THE CLOSE OF THE MIDDLE AGES
CHAPTER XI.
ENGLAND: THE LANCASTRIAN KINGS, 1399—1461
The
revolution of 1399 placed on the English throne a man in several ways
well-fitted to rule. Henry of Lancaster was handsome, brave, and energetic; his
knightly exploits in the lists and against the heathen, his liberality and his
affable manners had made him widely popular abroad and at home; he was besides
a devout churchman, free from any taint of his father’s anticlericalism, an
accomplished musician, and a discriminating patron of letters. His education,
for his time and class, was also considerable; from surviving records in his
hand we know that he could write both French and English and on occasion quote
a Latin tag; while he was famed for the ease with which he argued difficult
problems in casuistry with the scholars of his court. There can be no doubt,
therefore, that he was endowed with many royal graces; unfortunately the tasks
before him demanded sterner qualities than these, qualities such as patience
and circumspection which he did not possess. The office which he had so lightly
seized was passing through a crisis; yet he shewed little appreciation of its
difficulties. Of one of them in particular, the inadequacy of the royal revenue,
he was so far from being aware that on his march south from Ravenspur he had
made extravagant promises which he could not possibly keep as king. During the
fourteenth century, the monarchy had carelessly wasted its resources. Not only
the machinery of the Exchequer, but the whole administrative system had been
dislocated to pay for expensive wars. It was the first duty of a prudent
usurper to restore and to maintain financial stability. Hardly less urgent was
the need to reassert the lost authority of the Crown in local government. Here
the policy of allowing the maintenance of order and the administration of
justice to be engrossed by private persons—as marked a feature of “bastard” as
of true feudalism—had already proceeded to disastrous lengths. Lack of justice
was becoming one of the most fruitful sources of popular unrest. It is to the
credit of Richard II that he had realised these dangers, but the weapons with
which he had chosen to meet them had been unwisely used and were in any case blunted
by his failure. To levy arbitrary taxes and to combat private armies by
enlisting a private army of his own required more tact than he was master of.
The violence and uncertainty of his fiscal methods and the lax discipline which
he permitted his retainers contributed largely to his downfall. His successor
was pledged to find other means; yet, in spite of frequent warnings, Henry did
nothing. Under his rule the royal debt was swollen to unmanageable proportions
by a series of annual deficits; hardly a year passed without fresh evidence of
administrative weakness, while the many baronial rebellions of the reign derived
support and justification from the fact of widespread discontent. Those who had
looked for much from the change of kings were quickly disillusioned. It was not
that they had expected the impossible; the fault lay with the man. In so far as
Henry IV fell short of Henry VII in parsimony, caution, and reforming zeal, he was
unfitted for his task. In other respects, he was not an unsuccessful king.
Tenacious of his rights, unflagging, until disease incapacitated him, in his
attention to public business, tireless in his efforts to defeat his many
enemies, he managed to retain the throne which he owed to Richard’s errors
rather than his own deserts. But because he took too narrow a view of his
responsibilities, his failings outweighed his merits, and if his dynasty was
shortlived and its end inglorious the blame in the first place must be attached
to him.
For
these reasons it is impossible to regard the revolution of 1399 as a landmark
in English history. Its outstanding importance was as a precedent. A dynasty
with a weak hereditary title had usurped the throne; it had merely been the
business of a popular assembly to ratify what had been achieved by force and to
recognise a de facto king, one indeed who never fully abandoned his first
intention of claiming England by conquest. This was a lesson easily learned,
and it is not surprising that it was often imitated during the coining century.
But otherwise—except for the persecution of Lollardy by the State—there is
little to distinguish the period after 1399 from that before it. Under the Lancastrians
the same constitutional battles were fought as under Edward III and Richard II;
this was inevitable, since Henry IV came in, like Charles II, “without
conditions”, and nothing was settled about the powers and composition of the
council or the control of royal expenditure. Already in the first parliament of
the reign, the old issues were joined; in the commons the extravagance of the
new king’s grants were criticised; and while Archbishop Arundel put the
traditional baronial case for government not by “the voluntary purpose or
singular opinion of the king”, but by “the advice, counsel, and consent” of
“the honourable, wise, and discreet persons of his realm”, Henry was at pains
to accept for himself all the liberties which his predecessors had enjoyed. Richard
doubtless had erred, but that was no reason why the rights of the Crown should
be diminished. On this point Henry took his stand, and was so far from yielding
that he risked civil war before at the very close of his life he finally gained
his way. From the first he revealed a determination to rule, as Richard had
done, by the help of servants of his own choosing, and to resist any attempt to
impose upon him that aristocratic or “natural” council which was to be the
principal aim of baronial policy. Lancastrian knights like John Cheyne and
Thomas Erpingham, esquires like John Doreward and John Norbury, clerks like
John Searle and John Prophete, were the men in whom he put his trust. In this he
was assisted by divisions in the ranks of the baronage, personal feuds and
jealousies arising out of the late king’s attempt to pack the upper house.
There was little chance of common action so long as the victors of 1399 only
desired to settle old scores with the Appellants of 1397. At first Henry succeeded
in protecting Richard’s favourites from the vengeance of their enemies,
inspired perhaps by a wish to preserve some counterpoise to those powerful
families which had helped him to attain the throne—the Percies, the Nevilles,
and the Arundels. If this was his object, he failed. In January 1400, fear
drove the Appellants to risk all in an ill-planned rebellion. Richard’s tyranny
was not, however, yet forgotten and many of his friends now met their deaths at
the hands of the common people. Kent and Salisbury perished at Cirencester,
Huntingdon at Pleshey, and Despenser at Bristol; many men of inferior rank were
afterwards executed by the royal command. The alarm this outbreak excited was
sufficient to seal the fate of Richard II; by the end of February he was dead
at Pontefract in circumstances which leave little doubt that he was murdered.
The
first attempt at counter-revolution had failed; there still remained the
possibility of armed interference from abroad. Although England had
demonstrated her loyalty to the new dynasty, France and Scotland were in no
hurry to extend their recognition. But the fact that both kingdoms had their
own internal difficulties prevented them from making any serious effort to
oppose the English revolution. Richard’s French queen was in Henry’s custody,
and the government of Charles VI had therefore to proceed cautiously until she
was safe. The Scots, however, had not the same motives for restraint. Their
truce with England expired at Michaelmas 1399, and under cover of half-hearted
negotiations for its extension Scottish raids over the border recommenced. On
hearing this, Henry told parliament on 10 November that he proposed to invade
Scotland in person. Yet it was not until Robert III had made it clear that he
had no genuine intention of coming to terms that on 14 August 1400 the English
marched into the Lowlands with the king at their head. A fortnight later, after
failing before Edinburgh Castle, they were obliged to beat an ignominious retreat.
This expensive fiasco brought peace no nearer, but when in August 1402 the
Scots in their turn invaded England, it fell to the Percies to regain the
credit which Henry had lost, by defeating their army decisively at Homildon
Hill. Four earls were among the prisoners. Domestic strife in Scotland
prevented any attempt being made to avenge this disaster. Finally, the capture
of Robert’s heir, James, at sea on his way to France in 1406 put an end to all
further danger to England from the north. The French were not so easily
disposed of. In the first place Henry was obliged to surrender Isabelle without
receiving very much in exchange. Preliminaries of peace were signed at
Leulighen near Calais on 3 August 1401, but many details were left over for discussion;
and although definite hostilities were for the time avoided, the conversations
dragged on until the French saw in Henry’s troubles at home a favourable
opportunity for adding to his embarrassments.
For
no sooner had he returned from his Scottish expedition than he was greeted by news
of a Welsh rising. Its leader, Owen Glyn Dwr (Glendower), was a descendant of
native princes and a landowner of some importance in North Wales. It is possible
that he had been denied legal redress for wrongs done to him by the king’s friend,
Lord Grey of Ruthin, but whatever the cause of his disaffection, his countrymen
responded with enthusiasm when he had himself proclaimed Prince of Wales at
Glyn Dyfrdwy on 16 September 1400. During the following week Ruthin and several
other English settlements were plundered and burnt. An ugly situation was saved
by the prompt action of a Shropshire magnate, Hugh Burnell, who collected the
local levies and forced the rebels to take refuge in the mountains. By the time
the king reached Shrewsbury all occasion for anxiety seemed over, and Henry
contented himself with a progress round the outskirts of Snowdonia. But the
lull was deceptive. Next year Glyn Dwr appeared in South Wales, and as time
passed it became evident that he had inspired a genuine national revival which
it would take long years and much campaigning to overcome. In October 1403 a
French fleet made a descent on Kidwelly; although the damage done was slight,
the way was prepared for a Franco-Welsh alliance. Had Henry had undisputed
command of the narrow seas, this development might have left him unmoved, but
in fact he was badly prepared for a maritime war. Any advantage which an
enlarged navy might have given him was thrown away when he permitted—perhaps
even encouraged—his subjects to prey on neutral shipping, for this immediately
involved him in disputes with Brittany, Flanders, and the Hanseatic League.
Between 1400 and 1403 English privateers wrought great havoc in the Channel,
capturing scores of rich prizes and making themselves feared and hated from Danzig
to Finisterre. Their most active captains were Mark Mixtow of Fowey, John
Hawley of Dartmouth, and Henry Pay of Poole, but even the royal admirals were not
above taking a part in the game. This inevitably led to reprisals and to the
persecution of English merchant communities abroad. In a short time the narrow
seas were the scene of a bitter privateering war. Buccaneers of various nationalities
from bases on the coast of Brittany threatened the principal trade routes. The
English ports themselves were not safe from attack. In August 1403 Plymouth was
burnt by the Counts of La Marche and Vendome; in the following December a
landing was made on the Isle of Wight by a force under the command of the (bunt
of St Pol; and during the summer of 1405 considerable damage was done at Looc,
Poole, and elsewhere by a Castilian, Don Pero Nino. All this time the pretence
of a truce was maintained between England and France, surviving even when in
July 1404 Charles VI promised to give military assistance to Glyn Dwr against
“Henry of Lancaster”. French help was long in coming and, though it came at
last in August 1405, it proved of small use to the Welsh. The allies advanced
into England as far as Woodbury Hill near Worcester, but they were obliged to retreat
when Henry threw hi in self into the city. Although the back of Welsh
resistance was not yet broken and the struggle continued for some years after
the failure of the French invasion, it was only a question of time before the English
were successful. Under Prince Henry, the king’s eldest son, they recovered
castle after castle, and when at length Harlech fell in 1409 Glyn Dwr again became
a fugitive in the woods and mountains. Meanwhile, as a result of the murder of
the Duke of Orleans in 1407, France was rapidly falling into anarchy, and at
the same time peace was being restored with the maritime powers. After long
negotiations a commercial truce was arranged with Flanders in March 1407. This
was followed in July by a similar agreement with Brittany, and finally at the
beginning of 1408 friendly relations were re-established with the Hanseatic
League. Europe had been forced to accept the house of Lancaster.
A
usurper’s greatest enemies are often those to whom he is most indebted for his
success. As the repentant kingmakers of 1399 discovered, Henry’s gratitude had
its limits; he proposed to rule as well as reign. The ease with which one revolution
had been achieved fascinated and demoralised the greater barons, and it was not
long before the youth of Richard’s heir, Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March, began
to suggest to the more ambitious and discontented of them the advantages which
might follow for those who placed him on the throne. To the Percies, allied with
the Mortimers by marriage, even a Percy king did not seem an impossible dream.
From a situation full of danger, Henry could derive one consolation. This preoccupation
with treason rendered the nobility incapable of a common policy. Those who
should have led the constitutional opposition in parliament were busy plotting
isolated rebellion in the country. This gave the king his chance. So long as
common advantage was abandoned for private ambition, he could hold his own by playing
one family off against another. But for the ancient feud between Percy and
Neville his cause might have been lost more than once during the first half of
his reign. One after another the plots against him misfired. That of 1403
probably came nearest to success. Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland, his brother
Thomas, Earl of Worcester, and his son the famous Hotspur, had been amply
rewarded for their share in the revolution, but they were dissatisfied at not
being allowed to ransom the prisoners they had taken at Homildon Hill. If they
had reasonable grievances, they made no attempt to obtain a hearing for them in
parliament. Instead, asserting the king’s faithlessness to the oath which, they
said, he had sworn to them at Doncaster in 1399, only to claim his duchy of
Lancaster, they took the field at the beginning of July 1403. Hotspur raised
the standard of revolt at Chester on the tenth, and, followed by men from
Cheshire and the March to whom the name of Richard was still dear, set out with
his uncle, Worcester, to surprise the young Prince of Wales at Shrewsbury. The
king heard the news at Nottingham on the 13th, and with all the speed of which
he was capable in an emergency, hastened to forestall them. He entered Shrewsbury
on the 20th, and on the following day defeated the rebels outside the town both
before they could make a junction with their Welsh allies and before the old
earl could come to their assistance from the north. Hotspur died fighting;
Worcester and other captured leaders were executed after the battle. Northumberland,
threatened by a Neville army, drew off, pretending that he had taken no part in
the rebellion. On 11 August he submitted to the king at York, and was promised
a pardon in return for the surrender of his castles. His constables
nevertheless refused to admit the royal officers, and he seems to have been
kept in custody until he was brought to parliament on 6 February 1404. The lords
showed their sympathy with his designs by refusing to convict him of treason;
his fault, they said, was nothing more than a trespass against the Earl of
Westmorland, and the king was obliged to set him free.
If
this was parliament’s attitude, it is not surprising that fresh insurrections
shortly took place. In February 1405 a successful attempt was made to carry off
the Mortimer children from Windsor, but the plot was discovered and they were
recaptured at Cheltenham before they had time to reach safety in Wales. Several
lords were implicated, including the Duke of York and Thomas Mowbray, the Earl
Marshall; even the Archbishop of Canterbury did not escape suspicion. The duke
was imprisoned and his lands confiscated, the earl pardoned, and the archbishop’s
protestations of innocence accepted. Northumberland, although he held aloof
from this conspiracy, was meanwhile preparing a new enterprise. On 28 February
he entered into an agreement with Glyn Dwr and Edmund Mortimer the elder, uncle
of the Earl of March, to divide the kingdom between them. The Earl Marshal] and
Lord Bardolf consented to join him and the mild and saintly Richard Scrope, Archbishop
of York, was also drawn in. The latter’s proclamation aimed at giving the
rebellion a popular basis. But again the rebels were too slow in massing their
forces. The Earl of Westmorland captured Scrope and Mowbray by treachery at
Shipton Moor near York on 29 May, while the king was still on his way north.
When he arrived, he was in no mood for mercy and in spite of the prayers of Archbishop
Arundel, who had followed him, he ordered the execution of the captives. After
a hurried and irregular trial by the Earl of Arundel and Sir Thomas Beaufort,
they were beheaded under the walls of York on 8 June. It says much for the
strength of Henry’s position that it was so little shaken by the execution of
an archbishop. Pope Innocent VII was too weak to avenge his servant; so low was
his credit among Englishmen that it was thought that his mouth had been stopped
with gold. But if God’s vicar was powerless, men believed that it was God’s
direct judgment on the murderer of a saint that immediately afterwards Henry
was stricken by a mysterious disease. From 9 to 16 June he lay ill at Ripon, we
are told with leprosy. Whatever it was, it was not this, for he was soon
healthy again and able to set about the systematic reduction of the Percy
castles. The royal artillery proved irresistible and by the end of August all
the rebel garrisons had submitted. The earl and Bardolf fled to Scotland at the
king’s approach. From here they made one last desperate attempt early in 1408.
But the weather was against them; it was the coldest winter in living memory
and, after a futile effort to raise the north, they were brought to bay and
slain by Sir Thomas Rokeby, sheriff of York, at Bramham Moor on 19 February.
With them died the selfish policy for which they had stood. Its chief effect
had been to paralyse the endeavours of the more moderate among their peers to
criticise and control the royal administration. Freed from this embarrassment
the loyal majority were shortly to find a leader in the Prince of Wales. But it
was not until he had mastered the Welsh problem, not, that is to say, until
1409, that Henry of Monmouth was able to devote his energy to politics. For more
than half the reign, therefore, the main brunt of opposition fell upon the parliamentary
knights, who did not prove themselves altogether unworthy of the trust.
Custom,
as well as their own reluctance to assume new burdens, for long excluded the
commons as a body from any active share in the government of the country,
although it must be remembered that one or two of their members were generally
of the king’s council. But nevertheless the lower house was being driven by its
wish to restrain the royal extravagance into adopting a more aggressive policy
than that of mere criticism; it claimed and was beginning to exercise an
effective control in certain administrative matters which was far from welcome
to the king. Its power was derived in the last resort from its command over
supply. Henry could no longer hope to “live of his own”; he had begun his reign
by repudiating the illegal exactions of his predecessor; therefore, so long as
he was refused a grant of taxation for life equal to his needs, he was bound to
come regularly to parliament for money. His opponents’ policy of making supply
conditional upon the redress of grievances, though he might reject it in
principle as he did in 1401, was in practice very difficult to circumvent. Thus
the commons were able to impose conditions upon the expenditure of their grants
and to attempt at least in questions of finance to secure the responsibility of
the executive to parliament. The progress of their demands can be traced in the
early parliaments of the century, reaching their culmination in that of 1406.
Each step was contested or evaded by the king, whose chief advantage lay in the
want of continuity between successive parliaments. But it is the mere existence
of this initiative on the part of the commons, premature and unfruitful though
in the main it was, which makes the period one of great constitutional
importance.
Controversy,
following traditional lines, slowly developed over the composition and functions
of the king’s council. At the beginning of the reign Henry had been tacitly
permitted to appoint his advisers without any formal nomination in parliament.
In spite of this he displayed a marked unwillingness to submit his acts to
their approval. When in 1399 he was petitioned by the commons to make no grant save
by the advice of his council, he returned a temporising answer “saving his
liberty”, and during the first year of his reign many minor offices were filled
and pensions awarded upon the royal authority alone. In 1401 the commons
returned to the attack with a request that they might know the names of the
king’s councillors, and that these might then be charged in their presence to
hold office until the next parliament. Although there were good precedents for
this request, it was, it seems, refused by the advice of the council itself.
The opposition was more successful three years later when on 1 March 1404 after
a troubled session the king announced that “at the strong instances made at
divers times in this parliament by the commons, he had ordained certain lords
and others to be of his great and continual council.” The list contained no new
names and the point of this surrender is lost if it is regarded as in any sense
a change of ministry. Unfortunately, the considerable speculation to which it
has given rise in modern times receives no assistance from contemporary
sources, since these are uniformly silent as to the object of the commons in
making this demand. But it is clear that they attached far greater importance
to the act of publication than to the contents of this list, which must indeed
have been already well-known to them, and it is therefore not unreasonable to
assume that their purpose was rather to underline the doctrine that the council
was answerable to parliament than to impose on the king men who were not of his
own choosing. The direct assault on Henry’s freedom of action had recently
failed; his critics may well have hoped to gain their object by fastening
responsibility for his mistakes upon those whom he had publicly acknowledged as
his advisers. The fact that they had in impeachment a ready-made procedure for
dealing with unpopular ministers must have added point to their claim. How this
was circumvented by the king will shortly be seen.
On
the other hand, the financial arrangements made in the first parliament of 1404
succeeded at least temporarily in curbing the royal power. For some time there
had been serious grumbling al the prodigal expenditure of the government and
especially of the household. Now it was said that the knights and officials of
the king’s court had since 1399 enormously enriched themselves at the public
expense. The resentful commons expressed their surprise that the revenues were
so suddenly diminished and, having characterised the treasurer’s proposals for
meeting this deficit as “most outrageou”s, for some days obstinately refused to
make the necessary grants. The king’s retort was to keep them in session until
they changed their minds. At length, worn out by this treatment, they
surrendered so far as to vote an extraordinary tax of one shilling in the pound
on land-rents. But so anxious were they that this should not be accepted as a
precedent that they made it a condition that all record of their vote and of
the subsequent collection of the tax should be afterwards destroyed. Further, determined
to safeguard the proceeds from being squandered in the usual way, the commons
insisted on appointing four special treasurers to control expenditure under the
direct supervision of the council and later to render an account of their
office to parliament.1 The king consented, but it is said that, though the
necessary documents were prepared, they were not sealed when parliament was dissolved.
Nevertheless, it was the existence of these four men—three London merchants and
a clerk from Rutland—standing between the king and his normal carelessness in
matters of finance, which made necessary the early summons of another parliament.
In the summer of 1404, Henry withdrew to his Lancastrian estates in the north
midlands, whence a large number of warrants were issued par commandement du Roy without the advice of the council. He was so short of money that on 5 July payment
on all pensions and annuities was suspended. At a great council at Lichfield on
25 August it was decided to hold a parliament at Coventry on 6 October. The
king made no secret of his determination to convoke an assembly from which all
troublesome elements had been excluded; for not only did he forbid the return
of any lawyers but actually pointed out to the sheriffs those whom they were to
have elected. In view of this, it is not surprising that next year the rebels
included in their manifesto a demand for the free election of members as in
former times. Henry had undoubtedly chosen his ground well, since Coventry was
in the heart of his private duchy and undisturbed by those influences for which
the capital had already begun to be famous. As the proceedings soon demonstrated,
it was his intention to reverse the acts of the previous parliament. In the
first place the council was not reappointed; in the second, the four
independent treasurers were replaced by two royal servants, Lord Furnival and
Sir John Pelham, the former of whom became shortly afterwards Treasurer of England.
But though the commons were timid and deplored their inexperience, they were by
no means uncritical. Their suggestions for financial reform, while
comprehensive enough, were scarcely practicable, and the fact that they were
too sweeping gave the king the excuse he desired for shelving them. An equally
rash attack upon the wealth of the clergy brought down upon the commons the
abuse of Archbishop Arundel, so that in the end they were obliged to drop their
proposals and to vote instead a very substantial grant. When parliament broke
up, Henry might well have congratulated himself on having outmanoeuvred his
opponents.
His
success was, however, illusory. In spite of the liberality with which he had
been treated, the expenses of the next critical year drained the exchequer, and
the government was hard put to it to maintain forces in the field sufficient at
the same time to cope with foreign attack and domestic rebellion. Its unpaid
creditors were becoming impatient; it was losing the confidence of the people,
and when it essayed to borrow money, the response was so disappointing that by
the end of 1405 there was no alternative but another parliament. It seems that
Henry attempted to repeat his previous triumph, for on 21 December writs were
despatched summoning members to Coventry for 15 February. But the meeting-place
was changed, first to Gloucester and at the last moment to Westminster, for
reasons which leave little doubt that the Londoners, supported by certain
members of the council, brought pressure to bear upon the king. This was to
prove a costly change of plan for the government. It was probably not
unconnected with the estrangement from the regime of a powerful but moderate
group of councillors of which the three Beauforts, sons of John of Gaunt by
Katherine Swynford, became the active nucleus. In February 1405 Sir Thomas
Beaufort was removed from his post as Admiral of the North to make way for the
king's second son, Thomas, a youth of eighteen years, who was later prominent,
as the rival of his elder brother and the enemy of the Beaufort family. Il is
clear from the demand for the better keeping of the seas, brought forward early
in the new parliament and urged insistently by the English merchant community,
that this appointment was not popular. It was quickly followed by the
resignation of Henry Beaufort, the ablest of the brothers, who had been
Chancellor since 1403. This foreshadowed the emergence of an opposition party
within the council itself, loyal to the dynasty but critical of the king’s
methods, which was soon to make its importance felt. The balance of political
forces was therefore altering when on 1 March 1406 the estates met at
Westminster and the government came face to face with a hostile and determined
house of commons.
The
“Long Parliament" of 1406 lasted with two adjournments until 22 December.
It was characterised throughout by the activity and outspokenness of the king's
critics, and its great length was due solely to their obstinate refusal to vote
taxes until the king had conceded their demands. The keynote was struck when on
23 March the Speaker made a solemn request for “good and abundant governance.
This somewhat colourless phrase, frequently repeated in the debates which
followed, embodied all the aspirations of the reforming party, and the zeal with
which the commons sought to give it a practical meaning justifies Stubbs's
description of this parliament as “an exponent of the most advanced principles
of medieval constitutional life in England”. Very little time seems to have
been spent in condemning the past shortcomings of the government, though the
extravagance and inefficiency of the civil service came in for some very
pointed criticisms. But while the greatest efforts were devoted to safeguarding
the future, in one respect Henry’s former good resolutions were not forgotten.
In 1404 he had promised that the special treasurers should present their
accounts to parliament for audit. He was now asked to fulfil this promise. At
first he gave an uncompromising reply: “Kings were not wont to render account”;
and every sort of obstruction was resorted to by ministers. But knowing how
hard pressed he was for money, the commons remained obdurate; their firmness
was rewarded when on 19 June, in return for a slight increase for one year in
the rates at which poundage might be levied, they were allowed an audit by
parliament. This was a notable victory; not only did it encourage the opposition
to continue the struggle but it was a clear vindication of the policy towards
which it was feeling its way, the policy of appropriating supplies and of
holding ministers personally responsible to parliament for their expenditure.
It
may well have been this demonstration of its value which now prompted the
commons to extend the use of their principle by enforcing it not merely in the
case of an extraordinary tax but in that of all taxes, and not merely upon
treasurers appointed ad hoc but also upon the regular officers of the Crown.
With this in view they were far from satisfied by the king’s action on 22 May
in nominating a council in parliament, but began to demand stricter terms of
reference. Yet Henry, giving his ill-health as an excuse, had already made one
very important concession. It had long been his habit to make his wishes known
directly to the chancery and exchequer by means of letters under the signet and
bills countersigned by one of his chamberlains; he was thus able to
short-circuit the council and to incur expenditure without its supervision. Now
he agreed to submit all such direct warrants to the council for endorsement,
only reserving for himself the right to pardon criminals and to appoint to
offices and benefices which were actually void. These reservations, it will be
noticed, involved no power to put fresh charges on the revenue. But although such
an arrangement would have contented parliament in 1399, it fell very short of
the desires of 1406. At first it seemed as if nothing would soften the extreme
reluctance of the commons to authorise any fresh taxation; in spite of the
king’s obvious intention to prolong parliament until they yielded, it was only
on the night of 22 December, when it was no longer possible for many of the
members to reach their homes by Christmas, that their resolution melted and a
grant was made. It was, however, a grant on conditions,1 and in order that
these conditions might be fulfilled, it was suggested that certain lords who
were still present in parliament and therefore probably members of the council
should bind themselves to refund out of their own pockets any part of the tax
which should be misappropriated. It is not surprising that these lords joined
with the king in angrily rejecting this revolutionary proposal. But although
the commons were forced to withdraw it, they only capitulated on terms. In the
first place they insisted that councillors should publicly swear to obey
thirty-one articles which were drawn up by parliament for their guidance; and
secondly that this oath, together with the articles, should be put on record on
the parliament roll in order that no doubt should be allowed to exist as to the
terms on which the appointments had been made. Experience had convinced the
government’s critics that they could not rely upon the spontaneous willingness
of the councillors to impose economies on the king unless they in their turn
were obliged to assume public responsibility. How far the commons were from
trusting the king’s good faith is revealed by a petition that at least six of
their number should be present when the roll was engrossed. Immediately
afterwards parliament was dissolved. In it the knights, with little or no help
from the lords and actively obstructed by the council, had secured the humiliation
of the Crown and a recognition of the fact that England was governed not by the
king alone but by a king acting on the advice of a council which was ultimately
accountable to parliament.
In
view of what had happened in 1404 it was not likely that Henry, now that he had
obtained the necessary supplies, would loyally respect the constitutional
scheme which had thus been thrust on him. Once again he compelled a submissive
parliament to loosen his bonds. Ten months after the Long Parliament had
dispersed, another met at Gloucester to reverse its acts. Meanwhile the king had
found a minister who was to serve him faithfully until his death. The
Archbishop of Canterbury had never shown himself over-scrupulous. In 1386 and
after, he had worked with the Appellants to humiliate Richard II. Ten years later
he was ready to betray his former associates to the king until the fate of his
brother, the Earl of Arundel, opened his eyes to Richard’s duplicity. As was generally
the case in that sordid period, he rarely hesitated to put his own interests
before those of his class. At the beginning of the new reign he seemed to stand
with the Percies and other noble supporters of the revolution for the preponderance
of the baronage in the affairs of the realm, and on one occasion at least was,
as we have seen, under suspicion of sharing the Percies’ treasonable designs.
But from 1405 there are signs that he was drawing closer to the king. In this
year he was allowed to have his way in the election of Walden to the vacant see
of London. His desertion of the aristocratic cause may have been due to his
dislike of the Beauforts who were beginning to champion it; perhaps he was
alarmed by the enterprise of the commons and by the envious eyes cast by some
of them on the wealth of the Church; probably personal ambition was the
deciding factor. Already in the parliament of 1406 he had in the name of the
council put obstacles in the way of reform. Shortly afterwards, on 30 January
1407, he accepted office as Chancellor, in the words of an ecclesiastical chronicler,
“against the will of those who loved his honour”. A patent confirming the
legitimation of the Beauforts, dated ten days later, which contained a new
proviso “excepta dignitate regali” been regarded as proof of Arundel’s
hostility to the king’s half-brothers. But there was as yet no open breach.
At
the short parliament which sat in St Peter’s Abbey at Gloucester on 20 October
1407, Arundel as Chancellor was the natural spokesman of the government. His
choice of text for the opening sermon, “Honour the king,” set the tone appropriate
to the meeting. As Henry boasted to a Hanseatic agent, this was to be a
parliament which would do his bidding. Proceedings had scarcely begun before
the Chancellor, anticipating criticism, went in person to the commons’ house to
inform them how the taxes granted in 1406 had been spent. This apparently did
not satisfy the commons, but when on 9 November their Speaker, Thomas Chaucer,
cousin and partisan of the Beauforts, tried to reopen the discussion, Arundel
plainly told him that the council had laboured diligently to perform its duties
and declined henceforward to be bound by the oath which its members had sworn
in the previous December. The king was graciously pleased to excuse them, and
thus the matter was terminated. In the same fashion, an attempt by Chaucer to
raise the question of illegal purveyance was successfully postponed. But before
long the government overstepped wise limits and provoked a display of spirit
even from the feeble commons. On 14 November, in response to a petition, seven
lords—including the Chancellor and the two elder Beauforts—had been permitted
to confer with the members about taxation. But a week later, before any grant
had been reported, the king approached the lords and invited them to state what
they would regard as a suitable provision; on receiving their reply, he then
commanded the lower house to endorse it. Loud was the outcry against the lords
and great the clamour that ancient liberties had been infringed. The king
hastened to reassure the members; nothing had been farther from his thoughts
than that of which they complained. The “altercation” was settled on 2 December
when it was recorded that each house might in the absence of the king debate
the country’s needs, provided that neither should report until both were agreed
and that the report should always be made by the commons’ Speaker. It can
hardly be claimed that this established save in a very limited sense the right
of the lower house to initiate a grant, but it certainly prevented a novel, and
if it had been successful, a very damaging invasion of its hard-won privileges.
Here ended, however, the commons’ success. For although they were promised that
no precedent should be thereby created, they went on immediately to vote the same
taxes as the lords had recommended. In return the king promised solemnly not to
ask for any more money until 23 March 1410, and gave to each returning member a
copy of this promise to show to his constituents.
The
ensuing two years are for us the most baffling in the history of the reign.
There is every sign that events were moving towards a crisis, but the
unexplained absence of conciliar records at this critical period is a serious
obstacle to its understanding. The king was dangerously ill; in June 1408 he
had a seizure at Mortlake and for a time was thought to be dead, “but after
some hours the vital spirit returned to him”. In the following winter he lay
sick at Eltham and Greenwich for many weeks; his children were summoned and on
21 January he made his will. Yet by 6 April he was able to write in his own
hand “of the good health that I am in” to his friend the Chancellor. There has
been much dispute about the nature of his disease; contemporaries called it
leprosy, but the symptoms point rather to some form of embolism, probably cerebral,
complicated by other less destructive ailments. Both his mental and physical
power’s suffered from these attacks. Although he was still capable of
occasional spurts of energy, these were of brief duration and quickly succeeded
by renewed visitations of weakness. His belief that his illness was a divine
judgment on his sins may explain his tendency to lean more and more upon the
support of his spiritual adviser, Arundel. Certainly the Chancellor was little
less than his vicegerent during these years. But the heir to the throne, who
may perhaps have felt that he had a better claim to this position, was
beginning to assert his rights. Prince Henry, advised by the Beauforts, was
resentful of the government’s incompetence and anxious to begin his reign. Already,
if we are to believe Monstrelet, the Bishop of Winchester had in 1406 informed
the French court of the impending abdication of the king in favour of his son;
be this as it may, there is no doubt that at a later date the prince lent his
ear to such a suggestion. When his father was on the point of death, he may
have been willing to wait, since it seemed that his time was not far distant,
but with the king’s recovery in the spring of 1409 inaction no longer contented
him. The outcome of this period of tension was the fall of Arundel at the close
of the year. The sequence of events leading up to this can only be inferred.
When on 26 October a parliament was summoned to meet at Bristol in the
following January, no unusual difficulties appear to have been anticipated.
Soon afterwards, however, a council, called to deal with the financial crisis,
reached decisions which seem to have been unwelcome to the king. Discharging
Sir John Tiptoft from the office of Treasurer, Henry ordered the collectors of
customs by signet letter to ignore the council’s orders. His defiance was
nevertheless shortlived. On 18 December Westminster was substituted for Bristol
as parliament’s place of meeting, and three days later Arundel resigned the
great seal. But although the two great offices were vacant, the king was either
unable to find or unwilling to accept new ministers. It was not until 6 January
that Lord Scrope became Treasurer; on the 19th orders were given to carry out
the council’s suspended financial regulations. There was no Chancellor for more
than a month; when necessary, Henry himself superintended the sealing of
documents, keeping the great seal by him for that purpose and giving instructions
viva voce to a clerk.
In
the absence of a chancellor, the opening sermon on 27 January was preached by the
Bishop of Winchester, the Speaker again being Thomas Chaucer. Four days later
the great seal was conferred on Thomas Beaufort. That the king himself had in
no sense quarrelled with the Archbishop of Canterbury is proved by the fact
that he spent the greater part of the session not in his own palace at Westminster
but across the water at Lambeth. Parliament was adjourned for Easter on 15 March,
but before that the commons had created great scandal by presenting a Lollard
petition, which proposed to solve the country’s financial difficulties by
confiscating the estates of the Church. The king—and not his son, as has been generally
supposed—refused to consider it, and his faithful servant, Sir John Norbury,
pleased at least one monastic chronicler by urging the primate to launch a
crusade against these English heretics. Unabashed, the followers of Wyclif
continued to make their voices heard in parliament, but in vain. In the second
session the commons turned their attention to the only less controversial matter
of administrative reform. On 23 April, they offered a series of remedies for
the better and more economical government of the realm. In its forefront
appeared the inevitable nostrum that the king should “ordain and assign in the
present parliament the most valiant, wise, and discreet lords to be of his council”
and that these along with the judges should be publicly sworn. In response to a
similar request of 2 May, Henry replied that certain lords had for good reasons
excused themselves, and then produced a list of seven names. Now the extent of
the prince’s triumph was revealed. Not only were his friends strongly represented
along with himself on the new council, but even more significant was the
omission of Arundel and of the usual curialists. It was in fact a small
aristocratic body, from which both the king’s friends and the members of the commons
were excluded. The Earl of Somerset had recently died, but both his brothers
were nominated, along with the Earl of Arundel, whose quarrel with his uncle, while
dating back to his share in Richard Scrope’s execution, had since been
aggravated by a mass of litigation over their respective rights in Sussex. When
the councillors were sworn, the prince declared that they could not be held to
their oaths unless sufficient funds were provided. After rejecting the
suggestion that they should give the king an annual tax for the remainder of
his life, the commons proceeded to vote a subsidy and a half, its collection to
be spread over three years. Just before the dissolution, Bishop Langley and the
Earl of Westmorland were excused attendance at the council on account of the necessity
for their presence in the north, and, at the prince’s request, the names of two
more of his friends, the Earl of Warwick and Bishop Chichele of St David’s,
were added to fill their places.
The
new councillors threw themselves into their task with energy. For the rest of
the year, they virtually governed the country in the king’s name, while Henry,
visiting his palaces at Windsor, Woodstock, and Kenilworth, was content to
leave affairs at Westminster in their hands. During June and July they met frequently,
mainly to discuss finance. A genuine attempt seems to have been made to
discoveir the government’s liabilities and to meet them by borrowing and by
ordinances for the better collection of the revenue. These researches evidently
brought home to them the gravity of the situation, for on 19 March 1411 a great
council was held at which the Treasurer placed a financial statement before the
lords in the king’s presence. Budgeting for the year Michaelmas 1410 to Michaelmas
1411, Lord Scrope estimated the probable deficit at over of £16,000, even
before any provision had been made for annuities payable at the exchequer or
for the salaries of councillors. It appears that the half-subsidy due at Midsummer
1411 had already been assigned to the king’s creditors, and the Treasurer
referred to the debts of the household, wardrobe, and other spending
departments as “amounting to a huge sum”. There is no evidence that the lords
had any remedy to offer for the unsoundness which this statement revealed. The
fact was that all this financial activity was occasioned by a desire to find
means for fresh expenditure. That Prince Henry’s thoughts were already turning
towards the possibility of military intervention in France, where the feuds of
Burgundy and Armagnac offered a tempting bait, is suggested by estimates drawn
up at this time for the cost of Calais in time of war. Notwithstanding the fact
that the ancient debts of this fortress alone were more than £9,000, he was
ambitious to raise and equip a new expeditionary force. In this he does not
appear to have had his father’s approval, but nevertheless in September 1411 a
small English army under the Earl of Arundel was despatched to the assistance
of Burgundy. On 9 November they took part in the victory of St Cloud, but were
shortly afterwards sent home.
Meanwhile
in England the prince’s ascendancy was drawing to an end. Following the arrest
in October of six knights, including the steward of his household, on an
unnamed charge, he made a progress through the country in search of popular
support. It was said that his advisers, led by Henry Beaufort, were openly
proposing that the king should be deposed in his favour, and apparently a
formal demand to this effect was made in the parliament which began at
Westminster on 3 November. It does not seem that this propaganda was at all
favourably received by the people as a whole or that Henry IV had any difficulty
in countering its effects. The latter bided his time. At his side was Arundel,
fresh from his triumph over the prince's friends at Oxford, where in the face
of obstinate resistance he had succeeded in humbling the University. The king
did not attend the opening of parliament, but when on its second day the
Speaker was presented to him he told him sharply that he wished on no account
to have any manner of novelty but intended “to stand as free in his prerogative
as any of his predecessors.” Nothing was heard for the moment of his
abdicating, but a statute of the last parliament was annulled because it
improperly limited the rights of the Crown. Before the end of the session, the
council was thanked for its services and discharged, Thomas Beaufort and Lord
Scrope were removed from office, and the Archbishop of Canterbury again entrusted
with the great seal. No council was formally nominated, but the Prince of Wales
and Henry Beaufort were excluded from that which met for the remainder of the
reign. It was a cowed and anxious parliament which, hearing that the king’s
heart was heavy against its members, begged and secured from him a declaration
of his faith in their loyalty before they returned home.
In
the matter of finance, the commons had not been generous, The government’s insolvency
did not, however, prevent it from planning a fresh expedition to France, this
time to succour the Armagnacs. It is difficult to explain this change of policy
on any other ground than that the king desired to mark his disagreement with his
son, though the possibility of recovering Aquitaine no doubt had its influence
in determining his choice. This decision produced a domestic crisis, the facts
of which are by no means clear. Henry was persuaded that the Prince of Wales,
who was raising troops in the northern midlands, contemplated rebellion with a
view to seizing the throne and preventing the betrayal of his former Burgundian
allies. In reply the prince issued a public statement at Coventry on 17 June,
asserting his innocence; he explained that his only object in mustering an army
larger than his quota was his desire to assist his father to reconquer
Aquitaine with all the means in his power, that he had acted as he believed
with the royal permission, and that the king had been listening to the calumnies
of certain sons of iniquity by whom he was surrounded. With protestations of
filial obedience, but “with much people of lords and gentles”, he then marched
to London and took up his residence at the Bishop of London’s inn. For several
days the city and suburbs were full of armed men, while the king and council
hurried on their preparations for the French voyage. In an interview with his
father the prince demanded the punishment of those who had slandered him; “the
king seemed indeed to assent to his request, but asserted that they ought to await
the time of parliament that these might be punished by the judgment of their
peers.” The reconciliation would therefore seem to have been incomplete. But at
length the tension was relieved when it was settled that the prince and the king,
who had meant himself to lead the expedition, should remain at home, while
Thomas of Lancaster, now created Duke of Clarence, and the other lords went to
France. The army set out from Southampton on 11 July, but it had not been long
in Normandy before the French parties temporarily sank their differences and
bought the invaders off. While this was taking place, the prince continued to
act in a fashion that did much to justify his father's suspicions. For again on
23 September he “came to London to the council with a huge people,” this time
to defend himself also against a charge of misappropriating the wages of the
Calais garrison. Leaving his followers in Westminster Hall he forced his way
alone into the royal presence, where after an emotional scene the king embraced
and forgave him. An enquiry conducted by the council into his government of
Calais resulted, as was inevitable, in his complete exoneration. Henry IV’s health
was now rapidly failing; in December he was again for a period unconscious, but
recovered sufficiently to take part in the Christmas celebrations at Eltham. He
died after another seizure at Westminster on 20 March 1413. For nearly fourteen
years he had struggled doggedly and with some measure of success, not only to
preserve his usurped throne against enemies at home and abroad, but to maintain
in the teeth of baronial pressure and popular criticism what he believed to be
the rights and prerogatives of the Crown. Arundel did not long survive his
master. Dismissed from the chancellorship on the first day of the new reign, he
withdrew from political life and died within a year.
It
was remarked by contemporaries that on his accession to power Henry of Monmouth
underwent a species of conversion; “in all things at that time he reformed and
amended his life and his manners”. The lawless and high-spirited youth became,
as it were overnight, a bigot and a disciplinarian. There was no room in his
nature for compromise, and by this abrupt change he expressed his conscious
dedication of himself to what he regarded tis the supreme purpose of his being.
If in the past he had been riotous and addicted to low company, this was only because
his enormous energy, denied adequate scope in politics, had been compelled to
seek another outlet. Once the curb imposed by his mistrustful father was
removed and he was free to give unfettered play to his imperial designs, he
abandoned his disreputable courses without hesitation or regret. The same thing
had happened when Thomas Becket went to Canterbury; Henry threw himself with an
ascetic zeal equal to that of St Thomas into realising a highly exalted
conception of the duties of his station. It was his dream, having first conquered
France, to lead a reunited Christendom against the Turk and, as he confessed on
his death-bed, to “build again the walls of Jerusalem” in a last Crusade. To
this Napoleonic task he was prepared to devote his life and fortune—and the
lives and fortunes of his less idealistic countrymen. But large as were his schemes,
there was nothing in the least visionary about his methods. A soldier of genius
and resource, he owed his success almost as much to his diplomatic skill as to
his victories in the field; while no medieval statesman grasped more fully the
importance of sea-power or set himself more actively to win for England the
undisputed command of the Channel. Imperious, untiring, and single-minded,
Henry was a cruel enemy and a harsh master, brooking no opposition to his will;
yet though he renounced all those qualities which make a monarch popular, he
achieved the remarkable feat of inspiring Englishmen with a patriotic
enthusiasm and a community of aims in marked contrast with their bitter disharmony
during the previous age. He found a nation weak and drifting and after nine years
he left it dominant in Europe.
The
whole-heartedness of this response to Henry’s lead made one thing clear: in spite
of many superficial indications to the contrary, Lancastrian England was by no
means decadent; the source of its troubles lay less in its own rottenness than
in the futility of its governors, unsettled by an economic revolution which
they did not understand. A young and vigorous civilisation had failed to obtain
the authoritative guidance of which it stood desperately in need. Its political
unrest, though it often served the ends of ambitious nobles, was not mere
factiousness; it sprang rather from the efforts of a new class to break through
the cracking shell of traditional medieval society. For more than a century, the
country had been waxing rich from the sale of its staple commodity, wool, which
for its unsurpassed quality was in steady demand on the markets of Flanders. No
amount of royal interference, of regulation in the interests of foreign policy
or of public finance, could hold up the progress of this traffic. Nor did it
stand alone; for alongside it had grown up the cloth industry: the products of
English looms were beginning to be carried in native bottoms to foreign parts.
The legend of the commercial backwardness of medieval England dies hard. Yet
during the fourteenth century, latecomers though they were, needing to force
their way into the closed markets of the continent, the English were laying the
foundations of their mercantile greatness. It was of no exceptional shipman that
Chaucer wrote:
“He knew
wel alle the havenes, as they were,
From
Gootlond to the Cape of Finistere;
And
every cryke in Britayne and in Spayne.”
By
the reign of Richard II, English merchants had planted a factory at Danzig and
won recognition of their privileges there from the reluctant Hansa. In the
early years of the fifteenth century native ships sailed adventurously from
Lynn “by nedle and by stone... unto the costes colde’’ of Iceland and
established a profitable trade with the inhabitants. All efforts to penetrate
into the Mediterranean were, however, repulsed. When in 1412 William Walderne
of London and his partners shipped £24,000 worth of wool to Italy, it was
seized by the Genoese authorities. Thereafter, apart from occasional
privateering ventures, no further attempt was made to challenge Italian
monopoly beyond the Straits of Morocco. In spite of this defeat, which was in
any case unparalleled, the time was one of increasing material prosperity. It
is hardly surprising that Italian visitors, though they considered the English
intellectually backward, were deeply impressed by the high standard of comfort,
amounting often to luxury, which they found everywhere prevalent. Their observations
are confirmed by the monuments, perhaps only a tithe of those erected, which
have survived into our own day. It is a striking fact that the magnificent
castles at Tattershall, Wingfield (co. Derby), and Bolton in Wensleydale were
built by men of lesser baronial rank, and those at Caister and Hurstmonceux by
no more than simple knights. Nor was this splendour confined to domestic
architecture. The scores of lofty perpendicular churches still extant in East
Anglia bear witness to the thriving trade of Ipswich, Yarmouth, Lynn, and
Boston; while their counterparts in Somerset and the Cotswold area tell a
similar tale about the western ports. Most districts profited directly, all were
ultimately fertilised, by this new wealth. For its benefits were enjoyed not
merely by that numerous middle class which was engaged in the transport, sale,
and manufacture of wool and cloth, but equally by those landowners, great and
small, from whose sheepfolds the raw material was drawn. The capital thus
accumulated was not suffered to lie idle; it was often reinvested, so that
territorial magnates became sleeping partners in business and in some cases
even possessed their own merchant-ships. The result of all this financial dealing
was to place too great a strain upon that ancient theological doctrine by which
Christians were forbidden to practice usury. In spite of the fact that this
prohibition was reinforced by the law of the land, it was rapidly becoming a
dead letter. But because steps were taken to circumvent it by legal fictions,
these unspectacular beginnings of modern capitalism for long escaped the notice
of historians. Nevertheless we find Sir John Fastolf advancing large sums to
London tradesmen “ad mercadinamdum” at 5 per cent, per annum. The truth is that loans at interest were common, and
even ecclesiastics did not hesitate to swell their incomes by committing “l’horrible et abominable vice de Usure”.
By far the largest borrower was the government, which, since Edward III had
defaulted to his Italian creditors, was obliged to rely in this matter mainly
if not wholly upon native capitalists. Fortunately for it there were several
individuals and many corporations rich enough to take the places of the Bardi
and Peruzzi. But the king's credit was so bad that, as we are informed by Sir
John Fortescue, he had to offer a premium of 20-25 per cent, before he could
raise the necessary sums. It is small wonder that acquisitiveness was the predominating
characteristic of Lancastrian England. Yet the mercenary spirit which has often
been taken for proof of its degeneracy was the outcome of a boundless vitality
and optimism.
It
was inevitable that these developments should profoundly modify the structure
of medieval society. In feudal England a definite limit had been set to the
free play of these competitive tendencies. It is of course true that a man of
gentle birth, given enough military skill, might rise from landless poverty to
affluence, and that both Church and law had always offered the chance of high
preferment to those whom the profession of arms did not suit. But the
underlying conception was one of static order, dependent upon an established
military caste. Yet once fortunes could be made by trade and invested in land,
the boundaries which had hitherto separated class from class rapidly disintegrated
and in a short time the old feudal aristocracy was itself invaded by the nouveau-riches.
Already in the fourteenth century its highest ranks had been entered by the son
of William de la Pole, a Hull merchant. This was still unusual enough to excite
resentment, but a little later no one minded when Chaucer’s grand-daughter
became a duchess or thought it odd that the grandson of Sir Geoffrey Boleyn,
who was mayor of London in 1457, should be an earl and the father of a queen.
Mixed marriages were quite common; thus William Stonor, an Oxfordshire knight,
took as his first wife the widow of a mercer, as his second the daughter of a
marquis. Several of the most famous Tudor families, who throve on the purchase
of monastic lands, owed their importance in the first place to their mercantile
ancestors in the fifteenth century. Many ancient institutions could not survive
in this changed atmosphere. The process of adaptation radically altered the
external structure, if not the essence, of feudalism itself. In the fifteenth
century military service was no longer merely an incident of tenure but also a
commodity to be disposed of by sale. The army of the Hundred Years’ War was a
mercenary army, consisting not of vassals but of hired retainers who were by no
means always the tenants of the man they served. The bond which united them to
him was a contract voluntarily entered into by both parties and not an indissoluble
hereditary tie. An enterprising magnate could therefore reach out beyond the
frontiers of his fief, and by indenting with his neighbours for their services
bring whole districts, sometimes an entire county, under his control. The “bastard
feudalism” thus begotten approached nearer to its continental prototype than to
the revised version which had been introduced into England by William I. By
substituting a few great areas of influence for the dispersed honours of the
Norman period, it raised the problem of 44the overmighty subject” in a new and
more acute form. Another factor was also at work to the same end. Estates
scattered in half a dozen shires could not be managed economically;
administrative convenience would in any event have dictated some measure of consolidation,
and the feudal geography of England had already been profoundly modified in
this direction by three and a half centuries of grant, purchase, marriage, and
exchange. But although this tendency threatened the stability of the central government,
it only produced a crisis when the enlistment of retainers gave baronial ambition
a wider range. Its corrupting effect on local institutions was soon apparent.
To attract retainers the baron had to be able to find patronage for them and
their dependants, to maintain their quarrels in the royal courts, and to reward
their loyalty in many other ways. Sir John Fortescue has admirably described
the result: “this hath caused many men to be such braggers and suitors to the king
for to have his offices in their countries to themself and their men that
almost no man in some country durst take an office of the king but he first had
the good will of the said braggers and engrossers of offices. For if he did not
so, he should not after that time have peace in his country; whereof hath come
and grown many great troubles and debates in divers countries of England.” As
his father’s reign had shewn, civil strife was already imminent when Henry V
temporarily resolved all discords by proclaiming war on France.
Although
his enthusiasm was for the moment infectious, it may be doubted whether many of
the king’s subjects really shared his dream of a continental empire. For one
thing the merchants were becoming dimly conscious that England’s destiny lay
not in France but upon the seas, a suspicion which a few years later deepened
into certainty. If they hated the French as traditional enemies, they hated the
Flemings, the Hansards, and the Italians still more as commercial rivals. Yet
Henry’s policy rested upon a close understanding with Flanders as a first step towards
a military alliance with Burgundy, and upon the neutrality of the other
maritime powers in order to isolate France at sea. In neither case was he
absolutely successful, but by 1415 his diplomacy had accomplished enough to
permit him to cross to Normandy in safety. Anglo-Flemish relations had been put
on a surer footing by an agreement of 7 October 1413, which provided for the
appointment in each country of “conservators of truces” to punish breaches of
the peace, to investigate charges of piracy, and to restore stolen goods to
their lawful owners. In pursuance of this a Statute of Truces and Safeconducts
was passed by the Leicester parliament in the following year. Do what he would,
however, Henry could not induce the Burgundians to throw in their lot
definitely with the English, and it was not until Duke John the Fearless was
murdered in 1419 that the longed-for Anglo-Burgundian alliance became a fact.
The negotiations had on the other hand secured the absence of the duke from the
French army of Agincourt and after, a service which contributed largely to
Henry’s chances of success. The isolation of the French at sea presented few
difficulties. Only the Genoese, whose seizure of the Londoners’ wool in 1412
had created bad blood, were persuaded to come to the assistance of France. In
1416 some twenty ships, commanded by Giovanni Grimaldi, appeared in the Channel
to join in the French blockade of Harfleur; but on 15 August they were attacked
by a hastily collected fleet under the Duke of Bedford and decisively beaten in
the Battle of the Seine. While Henry lived the English command of the narrow
seas was never again disputed. His policy nevertheless was not altogether popular.
The only interest to which it appealed strongly was the Staple. For it meant
allowing Flemings and Hansards to trade unmolested in England and some
restriction of native enterprise in the Baltic ports; since, though the king
maintained his subjects’ claim to fair treatment in Danzig, he was not prepared
to jeopardise Hanseatic neutrality by embarking on those wilder courses which
some extremists were already urging. It meant also putting down English piracy,
a great source of profit for the seafarers of the western ports. Again and
again Henry wrote to the home government from France pressing for stern
measures against native privateers, “that no man have cause hereafter to
complain in such wise as they do for default of right doing nor we cause to write
to you always as we do for such causes, considered the great occupation that we
have otherwise.” Though all this resulted in more security for English
shipping, since it diminished reprisals, it did not go nearly far enough for
those whose views found clear expression some twenty years later in the Libel
of English Policy. For the anonymous author of this pamphlet the conquest
of Normandy was not a stage in the conquest of France but a means of dominating
the Straits of Dover. He was a militant nationalist, but his nationalism was
economic not political, and though he praised Henry V generously for his naval
victories, he makes it clear that he would have put them to a different use.
The English Channel was, he realised, the high road of Western European trade.
Along it passed Italian carracks laden with “thynges of complacence” from the South
and East, silks and spices and oil, wine-ships from Lisbon and La Rochelle
bound for the Low Countries, and fleets carrying salt from the Bay of Bourgneuf
to the Hanseatic towns. England had therefore, he argued, only to “kepe thamyralte”
to be able to hold this traffic to ransom and to extort favourable terms for
its merchants in the continental markets. By blockading Flanders, suspending
the export of English wool, and compelling aliens in England to submit to
drastic regulation, he thought to give his countrymen the economic mastery of
the northern seas. It was an ambitious scheme, but it is doubtful whether England,
for all the advantages of its geographical position, was strong enough to risk
an encounter of this magnitude with all the naval powers at once. In any case
it never had a fair trial; Henry V, the one man who might have realised it, had
other, more medieval, ideas. It is the tragedy of his reign that he gave a wrong
direction to national aspirations which he did so much himself to stimulate,
that he led his people in pursuit of the chimera of foreign conquest, an adventure
from which they recoiled exhausted and embittered after more than thirty years
of useless sacrifice. When the war ended, not only were they ignominiously
defeated, but as a consequence of this defeat, their commercial expansion was
postponed for nearly a century.
Henry
did not live to deal with the troubles to which his large project gave rise.
Though by 1420 there were beginning to be signs of popular discontent with the
cost of the war, on the whole national enthusiasm survived his death. Before,
however, he had silenced criticism by his brilliant Agincourt campaign, he had
been faced by two recurrences of the domestic factiousness which had so
frequently disturbed his father’s peace. Of these the Lollard rising was the
more serious. The infection of Wyclif’s teaching had spread widely since the
heresiarch’s death, especially among the middle and artisan classes, where its
assault on clerical pride and covetousness was naturally most popular. Many
poor parish priests as well as unemployed and ambitious clerks from Oxford had
good reason for envying the princes of the Church. But its appeal had reached
also the more serious-minded among the educated laity, who were disturbed by
the continuation of the Schism and by the worldliness of an episcopate more
zealous for discipline than for the Christian life. Such men as Sir John
Cheyne, Sir Lewis Clifford, and above all Sir John Oldcastle (Lord Cobham by
right of his wife) had embraced the new doctrines. At the opening of the
century the University of Oxford was still the centre of the movement, but, as
we have seen, the house of commons contained a formidable body of sympathisers.
Nevertheless the Church was bent on persecution, though whether it was as much
shocked by the doctrinal heresies as by the anticlericalism remains doubtful.
The passage of the Statute De Haeretico Comburendo in 1401 ensured it
the co-operation of the lay arm in its attempt to stamp out the heretics.
During Henry IV’s reign a small number of obstinate Lollards were burnt, and at
Oxford Archbishop Arundel cowed the authorities into recognising his rights of
visitation and correction. In 1413 everything turned on the new king’s attitude
to the religious question. Hitherto this may well have puzzled contemporary
observers. He had, it is true, in 1410 exhorted John Badby, a convicted
heretic, to save his life by recantation and, on his refusal, he had suffered him
to be burnt; but on the other hand, he had championed his old university
against Arundel, and he was the friend of Sir John Oldcastle. All doubts were
set at rest early in his reign, when it became clear that he was ready to abandon
Oldcastle along with the other disreputable associates of his youth. Oldcastle
was arrested by the royal officers and on 23 September 1413 brought before his
ecclesiastical judges at St Paul’s; when he declined to abandon his errors and
firmly reasserted his faith in them, sentence of condemnation was passed upon
him. On 19 October, however, he made his escape from prison and began in secret
to rouse his co-religionists to armed rebellion. It was his intention, the
government asserted, to capture the king and to establish a commonwealth with
himself as protector, but this does not sound a likely story. The rising was
planned to take place at St Giles’ Fields, London, on 10 January 1414, but the
conspiracy was betrayed to the king, who took immediate steps to forestall it.
As the insurgents were making their way in bands to the scene of action during
the night of the 9th, they were surprised and scattered by the royal forces.
Many were captured and promptly executed, but Oldcastle again escaped. Though
the Leicester parliament in May 1414 gave its consent to fresh statutes for the
extirpation of Lollardy, it was not until the end of 1417 that he was
apprehended in Wales and hanged on the site of his rebellion. The subsequent
history of the sect is obscure; persecuted and hunted unmercifully, it went
into hiding, but there is no evidence that it was ever completely eradicated.
It
was to an informer also that Henry owed his timely knowledge of a mysterious
plot to assassinate him in July 1415, on the eve of his departure for France.
The principals in this affair were Richard, Earl of Cambridge, Sir Thomas Gray,
and Henry, Lord Scrope of Masham, the last-named being one of the king’s most
trusted servants. Their object was to restore Richard II, whom some believed to
be still alive, or, failing that, to enthrone his heir, the Earl of March. The
wretched March, to whom they rashly confided their secret, was so afflicted by scruples
that he went and unburdened his conscience to the king. He thereby earned forgiveness,
but his three companions were speedily arrested and put to death as traitors.
This done, Henry sailed from Portsmouth, leaving his brother Bedford to rule a
peaceful country in his absence.
His
expedition had been carefully prepared. For months beforehand artificers had
been employed constructing siege-engines, pontoons, and pieces of artillery;
vast quantities of war-material, armour, and weapons of every type had been assembled
by the royal purveyors and stored in casks at Pountney’s Inn in London. It was
a comparatively small, but an unusually well-equipped, army which landed near
Harfleur on 14 August. With its achievements and those of its successors we are
not concerned, since they have already been described elsewhere; here it is
only necessary to speak of the effects of the war upon the English Exchequer.
Like many conquerors, Henry does not seem to have bothered his head overmuch
about the financial soundness of his enterprise; he needed money, but was quite
indifferent as to the means by which it was procured. In spite of heavy
taxation, it was impossible to pay for the Agincourt campaign out of current
revenue, still less for the piecemeal reduction of Normandy which began in
1417. Income was therefore deflected from its normal uses and huge loans were
raised upon the security of the Crown jewels. Even so, many soldiers and more
civilians went unpaid. Death no doubt settled many accounts. But as late as 1454
that veteran warrior, Sir John Fastolf, was still claiming the arrears due to
him for services rendered at Harfleur in 1415. In a very short time the strain became
intolerable. Modern estimates, based upon an imperfect understanding of the principles
of medieval book-keeping, have unfortunately disguised the real gravity of the
position. Much more reliance can be placed in a contemporary statement drawn up
and laid before the council by the Treasurer on 6 May 1421. Not only was a
gigantic deficit expected, but every department was shown to be heavily in
debt. Yet a considerable proportion of the Treasurer’s estimated revenue of
nearly £56,000 had in any case no real value, since it had long ago been assigned
in advance to the king’s numerous creditors. The malady, that is to say, which
was already present in 1399, neglected year by year and recently aggravated by
Henry’s wild extravagance, had made and would continue to make rapid strides.
Loans staved off a crisis, but the cumulative effect of such a policy was bound
to be disastrous. We should be careful, however, not to talk loosely about the
country’s financial exhaustion in 1421; it was not the national wealth which
was exhausted, but that small fraction of it upon which the king could lay his
hands. At first the commons had been remarkably free with taxation, but in the
parliaments of 1420 and May 1421 no grants were made. Henry retaliated by extorting
forced loans and popular enthusiasm waned still further. Adam of Usk’s
well-known description of the smothered curses with which the royal
commissioners were greeted, however' much it may exaggerate, cannot be
dismissed as pure rhetoric. Dissatisfaction was also spreading among the
soldiers in France; thus one complains of “the long time that we have been here
and of the expenses that we have had at every siege... and have had no wages
since that we came out”; while another prays earnestly that he may soon depart
“out of this unlusty soldier’s life into the life of England.” It would not be
long before such men grew mutinous. The national effort had been too great to
be long sustained; it was visibly weakening when Henry himself succumbed to
camp-fever at Bois-de-Vincennes on 31 August 1422 in his thirty-sixth year.
As
the king lay dying, his thoughts were busy with the future. In addition to the
fact that his work was but half-finished, there was also the prospect of a long
minority to fill him with concern. For he was leaving behind him as heir a son,
Henry, not yet nine months old. In his third will, drawn up on 10 June 1421,
when he knew his queen to be with child, he had bequeathed the regency of
England in the event of his premature death to his younger brother Gloucester;
but there is reason to believe that he changed his mind more than once during
his last illness. Owing, however, to the violent disagreement of our
authorities, we do not know for certain what he finally decided. In any case it
was not carried out; for, as soon as he was dead, his wishes lost their binding
force and were set aside. He had long ruled the barons with a firm hand; they
joyfully reasserted their independence. Above all they were quite determined
that Gloucester should not step into his brother’s shoes. The prime mover in
their resistance to the duke’s advancement was Henry Beaufort, whose royal
blood, forceful personality, and ripe experience well qualified him for leadership.
Though only forty-seven years of age, he had been a bishop, first of Lincoln
and afterwards of Winchester, for nearly a quarter of a century. Not content
with this, he had looked higher, to Rome itself, but Henry V had forbidden him
to desert the royal service for the Curia. Yet, in spite of this discouragement,
he cultivated the friendship of Martin V, whose gratitude he had earned at
Constance in 1417, and waited for a suitable opportunity to turn it to account.
Meanwhile his knowledge of domestic politics was unrivalled. He had first held
the chancellorship in 1403, and since that date there had been few periods when
he was not officially employed. But for all his statesmanlike qualities,
Beaufort was an arrogant and grasping man. He had accumulated from various
sources an immense fortune, which enabled him to wield great influence. The sum
total of his loans to the Crown between 1417 and 1444 exceeds £200,000; he was
owed more than £20,000 by Henry V at his death. These transactions have been generally
regarded as proofs of the bishop’s disinterested patriotism, as though it was
glaringly obvious that by lending he had no thought of his own profit. But such
a view of his character has little to commend it. On the other hand there can
be no reasonable doubt that in 1424, under cover of such a loan, he defrauded
the king of some £10,000 by converting Crown jewels to his own use.
When
Beaufort set himself to undermine Gloucester’s pretensions, the latter was no
match for him. Equally overbearing and unscrupulous, the duke lacked his
rival’s administrative talents and political sagacity. For, while he inherited
his father’s affable manners and cultivated tastes, he inherited also his
financial incompetence and his rash ungovernable temper. He was rescued from political
insignificance by his birth and by the success with which he courted popular
favour. This latter gift saved his reputation after his death. Posterity for
centuries accepted the legend of “good Duke Humphrey”, overthrown and finally
murdered by the machinations of that “pernicious usurer” and “presumptuous
priest”, the Cardinal Bishop of Winchester.
The
first victory in their long duel went decisively to Beaufort. This took place
in the parliament which met at Westminster on 6 November 1422. On the day
before, Gloucester was given permission to open the proceedings and to continue
them as long as should be necessary “de assensu consilii”. Nothing was
decided at this stage about his future status, but the duke immediately
objected to the use of these conditional words, on the plea that when he had had
similar powers from Henry V there had been no such limitation. The council
refused to omit the offending clause; that is to say, they already drew a
distinction between the authority delegated to Gloucester as Regent by an
absent king and the authority to be exercised by Gloucester as the spokesman of
a king too young to rule. In this the ultimate settlement was foreshadowed;
during the minority there was to be a council of regency in fact if not in
name. This did not content the duke, who imagined that his brother’s death was
a reason for augmenting rather than reducing his share in the government. When parliament
assembled, he made haste to state his claim; as soon as the commons desired to
know what the lords proposed, he came forward to request “the governance of
this land, affirming that it belongeth unto (him) of right, as well by the mean
of (his) birth as by the last will of the king that was”. In reply, the lords
appealed to history; in the minority of Richard II, the king’s uncles had been
associated together to “survey and correct the faults of them that were
appointed to be of the king’s council.” Gloucester was not the only uncle of
Henry VI; besides Bedford who was abroad, there were two Beauforts. But if they
had hoped to silence the duke by this historical argument, they reckoned
without his bookishness, for he countered their example by the case of William
Marshal, who had been Rector Regis et Regni during the minority
of Henry III. Thereupon the lords fell back on the constitutional rights of
parliament; Gloucester’s proposal was “against the freedom of the estates”;
Henry V “might not by his last will nor otherwise alter...the law of the
land...without the assent of the three estates, nor commit nor grant to any
person governance or rule of this land longer than he lived”. But not wishing to
drive the duke into open opposition, they decided that in Bedford’s absence he
should be chief of the king’s council and “devised therefore (for him) a name
different from other councillors”. They rejected a number of names such as
Tutor, Lieutenant, Governor, and Regent for the very significant reason that
any of these would “import authority of governance of this land”, a suggestion
which they were particularly anxious to avoid, and chose instead “the name of
Protector and Defensor, the which importeth a personal duty of attendance to
the actual defence of the land” and nothing more. With this Gloucester was for
the moment forced to rest content. A council was then appointed in parliament
and it was enacted that the Protector was to take no steps without its advice.
With a few trifling exceptions it was to retain control of all official
appointments and all royal patronage. No controversial business was to be transacted
in the absence of a majority of the councillors, none at all unless four were
present in addition to the three officers.
This
arrangement, in spite of Gloucester’s attempts to upset it, remained virtually
unchanged for seven years. It was a thoroughly practical solution of the
constitutional question which, while denying Gloucester the authority he
craved, gave him titular rank and vested all real power in the hands of an
aristocratic council. But though the lords treated the Protector as they had desired
but failed to treat Henry IV, it is wrong to see in this a victory for the
principles of 1406. In the first place there was no suggestion that the
constitutional checks imposed on the Protector were to apply to the king when
he came of age, though naturally enough by the end of the long minority councillors
had become too deeply attached to their new privileges to surrender them
without regret; and secondly, nothing was said or hardly even implied about the
responsibility of ministers to parliament. In spite of the reference to the
three estates, the aspirations of the commons, as formulated in 1406, were
passed over in silence. It is difficult at first sight to understand why the
lower house did not grasp so obvious a moment for asserting its rights. Yet
though for some years all direct taxation was withheld, only the burgesses showed
any disposition to criticise the government. It was as if the knights of the
shire who had led the attack on Henry IV trusted the council to make a better
use of the royal authority than had the king and his curialists. Everything
points in short to a closer identification of outlook between the baronage and
the knights than the exceptional events of 1406 had seemed to suggest. The
strength of those local ties which still bound the small landowners to their
greater neighbours was felt as soon as the latter gained control of the royal
patronage. The council filled offices and settled disputes in deference to the predominant
territorial interests; it is not unreasonable to see in this the explanation of
the commons’ inaction. The one danger to be feared was a division among the
lords themselves; though this ultimately occurred, it was temporarily averted
by the obviousness of Gloucester’s ambition; the need to make common cause
against him kept the lords united when every consideration of private profit was
drawing them apart.
Between
1422 and 1425 the Protector gave very little trouble. The government was on the
whole popular and he had no following in the country. The vigilance of his opponents
was such that he was driven to employ his energies elsewhere. When the parliament
of October 1423 confirmed its predecessor’s settlement, he was already playing
with the idea of seeking his fortune abroad. The presence in England of
Jacqueline of Hainault, who had deserted her husband the Duke of Brabant, offered
him a favourable opening. Notwithstanding the knowledge that his purpose
endangered the Anglo-Burgundian alliance, he went through the ceremony of
marriage with Jacqueline and in October 1424 departed in her company to invade
Hainault. During his absence the protectorate was in abeyance, and his place at
the head of the executive was taken by Bishop Beaufort, now again Chancellor.
The expedition was a failure, Jacqueline was soon discarded, and for the future
all Gloucester’s hopes were centred in England. He returned in time for the
parliament of April 1425, to find his colleagues at issue with the city of
London over the protection which they wisely insisted on according to foreign
merchants. By fanning the passions which it was his duty as Protector to extinguish,
he made himself in a short time the idol of the middle class.
His
period of political isolation seemed at an end. Yet Beaufort chose this moment
to provoke an open quarrel by some tactless references to the futility and
dangers of the Hainault escapade. Thenceforward Gloucester’s ambitions were
bound up with a desire to humiliate his critic. The support of the Londoners
made him so formidable that for a few weeks in the autumn of 1425 he was able to
shake off the council’s control. Beaufort went in fear of his life, and on the
morning of 30 October an armed affray actually took place on London Bridge.
Gloucester’s victory was, however, of brief duration. The Chancellor at once
called in the Duke of Bedford to redress the balance, and when on 20 December
his brother landed in England, Duke Humphrey’s days of freedom were at an end.
In dudgeon he withdrew from the council and declined to meet his enemy; it was
only after several interviews that the lords persuaded him to agree to a formal
reconciliation. He and Beaufort shook hands before parliament at Leicester on
12 March 1426. Owing to the recent disorders it was thought best to avoid the
capital and, as an additional precaution, members were forbidden to come armed.
Bedford made no secret of his sympathies. On his arrival he had treated the men
of London with marked coldness, and when the commons charged the government
with bad faith in the matter of tonnage and poundage, he made short work of
their complaints. But Gloucester’s inaction had been dearly purchased. Bedford
was anxious to return to France, and it was soon known that the Chancellor
would accompany him. The time was ripe for Beaufort’s long-contemplated entry
into the larger field of Roman politics. Martin V was willing to make him a
cardinal and to give him employment. A short delay, however, was necessary to
save his pride and to enable him to collect his debts. On 14 May he resigned
the great seal and soon afterwards obtained permission from the council to undertake
a “pilgrimage.” He left the country in March 1427, and on Lady Day at Calais
received his red hat at Bedford’s hands.
If
Gloucester thought to have things his own way after Beaufort’s removal, he
deluded himself. On 24 November 1426 the councillors drew up a series of
articles which left no doubt that they intended to maintain the status quo. Not
content with this, they took steps just before Bedford’s departure to obtain from
him and his brother an emphatic recognition of their rights. On 28 January an
impressive ceremony was staged at Westminster; Duke John, in response to an
appeal from Archbishop Kemp of York, the new Chancellor, swore solemnly to
abide by the decisions of the council so long as he should be in England. Duke
Humphrey, who was absent ill, was rumoured to have said on hearing this: “Let
my brother govern as him lust while he is in this land, for after his going
over into France, I will govern as me seemeth good.” Next day, however, Kemp
visited him in his inner chamber to ask for a similar assurance; thus
confronted, Gloucester found it expedient to agree “to be ruled and governed by
my said lords of the council...and so submitted him unto their governance.”
Nevertheless within a year he had forgotten his promise. Finding his claims
ignored at the beginning of 1428, he refused to attend parliament until they were
satisfied. But his desertion of Jacqueline and her cause had lost him popular
support and it was no longer necessary to spare his feelings. In a crushing
rejoinder, the lords justified the arrangements which they had made in 1422 and
exhorted him “to be content...and not to desire, will or use any larger power”
than he had been granted then. At last Humphrey admitted defeat; for the remaining
months of the protectorate, he did not once question the council's right to
command his service.
This
same year which witnessed Gloucester’s submission was also memorable for the
victory of the government in another quarrel. Soon after his election Martin V
had revived the ancient controversy over Provisors. But although he again and again
pressed for the withdrawal of the offending statute of 1390, his representations
fell on deaf ears. At length in 1427 his patience was exhausted. Accusing
Archbishop Chichele of lukewarmness, he ordered him to use his influence more
actively in the Church’s cause. When this too proved fruitless, he suspended
the Primate’s legatine commission and threatened England with an interdict. His
bulls, however, were seized by the royal officers and not permitted to take
effect. In January 1428 Chichele besought parliament to comply with Rome’s
demands. It would nevertheless be wrong to assume that he therefore either
sympathised with the Pope’s campaign or was intimidated by his threats. Since
he must have known that the commons would reject his plea, it is more likely
that he wished to ease Martin’s retreat from the humiliating position into which
his offensive tactics had got him. Thus the Pope was able to accept this evidence
of his servant’s zeal and to let the proceedings against him drop. But though
in future Rome adopted more diplomatic methods to gain its object, the statutes
remained in force. All that this dispute had done was to make Martin extremely
unpopular in England.
Cardinal
Beaufort therefore chose a most inauspicious moment to return home on papal
business. After a futile crusade against the Hussites, he arrived in August
1428 to collect men and money for another invasion of Bohemia. His reception
was far from cordial. Only one bishop—his creature, Neville of Salisbury—was
present at his state entry into London, while convocation declined to vote him
any funds. On the other hand, although the government formally protested
against his use of his legatine authority in England, it allowed him to recruit
half the numbers for which he asked. He might still have escaped unscathed had
not events in France now taken a serious turn. Before his preparations were
complete, the English were obliged to raise the siege of Orleans and to fall
back towards Paris. News of Talbot’s defeat at Patay, arriving just as the
crusaders were about to leave for Bohemia, startled the council from its
preoccupation with domestic issues. Bedford wanted reinforcements at once, but
it had none handy; and so on 1 July 1429 it persuaded Beaufort to lead his crusading
army against the French. It is not clear what induced him to obey. But whether
he acted under duress or from motives of patriotism, his obedience cost him the
favour of the Pope. Martin set great store by the Church’s neutrality and, when
he heard what his legate had done, he refused to accept his excuses. So grave
was his displeasure that there was no question of his employing the cardinal
again.
The
resurrection of French nationalism discovered the weakness of Bedford’s hold on
the conquered provinces. His seven-years’ rule had been tactful and conciliatory,
but it could not avoid being burdensome; for he had had to rely too much on his
own resources with only meagre and intermittent support from home. Although Beaufort’s
3000 men had arrived in time to save Paris from capture, a great deal of ground
had been meanwhile lost and the confidence of the army was badly shaken after
its hurried retreat. The Regent therefore decided that his best hope of putting
new heart into his followers was to send for the king. Henry’s presence would
also help to counteract the growing prestige of Charles VII among the
inhabitants of northern France, while another advantage of this plan was that
it compelled the English government to assume responsibility for the war and to
provide a retinue worthy of the occasion of the king’s first voyage. For once
the councillors did not shirk their duties; half of them consented to accompany
the king; even parliament acknowledged the need for heroic measures by voting a
double subsidy, and everything possible was done to make the expedition a success.
In readiness for his departure, Henry was belatedly crowned at Westminster on 6
November 1429; he crossed the Channel with a numerous and impressive company on
St George’s Day 1430.
The
king’s coronation served as a pretext for removing Gloucester from office.
Regrettable as the experiment may well have seemed to the lords, his
appointment as Protector with carefully defined, indeed almost negligible,
powers had undoubtedly minimised his capacity for mischief. His struggles to
upset the constitution of 1422, though a frequent source of anxiety, had eventually
ceased. For nearly two years he had behaved with propriety and restraint,
submitting himself to conciliar control. Now the abolition of the protectorate
once more unmuzzled him. The unwisdom of this did not disclose itself immediately,
for two reasons. In the first place the duke had himself at length grasped how
much he stood to gain by caution; instead of harping on his rights as of old,
he conducted himself with unusual forbearance while he awaited a suitable
moment for an offensive. Secondly, he was no sooner free than his hands were
again tied, although only temporarily, by the scheme of government drawn up in anticipation
of the king’s absence from the country. At a council, held at Canterbury on 16
April 1430, it was decided inter alia that nothing controversial should be done
by the councillors in England until their colleagues in France had expressed
their concurrence; it was therefore impossible for Gloucester, even if he succeeded
in winning over a majority of those who remained at home, to dismiss any of the
great officers of State or to alter the composition of the council; and neither
the Chancellor, Archbishop Kemp, nor the Treasurer, Lord Hungerford, could be
trusted to fall in with his plans. In consequence it was necessary to await the
king’s return. The interval was employed by Gloucester in living down his
unfortunate reputation. One liberty he did allow himself, that of harassing
Cardinal Beaufort. The latter’s anomalous legal status offered an easy mark, attacks
on which were well calculated to arouse the sympathy not only of the laity but
also of the bishops, who in the absence of many lords at the war usually
outnumbered their secular colleagues on the council. Gloucester’s championship
of English liberties threatened by papal encroachment probably did more than
anything else to deflect suspicion from his own designs and to create a party favourable
to him among the lords. Already in the spring of 1429 he had called in
question, inconclusively but not entirely without success, Beaufort’s right to
hold the see of Winchester in commendam. In January 1430, on the ground
that no man could faithfully serve two masters, he criticised a proposal to
invite the cardinal to resume his seat in the council; in deference to his
objection, the reappointment was made conditional upon Beaufort’s taking no
part in discussions which touched the relations of Church and State. But for
the fact that Beaufort was contributing largely to the expenses of the royal voyage,
it is unlikely that he would have emerged from these encounters so
comparatively unscathed. Whatever its sentiments, the council could scarcely
proceed to extremes against one who in little over a year put nearly £24,000 at
the government’s disposal. Moreover, in spite of his being regarded with
jealousy and suspicion in many quarters, Beaufort was far from friendless. On
the other hand, his loans are no evidence of his desire to recover his lost
influence in English politics. His thoughts were still elsewhere. For notwithstanding
his dismissal in 1429, he had not ceased to entertain hopes of further work at
Rome, and when he sailed with Henry VI in 1430 it was to be nearer at hand and
secure from interference in the event of a papal summons. His expectations were
not disappointed. Martin, it is true, remained implacable, but Martin’s
successor, Eugenius IV, elected in March 1431, did not pursue the quarrel.
Letters of recall arrived early in 1432. The cardinal, with the permission of
those councillors who were with the king in France, hastened to obey. But as he
was making ready, a fresh attack by Gloucester, delivered with unexpected
force, left him no choice but to abandon his preparations and to return to
England to defend himself.
It
would have been far better for Gloucester had he suffered his enemy to depart
in peace. His clearest chance of success in the coup d'état which he was
then plotting lay in the prolonged absence of his only serious rival from the
scene. With Beaufort safely out of the way, no one stood between Duke Humphrey
and his objectives; by compelling Beaufort to reside in England, he made the
one serious blunder in an otherwise well-laid plan. Until the autumn of 1431
nothing had occurred to disturb the harmony of his relations with the English
council. In May of that year he had been employed to stamp out a Lollard
conspiracy which was discovered at Abingdon, a task which he performed without
mercy and which seems to have given him confidence for what he had in hand. It
was on the strength of this cheap triumph that a great council in November was
called upon by Lord Scrope, his warmest supporter, to grant him a largely
increased salary for life, though the motion was only carried in the teeth of a
considerable opposition under the leadership of Kemp and Hungerford. An attempt
to persuade a similar assembly to condemn Beaufort in his absence for a breach
of the Statute of Praemunire did not, however, meet with enough support.
Gloucester had better fortune with the privy council; yet although it agreed on
§8 November to the sealing of writs of praemunire against the cardinal, it persuaded
the duke to suspend their execution until the king landed. The threat of these
proceedings would probably have sufficed to bring Beaufort lo England; but in
addition a vast quantity of his portable wealth was seized by Gloucester’s
orders on 6 February 1432 as it was being smuggled from Sandwich to the continent.
Beaufort, who had parted from the king at Calais to go on a visit to the Burgundian
court, was in Flanders when news of his peril reached him. From Ghent on 16
February he wrote to his friend the Chancellor requesting his good offices and
appointing attorneys to answer the charge of praemunire. From Ghent also on 13
April he addressed to the citizens of London what was virtually a manifesto, in
which he proclaimed his innocence, denounced his accusers, and intimated his
intention of confronting them in person as soon as parliament assembled. He had
not long to wait. Writs had already been sent out summoning members to meet at
Westminster on 12 May, and it was there shortly afterwards that he presented
himself for trial.
Meanwhile
Henry VI0’s entry into London on 21 February had been Gloucester's cue. In the
space of a few days he brought about a complete change of government. The
Archbishop of York was relieved of the great seal on 25 February; next day
Scrope succeeded Hungerford at the exchequer; and on 1 March Lords Cromwell and
Tiptoft, together with some lesser officials, were removed from the household.
At the same time writs ordering Beaufort to appear before the king’s justices
at Westminster, which had been held in readiness, were sent to the sheriffs,
while the repayment of his loans was interrupted. There followed a lull; but
the existence of an order to certain lords, including the aggrieved Cromwell,
forbidding them to come to parliament with more than their customary retinues,
proves that trouble was anticipated. As soon as the session had been formally
opened, Gloucester hastened to disarm criticism by a declaration that, although
his birth entitled him in his brother’s absence to be the king’s chief councillor,
he would nevertheless act in co-operation with the council and not “ex suo proprio
capite”. This assurance was well received, and Gloucester had no difficulty in
snubbing Cromwell when the latter sought to raise the question of his summary
dismissal. Duke Humphrey’s position was for the moment unassailable, and Beaufort
on his return wisely confined himself to his own defence. At what stage in the
proceedings he made his appearance is uncertain; but it was not until 3 July that
he succeeded in obtaining redress. On a motion of the commons, the charges
against him were quashed, while Gloucester graciously consented to admit that
his loyalty was not in question. Some sacrifices, however, were necessary to
produce this result. In order to recover his property, which the court of the
exchequer had adjudged on 14 May to be forfeited to the Crown, he had to make a
deposit of £6,000; this was not to be restored to him unless he could satisfy
the king of his innocence within six years. And the repayment of his loans was only
resumed when he had agreed to lend another £6,000. Lastly, some sort of promise
was extracted from him that he would not attempt to re-enter papal service
without the government’s consent. If therefore he had been able to repulse
Gloucester’s attack, it was only at the expense of his most cherished ambition.
For another year even his prospects in England remained far from bright. He was
not summoned to the council, over which his adversary held undisputed sway, so
that for want of employment he was thrown back on the affairs of his neglected
diocese. But, as in 1425, the intervention of the Duke of Bedford in July 1433
again rescued him from his isolation.
Bedford
came to England neither to take sides nor to apportion blame, but to compose the
dissensions which threatened the cause which he had most at heart. His sole
concern was with the increasing gravity of the military outlook in France. The
Burgundian alliance, upon which English security depended, was becoming strained.
A resolute offensive would therefore be necessary in 1434 if disaster was to be
avoided, and Bedford knew that he could only achieve this in co-operation with
the ministers at home. To a limited extent he gained his purpose. He seems,
that is, to have shamed the English leaders into sinking their differences and consenting
to work together in outward amity. But it was easier to restore “good and
abundant governance”, to get Beaufort and Gloucester to share responsibility,
than to overcome the financial obstacle and to place another army in the field.
Duke Humphrey had perhaps not been unusually liberal in his awards to himself
and his partisans, but the exchequer was practically empty. One of Bedford’s first actions was to
dismiss Scrope and to make Cromwell Treasurer. In his campaign to extract
supplies he was to find in Cromwell an energetic and resourceful collaborator.
Under his guidance the permanent officials were immediately set to investigate
the nature and extent of the Crown’s resources and commitments. The result was
the fullest and probably the most accurate financial summary which has survived
from the medieval period. This was laid before parliament on 18 October by the
new Treasurer, who brought out its implications in an accompanying gloss.
Excluding the war from his calculations and dealing only with the requirements
of the home government, he estimated that receipts fell short of normal
expenditure by at least £35,000 per annum. Yet even these receipts were not
available, since they had already been pledged to creditors for more than two
years in advance. He was daily compelled to refuse payment on countless
warrants which were brought to him, and these went to swell a debt which at
that moment amounted to over £168,000. Even therefore if Bedford’s military
needs could be met wholly out of special taxation, not in itself a likely
event, the domestic problem would remain unsolved. The stinginess of the commons
finally shattered any hope that survived of a large-scale offensive in France in
the following year. Something, however, was gained by the report. The lords swore
to support Cromwell in his unpopular duty of curtailing grants, while the
councillors under Bedford’s leadership set an example to others by consenting
to forgo the whole or part of their salaries in the national interest. Thus encouraged,
the Treasurer agreed to continue in office. But although, during the next few
years, he revealed determination in opposing thoughtless extravagance, tried
his hand at manipulating the wool trade to the royal profit, and applied novel
methods of taxation, he scarcely touched even the fringes of the problem. Meanwhile
commissioners of loans reported a steady deterioration of the royal credit, and
the yield of taxation itself began to be affected by a decline in national
prosperity. Peace, the first condition of financial recovery, proved
unattainable, and as the war dragged on the policy of repudiation with all its
ruinous social consequences was forced more and more urgently upon a desperate
government.
Bedford
took no pains to conceal the bitterness of his disappointment. But not
unnaturally he was beginning to tire of exertions which brought him neither
credit nor reward, and when both lords and commons urged him to prolong his
stay in England as Chief of the King’s Council, he yielded with a good grace. A
peasant rising in Normandy, however, soon recalled him to a sense of duty.
Under no illusions as to the hopelessness of his task, he took his leave early
in July 1434. His premature death at Rouen just over a year later was an
irremediable misfortune for the Lancastrian dynasty. Not that even his courage
and unselfish devotion could have much longer staved off the inevitable in France.
But as the one adviser of Henry VI whose character commanded universal respect,
he might have exercised a moderating influence in English politics which would
be sorely missed during the coming critical years. A few days before his death
another event, almost equally calamitous, had sealed the fate of Paris. At
Arras on 21 September 1435, as a result of the breakdown of negotiations for a
general peace, Duke Philip the Good forgave his father’s murderers and was
reconciled with Charles VII. If not entirely unexpected, Burgundy’s defection
created a profound impression in England. For some time the cause of peace had
been gaining ground there. The more far-sighted among the councillors were
definitely in its favour, provided that it could be achieved without sacrifice
of territory or of national pride. The attitude of the country as a whole was noncommittal;
most men grudged the cost and effort inseparable from war and yet were
noticeably lukewarm in their desire for peace. It was as though they had awakened
from the dream of cheaply-won military glory but not to a full realisation of
the possibility of outright defeat. All this was now changed. Within a year of
Arras the people’s jealous hatred of the Flemings, which had been with
difficulty restrained for a quarter of a century in the interests of
Anglo-Burgundian friendship, gathered such force that the government was
reluctantly stampeded into war with its recent ally. At the same time
Englishmen began to harden their hearts in an angry determination to surrender
nothing voluntarily, to denounce all concessions as treasonable and, if they
could not have peace on their own terms, to relieve their feelings by making scapegoats
of their leaders.
At
home the political truce which Bedford had imposed was outwardly maintained,
but it only thinly disguised the transfer of power into the hands of a group
headed by Cardinal Beaufort who, once he had been readmitted to the council,
made short work of the rival pretensions of the Duke of Gloucester. The stages
by which this group captured control are now obscure; but the factor which
assured its permanence was undoubtedly the favour of the king. The
reappointment of the council on 12 November 1437 marks the formal termination
of the minority. But for at least two years before this Henry VI had been enjoying
a share in the administration. He had not yet celebrated his fourteenth birthday
when he began to minute state papers with his own hand, while 1436 saw the
signet and other “immediate” warrants again in general use. Apart from this
precocious interest in public affairs, the king’s childhood would seem to have
been normal and healthy. Hardyng’s oft-quoted assertion that he was from the
first so simple as to be unable to distinguish between right and wrong, cannot be
accepted; for, whatever may have been Henry’s shortcomings, it is hard to
believe that a defective moral sense was ever one of them. There is as little
reason for supposing that he was physically backward. In 1432 he was described
as so “grown in years, in stature of his person, and also in conceit and
knowledge of his royal estate, the which cause him to grudge with chastising” that
it was thought wise to arm his “master”, the accomplished Warwick, with more
authority to correct him. This early promise, recalling his father’s youth, was
not to be fulfilled. Henry grew up a delicate and studious recluse, not merely
without military ambition but with a pious horror of all bloodshed, morbidly
devout and wholly incapable both in peace and war of giving his distracted
realm the leadership it craved. We do not know anything to account for this
breakdown; it is probable, however, that between 1432 and 1435 he prematurely
overtaxed a constitution in which the faulty strains of Lancaster and Valois
were united. The alternative, that his spirit was broken by harsh treatment, seems
scarcely worth considering. It was not until many years later that his brain
definitely gave way, but at fifteen he was already a nervous invalid, whose
feeble will rendered him the easy victim of those who sought to use him.
Although the council affected to lament his pliancy and more than once rebuked
his open-handedness, its members for all their joint protestations were not the
men to be deterred from exploiting such attractive qualities to the full. For a
year or two Henry distributed his favours with a generous impartiality, but
this heyday of the office-seeker was soon over. Before long the flow of
patronage was regulated and the Beaufort faction came to be its sole conduit.
In denying others access to the source, the cardinal was greatly assisted by
the king’s ill-health, which made it advisable for the latter to reside out of
town and therefore deprived him of direct and frequent contact with his council.
Beaufort had only to secure the loyal co-operation of the Household to achieve
his end. In this he was entirely successful. He had many well-wishers among the
officials; of these the staunchest was the Steward, William de la Pole, Earl of
Suffolk; but he could also rely on the assistance of Sir William Phelip the Chamberlain,
Sir Ralph Boteler, Sir John Stourton, Sir John Beauchamp, Robert Rolleston, and
the brothers Roger and James Fenys (or Fiennes), the majority of whom were
eventually raised to the peerage in recognition of their services.
But
what perhaps most facilitated this transition from conciliar to curialist
government was the constant presence at the king’s side of an additional clerk
of the council. Designed in all probability as a link between the central
administration and the court, this office, in the able hands of Adam Moleyns, a
devoted adherent of the new regime, was soon turned to a very different use. By
1438 Moleyns was in all but name the king’s principal secretary, discharging
his duties under the eyes of a few officials and household knights, often in
the presence of Suffolk alone. And yet his endorsement on a bill, with or
without the royal sign-manual, was a sufficient warrant for both the great and
privy seals. Outside the household, Beaufort’s warmest supporters were, among
the baronage, his two nephews Somerset and Dorset, the Earl of Stafford, and
Lords Cromwell, Beaumont, Tiptoft, and Hungerford; among the bishops, Kemp of
York and Lumley of Carlisle. The cardinal, however, was aging, and when in 1443
he finally retired from public life Suffolk stepped into his shoes. Consciously
or unconsciously the king was their willing instrument. It is possible, indeed,
that he was deliberately kept in ignorance of the real state of popular
sentiment; for, according to Gascoigne, he was guarded with such care that
those invited to preach before him had either to undertake to say nothing
“against the actions or counsels of the king’s ministers’” or else to allow
their sermons to be censored in advance by the officials of the court. On the
other hand, the favourites were quick to shelter behind the royal name and to
attribute many of their most controversial decisions to the exercise of the king’s
personal authority alone. By these and other means, the council was gradually
stripped of its importance, devitalised rather than suppressed outright. As a
purely advisory body, without control over the seals, meeting at a distance
from the court and communicating with Henry only through his ministers, it
continued to debate such questions as were referred to it, but its inability to
take action on them caused the atmosphere of its meetings to become
increasingly unreal. As Gloucester himself said, what was the use of their
wasting their time when the cardinal would have his way in any case. It is not
surprising that barons who were out of sympathy with the regime found
attendance unprofitable and began to stay away. Duke Humphrey, it is true,
still came to criticise, but even he lost patience when his utterances were ignored.
Although several attempts were made to revive its effectiveness, notably in
1444 during Suffolk’s absence abroad, the council was in eclipse until the eve
of civil war.
These
developments seemingly excited no comment in parliament. The commons may have
been deceived by the very gradualness of the change, but in any case they were
preoccupied with other issues. If they had any quarrel with the king’s treatment
of his council, it was for the moment overshadowed by their concern for the
future of international trade. Their plain-speaking on this topic proves at
least that their apparent indifference to the need for constitutional reform
did not spring from timidity. Profiting at every turn from the crippled state of
the royal finances, they gave the government no rest. In their view its
unenterprising naval policy was responsible for the fact that the high seas and
many continental ports were no longer safe for English merchantmen. Although
their strictures were not undeserved, they forgot how much this insecurity was
due to the excesses of their own privateers whom they themselves had encouraged
in the teeth of ministerial opposition. For twenty years the Statute of Truces
and Safeconducts had acted as a reasonably effective deterrent, but isolated
cases of piracy were from time to time reported to the council. In the
parliament of 1430, however, an agitation was begun for the repeal of the
statute. This came to a head in 1435, when in the hope of coercing Burgundy the
ministers, acting probably under the stress of poverty, agreed to relax its operation
for a period of seven years. They soon had reason to regret their decision. No
sooner were the seamen unleashed the Flemings than they turned to prey on the
shipping of other nations with a total disregard for safeconducts and
neutrality. Reprisals only led to fresh excesses, and in a short time all the
worst features of 1403 were again rife. Too late the government endeavoured to repair
the damage by negotiating commercial treaties with Flanders and the Hanseatic
League. But they were running counter to popular prejudices, they were not
strong enough to put down piracy, and the treaties were still unratified when
parliament met in November 1439 in a mood of bellicose nationalism which
destroyed all chances of peace. Instead of blaming the irresponsibility of such
shipmen as John Mixtow and William Kyd, the commons interpreted the situation
as yet another argument for their favourite thesis—the injustice of permitting
aliens to trade in the home markets. That the king both protected these
unwanted competitors and at the same time failed to “keep the seas’’ increased
their sense of grievance. For a whole session the court resisted this attack. But
it could not afford to maintain an attitude which threatened to deprive it of
the necessary supplies. After failing to weaken the resolution of its opponents
by transferring parliament from Westminster to Reading, it at length
capitulated in January 1440. Not only was it obliged to impose “hosting*
regulations of an unusually irksome kind, but to accept a poll-tax on foreign
residents as a fraction of its reward. Two years later another parliament
re-enacted these measures, and made the want of order in the Channel a
convenient excuse for entrusting the policing of the coasts to a body of
private traders. At the same time the Statute of Truces was suspended for
another twenty years. These acts completed the reorientation of English
mercantile policy and the substitution of anarchy for order. Such exploits as
the capture of the Bay Fleet by Robert Winnington in 1449 were a doubtful gain
when set alongside the interruption of ancient trade-routes and the loss of
foreign markets which this reversal of policy involved. Nor did the government
derive any lasting benefit from a surrender which only too clearly had not been
accompanied by a change of heart; on the contrary, it was still suspected of lukewarmness
in its championship of native interests and allowed scant credit for having its
hands full elsewhere.
Meanwhile
Beaufort and his friends had not entirely lost sight of the fact that their own
safety as much as the nation’s welfare depended upon the cessation of hostilities
in France. To seek peace, however, was one thing, a totally different thing to
agree to the humiliating price at which it was offered by a confident foe. Even
when the English representatives had at length brought themselves to abandon
Henry VFs claim to the French throne, they still clung obstinately to the hope
that he would not be required to do homage for his continental lands. It was
because Charles VII proved unaccommodating on this point that the conversations
between Beaufort and the Duchess of Burgundy, held near Calais in the autumn of
1439, were broken off with a general peace as far away as ever.
But
the failure of Somerset’s expedition in 1443, on the success of which much had
been staked, and the gradual loss of ground in the north during York’s
lieutenancy finally convinced Suffolk for one that the only thing that now mattered
was the preservation of what remained of Henry V’s conquests, even if this
implied a sacrifice of title and a confession of defeat. The earl had a better
right to express an opinion on the military situation than any other of the
king’s ministers. For like his grandfather, the hated favourite of Richard II,
he had seen long service in the wars before he turned courtier and advocate of
peace. Experience had also well qualified him to act as an ambassador; apart from
the diplomatic knowledge which he had gained at Arras, as Dunois’ prisoner
after Jargeau, and for four years the amiable gaoler of Charles of Orleans, he
had become intimate with several of the French leaders. Unfortunately, he did
not possess the courage of his convictions and was unwilling to identify
himself publicly with a course of action which might become unpopular. For ten
years he had enjoyed great backstairs influence without attracting hostile
notice, when Beaufort’s retirement forced him out into the open. But though he
was bent on self-aggrandisement, he had no taste for the kind of prominence
which had been fatal to his grandfather. Foreseeing that he might be accused of
betraying his country’s interests if he assumed the responsibility of treating
in person with Charles VII, he tried to shift the burden to other shoulders;
the mere rumour of his appointment had been sufficient, he alleged, to provoke
an ugly growl from the citizens of London. He was, however, overborne by his
equally nervous colleagues and, on the explicit understanding that he should
incur no individual blame for what he was about to do, he consented in February
1444 to head an embassy to the French court. Although no impartial record of
his mission survives, his own account, if only because it reveals him as shirking
all the major issues, bears the stamp of truth. According to this, he secured
the hand of Margaret of Anjou for his master and a general truce for two years
without committing England definitely to anything in return. As he told
parliament in 1445, ‘he neither uttered ne communed of the specialty of the
matters concerning in any wise the said Treaty of peace, nor of what manner of
thing the same Treaty should be”; he left all this to be determined later by
the king himself in consultation with ambassadors from France. His audience was
so relieved at the ease with which he had obtained this breathing-space that
they were blind to the possibility that a final settlement might not be won as
cheaply; their subsequent disillusionment and anger were all the more extreme.
For the moment everything seemed to be going well for Suffolk. He returned from
Tours with a greatly enhanced reputation. His report was enthusiastically
accepted by both lords and commons and Gloucester himself seconded the
Speaker’s vote of thanks. But on 22 December 1445, Henry VI, acting apparently
under the influence of his sixteen-year-old queen, wrote to his father-in-law,
Rene of Anjou, agreeing to the surrender of Maine. He had reckoned without the
effect of his promise in England. Owing to the refusal of his captains to obey
orders, the province had to be taken by force in March 1448. Meanwhile, although
the truce was renewed, the occurrence of frontier incidents and the rising
temper of the English had killed all prospects of a stable peace. Finally
Charles VII declared war in July 1449.
The
news of the proposed delivery of Maine annihilated Suffolk’s brief popularity
and stamped him in most eyes as a traitor. It became an article of common
belief that he had already promised it secretly when negotiating the king's
marriage, but for this there is not a scrap of evidence. Many stories of his
criminal incompetence as a general, his Francophil sympathies, and his
treasonable ambition were soon being freely circulated. Although the majority
of these were unfounded, his detractors were on firmer ground when they criticised
his covetousness. There was no gainsaying that he had profited from his
situation at court to a degree unusual even in those times; when the commons
put the number of his patents at more than thirty, they were guilty of no exaggeration.1
And not content with amassing lands and offices, he and his business partners
made use of royal licences to circumvent the regulations of the Staple and to
forestall their competitors in the Flemish wool market. While privileges like
these set the middle classes against him, his territorial designs excited the
jealousy and alarm of his own order. In East Anglia, where his ancestral
estates lay, he was a grasping and unscrupulous neighbour; and Sir John Fastolf
was not the only landowner to find himself “vexed and troubled by the might and
power of the Duke of Suffolk and by the labour of his council and servants”. Such
notorious malefactors as Sir Thomas Tuddenham and William Tailboys were
encouraged to terrorise the countryside and were shielded from justice in the
royal courts. In this way Suffolk made a host of enemies, including his former
colleague, Ralph, Lord Cromwell, and the young and powerful Duke of Norfolk.
His example was naturally followed elsewhere by other members of the government;
in no district more ruthlessly than in Kent, where the tyrannies and extortions
practised by Lord Say and Sele with the aid of his son-in-law, sheriff William
Crowmer, led to Cade's Rebellion in 1450. It is not surprising that the regime
did not last.
At
the moment when his reputation was becoming tarnished, Suffolk involved himself
in fresh difficulties by making a martyr of the Duke of Gloucester and by
alienating the even more formidable Duke of York. In his dealings with York he
would appear to have been gratuitously offensive, but with regard to Gloucester
it is more than likely that he could not help himself. For Duke Humphrey had
ceased to be a harmless spectator with the veering of popular opinion against
the truce. The difference was clearly marked in his bearing during the
parliament of 1445-46; at its beginning he joined with the estates in
congratulating Suffolk upon his diplomatic triumph; before its close he had
denounced the government’s peace policy in unmeasured terms. This “Long
Parliament”, with its protracted debates and numerous adjournments, severely
tried the ministers’ patience and opened their eyes to the danger of allowing
Gloucester to remain at large. They therefore decided upon his impeachment and,
in order to lessen the risk of a miscarriage, to hold the trial at Bury St Edmunds,
where Suffolk’s influence was strong. The latter’s adherents were mustered in
large numbers about the town when parliament met there on 10 February 1447,
less than a year after its troublesome predecessor had been dissolved. Gloucester
justified these precautions by making a show of resistance, but was easily
outmatched. As soon as he had arrived, on 18 February, he was placed under
arrest in his lodgings. Five days later he was dead. Although foul play is improbable
and in fact was not at first suspected, a removal so opportune was bound to
give rise to unpleasant conjectures. Embroidered with much contradictory detail,
the murder of “the good Duke Humphrey” became before long part of the
stock-in-trade of every Yorkist pamphleteer. Even Cardinal Beaufort, then
himself dying far away at Winchester, was eventually made to play a part in this
fictitious tragedy.
Unlike
Gloucester, York had had no quarrel with Suffolk or his colleagues before 1443.
In that year, however, the appointment of the Duke of Somerset to be
Captain-General of France and Guienne had given him, as the king’s Lieutenant in
Normandy, just cause for protest. Scarcely had this storm blown over than he
began to nurse another and more rankling grievance. It was being openly said in
England and, as he hinted, with the connivance of the ministers, that he had
“not governed the finances of France and Normandy so well to their weal and
profit as he might have done”. In 1445 he came home to attend parliament, and
was so far successful in clearing himself that by 20 July 1446 his accounts had
been examined and approved. This did not, however, silence his traducers. He
therefore decided to pick a quarrel with Suffolk’s right-hand man, Adam
Moleyns, by this time Bishop of Chichester and Keeper of the Privy Seal, whom
he regarded as the source of his ill-fame. Moleyns, he told the council, had
bribed soldiers from the Norman garrisons to complain to the king that he had
defrauded them of their pay. The insuiting terms in which Moleyns flatly denied
the truth of this accusation still further widened the breach between them, put
an excessive strain on York’s loyalty, and made 1447 the turning-point in his
career. By treating him as an enemy, the court had made him one. Though time would
disclose his want of judgment, no one could have been better suited by rank and
fortune for the leadership of what was now certainly the popular cause. He had
become in 1447 by the death of Gloucester heir presumptive to the throne; through
his mother he had already inherited the rival Mortimer claim, and as the
representative of the three noble houses of York, March, and Clarence he was
far and away the largest landowner among the king’s subjects. Suffolk’s reasons
for wishing to be rid of him are clear. After prolonged hesitation, it was
decided not to send him back to France, where he was beginning to win the
affection of the army, but to virtual exile as King’s Lieutenant in Ireland.
His appointment was dated 29 September 1447, but he was so reluctant to obey
that nearly two years elapsed before he betook himself to his new post.
Yet
even with Gloucester and York out of the way, Suffolk can hardly have felt
himself secure. His government, enjoying neither the respect of the people nor
the co-operation, outside certain districts, of the landed gentry, found it
almost impossible to preserve order. Tyranny at the centre was therefore
diversified by anarchy on the fringes, where the king’s writ ran to little or
no purpose. In many parts of England, but especially in the more lawless north
and west, magnates were beginning to settle their disputes in the field rather
than in the royal courts. Even when the forms of law were outwardly respected,
justice was perverted by corruption and “maintenance,” for although judges were
as a rule superior to bribery or intimidation, this was most certainly not the
case with sheriffs, juries, and witnesses. A legal quarrel often ended in an encounter
between rival bands of men-at-arms. In 1441, for example, Devon witnessed the first
of a series of “wars” between Courtenays and Bonvilles, in which, it is said
with perhaps some exaggeration, “many men were hurt and many slain.” Yet when
the parties were called to account, they made the merest pretence of obeying
and were soon again at one another’s throats. It was the knowledge that he
could not count on redress in Star Chamber which prompted Archbishop Kemp to
garrison Ripon “like a town of war” when threatened by Sir William Plumpton and
the inhabitants of Knaresborough Forest. That the king’s ministers from
weakness tolerated such breaches of the peace sapped their remaining authority
and brought them into universal contempt. For a decade the country had been
slowly getting out of hand; by the autumn of 1449 it was ripe for revolution
and civil war.
What
finally destroyed Suffolk was the French invasion of Normandy, for it
precipitated the long-impending financial crisis. Since 1433 the royal debt had
risen from £168,000 to £372,000; the land was full of disappointed creditors
and of unpaid and mutinous soldiers; and now a new expeditionary force was
wanted. Although the Winchester parliament of 1449 had only just been dissolved
when war broke out, another immediately became necessary. This met at Westminster
on 6 November, to be greeted on its arrival by news of the fall of Rouen. The
Speaker, William Tresham, who was an adherent of the Duke of York, was not long
in proving himself a resolute champion of administrative reform. The hour had
come for the rats to leave the sinking ship; the Treasurer, Bishop Lumley of
Carlisle, had in fact already resigned in September rather than face the wrath
of the commons; his example was followed by Bishop Moleyns on 9 December and by
the Chancellor, Archbishop Stafford, on 31 January. Cardinal Kemp, who had for
some time wisely held himself aloof, now accepted the great seal and displayed
considerable ingenuity in steering a moderate course under difficult
circumstances. The new Treasurer, Lord Say, who had the more exacting task, was
less skilful. What looked suspiciously like an attempt by William Tailboys to
murder Lord Cromwell, in Westminster Hall on 28 November, produced the first trial
of strength. Although defended by Suffolk, Tailboys was committed to the Tower
to await trial at the request of the lower house.
When
parliament adjourned for Christmas, the future of the unpopular favourites was still
in doubt. But during the vacation, on 9 January, Moleyns was assassinated at
Portsmouth “for his covetousness’’ by a mob of angry seamen; as he died some sort
of confession was wrung from him which fatally incriminated Suffolk in the loss
of Maine. The duke’s impeachment was now inevitable. But although Cromwell was
working assiduously against him among the members, he was still secure in the
royal favour. Moreover, when the estates reassembled on 22 January, “there was
great watch about the king and in the city of London every night. And the
people were in doubt and fear what should fall, for the lords came to Westminster
and to the parliament with great power as men of war”. Hoping to steal a march
on his critics, Suffolk rose on the first day of the new session to ask to be heard
in his own defence; he recited his past services and challenged anyone to find
any evidence of his disloyalty. The commons, however, were not to be
intimidated; their answer was to request his arrest pending a detailed indictment.
This was at first refused by the lords. But when the commons asserted that the
duke had sold England to Charles VII and had fortified and victualled Wallingford
Castle in readiness to assist the invaders, he was ordered to the Tower. On 7
February he was formally impeached under nine heads. These amounted to little more
than a repetition of current gossip about his treasonable correspondence with
the French, the supposed object of which was to place his son, John de la Pole,
on the English throne, after marrying him to the Beaufort heiress, Margaret of
Somerset. This was unconvincing enough, but even more wildly improbable was the
suggestion that he had deliberately prevented peace with France. When the
indictment was read over to Henry VI in council on 12 February, he ordered the
matter to be reserved for his own decision. This was generally interpreted as
an acquittal. “The Duke of Suffolk is pardoned”, Margaret Paston wrote from Norwich
a month afterwards, “and hath his men again waiting upon him and is right well
at ease and merry.” But already her news was out of date. On 7 March the lords ordered
the impeachment to proceed and two days later the commons presented a fresh
bill of charges, far weightier than their first. The duke, they argued in the
course of eighteen articles, had been the “priviest of the king's counsel”
since 1437, and during this time had impoverished the realm, broken its laws,
sold offices to the highest bidder, and enriched himself mightily at the
Crown’s expense. The prisoner in reply stoutly maintained his innocence and described
these new counts as “false and untrue.” But during the ensuing argument some
damaging points were made against him. The lords still hesitated to deliver
their verdict, and meanwhile the court was working behind the scenes to achieve
a compromise. This was announced by the Chancellor in the king’s name on 17
March; no judgment would be passed on the accused, but he would be banished
from the country for five years. Soon afterwards he was set at liberty. At the
same time parliament was adjourned to Leicester in an attempt to save his
friends. Narrowly escaping capture by the infuriated Londoners, Suffolk made his
way to Ipswich, where he solemnly swore to his innocence in the presence of the
county and bade farewell to his heir. On 1 May he embarked for Calais. He was,
however, intercepted in the Channel by a mutinous royal ship, the Nicholas of
the Tower, and beheaded without further trial by a nameless Irishman with six
strokes of a rusty sword. Mysterious as was his end, his character and aims are
hardly more intelligible. To one historian he is a statesman, farsighted,
loyal, and misunderstood, to another an unscrupulous and blundering tyrant. The
truth, as so often, lies probably somewhere midway between these opposite
extremes. For good or ill, he was no figure of heroic mould; ambitious yet
timid, corrupt yet well-meaning, he was the inevitable scapegoat who atoned for
the sins of others as much as for his own.
The
fall of Suffolk was the signal for which the country had been waiting. While
his trial was in progress, riots, routs, and unlawful congregations were
reported from various quarters. Kent especially, for long the playground of
Lord Say and his band of extortioners, was in a ferment, inspired by wandering
agitators known as “the Queen of the Fair” and “Captain Bluebeard.” The authorities
dealt promptly with a danger so near the capital, and Captain Bluebeard, alias
Thomas Cheyney, a fuller of Canterbury “feigning himself a hermit”, was caught
and executed. For a while all was quiet. Then at the beginning of June a large
and disciplined force, commanded by one Jack Cade, who called himself John
Mortimer, a cousin of the Duke of York, marched unexpectedly on London and
encamped at Blackheath. No contemporary document gives a clearer picture of the
hardships with which the lower and middle classes were afflicted than the
restrained and skilfully drafted manifesto in which the rebels set forth their
grievances. These were partly economic, partly administrative. “All the common
people, what for taxes and tallages and other oppressions, might not live by
their handwork and husbandry.” The Statute of Labourers, which had been
re-enacted with new provisions in 1446, and excessive purveyance were singled
out for separate mention, while grave unemployment was said to have been caused
in the weaving industry by the interruption of overseas trade. The courts,
whether central or local, offered no help to the poor litigant; “the law
serveth nought else in these days but for to do wrong.” As for the traitors about
the king, it was through them that he “hath lost his law, his merchandise is
lost, his common people is destroyed, the sea is lost, France is lost (and) the
king himself is so set that he may not pay for his meat and drink.” Among the
reforms desired were an act of resumption, the dismissal and punishment of
Suffolk’s “false progeny and affinity,” the recall of York, the formation of a
new government of “true” barons, and the repeal of the Statute of Labourers.
This was a popular programme, and it is not surprising that a London chronicler
thought its contents “rightful and reasonable.” Its moderation was calculated
to set at rest the fears of property-owners and to win new recruits to the army
on Blackheath. With the same objects in view Cade kept his men well under control
and dealt severely with those who disobeyed his orders against plundering.
Nevertheless the government accused him of advocating communism. The
baselessness of this charge is exposed by the recorded occupations of those
afterwards pardoned for their share in the insurrection. More than half were
yeomen, husbandmen, and craftsmen, and over a hundred were of gentle birth. The
presence of 98 constables may explain how the host was collected and why it was
so orderly. Far from being a rabble of peasants and labourers, it was a
well-organised body drawn from all classes of society below the rank of knight.
That these men should have wished to “hold all things in common” was absurd.
Parliament
was sitting at Leicester when the court was informed of what was afoot. No time
was wasted in raising an army since the lords were already attended by the bulk
of their retainers. Having hastily adjourned the session, the king set out for
London in their company. From his camp in Clerkenwell Fields, he opened
negotiations with Cade’s men on 15 June. But two days later he rejected their
demands and peremptorily ordered them to disperse. They withdrew overnight towards
Sevenoaks. Here on 18 June the vanguard of the royal army came into conflict
with them and suffered a defeat; whereupon the main body, which had remained
inactive at Greenwich, became mutinous and began to clamour for the heads of
the king’s ministers. The arrest of Lord Say and William Crowmer came too late
to appease its wrath. By this time it was completely out of hand and engaged in
sacking the houses of courtiers in the city. After some days of indecision, the
king retreated to Kenilworth, leaving the citizens to fend for themselves with
the help of the Tower garrison. His departure coincided with a general outbreak
of disorder in the southern counties. On 29 June at Edington in Wiltshire
Bishop Ayscough of Salisbury was dragged from the altar and stoned to death,
while other household officials narrowly escaped like fates elsewhere. Cade, who
had employed the interval in rounding up supporters from Kent, Surrey, and
Sussex, marched into Southwark at their head on 2 July; on the same day the men
of Essex, with whom he had established contact, advanced as far as Mile End. Although
the rebels had many friends among the Londoners, a majority of the aidermen
were justifiably reluctant to admit them within the walls. Treachery, however,
next day enabled Cade to obtain possession of London Bridge and to make himself
master of the city. His difficulties were vastly increased by the narrow
streets and by the excited condition of the London mob, but so well did he
maintain discipline that only a few houses were pillaged and no extensive
rioting took place. Saturday, 4 July, was occupied in bringing Say and Crowmer
to justice. The former, delivered up to his enemies by the commandant of the
Tower, was tried at the Guildhall and summarily executed in Cheapside, when he
declined to plead; his son-in-law met his death at Mile End. Cade and his
followers then passed Sunday quietly in their lodgings on the south bank of the
Thames. This gave the city authorities a chance to take the offensive. That
night the royal troops sallied forth from the Tower and attempted to recapture
London Bridge. But they failed to surprise the sentries, and after a battle
which lasted until daybreak they were glad to withdraw under cover of a truce.
This encounter, however, had also cooled the ardour of the insurgents. They had
less to fight for since their principal oppressors were dead and the others out
of reach. When therefore Cardinal Kemp, Archbishop Stafford, and Bishop
Waynflete opened negotiations, Cade was ready to come to terms. On 8 July, less
than a week after their entry into the capital, the rebels marched home bearing
with them full pardons for all that they had done. No sooner were they
dispersed than the ministers began to regret their initial clemency. The
amnesty which they had granted did not of course apply to any fresh acts of
rebellion, and therefore, when Cade made a wholly gratuitous though fruitless
assault upon Queenborough Castle in Sheppey, they were within their rights in
proclaiming him a traitor. Pursued by the new sheriff of Kent, he fled to
hiding in Sussex, where he was mortally wounded on 12 July while resisting
arrest. Eight of his accomplices were condemned to death by a royal commission
which sat at Canterbury during the following month. For the moment popular indignation
had spent its force, and when two other “Captains of Kent” came forward, they
failed to raise the commons and were easily suppressed.
The
government was still reeling under the shock of these events when Richard of
York landed uninvited at Beaumaris. To meet this new danger, Edmund Beaufort,
Duke of Somerset, was hurriedly recalled from France and made Constable of
England. His presence at the king’s side emphasised the dynastic issue already
raised by York’s return. For although his family had been debarred from the
royal succession by Henry IV, Somerset was, after the king, the sole surviving
male member of the House of Lancaster and therefore, so long as the queen
continued barren, the only man who could dispute with York the title of heir to
the throne. If, on the other hand, the latter chose to prefer his descent in
the female line from Edward III, he had a better right to be king than Henry VI
himself. But, whatever may have been at the back of his mind, York, like
Bolingbroke in 1399, assumed an air of injured innocence and simple loyalty. It
is unlikely that he deceived anyone, except perhaps the unsuspecting king. For
some time the name of Mortimer had been in people’s mouths and now its representative,
himself the son and nephew of traitors, had returned from banishment without
permission to set the realm to rights. Many therefore flocked to his standard,
and in spite of several attempts to arrest his advance, he succeeded in reaching
Westminster with 4000 men-at-arms. Here, towards the end of September, he
forced his way into the royal presence. The household was “afraid right sore”
at this intrusion, but the king received his cousin with fair words and accepted
without demur his assurances of good faith and allegiance.
From
now onwards Henry devoted his energies to the vain task of trying to reconcile
the warring elements in his kingdom. It is impossible to doubt his honesty, but
had his efforts as peacemaker been the result of guile, they could hardly have
played more completely into the hands of Somerset and the courtiers. Again and
again York was outwitted. Thus, when he opened his attack by submitting a
programme of necessary reforms, he was answered that it was unseemly for the Crown
to take one man’s advice alone. This was such sound constitutional doctrine
that he could not question it without putting himself openly in the wrong. Nor
could he object to the proposed appointment of a “sad and substantial council,”
including others besides himself and his friends, His success was no greater in
the parliament which met at Westminster on 6 November, even though he spared no
pains to prejudice its verdict in his favour. The influence which he brought to
bear on the elections doubtless helped to procure him a more sympathetic
hearing from the already friendly commons, but he had badly miscalculated the
reactions of his fellow peers. Headstrong and self-centred, he neither
possessed their confidence nor had exerted himself to secure it; his call to
his partisans to be with him during the session in their best array was therefore
foiled by the presence of his opponents in equal or superior numbers. He had
now lost the advantage of surprise. His royal blood and the pretensions which
it nourished were to handicap him as they had handicapped Gloucester. He could
not rely upon the support of the barons as a class, because their interests as
a class were not served by his elevation to the first place in the State. For
them the choice no longer lay, if it had ever lain, between good government and
bad government, but between York and Somerset, ultimately between York and
Lancaster. In the absence of a common motive, each man would choose as his private
ambitions and opportunities dictated. The upper classes were already in any
case too much divided by local and family feuds to align themselves solidly on
any one side. These lesser loyalties now governed their conduct in the wider
field of national politics; if Courtenay was for Lancaster, then Bonville was
for York. Duke Richard was, apart from the king, the lord of more acres than
any man in England; he could depend upon the assistance of his nephew, John,
Duke of Norfolk; and his other kinsmen, the Earls of Salisbury and Warwick,
cadets of the powerful house of Neville, were soon to become his close allies.
Those who hated or feared these families as neighbours wanted no stronger
motive for drawing closer to the court. Thus, as the issues became clarified,
the opposing forces revealed themselves as more evenly matched than at first
seemed probable. Yet it was not in York’s nature to draw back, even though he
saw the promise of a decisive victory slipping from his grasp. Instead of
waiting for a more favourable opportunity, he merely displayed his impotence by
appealing Somerset, who soon regained his freedom. The commons fared no better.
Their petition, that some thirty men and women, accused of “misbehaving” about
the royal person, should be expelled from the court and brought to justice, was
treated by the king with almost contemptuous levity. And when Thomas Young,
M.P. for Bristol, asked for York’s recognition as heir presumptive to the
crown, he was sent to the Tower for his pains, while parliament was immediately
dissolved. This was at the end of May 1451. In the previous February, York had
further damaged his cause by taking a conspicuous and, it seems, a willing part
in the so-called “Harvest of Heads,” that bloody assize by which the last traces
of the popular movement in Kent were extinguished. He was soon given cause to
repent his harshness, For when he was next hard-pressed, the gates of London
were barred against him and the men of Kent remained sullenly unresponsive to
the call of Mortimer. It is not difficult to account for the indifference of
the middle and lower classes during the Wars of the Roses. Bitter experience
had taught them that they could look for little help or gratitude from either
party, and they were therefore content except on rare occasions to be idle
spectators of a barons’ quarrel. In this battle of kites and crows they only shewed
their good sense by their neutrality.
The
parliament of 1450-51 had concluded nothing. The government, though badly shaken,
had outlived the crisis; it had even succeeded to some extent in entrenching
itself afresh; but its most formidable critic was not disarmed and only
temporarily discouraged. The struggle therefore continued, in and out of parliament,
with increasing violence for another ten years, the result being in doubt up to
the very last. Until the autumn of 1453 the tide ran strongly in favour of the
Lancastrians. When in February 1452 Duke Richard again took up arms, they were
already preparing to strike. He was promptly cornered at Dartford in Kent,
induced to disband his forces, and tricked into an ignominious capitulation. In
the following year the return of a parliament with strong royalist leanings
enabled Somerset to push home his advantage. During the course of two sessions,
the one at Reading from 6 to 28 March, the other at Westminster from 25 April
to 2 July, an unusual harmony prevailed between the commons and the court. Thus
the king was desired to resume all royal grants to York and the other 64
traitors assembled in the field at Dartford” and to “put in oblivion” that petition
of 1450 which had aspersed his choice of household servants. Sir William
Oldhall, Speaker in the last parliament and one of York’s trusted councillors,
was attainted for his share in the recent disturbances, and a statute was
passed condemning all who in future neglected to appear at the royal summons to
the penalty of utter forfeiture. Needless to say, so loyal a body lent a
favourable ear to the king’s request for money; not content with voting one and
a half tenths and fifteenths, it granted him the wool-subsidy and certain other
taxes for life, and authorised him to raise 20,000 archers at the expense of
the shires and boroughs for six months’ service if and when they were required
“for the defence of the realm.” Parliament was then adjourned until 12 November.
In the interval, however, on or about 10 August, the king, whose strength had
been overtaxed, lapsed without warning into a state of imbecility. At first the
news was not allowed to leak out. But on 24 October a gathering which is
described as a council, though neither Somerset nor the Chancellor was present,
met at Westminster, and resolved to send for York “to set rest and union
betwixt the lords of this land.” By 21 November he had assumed control. Shortly
afterwards Somerset was appealed by Norfolk and committed to the Tower. The
situation had, however, been complicated by the birth of a son and heir to the
queen on 13 October, an event which destroyed York’s hope of a peaceful
succession to the throne on Henry’s death. He met this new blow with commendable
calm. If there were those who cast doubts on the boy’s paternity, he gave their
insinuations no official countenance. On the other hand, motherhood wrought a
violent change in Margaret’s position and behaviour. Whereas she had hitherto
rested content with a subordinate place at her husband’s side, interfering only
to obtain small favours for her personal dependants, she now became the
resolute and implacable defender of her son’s rights. The Lancastrian cause had
at length obtained a mettlesome if uncompromising champion. As soon as the
adjourned parliament reassembled at Westminster on 14 February, she laid claim
to the regency. It is probable that she received some support from the commons;
even the lords were loth to decide against her, but after much hesitation York
was named Protector on 27 March. It is nevertheless clear that many did not
relish his elevation and that the spirit which had vexed Gloucester was not
dead. He was able to abridge the royal household “to a reasonable and competent
fellowship”, to ensure the appointment of new ministers, chosen from his own
kin, and to restore a measure of conciliar government; he was equally
successful in subduing a Lancastrian rising in the North. But the infant Edward
was recognised as Prince of Wales, and though Somerset continued in prison, it
was not thought expedient to bring him to trial1.
These
arrangements did not endure, for about Christmas 1454 the king returned to his
senses. At the beginning of February Somerset was reinstated and York
dismissed. Although for a time moderate counsels prevailed and some attempt was
made to effect a last-minute compromise, this was imperilled by the open preparations
of the courtiers to avenge their wrongs. By March the prospect was so threatening
that York withdrew in dudgeon to the North and with the support of the Nevilles
began to collect an army. This done, he marched on London. Arriving outside St
Albans on 22 May, he found the town occupied by the king and a royal host commanded
by the Dukes of Somerset and Buckingham. Barricades had been hastily
constructed, but the defenders wore outnumbered by five to three3. After an
abortive parley, York, without waiting for the arrival of the Duke of Norfolk,
who was at hand with reinforcements, gave the order to attack. The engagement
in the streets and gardens of the town lasted less than an hour; for, thanks to
their superior numbers and to the skill and dash of the young Earl of Warwick,
the Yorkists soon carried the day. But although the casualties were few, the
deaths of Somerset, Northumberland, and Stafford gave rise to blood feuds in
the ranks of the nobility which were not assuaged for many years to come. After
the battle, King Henry, who had received a slight wound in the neck from an arrow
while standing idly beneath his standard, was respectfully conducted back to
Westminster by the victors. There he agreed to summon a parliament. In spite of
the fact that the Yorkists openly rigged the elections, the proceedings were interrupted
by rancorous quarrels and “many a man grudged full sore” an act of indemnity
which was passed to absolve the rebels from the consequences of their treason.
In the autumn, however, the king’s mind again gave way, and York became
Protector for the second time on 17 November. But the lords only consented to
his appointment after they had been thrice petitioned by the commons, while
they carefully safeguarded the rights of the Prince of Wales and insisted on
the ultimate authority of the council to exercise “the politic rule and
governance of this land.” York did not enjoy his position for long. For after
Christmas Henry once more recovered. He was, it seems, at first in favour of keeping
the duke as chief councillor, but the queen spared no pains to undermine their
good relations. Although an open breach was somehow averted, in August 1456 she
carried her husband off to the midlands, where the Lancastrian estates afforded
them better protection than the capital. On 7 October a council took place at
Coventry, attended by York and his friends, at which Buckingham essayed the role
of peace-maker. But after taking an oath of obedience to the king, the
malcontents again withdrew from the court. Nothing happened for a year or more.
Then on 25 March 1458, a hollow pacification or “loveday” was staged at St Paul’s
in London, although this did not interrupt the preparations which each side was
making for civil war. York spent most of his time in the Welsh Marches,
Salisbury was at Middleham in Wensleydale, and Warwick was at Calais, biding
their chance, while Margaret kept “open household” in Cheshire and set herself
to court its gentry on her son’s behalf. Warwick’s naval successes, sheer piracy
though they were, helped to revive Yorkist credit. In November 1458, therefore,
he was ordered to resign his command and, when he declined, an attempt was made
to waylay him as he left the council-chamber. Meanwhile Duke Richard was strengthening
his hands by means of a family alliance with the house of Burgundy. There can
be little doubt that he had by now set his mind on the throne, but he wisely
kept his own counsel and not even his own allies were aware of the direction of
his thoughts. By the spring of 1459 both parties were ready. The court had the
advantage of interior lines, and it was in its interests to prevent the
Yorkists from combining forces. But Salisbury slipped past an army sent to
intercept him, defeated Lord Audley at Blore Heath on 22 September, and joined
York at Ludlow. Warwick arrived from Calais with a part of its garrison shortly
afterwards. When, however, the royalists advanced into Shropshire, York’s
followers melted away at the “rout of Ludford,” and their leaders were obliged
to beat a hasty retreat. Duke Richard and his second son, the Earl of Rutland,
retired first into Wales and later to Ireland, where they were received with
enthusiasm by the inhabitants of the Pale; his heir, Edward, Earl of March,
accompanied the Nevilles to Calais; at the close of the year only Denbigh held
out against the king.
The
royalists celebrated their triumph in the Coventry parliament of 20 November-20
December 1459, an assembly hastily convened and unscrupulously packed. The lords
found the leading Yorkists guilty of treason in their absence, and swore to
uphold the Lancastrian succession. But the government cast aside discretion by
the oppressive fashion in which it sought to repair its crumbling authority.
Its forced loans, purveyances, and commissions of array, rendered it generally
obnoxious and prepared the country to accept a revolution. When, therefore,
Salisbury, Warwick, and March landed at Sandwich on 26 June 1460, they were
welcomed with every sign of joy by the men of Kent. Thus fortified, they
entered London on 2 July. To curry popular favour and to justify their invasion,
they proclaimed the misdeeds of the king’s advisers and even accused them of
preaching that his will was above the law. Their task was simplified by the
fact that the royal forces were scattered; for while Henry and a number of
lords were at Coventry, some were in the southwest and others had gone north
with Margaret to search for reinforcements. Leaving Salisbury to guard the
capital, Warwick and March rightly decided to strike at once. Outside
Northampton on 10 July they came up against the main body of the enemy and won
a battle in which the king was captured and several of his closest supporters,
including Buckingham and Shrewsbury, were slain. This done, they returned to
London to await York’s arrival and to call a parliament in the name of Henry
VI. It met on 7 October. Three days later Duke Richard appeared, and without
waiting to test the temper of his allies strode to the throne in Westminster
Hall as if he intended to occupy it. He was, however, stopped by Archbishop
Bourchier, who asked him pointedly whether he desired to interview the king.
His reply, “I know of no person in this realm the which oweth not to wait on me
rather than I on him,” filled his audience with consternation. Obstinately
though he pressed his claims, the lords stood firm. A fortnight’s deadlock ended
in a compromise by which Henry was to retain the crown for life on the understanding
that York was to succeed him to the exclusion of the Prince of Wales. But
precious time had been wasted in argument while the Lancastrians were massing
afresh in Yorkshire. It was not until the beginning of December that Richard,
now again Protector on the grounds of the king’s incapacity, set out to cope
with these new enemies. After spending Christmas at his castle of Sandal near
Wakefield, he issued forth only to be overwhelmed and killed by Northumberland
and the young Somerset before its gates on 30 December. Rutland was stabbed to
death soon afterwards by Lord Clifford, whose father had lost his life at St
Albans; Salisbury was beheaded by the men of Pontefract. Margaret’s absence in
Scotland, where she succeeded in obtaining help from the queen-mother, delayed the
Lancastrian advance; but in February 1461 she put herself at the head of a
mixed band of English, Welsh, and Scots, and marched south along the Great
North Road. Her wild border levies struck terror among the inhabitants by plundering
houses and churches on their route. At St Albans, Warwick tried to head them
off, but he was decisively defeated and forced to leave the capital unguarded
(17 February). King Henry, who was with him, escaped to join his wife. It was
probably owing to his influence that she was persuaded not to lead her
undisciplined troops into the city, where they would almost certainly have got
out of hand. By this clemency he threw away his one remaining chance of keeping
the crown. For Edward of York, after crushing the Earls of Pembroke and
Wiltshire at Mortimer’s Cross, was approaching from the west. On 26 February he
rode with Warwick into London where he was “elected” king by general acclamation.
Too late, the Lancastrians retreated northwards, but he pursued and overwhelmed
them with great slaughter at Towton on 29 March. Henry, Margaret, and their son
fled towards Scotland, while Edward returned to Westminster for his coronation.
It
is only too easy to convey a distorted impression of Lancastrian England by
dwelling exclusively upon the story of its political failure. The continued
existence of a government which had abdicated its primary function of maintaining
order and impartial justice, the abuse of power by turbulent vassals, and the
clash of baronial factions could not but leave their mark upon the lives of
ordinary men and women. Yet in describing the hardships inflicted by this “lack
of governance,” there is a very real danger of exaggeration. Such incidents as
the cold-blooded murder of William Tresham by a private enemy in 1450 or that
of Nicholas Badford five years later had few contemporary parallels. In some
districts and at some times, conditions were admittedly bad and growing worse;
this was, for example, the case in Yorkshire, Norfolk, Kent, and Devon throughout
much of the last two decades of Henry VI’s reign and over a wider area during
the years 1450 and 1459-61. But if the rights of property were often infringed,
the forms of law misused, juries and witnesses bribed and intimidated, some
allowance must be made for the fact that these evils were at least to some
extent common to all medieval periods. For the rest, the customs accounts show
a decline in overseas trade, taxation was by normal standards high, and the
king did not pay his debts. That as a result both town and country were less
prosperous goes without saying. But for any blacker picture of universal
desolation the evidence is slight and untrustworthy. It would never do, for
instance, to accept at their face value the ex parte statements of those
engaged in litigation. And after all even the war at sea had its compensations,
since it brought no small gain to innumerable native privateers.
There
are, however, other things for which these sixty years deserve to be remembered,
namely for their artistic achievement and their bright promise of intellectual
growth. It is true that in painting and illumination Englishmen had fallen well
behind their continental neighbours, though critics have perhaps been over-ready
to attribute to this or that foreign artist everything of value which time and
Protestant iconoclasm have spared. It is also true that the architecture of the
fifteenth century was often wanting in inspiration and mechanical in its
detail. But no one can question the splendour of its bell-towers, the rich
perfection of its wood-carving, stained glass, and metal-work or the occasional
excellence of its figure sculpture. Civil disturbance did not impair the
mastery with which these arts were practised; the traditions of native craftsmanship
survived the wars undamaged. As much if not more can be claimed for English
scholarship. Under the enthusiastic patronage of Humphrey Duke of Gloucester,
the “new learning” took root, especially at Oxford, and began to flourish.
William Grey, Chancellor of the University in 1440, and the infamous John
Tiptoft, Earl of Worcester, were among the first humanists to study in Italy and
to correspond with foreign scholars. The ancient ways, on the other hand, were
not deserted. Lyndwood’s Provinciale and the controversial writings of
Thomas Netter of Walden repel the charge of intellectual stagnation frequently
brought against this period. One book deserves more special mention: the Repressor
of Overmuch Blaming of the Clergy, by Bishop Pecock of Chichester, a
defence of reason against Lollard “fundamentalism,” was the first considerable
work of learning to be written in the English tongue. Everywhere the vernacular
was gaining ground. Between 1400 and 1450 it completely ousted French as the
language of the upper class and even made inroads upon the conservatism of the
government departments. It had already triumphed in poetry with Chaucer; and if
after his death it proved a clumsy instrument in the hands of Hoccleve and Lydgate,
the ballads of John Page and others shew that there were still men who could
turn it to robust and graphic use. Finally, education was being more widely
spread by the foundation of new grammar schools. In short a low degree of public
security was not incompatible with a vigorous national life.
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