assurances, he set the treaty of Picquigny at defiance, and contracted a marriage between the Dauphin and a daughter of
the Emperor Maximilian.
Fortunately for Louis, Edward was a much less formidable personage than
of yore. Since returning from his French expedition, the English King had given
himself up to luxury and indolence. He had drunk deep, kept late hours, sat
long over the wine cup, and gratified his sensual inclinations with little
regard either to his dignity as a king or his honour as a man. Dissipation and
debauchery had ruined his health and obscured his intellect. Even his
appearance was changed for the worse. His person had become corpulent, and his
figure had lost its grace .He was no longer the Edward
of Towton or of Tewkesbury.
On discovering, however, how completely he had been duped, Edward
displayed some sparks of the savage valour which, in other days, had made him
so terrible a foe. Rousing himself to projects of revenge, he vowed to carry
such a war into France as that country had never before experienced and commenced preparations for executing his threats. As his resentment
appeared implacable, Louis deemed it prudent to find him work nearer home; and,
with this object, excited the King of Scots to undertake a war against England.
Some successes achieved by Gloucester in Scotland emboldened Edward in
his projects. It happened, however, that he did not live even to attempt the
execution of his threats. The excess of his rage against Louis had been such as
seriously to affect his health; and, about Easter, 1483, in his forty-second
year, the warlike King was laid prostrate with a fever in the Palace of
Westminster. Stretched on a bed of sickness, the King found his constitution
rapidly giving way; and losing faith in the skill of his physicians, he
referred his quarrel with Louis to the judgment of God, and summoned the lords of his Court to bid them fare well.
The King, indeed, could not fail to be anxious as to the fortunes of the
family he was leaving. Ever since his ill-starred marriage, the Court had been
distracted by the feuds of the Queen’s kindred and the old nobility of
England. The death of Warwick and the judicial murder of Clarence had by no
means restored harmony. At the head of one party figured the Queen’s brother,
Earl Rivers, and her son the Marquis of Dorset; at the head of the other was
the Duke of Buckingham, with whom sided the Lords Stanley and Hastings.
Difficult as the task might be, Edward hoped to reconcile the hostile factions ere going to his grave.
When the lords appeared in the King’s chamber, and assembled around his
bed, Edward addressed to them an impressive speech. Having indicated his
brother Richard, Duke, of Gloucester, as the fittest person to be Protector of
the realm, he expressed much anxiety about the affairs of his kingdom and family,
pointed out the perils of discord in a state, and lamented that it had been his
lot “to win the courtesy of men’s knees by the fall of so many heads”. After
thus smoothing the way, as it were, he put it to his lords, as a last request,
that they should lay aside all variance and love one another. At this solemn
appeal the lords acted their parts with a decorum which imposed on the dying
man. Two celebrated characters, indeed, were absent, whose talents for dissimulation
could not have failed to distinguish them. Gloucester was on the borders of
Scotland, and Rivers on the marches of Wales; so that Richard Plantagenet, with
his dark guile, and Anthony Woodville, with his airy pretensions, were wanting
to complete the scene. But Hastings, Dorset, and others, though their hearts
were far asunder, shook hands and embraced with every semblance of friendship;
and the King dismissed them with the idea that he had effected a
reconciliation.
His affairs on earth thus settled, as he believed, Edward proceeded to
make his peace with heaven. Having received such consolations as the church administers
to frail men when they are going to judgment, and committed his soul to the
mercy of God, Edward awaited the
coming of the Great Destroyer. On the 9th of April his hour arrived; and
complaining of drowsiness, he turned on his side. While in that position he
fell into the sleep that knows no breaking; and his spirit, which had so often
luxuriated in carnage and strife, departed in peace.
On the day when the King breathed his last, he lay exposed in the Palace
of Westminster, that the lords, temporal and spiritual, and the municipal
functionaries of London might have an opportunity of ascertaining that he had
not been murdered. This ceremony over, the body was seared and removed to St.
Stephen’s Chapel, and there watched by nobles, while masses were sung.
Windsor had been selected as the place of interment. Ere being conveyed
to its last resting-place, however, the corpse, covered with cloth of gold, was
carried to the Abbey of Westminster under a rich canopy of cloth imperial,
supported by four knights, Sir John Howard bearing the banner in front of the
procession, and the officers of arms walking around. Mass having been again
performed at Westminster, the mortal remains of the Warrior-King were placed in
a chariot drawn by six horses, and conveyed, by slow stages, along the banks of
the Thames. Having been met at the gates of Windsor, and perfumed with odours,
by the Archbishop of York and the Bishop of Winchester, the corpse was borne, in
solemn procession, to the Chapel of St. George, where, placed in the choir, on
a hearse blazing with lights and surrounded with banners, it was watched for
the night by nobles and esquires. Another mass, more religious solemnities, a
few more ceremonies befitting the rank of the deceased, and the last
Plantagenet whose obsequies wero performed with royal honours was committed to
the tomb.
CHAPTER XLI.
THE DUKE OF GLOUCESTER.
Whether Richard the Third, with his hunch back, withered arm, splay feet, goggle eyes,
and swarthy countenance, as pourtrayed by poets and
chroniclers of the Tudor period, very closely resembles the Richard of Baynard’s Castle and Bosworth Field, is a question which
philosophical historians have answered in the negative. The evidence of the old
Countess of Desmond, when brought to light by Horace Walpole in 1758, first
began to set the world right on this subject. Born about the middle of the
fifteenth century, she lived—when the Plantagenets had boon displaced by the
Tudors, and the Tudors succeeded by the Stuarts—to affirm, in the seventeenth
century, that in her youth she had danced with Richard at his brothers Court,
and that he whom historians had, in deference to Tudor prejudices, represented
as a monster of ugliness, was in reality the handsomest man in the room except
his brother Edward—and that he was very well made.
It cannot be denied that the Countess of Desmond’s description of
Richard appears extremely complimentary; and, indeed, it would have been
something novel in human nature if this lady of the House of Fitzgerald, in old
age and penury, had not been inclined to exaggerate the personal advantages of
a Plantagenet prince, who, in the days of her youth and hope, had distinguished
her by his attention. Evidence, however, exists in abundance to prove that
Richard was utterly unlike the deformed ruffian introduced into history by the
scribes and sheriffs of London, who plied their pens with an eye to the favour
of the Tudors.
Portraits and authentic descriptions of the last Plantagenet king which
have come down to posterity, convey the idea of a man rather under-sized and hard-featured, with dark brown hair, an
intellectual forehead, a face slightly deficient in length, dark thoughtful
eyes, and a short neck and shoulders somewhat unequal, giving an appearance of
inelegance to a figure, spare indeed, and wanting in bulk, but wiry, robust,
and sinewy; trained by exercise to endure fatigue, and capable on occasions of
exercising almost superhuman strength. Such, clad in garments far more gorgeous
than good taste would have approved, his head bent forward on his bosom, his
hand playing with his dagger, as if in restlessness of mood, and his lips
moving as if in soliloquy, appeared to his contemporaries the subtle politician
who, at Baynard’s Castle, schemed for the crown of
St. Edward. Such, arrayed in Milan steel, bestriding a white steed, the emblem
of sovereignty, with a surcoat of brilliant colours over his armour, a crown of
ornament around his helmet, a trusty lance skilfully poised in his hand, and an
intense craving for vengeance gnawing at his heart, appeared the fiery warrior,
whose desperate valour well-nigh saved St. Edward’s crown from fortune and the
foe on Bosworth Field.
CHAPTER XLII.
THE PROTECTOR AND THE PROTECTORATE.
Before ‘‘giving up his soul to God” in
the Palace of Westminster, the fourth Edward nominated bis brother Richard,
Duke of Gloucester, as Protector of England during the minority of Edward the
Fifth. The choice was one of which the nation could not but approve. Richard
was in the thirty-first year of his life, and in the full vigour of his
intellect with faculties refined by education and sharpened by use; knowledge of
mankind, acquired in civil strife and in the experience of startling
vicissitudes of fortune; a courage in battle which had made his slight form and
grisly cognisance terrible to foes on fields of fame; a genius for war which
had given him an enviable reputation throughout Christendom; a temper hitherto
so carefully kept under restraint that any man hinting at the excess of its
ferocity would have been deemed insane; and an ambition hitherto so well masked
by affected humility that no one could have imagined it capable of prompting
political crimes, unjustifiable, save by those Italian maxims associated with
the name of Machiavelli.
It was on the 2nd of October, 1452, shortly
after the Roses wore plucked in the Temple Gardens, that Cicely, Duchess of York,
gave birth to her youngest son, Richard, in the Castle of Fotheringay.
He was, therefore, scarcely three years old when the Wars of the Roses
commenced at St. Albans, and little more than eight when the Duke of York was
slain by the Lancastrians on Wakefield Green. Alarmed, after that event, at the
aspect of affairs, warned by the murder of her second son, the Boy-earl of
Rutland, and eager to save George and Richard from the fate of their elder
brother, the Duchess Cicely sent them to Holland, trusting that, even in case
of the Lancastrians triumphing, the Duke of Burgundy would generously afford
them protection and insure them safety.
After being sent to the continent, Richard and his brother remained for
some time in secret at Utrecht; but the Duke of Burgundy, hearing that the
young Plantagenets were in that city, had them sought out and escorted to
Bruges, where they were received with the honours due to their rank. When,
however, his victory at Towton made Edward King of
England, he requested Burgundy to send the Princes;
and in the spring of 1461, “The Good Duke” had them honourably escorted to
Calais on their way home. When, after their return to England, George was
dignified with the Dukedom of Clarence, Richard became Duke of Gloucester,
At an early age Richard, who was energetic and highly educated, acquired
great influence over the indolent and illiterate Edward; and in the summer of
1470, when scarcely eighteen, he was appointed Warden of the West Marches. The
return of Warwick from France interrupting his tenure of office, he shared his
brother’s flight to the territories of the Duke of Burgundy; and when Edward
landed at Ravenspur to conquer or die, Richard was by
his side, and proved an ally of no mean prowess. Being intrusted with high
command at Barnet and Tewkesbury, his conduct won him high reputation: and in spite of his foppery, and fondness for dress and gay
apparel, he showed himself, at both of these battles, a sage counsellor in
camp, and a fiery warrior in conflict.
The Lancastrians having been put down and peace restored, Richard turned
his thoughts to matrimony, and resolved to espouse Anne Neville, daughter of
Warwick and widow of Edward of Lancaster. Clarence wishing to keep the Warwick
baronies to himself, as husband of Isabel Neville, attempted, by concealing her
sister, to prevent this marriage. But Richard was not to be baffled. He
discovered the fair Anne in London, disguised as a cook-maid, and carrying the
youthful widow off, placed her for security in the sanctuary of St. Martin’s.
Nevertheless, Clarence continued unreasonable. “Richard may have my
sister-in-law if he will,” he said, “but we will part no livelihood.” Edward,
however, took the matter in hand, pacified his brothers, allotted Anne a
handsome portion out of the Warwick estates, and had the marriage with Richard
forthwith solemnised. One son, destined to figure for a brief period as Prince
of Wales, was the result of this union.
Years rendered memorable by the inglorious expedition to France and the
unfortunate execution of Clarence passed over; and in 1482, when Edward
conspired with the exiled Duke of Albany to dethrone James, King of Scots,
Richard, who, among his contemporaries, had acquired the reputation of being “a
man of deep reach and policy,” was intrusted with the conduct of the war.
Having been nominated Lieutenant-General against the Scots, and joined by the
Earl of Northumberland and Lord Stanley, he led twenty-five thousand men across
the Tweed, regained Berwick, which had been surrendered by Queen Margaret, and
marched to the gates of Edinburgh. By this expedition Richard acquired an
increase of popularity; and he was still in the north when Edward the Fourth
departed this life and his son was proclaimed as Edward the Fifth.
At that time the young King—a boy of thirteen—was residing in the Castle
of Ludlow, on the marches of Wales, and deceiving his education under the
auspices of his maternal uncle, Anthony Woodville, Earl Rivers. Anthony was
eminently qualified for the post of tutor; and every precaution appears to have
been taken to render the boy worthy of the crown which he was destined never to
wear.
While the news of his father’s death was travelling to young Edward at
Ludlow, the feud between the ancient nobility and the Queen’s kindred broke out
afresh at Westminster, and London was agitated by the faction’s strife.
Elizabeth, jealous of the designs of the adverse faction, wrote to Rivers to
raise a large force in Wales, and conduct the King to the capital to be crowned;
and she empowered her son, the Marquis of Dorset, who was Constable of the
Tower, to take the royal treasure out of that fortress, and fit out a fleet.
Hastings, farmed at those indications of suspicion, threatened to retire to
Calais, of which he was captain; and both parties appealed to Richard, who had
hitherto so acted as to give offence to neither.
Richard, on learning the state of affairs,
immediately wrote to the Queen, recommending that the army gathering round her
son should be dismissed; and the royal widow, who was totally devoid of the
intellect and sagacity necessary for such a crisis, despatched a messenger to
her brother to disband his troops. The young King, however, set out from
Ludlow, and, attended by Earl Rivers, Elizabeth’s
second son, Richard Grey, and Sir Thomas Vaughan, he approached Northampton on
the 22nd of April, and learned that Richard had already arrived at that town.
Richard, as we have said, was on the frontiers of Scotland when
his brother expired at Westminster. On receiving intelligence of this sad event he rode southward to York, and entered that city with a retinue of six hundred
knights and esquires, all dressed like himself in deep mourning. At York he
ordered a grand funeral service to be performed in the Cathedral; and having
summoned the magnates of the neighbourhood to swear fealty to Edward the
Fifth, he set them the example by taking the oath first. After going through
this ceremony, he wrote to Elizabeth Woodville and to Earl Rivers, expressing
the utmost loyalty and affection for the young King; but, at the same time, a messenger
was sent to the Duke of Buckingham appointing a meeting at Northampton.
Again taking the road
southward, Richard reached Northampton on the 22nd of April; and learning that
the King was every hour expected, he resolved to await the arrival of his
nephew and escort him safely to London. Ere long Rivers and Richard Grey
appeared to pay their respects, and announce that the
King had gone forward to Stony Stratford. Richard, who had hitherto given the
Woodvilles no cause for suspicion, was doubtless somewhat surprised at this
intelligence. He, however, suppressed his emotions, listened patiently to
Anthony’s frivolous apology about fearing that Northampton would have been too
small a place to accommodate so many people, and with the utmost courtesy invited
the uncle and, nephew to remain and sup.
Rivers and Grey accepted without hesitation an invitation given in so
friendly a tone; and soon after, Buckingham arrived at the head of three
hundred horsemen. Everything went calmly. The two Dukes passed the evening with
Rivers and Grey; they all talked in the most friendly way; and next morning they rode together to Stony Stratford.
On reaching Stony Stratford, Richard found the King mounting to renew
his journey; and this circumstance seems to have convinced him that he was
intended, by the Woodvilles, first as a dupe and then as a victim. At all
events, their evident anxiety to prevent an interview between him and his
nephew, afforded him a fair opportunity for taking strong measures, and he did
not hesitate. Turning to Rivers and Grey, he immediately charged them with
estranging the affections of his nephew, and caused
them to be arrested along with Sir Thomas Vaughan.
Having ordered the prisoners to be conveyed to the castle of Sheriff
Hutton, Richard and Buckingham bent their knees to their youthful Sovereign,
and explained to him that Rivers, Grey, and Dorset were traitors. But Edward,
educated by his maternal relatives and much attached to them, could not conceal
his displeasure at their arrest.
This scene over, Richard dismissed all domestics with whom Rivers had
surrounded the young King, and conducted his nephew towards London, giving out
as he went that the Woodvilles had been conspiring. On the 4th of May they
approached the metropolis; and at Hornsey Wood they were met by Lord Mayor
Shaw, with the sheriffs and aldermen, in their scarlet robes, and five hundred
of the citizens, clad in violet and gallantly mounted. Attended as became a
King, young Edward entered London. Richard rode bareheaded before his nephew;
many knights and nobles followed; and amid loud acclamations from the populace,
Edward the Fifth was conducted to the Bishop’s Palace. A grand Council was then
summoned, and Richard was declared Protector of England.
Meanwhile, Elizabeth Woodville had been seized with dread. Alarmed at
the report that her brother and son were under arrest, and apprehensive of
Richard’s intentions, she fled to the sanctuary with her five daughters, her
eldest son, the Marquis of Dorset, and her youngest son, Richard, a boy of ten,
who had been created Duke of York and contracted in marriage to an heiress of
the Mowbrays who died in infancy. The King on
learning that his mother was alarmed, expressed his grief with tears in his
eyes. At first Richard only protested his loyalty, and marvelled that his
nephew should be so melancholy; but ere long he resolved to turn the royal boy’s
unhappiness to account, and with this view sent the Archbishop of York to
Elizabeth to say that, to the King’s happiness, the company of his brother was
essential.
The prelate carried the Protector’s message to the sanctuary, and found
the mournful mother earnestly opposed to delivering up the Duke of York. The Archbishop, however, told her plainly that if she did not consent,
he feared some sharper course would speedily be taken; and at this warning
Elizabeth, who was at once timorous and imprudent, began to yield. At length
she took the boy by the hand and led him to the Archbishop.
“My Lord,” she said, “here he is. For my own part, I never will deliver him
freely, but if you must needs have, take him, and at your hands I will require
him.”
At that time, Richard and other lords were in the Star Chamber; and
thither the Archbishop led the weeping boy. As they
entered, Richard rose, embraced his nephew affectionately, and exclaimed with
characteristic dissimulation—“Welcome, nephew, with
all my heart! Next to my sovereign lord, your brother, nothing gives me so much
contentment as your presence.” A few days after this scene was enacted, Richard
declared that it was necessary that the King and his brother should be sent to
some place of security till the distempers of the commonwealth were healed; and
a Great Council, summoned to discuss the question, resolved, on the motion of
Buckingham, that the Princes should be sent to the
Tower. Accordingly, they were conducted to the metropolitan fortress; and it
was intimated that they were to remain there till preparations had been made
for the King’s coronation.
The fate of Rivers, Grey, and Vaughan having been decided on, the 13th
of June was appointed as the day of execution; and Sir Richard Ratcliffe, an
unscrupulous agent of Richard, was intrusted with the ceremony. Anthony
Woodville was prevented from addressing the people on the occasion; and posterity
has been deprived of the satisfaction of reading the accomplished adventurer’s
vindication; but Vaughan was more lucky in his effort
to be heard.
“I appeal,” said Vaughan, solemnly, “to God’s high tribunal against the Duke of Gloucester for this wrongful murder.”
“You have made a goodly appeal,” said Ratcliffe, with a sneer, “so lay
down your head.”
“I die in the right, Ratcliffe,” answered Vaughan; and, preparing to
submit to the blow, he added, “Take heed that you die not in the wrong.”
Ere disposing of the Woodvilles, Richard persuaded himself that his
dream of the crown might be realised; and, by bribes and promises, purchased
Buckingham’s aid in overthrowing the obstacles that stood in his way. Anxious,
also, to gain over Hastings, he deputed the task of sounding him to William
Catesby, an eminent lawyer, who descended from an ancient family at Lapworth, in Warwickshire, and who was destined to acquire
an unenviable notoriety in Richard’s service. The result was not satisfactory.
In fact, Hastings, though he heartily concurred in Richard’s measures against
the Woodvilles, was determined to stand by Edward’s sons to the death; and, ere
long, matters arrived at such a pass, that while Richard sat at the head of a majority of the Council at Crosby Hall, Hastings presided
over a minority at the Tower. The party of Hastings appeared formidable. Lord
Stanley, among others, took part in its proceedings; and Stanley’s son, George,
Lord Strange, was reported to be levying forces in Lancashire to give effect to
its decisions. Richard was not blind to the fact that if he did not destroy the
confederacy forthwith it would destroy him. At such a crisis he was neither so
timid nor so scrupulous as to hesitate as to the means.
Some years before his death, Edward of York, while pursuing his amours
in the city of London, was captivated by the charms of Jane Shore, a young city
dame, whose name occupies an unfortunate place in the history of the period.
This woman, after being for seven years the wife of a reputable goldsmith,
allowed herself, in an evil hour, to be allured from the house of her husband,
and figured for some time as the King’s mistress. Notwithstanding her
equivocal position, however, Mistress Shore exhibited many redeeming qualities.
Her wit and beauty giving her great influence over Edward, she exercised it for
worthy purposes, and was ever ready to relieve the needy, to shield the innocent,
and protect the oppressed.
When Edward had been laid at rest in St. George’s Chapel, and Elizabeth
Woodville fled to the sanctuary, Mistress Shore manifested much sympathy for
the distressed Queen; and, having formed an intimacy with Lord Hastings, she
framed something resembling a plot against the Protector. Elizabeth at once
forgave Hastings the hostility he had displayed towards her kindred,
and forgave Mistress Shore for having supplanted her in Edward’s
affections; and the three became allies. Richard’s jealousy was aroused, and he
resolved to make this extraordinary alliance the means of effecting the ruin of
Hastings.
It was Friday, the 13th of June—the day on which Rivers,
Grey, and Vaughan suffered at Pontefract— and Hastings, Stanley, the Bishop of
Ely, the Archbishop of York, with other men of mark, had assembled at nine
o’clock in the Tower, when the Protector suddenly entered the Council Chamber
and took his seat at the table. Richard appeared in a lively mood, conversed
for awhile gaily with those present, and quite
surprised them by the mirth which he exhibited.
Having set the lords somewhat at their ease and persuaded them to
proceed with business; Richard begged them to spare him for awhile, and leaving the
Council Chamber he remained absent for an hour. Between ten and eleven he
returned, but frowning and fretting, knitting his blow and biting his lips.
“What punishment,” he asked, seating himself, “do they deserve who have
imagined and compassed my destruction, who am so nearly related to the King,
and intrusted with the government of the realm?”
“Whoever they be,” answered Hastings, after a pause, “they deserve the
death of traitors.
“These traitors,” cried Richard, “arc the sorceress my brother’s wife,
and her accomplice, Jane Shore, his mistress, with others, their associates; who have, by their witchcraft, wasted my body.”
“Certainly, my Lord,” said Hastings, after exhibiting some confusion,
“if they be guilty of these Crimes they deserve the
severest punishment.”
“What?” exclaimed Richard, furiously, “do you reply to me with ifs and
with ands? I tell thee they have so done; and that I will make good on your body, traitor.”
After threatening Hastings, Richard struck the council table; and
immediately a cry of “Treason” arose, and armed men rushed into the chamber.
“I arrest thee, traitor,” said Richard, turning to Hastings.
“Me, my Lord ?” asked Hastings, in surprise.
“Yes, thee, traitor,” said Richard; “and, by St. Paul, I swear I will
not to dinner till I have thy head off.”
While this conversation was passing between the Protector and Hastings,
one of the soldiers, as if by accident or mistake, struck a blow at Lord
Stanley. But the noble baron, who had no ambition to share his ally’s fate, and
who, indeed, contrived to carry his wise head to the grave, saved himself on
this occasion by jerking under the table, and escaped without any other bodily
injury than a bruise.
While Lord Stanley, the Archbishop of York, and the Bishop of Ely were
arrested, and shut up in various parts of the Tower, Hastings was hurried
outside for immediate execution. Richard would not oven allow the headsman time
enough to erect a scaffold: but a log of wood answered the purpose. This,
having been found in the court of the Tower, was carried to the green near the
Chapel; and the Lord Chamberlain, after being led thither, was without further
ceremony beheaded. At the same time the Sheriffs of London proceeded to Mistress
Shore’s house, took possession of her goods, which were valued at three
thousand marks, and conveyed her through the city to the Tower. On being
brought before the Council, however, on the charge of sorcery, no evidence
worthy of credit was produced; and an acquittal was the consequence.
The sudden execution of the Lord Chamberlain naturally excited much
interest in the city; and, as Hastings happened to be a great favourite with
the inhabitants, Richard deemed it necessary to vouchsafe an explanation.
Having therefore sent for some of the influential citizens, and frankly
justified himself as having acted simply in self-defence, he, within two hours,
caused a proclamation, under the Great Seal, fairly written on parchment, to be
read by a herald-at-arms, with great solemnity, in various parts of London. Unfortunately,
this vindication appeared so soon after the execution that people could not
help suspecting that it had been drawn up before.
“Here’s a gay goodly cast,” remarked the schoolmaster of St. Paul¡s, as the document was read at the Cross: “soul cast
away for haste”.
“Aye,” said a merchant standing by, “I think it has been written by the
spirit of prophecy.”
CHAPTER XLIII
THE USURPATION.
After mewing the Princes in the Tower, beheading Hastings in London and the
Woodvilles at Pontefract, placing such foes to his pretensions as Lord Stanley
and the Bishop of Ely under lock and key, and arousing the people’s moral
indignation by the scandal of a King’s widow taking counsel with her husband’s
mistress to embarrass the Government carried on in the name of her son, Richard
applied himself resolutely to secure the prize on which he had set his heart.
Ere long, the citizens who discussed the proclamation about Hastings were
destined to have fresh subjects for gossip.
Among the numerous ladies upon whom Edward, about the beginning of his
reign, cast admiring eyes, was Eleanor Talbot, grand-daughter of the great Earl of Shrewsbury. This patrician dame was the widow of Lord
Butler of Sudeley, and had seen fifteen more summers than her royal lover.
Edward, not on that account the less enamoured, asked her to become his wife;
and, won by the ardour of his attachment, Eleanor consented to a secret
marriage. The ceremony was performed by Dr. Stillington, Bishop of Bath; but as time passed on, the
Yorkist king’s amorous heart led him into another engagement; and the neglected
Eleanor was astonished with news of his having married Elizabeth Woodville. On
hearing of his faithlessness, she fell into a profound melancholy, and
afterwards lived in sadness and retirement.
This silent repudiation of a daughter of their house, shocked the
propriety and hurt the pride of the Talbots; and they applied to Stillington to demand satisfaction. Not relishing the
perilous duty, the Bishop spoke to Richard on the
subject, and Gloucester mentioned it to the King. This intercession proved of
no avail; and Edward displayed such fury on learning that the secret was known, that nobody, who valued a head, would have cared to
allude to it while he was on the throne. But Richard, who had not forgotten a
circumstance so important, now saw that the time had come when the secret might
be used to advance his own fortunes. It was necessary, however, that the facts
should be published in such a way as to produce a strong impression; and a plan
was devised for bringing together a multitude.
For this purpose, Richard caused Mistress Shore to be again dragged into public, and tried before the spiritual courts for her
scandalous manner of life. The Protector was not this time disappointed. However
unfounded the charge of sorcery, there was no lack of evidence as to her
frailties, and she was condemned to do open penance. Sunday was appointed for
this act of humiliation; and on that day, through streets crowded with
spectators, the erring woman was under the necessity of walking to St. Paul’s
barefooted, wrapped in a white sheet, and holding a lighted taper of wax in her
hand.
This exhibition was of itself deemed likely to advance the Protector’s
interests by impressing people with a high opinion of his worth as a reformer
of morals; but Richard had arranged that, ere the crowd assembled as spectators
had time to disperse, another and a far more important scene should be enacted.
In this the chief actor was Dr. Shaw, an Augustine
friar of high reputation and great popularity. Mounting the pulpit at St.
Paul’s Cross, Shaw, who was a brother of the Lord Mayor and an adherent of the
Protector, preached from the text—“The multiplying
brood of the ungodly shall not thrive, nor take deep rooting from bastard slips;”
and proceeded boldly to prove that the Princes in the Tower were illegitimate.
Richard appears to have found this stratagem unsuccessful; but he did
not dream of abandoning his ambitious project. Nor can he, with justice, be
severely blamed for setting aside the sons of Elizabeth Woodville. However the
matter may have been slurred over by men writing with the fear of the Tudors
before their eyes, hardly any doubt can exist that Edward was guilty of bigamy,
and that his marriage with Elizabeth was invalid; for Philip de Comines bears
witness to having heard Bishop Stillington state that
he had married the King to Lady Butler; and Eleanor undoubtedly survived that
unfortunate ceremony performed on a May morning in the Chapel at Grafton.
But the illegitimacy of Edward’s offspring did not make Richard heir of
the House of York. Between him and the crown stood the children of Clarence,
Edward Plantagenet, Earl of Warwick, and his sister Margaret, afterwards
Countess of Salisbury and mother of Cardinal Pole. The claim of these children
was such as could not decently be rejected; but having gone too far to recede,
Richard pretended that their father’s attainder disqualified them from inheriting,
and adopted measures for usurping the crown,
Richard again invoked the aid of Buckingham; and, on the Tuesday after Dr. Shaw’s sermon, attended by nobles, knights, and
citizens, Buckingham appeared on the hustings at Guildhall, and harangued the
populace. The Duke’s oratory was successful. Some of
the wealthy citizens, indeed, asked time for consideration; but the multitude
tossed their bonnets in the air, and shouted—“Long
live King Richard.”
At Baynard’s Castle, with the Duchess of York,
Richard was then residing; and thither, to wait upon him, the citizens sent a
deputation, headed by the Lord Mayor and accompanied
by Buckingham. On being informed that a number of people were in the Castle court, Richard affected alarm and declined to receive
them. But, at length, they were admitted, and Buckingham presented an address,
praying Richard to take the crown as his by right of birth and the election of
the estates of the realm.
“I little thought, cousin,” said Richard, angrily, “that you, of all
men, would have moved me to a matter which, of all things, I most decline”
“The free people of England will
never be ruled by a bastard,” said Buckingham; “and if you, the true heir,
refuse the crown, they know where to find another who will gladly accept it.”
“Well,” said Richard, with the air of a man making a great sacrifice, “since
I perceive that the whole realm is resolved not to permit my nephew to reign,
and that the right of succession belongs to me, I am content to submit to the
will of the people.”
On hearing this speech, the citizens raised a cry of “Long live King Richard, our sovereign lord;” and the brief reign of Edward the Fifth was at an end.
CHAPTER XLIV.
RICHARD’S CORONATION.
When Richard had expressed his intention to usurp the English crown, he fixed the
6th day of July, 1483, for his coronation, and caused
preparations to be made for performing the ceremony with such magnificence as
was likely to render the occasion memorable. Never had arrangements been made
on so splendid a scale for investing a King of England with the symbols of
power.
At the same time, Richard took precautions against any opposition that
might be offered by the friends of Elizabeth Woodville. From the north were
brought five thousand fighting men, “evil apparelled, and worse harnessed, in
rusty armour, neither defensible for proof nor scoured for show,” but with
fearless hearts and strong hands. Their leader was one whose name a Woodville
could hardly hear without growing pale. For it was Robin of Redesdale who, in
other days, had led the half-mob half-army that seized and beheaded old Earl
Rivers, and that son of Earl Rivers who, while in his teens, had wedded a
Dowager Duchess in her eighty-second year. On the 4th of July, these northern
soldiers encamped in Finsbury Fields, and inspired the citizens of London with
emotions of doubt and apprehension.
On the day when Robin of Redesdale and his men startled London, Richard
and his ill-starred Queen the Anne Neville of earlier and happier times—took
their barge at Baynard’s Castle,
and went by water to the Tower. After releasing Lord Stanley and the
Archbishop of York, that they might take part in the coronation, the King
created his son Edward, Prince of Wales, nominated Lord Level to the office of
Lord Chamberlain, vacant by the execution of Hastings, and appointed Sir Robert
Brackenbury, the younger son of an ancient family long settled at Sallaby, in the Bishopric of Durham, to the Lieutenancy of
the Tower. At the same time he bestowed on Sir John
Howard the Dukedom of Norfolk, and to Thomas, eldest son of that pretentious
personage, he gave the Earldom of Surrey. Gratified as the vanity of the
Howards might be, Sir John must have blushed, if, indeed, capable of so much
decorum, as he thought of the disconsolate woman in the sanctuary, and
remembered the letter which, twenty years earlier, at the time of her marriage,
he had written to her father, Sir Richard Woodville.
At length the day appointed for the ceremony arrived, and Richard
prepared to place the Crown of St. Edward on his head. “The King, with Queen Anne, his wife,” says
the chronicler, “came down out of the Whitehall into the Great Hall at Westminster,
and went directly to the King’s Bench, and from thence, going upon Raycloth, barefooted, went to St. Edward’s Shrine; all his
nobility going with him, every lord in his degree.”
A magnificent banquet in Westminster Hall brought the coronation
ceremony to a conclusion; and, in the midst of the
banquet, Sir Robert Dymoke, as King’s Champion, rode
into the Hall and challenged any man to say that Richard was not King of
England. No one, of course, ventured to gainsay his title; hut from every side
rose shouts of “King Richard, King Richard”, and his inauguration as Sovereign
of England having been thus formally completed, the usurper retired to consider
how he could best secure himself on that throne which he had gained by means so
unscrupulous.
CHAPTER XLV.
THE PRINCES IN THE TOWER.
When the sons of the fourth Edward and Elizabeth Woodville had been escorted through
London, conducted to the Tower, and given into the keeping of Sir Robert
Brackenbury, the populace saw their faces no more.
According to the chroniclers who wrote in the age of the Tudors, the
young King had, from the time of the arrest of his maternal kinsman, at Stony
Stratford, been possessed with vague presentiments; and he no sooner heard of
the usurpation than he revealed the alarm he felt for bis personal safety. “Alas!”
exclaimed the boy, on being informed that Richard was to be crowned, “I would
mine uncle would let me enjoy my life, though I lose my kingdom and my crown”
The lives of the Princes might have been
spared; but it happened that, after causing his coronation to be celebrated
with so much splendour at Westminster, Richard undertook a progress to York to
have the ceremony repeated in the capital of the north. While on his way,
Richard learned that the friends of Elizabeth Woodville were conspiring to
deliver the Princes from the Tower, and to place young Edward on the throne.
Tho usurper, it is said, then resolved on having his nephews put to death ere
they could be used by his enemies to disturb his reign. With this view, while
at Gloucester, Richard despatched a messenger, named John Green, to
Brackenbury, with instructions to make away with the Princes;
but Brackenbury, though elevated to office by Richard, declared that he must
decline the commission.
Richard was at Warwick when this answer reached him; and, on healing
that Brackenbury was a man who entertained scruples, he exclaimed, with
astonishment, “By St. Paul, whom then may we trust”. He was determined,
however, that the deed should be done, and, while musing over the matter,
bethought him of his Master of the Horse, Sir James Tyrrel,
who was in the next room. This man, a brother, it appears, of the knight of
that name who fell with Warwick at Barnet, was turbulent in spirit and so eager
for preferment, that, in order to make his fortune, he
would shrink from no crime. When, therefore, summoned to the King’s presence,
he showed himself even readier to execute the murderous deed than Richard was
to intrust him with the commission.
‘‘Would you venture to kill one of my friends?” asked Richard.
“Yes, my lord,” answered Tyrrel; “but I would
rather kill two of your enemies.”
“By St. Paul!” exclaimed Richard, “that is the very thing. I want to be
free from dread of two mortal foes in the Tower.”
“Open the gates to me,” said Tyrrel, “and you
will not need to fear them longer.”
Richard, glad to have found a man capable of executing his commission,
gave Tyrrel letters to Brackenbury, commanding that
he should be intrusted with the custody of the Tower and of the Princes for twenty-four hours. Armed with these letters, Tyrrel hied him to London; and having freed Brackenbury for
a while from the exercise of his official functions, he enlisted in his
service a man named Miles Forrest, and a sturdy groom named James Dighton. With
the aid of these ruffians, and the sole attendant of the Princes, William
Slaughter, whom chroniclers call “Black Will,” and emphatically describe as a
“bloody knave,” Tyrrel prepared for the murderous
deed.
On a summer night—such is the story so often told—the two Princes were
sleeping in an upper chamber of the Tower, in that part of the gloomy
stronghold still pointed out as “the Bloody Tower.” Their only attendant was
“Black Will;” but, as clasped in each other’s arms they slept the sleep of
boyhood, their very innocence seemed a protection. While Tyrrel remained outside the door, Forrest and Dighton suddenly stole into the room,
prepared to set about the work of murder. The spectacle presented would have
melted any other than the hardest hearts; but Forest and Dighton were so
hardened as to be impervious to emotions of pity; and they proceeded to their
task with a shocking brutality. Wrapping the boys tightly in the coverlet, they
placed the pillows and feather bed over their mouths till they were stifled;
and then, seeing that their innocent souls had departed, laid the bodies on the
bed, and intimated to their employer that all was over,
Tyrrel on hearing this,
entered the room to see with his own eyes that the horrid commission had been
faithfully executed. After satisfying himself on this point, the unworthy
knight ordered the bodies of the murdered Princes to be buried beneath the
stair; and hastened back to inform the King that his nephews slept in Paradise.
CHAPTER XLVI.
A MOCK KING-MAKER.
Among the many men of high estate who aided Richard to usurp the English throne, none
played a more conspicuous part than his rival in foppery, Henry Stafford, Duke
of Buckingham. No sooner, however, had the Protector been converted into a King
than his confederate became malecontent and
restlessly eager for change. The death of Warwick, the captivity of John de Vere,
the extinction of the Mowbrays and Beauforts, had left the Duke one
of the most influential among English magnates then alive and at liberty; and,
albeit destitute of prowess and intellect, he appears to have vainly imagined
that he could exercise that kind of influence which had rendered Richard
Neville so formidable. But capable as Buckingham might have deemed himself of
rivalling “The Stout Earl” who slept with his Montagu ancestors in the Abbey of
Bisham, he had none of “the superb and more than regal pride” which rendered
the descendant of Cospatrick averse to the gewgaws of
royalty. The object of the Duke’s ambition, when he
resolved to break with the usurper, appears to have been the crown which he had
helped to place on Richard’s head.
With his shallow brain full of ambitious ideas, and hardly deigning to
conceal his discontent, Buckingham took leave of Richard. On leaving the Court
of Westminster he turned his face towards his Castle of Brecknock; and by the
way regaled his fancy with splendid visions of crowns and sceptres.
It happened that, on the day before the Coronation, when Richard
released the confederates of Hastings from the Tower, he found John Morton,
Bishop of Ely, decidedly hostile to his pretensions. Unable to gain the support
of the prelate, but unwilling, on such an occasion, to appear harsh, Richard
delivered him to Buckingham to be sent to Brecknock and gently guarded in that
castle. At Brecknock, musing over his experiences as Parson of Blokesworth, his expedition to Towton Field, his exile to Verdun, and his promotion to the See of Ely by a Yorkist
King, Buckingham met the Bishop when he went thither
awakened from his dream of royalty, but panting for enterprise, however
quixotic. After so many exciting scenes—suppers at Northampton, orations at the
Guildhall, deputations to Baynard’s Castle,
progresses through London, and coronation banquets at Westminster—the Duke, doubtless, found Brecknock intolerably dull. Feeling
the want of company, he threw himself in the Bishop's way, and gradually surrendered himself to the fascination of the wily
churchman’s conversation. The Bishop, perceiving that
envy was devouring the Duke’s heart, worked craftily upon his humour; and,
Buckingham, exposed to the influence of one of the most adroit politicians of
the age, by degrees approached the subject which the Bishop was anxious to
discuss.
“I fantasied,” such were the Duke’s words, “that
if I list to take upon me the crown, now was the time, when this tyrant was
detested of all men; and knowing not of any one that could pretend before me.
In this imagination I rested two days at Tewkesbury. But as I rode between
Worcester and Bridgenorth, I met with the Lady Margaret, Countess of Richmond,
now wife to the Lord Stanley, who is the daughter and sole heir of John, Duke
of Somerset, my grandfather’s elder brother (who was as clean out my mind as if
I had never seen her); so that she and her son, the Earl of Richmond, have,
both of them, titles before mine: and then I clearly saw how I was deceived,
whereupon I determined utterly to relinquish all such fantastical notions concerning
the obtaining the crown myself.”
The Bishop listened eagerly, and, doubtless,
felt much relieved at this announcement. He had soon more cause for
gratification when Buckingham added— “I find there can be no better way to
settle the crown than that the Earl of Richmond, very heir to the House of
Lancaster, should take to wife Lady Elizabeth, eldest daughter to King Edward,
the very heir of the House of York; so that the two Roses may be united in one.”
“Since by your Grace’s incomparable wisdom, this noble conjunction is
now moved,” exclaimed the Bishop, almost overcome with
joy at the Duke hitting “the mark he had himself aimed at” in forming his
projects, “it is in the next place necessary to consider what friends we shall
first make privy to our intention.”
“By my troth,” said the Duke, “we will begin with
the Countess of Richmond—the Earl’s mother— who knows where he is in Brittany,
and whether a captive or at large.”
The conspiracy, originated at Brecknock, rapidly became formidable.
Reginald Bray, a retainer of the Countess of Richmond, was employed to open the
business to his mistress; and the Countess, approving
of the project, commissioned her physician, Dr. Lewis, to treat with Elizabeth Woodville in the sanctuary.
Elizabeth interposed no obstacle to a project which promised her
daughter a throne; and Bray, on finding that the negotiation had proved
successful, was enabled to draw many men of high rank into the conspiracy.
John, Lord Welles, true like his ancestors to the Red Rose, prepared to draw
his sword for Lancaster.
Peter Courtenay, Bishop of Exeter, and his brother Sir Edward, a man
remarkable for his elegance and destined to wed King Edward’s daughter
Katherine, undertook to raise the inhabitants of the western counties. Dorset,
escaping from the sanctuary, repaired to Yorkshire, trusting to rouse the men
of the north against the usurper.
Buckingham, meanwhile, remained at Brecknock, gathering the Welsh to his
standard, and dreaming, perhaps, of entering London as Warwick had entered
London thirteen, years earlier. The Duke, indeed,
seems to have had no conception of the hazard to which he was exposing himself.
He had been so flattered that he believed himself hedged by the nobility of his
name. He had not the elevation of soul to dream of a Barnet; and he had too
much vanity to entertain a prophetic vision of the crowded Market Place, the scaffold,
and the block, which, with the headsmen, awaited unsuccessful rebellion.
CHAPTER XLVII.
THE COMING MAN.
At the time when
Richard usurped the English throne, a young Welshman was residing at Vannes, in
Brittany, ihs age was thirty; his stature below the
middle height; his complexion fair; his eyes grey; his hair yellow; and his
countenance would have been pleasing, but for an expression indicative of
cunning and hypocrisy. It was Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond, grandson of Owen
Tudor, and sole heir of his mother, Margaret-Beaufort, granddaughter of John of
Gaunt and Katherine Swynford.
While passing his time at Vannes, Richmond was one day startled by the
arrival of messengers, with intelligence that a conspiracy had been formed at
Brecknock to place him on the English throne and give him in marriage a, young
woman who belonged to the House of York, which he had detested from his cradle,
and who, moreover, had the disadvantage of being considered illegitimate.
Richmond does not appear to have received the proposals with enthusiasm, and
matters might never have been brought to a satisfactory issue but for the
arrival of the Bishop of Ely. The prelate by his diplomacy, however, removed
all obstacles; and the Duke of Brittany, on being consulted, promised to aid
the enterprise.
At that period, Dr. Thomas Hutton, a man of
intellect and perception, was in Brittany as English ambassador, ostensibly to
ascertain whether or not Duke Francis gave any
countenance to the Woodvilles, but, doubtless, with secret instructions to
defeat the machinations of the exiles at Vannes. Hutton, who had an eye to see
and a brain to comprehend, soon became aware of Buckingham’s plot, and
endeavoured to persuade the Duke of Brittany to detain Richmond. But when the Duke, who was already committed, declined to interfere, the
ambassador sent such intelligence to England as enabled Richard to form a clear
notion of the conspiracy formed to hurl him from the throne.
Nevertheless, Richmond, with forty ships and five thousand Bretons, sailed
from St. Malo. But his voyage was the reverse of prosperous. And on the very
evening when the adventurers put to sea a violent tempest dispersed the fleet.
Only the ship which carried Richmond, attended by a single bark, held on her
course, and reached the mouth of Poole harbour, on the coast of Dorset.
And now the Welsh Earl had startling proof of Hutton’s vigilance. On
approaching the English coast, Richmond perceived crowds of armed men, and immediately
suspected a snare. However, he sent a boat ashore to ascertain whether they
were friends or foes; and his messengers returned with information that the
soldiers were friends, waiting to escort him to Buckingham’s camp. But
Richmond, too cautious to land with so slender a force in an enemy’s country,
resolved on sailing back to St. Malo. The wind being favourable, Richmond soon
came in sight of Normandy, and after a short stay on that coast, he returned to
Brittany.
Meanwhile, Buckingham’s insurrection began; and in autumn Richmond was
proclaimed king at various places in England. At the same time the Duke, at the head of a large body of Welshmen, marched from
his castle and moved towards the Severn; his first object being to join the Courtenays.
Matters immediately assumed a gloomy aspect; and Buckingham found that
heading an insurgent army was less agreeable than dancing with princesses at Windsor, or displaying his gorgeous attire before the
citizens of London. While he was blundering along the right bank of the Severn
in search of a ford, autumnal rains rendered every ford impassable; and the
river, rapidly overflowing its banks, inundated the country around. A scene
replete with horrors was the consequence. Houses were overthrown; men were
drowned in their beds; children were carried about swimming in cradles; and
beasts of burden and beasts of prey were drowned in the fields and on the
hills. Such a flood had never been experienced within the memory of man; and,
for centuries after, it was remembered along the banks of the Severn as “the
Duke of Buckingham’s water.”
Buckingham was rudely awakened from his delusions. The flooded river and
broken bridges created difficulties with which he could not cope. His
enterprise—from the beginning never very promising—became utterly hopeless; and
the Welshmen losing heart and finding no provision made for their subsistence,
turned their thoughts affectionately to the rude homes and the rude fare they
had left behind. The result soon appeared. The Celtic warriors pretended to
regard the flood as a sign that the insurrection was displeasing to Heaven,
deserted their standards in crowds, and, without exception, returned to their
mountains.
Buckingham now lost courage; and while his confederates—Dorset, the Courtenays, Lord Welles, Sir William Brandon, and Sir John Chcyney—escaped to Richmond in Brittany, the Duke fled to
Shrewsbury and took refuge in the house of one of his retainers, named Humphrey
Bannister. Tempted by the reward offered for Buckingham’s apprehension,
Bannister betrayed his master; and the Duke, having
been conveyed to Salisbury, was beheaded, without trial, in the Market Place.
When the conspiracy of Brecknock had been crushed, Richard summoned a
Parliament, which declared him lawful sovereign, entailed the crown on his son,
and passed a bill of attainder against those who had taken part in Buckingham’s
attempt at king-making. Nevertheless, Richard did not feel secure. The dread of
an invasion and of his enemies uniting Richmond and Elizabeth kept the usurper
uneasy; and he set himself boldly to the scheme of getting both the Welsh Earl
and the English Princess in his power. The persons who could aid him in this
were Peter Landois and Elizabeth Woodville.
The Duke of Brittany now reigned no longer save in name; and Peter Landois—son of a tailor—ruled the province with more than
ducal power. Peter, though elevated to so high a position, was not proof to the
temptation of a bribe; and Richard, by means of gold, converted him from a
friend to an enemy of Richmond, and obtained bis promise to send the Welsh Earl
a prisoner into England.
With Elizabeth Woodville Richard was equally successful. That lady,
weary of the sanctuary, not only listened to his proposals, but went with her
daughters to Court, where Elizabeth, the eldest, was treated with the utmost
distinction. Richard is supposed to have intended to match the Princess with
his son, a boy of eleven; but the death of the Prince,
at Middleham, defeated this plan for reconciling conflicting claims.
No sooner, however, had Richard recovered from the grief caused by the
death of his son, than he formed a new scheme for keeping Elizabeth in his
family. His Queen, the Anne Neville of other days, was in feeble health; and
Richard, under the impression that she could not live long, determined to
obtain a dispensation from Rome, and marry the Princess.
Neither mother nor daughter appear to have objected to this scandalous
project. Elizabeth Woodville wrote to the Marquis of Dorset to abandon Richmond’s
cause, as she had formed a better plan for her family: and Elizabeth of York,
at the instigation of her mother, no doubt, wrote to Sir John Howard, now Duke
of Norfolk, expressing her surprise that the Queen should be so long in dying.
At length, in March 1485, Anne Neville breathed her last; and Richard
consulted Catesby and Ratcliffe as to the policy of espousing Elizabeth. Both protested against the project, declaring that such a
marriage would shock both clergy and populace; and would, moreover, alienate
the men of the north, hitherto so faithful to Richard as the husband of Lord
Warwick’s daughter. Richard, convinced, banished all thought of marrying
Elizabeth; and, having sent her for security to the Castle of Sheriff Hutton,
he prepared to encounter the coming man.
CHAPTER XLVIII.
FROM BRITTANY TO BOSWORTH.
On Christmas Day,
1483, a memorable scene was enacted in the capital of Brittany. On that day,
Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond, appeared in the Cathedral of Rennes; before the
high altar and in the presence of the Marquis of Dorset and many other exiles,
the Welsh Earl swore, in the event of being placed on the English throne, to
espouse Elizabeth of York; and thereupon the Marquis, with the other lords and
knights, did him homage as to their sovereign. On the same day, Richmond and
the English exiles took the sacrament, and bound themselves by oath never to
desist from making war against King Richard till they accomplished his
destruction or his dethronement.
Within twelve months after this solemn ceremony, and while Richmond was
musing over his prospects, his mother’s chaplain one day arrived with a message
to the effect that the Welsh Earl was no longer safe in Brittany; and, after
considering the matter, Richmond resolved upon an escape, and prepared to be
gone. With this view he announced his intention to visit a friend in a
neighbouring village; and, without delay, mounted his horse as if to proceed on
the way thither. After riding five miles, however, he entered a wood; and hastily exchanged clothes with one of his
servants. Having assumed the character of a valet, Richmond again mounted; and
travelling by bypaths without halting, save to bait the horses, he reached
Angers, and accompanied by the exiled lords, pursued his way to the Court of
France.
Events had recently occurred at the French Court which secured Richmond
a favourable reception. In the summer of 1483, Louis the Crafty had drawn his
last breath; his son Charles then being a boy of thirteen. A struggle for power
began between the young King’s sister Anne, wife of the Sire de Beaujieu, and Louis, Duke of Orleans, heir-presumptive to
the throne. Orleans, it seems, had formed an alliance with Richard; and Anne,
from considerations of policy, determined to assist Richmond.
At Paris, therefore, Richmond was received with distinction; and, ere
long, Anne, in the young King’s name, agreed to furnish him with money and men
to undertake an expedition against the King of England. Richmond then commenced
preparations for the great adventure.
Matters, however, did not go quite smoothly; and Dorset, despairing,
resolved to avail himself of Elizabeth Woodville’s invitation; and, with this
view, the Marquis, who, though young, appears to have been false and calculating
as his mother, forgot his oath in the Cathedral of Rennes, and left Paris
secretly by night. His disappearance caused some consternation; for, though in
most respects a man of arms would have been a greater loss, he was possessed of
information which, conveyed to Richard, would have ruined everything. Humphrey
Cheyney, one of Sir John’s brothers, was, therefore, despatched in pursuit, and
succeeded in bringing the renegade back to Paris.
Ere the escape of the Marquis, Richmond had been joined by an
Englishman, whose presence lent dignity to the enterprise and would have more
than compensated for the loss of five hundred Dorsets.
A long and weary captivity, during which his only son had died in the
Tower, and his wife lived by needlework, had not broken the spirit of Oxford’s
Earl. John De Vere was still ready for adventure; and no sooner did he learn
that the partisans of the Red Rose were in motion, than becoming eager to leave Hammes, he tried his eloquence on James Blount,
captain of the fortress. Oxford’s success was more signal than he anticipated.
Won, and touched with admiration at the degree of courage that animated the
Earl after so long a captivity, Blount not only consented to set Oxford at
liberty, but offered to accompany him to Richmond, and place the fortress at the
adventurer’s service. They went; and Richmond was delighted to have such a
castle as Hammes at his disposal, and such a
patrician as John De Vere at his right hand.
All that could be done in Paris having teen accomplished, Richmond put
Dorset in pledge for the money he had borrowed, and left the Court of Paris for Harfleur. Having made all preparations, he and his
English friends embarked, with a few pieces of artillery and about three
thousand men, collected from the gaols and hospitals of Normandy and Brittany,
and described by Comines as “the loosest and most profligate fellows of all the
country.” On the last day of July, 1485—it was a
Sunday—the armament, leaving the mouth of the Seine, put to sea; and Richmond
ordered the mariners to steer for Wales. The voyage was free from such
disasters as attended Richmond’s former expedition; and, after having been six
days at sea, the adventurers sailed safely into Milford Haven. At the grand
national harbour, which gives importance to that part of South Wales, Richmond
debarked his soldiers without challenge.
On the morning of Sunday, the 21st of August, about three weeks after
his landing, Richmond, having marched from Milford Haven without a check,
encamped in Leicestershire at a place then known in the locality as Whitemoors, and erected his standard on the margin of a
rivulet now known in the locality as the Tweed. To the north of Richmond’s camp
was a morass, and beyond the morass a spacious plain nearly surrounded by
hills. At the furthest verge of these hills, about three miles north from the
camp, but concealed from view by the elevated ground that intervened, was a
little town, to which the inhabitants of that part of Leicestershire were long
in the habit of repairing weekly to market. Since that time, however, the name
of that market-town has become famous as the scene of a great battle, which
destroyed a dynasty and overturned a throne. It was Bosworth.
CHAPTER XLIX
RICHARD BEFORE BOSWORTH.
While Oxford was leaving Hammes, and Richmond was at Paris
maturing his projects, and Reginald Bray was carrying messages from the English malecontents to the Welsh Earl, the King appears to
have been unaware of the magnitude of his danger.
Richard was not, however, the man to be surprised by armed foemen in the
recesses of a palace. No sooner did he hear of an armament at the mouth of the
Seine, than Lord Lovel was stationed at Southampton, Sir John Savage
commissioned to guard the coasts of Cheshire, and Rice ap Thomas intrusted with
the defence of Wales. At the same time, Richard issued a proclamation,
describing Richmond as one Henry Tudor, descended of bastard blood both by father’s and mother’s side who could have no claim to the crown
but by conquest; who had agreed to give up Calais to France; and who intended
to subvert the ancient laws and liberties of England.
Having thus endeavoured to excite the patriotism of the populace,
Richard, about Midsummer, set up his standard at Nottingham; and around it,
with the Earl of Northumberland at their head, came the men of the north in
thousands. While keeping his state in Nottingham Castle, Richard heard of
Richmond’s landing at Milford Haven, and soon after learned, with indignation,
that Rice ap Thomas had proved false, that Sir Gilbert Talbot, with two
thousand retainers of his nephew, the young Earl of Shrewsbury, had joined the
invaders; that after leaving Shrewsbury, Richmond had pursued his way through
Newport to Stafford, and from Stafford to Lichfield, and that men were rapidly
gathering to his standard. Vowing vengeance, the King issued orders that his
army should forthwith march southward to Leicester.
Meanwhile, many of the lords whom Richard had summoned did not appear;
and Lord Stanley, feeling that he, as husband of the Countess of Richmond, was
peculiarly liable to suspicion, sent to say that sickness alone kept him from
his sovereign’s side at such a crisis. But this apology did not prove
satisfactory; and Richard having Stanley’s son, Lord Strange, in the camp,
ordered him to be secured, and made it understood that the son’s life depended
on the sire’s loyalty.
It was the evening of Tuesday, the 16th of August, when Richard, mounted
on a tall white charger, environed by his guard and followed by his infantry,
entered Leicester; and as the Castle was too much dilapidated to accommodate a
King, he was lodged in one of those antique edifices, half brick, half timber, that have gradually given way to modern
buildings. In a room of this house, long known as “The old Blue Boar,” Richard
slept during his stay at Leicester on a remarkable bedstead of wood, which had
a false bottom, and served him as a military chest. After the battle of
Bosworth this strange piece of furniture was found to contain a large sum of money;
and it was long preserved in Leicester as a memorial of King Richard’s visit to
that city.
While Richard was at Leicester, fighting men came in
to his aid. There he was joined by John Howard, Duke of Norfolk, by
Thomas, Earl of Surrey, by Lord Lovel, and by Sir Robert Brackenbury. But with
them came further tidings of desertion; for at Stony Stratford, Sir Walter
Hungerford and Sir Thomas Bourchier, son of Sir
Humphrey, who fell at Barnet, feeling that they were not trusted, deserted
Brackenbury, and—much as they owed to Richard—went straight to Richmond’s camp.
Nevertheless, the King’s courage continued high; and, on the morning of
Sunday, the 21st, having, it would appear, been previously out of the city
looking for his foes, he rode from Leicester towards Market Bosworth, in the
hope of an early meeting. On the way, it was necessary for him to pass over Bow
Bridge, which crossed the Stoure on the west side of
the town. Upon this bridge, according to tradition, was a stone of such height,
that, in riding by, Richard happened to strike it with his spur. An old woman,
who was supposed to practice, in a humble way, the arts which the populace associated
with the names of Friar Bungey and the Duchess of
Bedford, thereupon shook her head, and on being asked what would
be the King’s fortune, she answered, “Where his spur struck, there shall
his head be broken.”
After marching about eight miles, Richard came in sight of Richmond’s
army, and encamped for the day near the Abbey of Miraville.
In the evening, however, he moved forward to within a mile of the town of
Bosworth, and posted his army strongly on Amyon Hill,
an acclivity with a steep descent on all sides, but steepest towards the north
or Bosworth side, and least so towards the south, where, with a morass
intervening, Richmond’s army lay. Lord Stanley still remained at Stapleton. His brother, Sir William Stanley, had not yet arrived.
When that August day drew to a close, and
darkness concealed the hostile armies from each others view, Richard retired to rest. Repose, however, was not granted, so disturbed
were his slumbers and so alarming his dreams; and, at daybreak, he had further
evidence of the spirit of treachery that prevailed in his camp. During the
night, Sir John Savage, Sir Simon Digby, and Sir Brian Sandford, had gone over
to Richmond. The desertion of Savage was of no slight consequence, for he was
Lord Stanley’s nephew, and he led the men of Cheshire.
Nor was the desertion of Savage, Digby, and Sandford, the most alarming
incident. A mysterious warning in rhyme, attached, during the night, to the
tent of the new Duke of Norfolk, seemed to intimate that the King’s prospects
were worse than they yet seemed; for still, to all appearance, Richard’s army
was comparatively formidable. It was not merely by Brackenbury, and by Catesby,
Ratcliffe, and Lovel, whose names had been rendered familiar by Collingborn’s rhyme, that the usurper found himself
surrounded on that memorable morning. On the King’s side, Northumberland still remained, somewhat reserved, perhaps, but raising no
suspicion of the treachery of which he was about to be guilty. On the King’s
side, also, appeared John, Lord Zouche and Walter
Devereux, Lord Ferrers of Chartley, and Sir Gervase
Clifton, albeit the son of the Lancastrian executed after Tewkesbury. And not
the least conspicuous, decked out in the trappings of the Mowbrays,
and reminding contemporaries of the jackass in the lion’s skin, figured Sir
John Howard, for once in his life acting with honesty, and prepared to prove
his gratitude for the dukedom he had long coveted.
All this time, however, the intentions of Lord Stanley were doubtful.
Hitherto, the wary Baron had kept his counsel so well, that even his own
brother, who had come with three thousand men from Stafford, and encamped to
the King's right, was unaware of his intentions.
When, however, the morning advanced, and the hostile armies prepared for
battle, and Lord Stanley moving slowly forward, posted his men midway between
the two armies, Richard lost temper and resolved to try the influence of a
menace. He, therefore sent a pursuivant-at-arms to command Lord Stanley’s
attendance, and to intimate that he had sworn by Christ’s passion, in case of not being obeyed, to strike off
Lord Strange’s head. Lord Stanley, however, remained
resolute. “If the King cut off Strange’s head,” said
the grim baron, “I have more sons alive. He may do his pleasure; but to come to
him, I am not now determined.” Enraged at this answer, Richard ordered Strange
to be led forth to execution; but his advisers agreed that it was better to
keep the prisoner till after the battle. “It was now,” they said, “the time to
fight, not to execute;” and Richard, perhaps, thinking that, while the son's
life hung in the balance, there was a chance of the father repeating the part
so well played at Bloreheath, placed Strange in the custody of his tent keeper,
and girded on his armour for a great struggle to retain the crown he had
usurped.
And who can doubt that, in such an hour, other than selfish motives
animated the last Plantagenet king? With all his faults, Richard was an
Englishman, and a man of genius; and his patriotism and his pride must have
been shocked at the possibility of the throne, from which the first and the
third Edward had commanded the respect of Europe, becoming the perch of an
adventurer, who would never have been heard of, but for a Welsh soldier having
made too elaborate a pirouette while enacting the part of court fool.
CHAPTER L.
BOSWORTH FIELD.
It was the morning of
Monday the 22nd of August, 1485, when the Yorkist
usurper and the Lancastrian adventurer mustered their forces on the field of
Bosworth, and prepared for that conflict which decided the thirty years’ War of
the Roses.
On the eve of a struggle which subsequent events rendered so memorable,
Richard was not quite himself. For days his temper had been frequently tried by
news of desertion; and for nights his rest had been broken by dreams of
disaster. Nevertheless, he prepared for battle with energy. The honour of
leading the van, which constituted of archers, flanked with cuiraissiers,
fell to the Duke of Norfolk, and his son the Earl of Surrey. The main battle,
consisting of choice billmen, empaled with pikes, and formed into a dense
square, with wings of cavalry on either side, the King took under his own
auspices. The rearguard was under the command of Northumberland. Besides,
Richard’s artillery was the reverse of contemptible; and, altogether, he had
little to fear save from the treachery of his adherents.
Richmond, meantime, growing uneasy in the presence of a foe so
redoubted, sent to ask Lord Stanley to come and assist him in marshalling his
army. The answer of the Countess of Richmond’s husband was not quite satisfactory
to his stepson. Indeed, Stanley gave the messenger to understand that no aid be
expected from him till the armies joined battle and he only committed himself
so far as to advice that the onset should be made without delay.
Richmond was staggered by Stanley’s answer. The Welsh Earl’s situation
was painful and perplexing. He knew that his army was scarcely half so numerous
as the King’s; and he could not but be conscious of his immeasurable inferiority
as a general. Retreat, however, was impossible; and, after holding a council of
war, Richmond resolved on fighting forthwith. This resolution having been
arrived at, the Lancastrian army was set in order for
battle. Oxford took the command of the van, which consisted principally of
archers. Richmond whose standard was borne by Sir William Brandon—undertook to
command the main body; and in his rear, with body of horsemen and some bills
and pikes, was posted Jasper Tudor, whose age and experience, it was probably
hoped, would compensate in some measure for his nephew’s lack of military skill
and prowess. Besides, Richmond’s army had two wings. Of those, one was
commanded by Sir Gilbert Talbot, the other by Sir John Savage.
His preparations made, and his armour girded on except the helmet,
Richmond, to encourage his army, rode from rank to rank; and many of the
Lancastrian soldiers for the first time saw the man who represented himself as
the heir of John of Gaunt. The aspect of the adventurer must have disappointed
those who had pictured, in imagination, such a chief as the conqueror of Towton and Tewkesbury. Nature had denied Richmond kingly
proportions; and his appearance, though not positively mean, was far from
majestic; while his countenance wore an expression which indicated too clearly
that tendency to knavery destined to be so rapidly developed.
After riding alone Richmond halted, and, from an elevated part of the
field, addressed to his army one of those battlefield orations which were in
fashion at the period. Dealing with such topics as were most likely to inflame
his partisans against the usurper, he was listened to with sympathy; and
perceiving, as he pronounced, the words—“Get this day, and be conquerors ; lose the battle and be slaves”— that an
impression had been produced, he added—“In the name of God, then, and of St. George, let every man advance his
banner.” At these words Sir William Brandon raised the Tudor’s standard; the
trumpets sounded an onset; and Richmond, keeping the morass to his right, led
the Lancastrians, with the sun on their backs, slowly up the ascent towards Amyon Hill.
Ere this, Richard had mounted his tall steed—the White Surrey of Shakespeare—ascended
an eminence, since known as “Dickon’s Mount,” called his captains together, and
addressed them as his “most faithful and assured friends.” The speech, not
unworthy of one whom his enemies confess to have been “a king jealous of the
honour of England,” elicited some degree of enthusiasm; but Richard must have
sighed as he recalled to memory how enthusiastic, in comparison, had been the
burst of sympathy which rose from Edward’s soldiers on the field of Barnet. The
bold usurper, however, appeared undismayed. “Let every one,” he said in conclusion, “strike but one
sure blow, and certainly the day will be ours. Wherefore, advance banners,
sound trumpets; St. George be our aid; and God grant us victory!”
As the King concluded, and placed his helmet, with a crown of ornament,
on his brow, the Yorkists raised a shout, sounded trumpets, and moved down the
hill; and, with banners flying, and plumes waving, the hostile armies came hand
to hand.
The day opened not inauspiciously for Richard. His army would be little
inferior to that of his adversaries even should Stanley join Richmond; and his
position on Amy on Hill had been selected with judgment. Moreover, to
intimidate and outflank the foe, he had extended his van to an unusual length:
and this artifice proved so far successful, at least, that Oxford was somewhat
dismayed at the danger that threatened his scanty ranks.
Oxford, however, was a leader of extraordinary calibre, he had not,
indeed, seen many fields; but, to him, Barnet had been worth thirty years of
experience to men not gifted with the military genius which rendered. the
Anglo-Norman barons such formidable war-chiefs. Over the events of that
disastrous day, the Earl may be supposed to have mused for twelve years in his
prison at Hammes, and to have learned, in sadness and
solitude, wholesome lessons for his guidance, in the event of being again
called to encounter the warriors of the White Rose. The day had now arrived;
and John De Vere was resolved not to be outwitted either by “Jocky of Norfolk" or “Dickon his master.”
No sooner did Oxford’s men come to close encounter with those under
Norfolk, than the Earl saw that he was exposed to danger. Without loss of time,
he issued orders that no soldier should move ten yards from his colours. Their
leader’s motive not being understood, the men hurriedly closed their ranks, and
ceased from fighting; and the enemy, suspicious of some stratagem, likewise
drew back from the conflict.
Oxford quickly availed himself of this pause in the battle; and, placing
his men in the form of a wedge, he made a furious attack on the foe. At the
same time, Lord Stanley, who, when the armies moved, had placed himself on
Richmond’s right-hand to oppose the front of the royal van, charged with
ardour; and Norfolk would have been exposed to a danger similar to that from
which Oxford had just been freed, if, while Oxford was forming the Lancastrian
van into a wedge, Richard had not arrayed anew that of the Yorkists —placing
thin lines in front, and supporting them by dense masses.
Both armies having thus been reformed, proceeded with the battle. But it
soon appeared that, however equal the antagonistic forces might be in number,
the zeal was all on the side of the Red Rose. Moreover, Northumberland, who
commanded the rear—one-third of Richard’s army—refrained from taking any part
whatever in the conflict; and futile proved the King’s expectation of aid from
the potent northern Earl.
The battle had not been long joined, ere the field wore an aspect most
unfavourable to Richard. Norfolk, indeed, fought resolutely in the van; but,
outnumbered and hard-pressed by Oxford and Stanley, he was slowly but surely
giving way; and the men composing the King’s division exerted themselves
faintly, and exhibited little of such enthusiasm as might have carried them on
to victory against superior numbers.
Amid the smoke of artillery and the roar of battle, Sir Robert Brackenbury
and Sir Walter Hungerford met face to face.
“Traitor” exclaimed Brackenbury, “what caused you to desert me?”
“I will not answer you with words,” said Hungerford, taking aim at the head
of his ancient comrade.
The blow would have been fatal; but Brackenbury received its force on
his shield, which was shivered in protecting its owner’s head; and Hungerford,
perceiving bis antagonist’s defenceless plight, chivalrously declared that
they should fight on equal terms and handed his own shield to a squire. The
combat was then renewed; and both Knights exerted their utmost strength. At
length, Brackenbury’s helmet was battered to pieces; and his adversary’s weapon
inflicted a severe wound. “Spare his life, brave Hungerford,” cried Sir Thomas Bourchier, coming up; “he was our friend, and he may be so
again.” But it was already too late to save the wounded Knight. As Bourchier spoke, Brackenbury fell lifeless to the ground.
In another part of the field, met Sir John Byron and Sir Gorvase Clifton. The two Knights were neighbours in the
county of Nottingham; and, before embracing opposite sides, had made a singular
contract. Byron, who donned the Red Rose, agreed, in the event of Richmond
being victor, to intercede for the heirs of Clifton; and Clifton, who assumed
the White Rose, promised, in case of Richard’s success, to exercise his utmost
influence on behalf of Byron’s family. Byron, seeing Clifton fall, instantly
pressed forward to save him; and, sustaining his wounded friend on a shield,
entreated him to surrender. Clifton opened his eyes, recognised his neighbour,
and recalled their agreement to memory. “All is over with me,” he said,
faintly; “but remember your promise”. Byron pressed the hand of Clifton, as the
Yorkist warrior expired; and he kept the promise so faithfully that Clifton’s
estates remained in possession of his children.
About this time, Richard rode out of the battle, and dismounted to
quench his thirst at a spring of water on Amy on Hill, now covered with a
pyramid of rough stones, indicated by Dr. Parr’s
inscription in Roman letters, and pointed out to strangers as “King Richard’s
Well”, and Catesby and other of the usurper’s friends, believing defeat
inevitable, brought one of those fleet steeds which, on such occasions, seldom
failed their riders.
“The field is lost, but the King can yet be saved,” they said, as the
war-cries, reaching their ears through the roar of bombards and the din of
battle, intimated that Oxford and Stanley were over-matching the Howards, and
that, ere long, the shout would be “Richmond and victory.”
“Mount, my lord,” said Catesby, “I hold it time for you to fly.
Stanley’s dints are so sore, that against them can no man stand. Fly! Another
day we may worship again”
“Fly” exclaimed Richard. “By St. Paul, not one foot. I will either make
an end of all battles this day or finish my life on this field. I will die King
of England”
His determination thus expressed, Richard mounted his charger, hastily
closed his visor, and again faced the field. By this time it appeared that the day would be decided by the vans. Richard, not altogether
willing to stake his crown on the generalship of the
Howards, spurred from his right centre to see how the conflict went; and, at
the same moment, Richmond, surrounded by his guard, left his main body, and
rode forward to encourage the men under Oxford and Stanley. Thus it happened that the King and the Welsh Earl came in sight of each other; and
no sooner was Richard aware of Richmond being within reach, than the temptation
to single out the hostile leader became too strong to be resisted.
And never during the battles of the Roses—neither in the mist at Barnet,
nor in the sunshine at Tewkesbury—had Richard made himself so formidable as in
that hour. With his lance in rest, and followed by choice warriors, he dashed towards
the spot where the banner borne by Sir William Brandon indicated Richmond’s
presence. The white war-steed, the gorgeous armour, the crown of ornament,
rendered Richard conspicuous as he spurred forward; and fierce was the onset, he
charged among the knights who clustered around the Lancastrian chief. Vain were
all efforts to bar his progress, Richmond’s standard was trampled in the dust;
Sir William Brandon, pierced with a mortal wound, fell never more to rise ; Sir John Cheyney, throwing his bulky form in
Richard’s path, was hurled from his horse; and the Welsh Earl, all unused to
the game of carnage, was in the utmost peril. His destruction, indeed, appeared
inevitable. The Lancastrian warriors, however, spurred to the rescue, and shielded
the adventurer’s head hand from the usurper’s hand.
But most doubtful was now the issue of the conflict. The desperate
charge of Richard had created a panic among his foes; and there was some
prospect of Richmond having to choose between dying bravely and flying cravenly,
when a circumstance, not unexpected, changed the aspect of the field.
Sir William Stanley had hitherto remained a spectator of the fight
Having ever been a devoted Yorkist, perhaps the gallant knight, hating Richard
as he did, was not eager to draw the sword for Lancaster against a Yorkist,
even though a usurper. When, however, Richard’s triumph was likely to result
from his inaction, Stanley came with a shout to Richmond’s aid; and this
accession of force to the Lancastrians so completely turned the scale, that no
chance of victory remained for Richard; unless, indeed, the chief of the Percies should lead the tall Danes of the north to the
rescue.
But Stanley charged on, and the conflict became a rout; and the Yorkist
warriors, attacked with energy, gave way in a body; and, still, Northumberland
maintained his position, and, having ordered his soldiers to throw down their
weapons, stood motionless while fliers and pursuers swept by.
Lord Lovel and other Yorkists of name made their escape. But, as at
Barnet and Tewkesbury, so also at Bosworth, men of high spirit disdained to fly
or yield. John Howard, Duke of Norfolk, fighting in the van, redeemed a mean
life by a not inglorious death; Walter, Lord Ferrers, died with courage, as he had
lived with honour; and Sir Richard Ratcliffe partially wiped away his disgrace,
by falling bravely for the Sovereign whom be had too
faithfully served. Lord Surrey and Sir William Catesby were taken on the field.
Northumberland quietly surrendered.
Richard now felt that he was face to face with his destiny; and, in the
hour of defeat and despair, he did not shrink from the fate he had defied.
Indeed, the valour he displayed in his last moments excited admiration even in
adversaries. Rising in his stirrups, as he saw his standard-bearer went down,
and shouting loudly that he had been betrayed, the
usurper spurred into the midst of his foes, and made his sword ring on helmet
and shield. Not till unhorsed did he cease to fight desperately. Even then, his
shield broken, his armour bruised, and the crown of ornament hewn from his
helmet, Richard continued to struggle. At length, exhausted with fatigue, and
pierced with many wounds, he died disdainfully, with the word “Treason” on his
tongue.
Ere the warriors of the Red Rose had time to moralise over the fall of
the last Plantagenet King, Richmond, unwounded in the dreadful scene with which
the conflict closed and feeling like a man saved from imminent peril of
drowning, threw himself on his knees and returned thanks to God for victory. Then he rose and
expressed gratitude to those who had aided him in his enterprise; and Reginald
Bray, bringing Richard’s crown from a bush, on which that ornament had been
hung, handed it to Lord Stanley: and Stanley placed it on the victor’s head;
and the soldiers cried, “Long live Henry the Seventh;” and the monarchy of the
Plantagenets ceased to exist.
CHAPTER LI.
AFTER BOSWORTH.
When the battle of Bosworth was over; and Richmond, with John De Vere, and Jasper of
Pembroke, and the Stanleys, including Lord Strange, stood around the mangled
corpse of Richard, the prisoners were brought before the victor. Among them
appeared William Catesby, and the Earls of Surrey and Northumberland. Northumberland
was readily received into favour. Surrey, when asked how he durst bear arms for
the usurper, answered—“If the Parliament of England
set the crown upon a bush, I would fight for it.” Richmond was softened by this
speech, and Surrey was spared to fight for the Tudors at Flodden, and to wear
the ducal coronet of the Mowbrays. Catesby, less
fortunate than the two Earls, was summarily executed. Dr. Hutton, who, according to tradition, was summarily executed was one of “the Huttons of that Ilk,” sought safety north of the Tweed.
From Bosworth, Richmond marched to Leicester; and thither, covered with blood and dust,
hung across a horse, behind a pursuivant-alarms, the feet dangling on one side
and the hands on the other, the body of King Richard was carried. As the
mangled corpse was conveyed over Bow Bridge, the head dashed violently against
the stone which Richard had, the day before, struck with his spur—“thus,” say the old chroniclers, “fulfilling the prediction
of the wise woman.”
After being exposed to view in the Town Hall of Leicester, Richard’s
body was buried in the Grey Friars’ Church; and
Richmond slowly advanced towards London. At Hornsey Wood he was met and welcomed
by the Mayor and Aldermen, all clad in violet. Having been escorted to St.
Paul’s, he returned thanks to God for
his victory, and offered three standards upon the high altar.
After some delay Richmond appointed the 30th October, 1485, for his coronation; and on that day, the old Archbishop of
Canterbury anointed the adventurer, as, two years earlier, he had anointed the
usurper. All the ancient ceremonies were observed; and Richmond availed himself
of the occasion to elevate Lord Stanley to the Earldom of Derby, Sir Edward Courtenay
to the Earldom of Devon, and Jasper Tudor to the Dukedom of Bedford—the old
Duchess, Elizabeth Woodville’s mother, having gone to her account at the time
when peace and prosperity surrounded the throne of her son-in-law, and when
William Caxton was setting up his printing press under the patronage of the
White Rose.
A week after Richmond’s coronation, Parliament assembled at
Westminster. Richard’s adherents were declared traitors; while De Vere, De Roos, Beaumont, Welles, and others were restored; and the
heir of the Cliffords, who had passed his youth in
the garb of a shepherd, emerged at thirty from the fells of Cumberland, and
lived to lead the men of the Craven to Flodden Field.
But of all who suffered during the Yorkist domination, no one was so
harshly treated as the widow of “The Stout Earl,” who fell, on Gladsmuir Heath, fighting for the ancient rights and
liberties of Englishmen. After having heard of Warwick’s death, the Countess took refuge in the sanctuary of Beaulieu, and there
remained in poverty. On Richmond’s accession, however, an Act of Parliament
was passed, to restore her manors. But this, it would seem, was done that she
might convey them to the King; and only that of Sutton was allotted for her
maintenance.
From the day when Edward, Prince of Wales, perished in his teens at
Tewkesbury, Margaret of Anjou ceased to influence the controversy with which
her name is inseparably associated.
Margaret lived
several years after regaining her freedom; and, deprived of the crown which her accomplishments had won, the Lancastrian queen wandered sadly from place to place, as if driven by her perturbed spirit to seek something that was no longer to be found.
Tortured by
avenging memory, embittered by unavailing regret, and weary of life, Margaret
of Anjou summed up her experience of the world when she wrote in the breviary
of her niece, “Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.” At length, in August, 1480, the disconsolate queen, after reaching the age of twoscore and ten, breathed her last at Damprierre, and was buried by the side of her father in the Cathedral of Angers.
CHAPTER LII
THE UNION OF THE TWO ROSES.
At the
time of the battle of Bosworth the eldest daughter of Edward of York and
Elizabeth Woodville was immured in the Castle of Sheriff Hutton, within the
walls of which her cousin, Edward Plantagenet, was also secure. After
Richmond's victory both were removed to London: Elizabeth of York by high and
mighty dames, to be restored to the arms of her mother; Edward of Warwick by a
band of hireling soldiers, to be delivered into the hands of a jailer and
imprisoned in the Tower.
It soon appeared that Richmond was not
particularly eager to wed the Yorkist princess. He was not, however, to escape
a marriage. When Parliament met, and the King sat on the throne, and the Commons
presented a grant of tonnage and poundage
for life, they plainly requested that he would marry Elizabeth of York; and the
lords, spiritual and temporal, bowed to indicate their concurrence in the
prayer. Richmond, perceiving that there was no way by which to retreat, replied
that he was ready and willing to take the Princess to wife.
The marriage of Henry Tudor and Elizabeth of York was fixed for the
18th of January, 486; and the ceremony was performed at Westminster. The
primate, soon to be laid in his grave and succeeded by the Bishop of Ely,
officiated on the occasion; and everything went joyously. The knights and
nobles of England exhibited their bravery at a grand tournament; the citizens
of London feasted and danced ; the populace sang songs and lighted bonfires;
the claims of the King of Portugal, the heir of John pf Gaunt, and the
existence of Edward Plantagenet, Earl of Warwick, the heir of Lionel of
Clarence, were conveniently forgotten; and the marriage of a spurious
Lancastrian prince and an illegitimate daughter of York was celebrated by
poets and chroniclers as “ The Union of the two Roses”.
THE WAR OF THE ROSES |
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SECOND PART |
THIRD PART |
FOURTH PART |
FIFTH PART |