More 10. Sir Tho. made chauncellour of the Duchy of Lancaster I. SIR THOMAS MORE hauing determined by the aduise and direction of his ghostlie father to be a married man there was at that time a pleasant conceipted gentleman of an ancient familie in Essex one Mr. Iohn Colte of Nevvhall from whome Sr. Henry Colt that now liueth is lineally descended that inuited him to his house being much delighted in his companie and proffered vnto him the choyce of anie of his daughters who were yong gentlewomen of verie good carriadge and complexions and very religiously inclined whose honest and swecte conuersation whose vertuous education enflamed Sir THOMAS not a little and although his affection most serued him to the second for that he thought her the fayrest and best fauou red yet when he thought with himselfe that this would be a griefe and some blemish in the eldest to see her yonger sister preferred before her he of a kinde of compassion settled his fancie vpon the eldest and soone after married her with all her friends good liking Now when he began to be clogged with wife and familie children also began to growe fast vpoÌ him for his wife whose name was laneColt as long as she liued with him which was but some six yeares brought vnto him almost euerie yeare a childe for whose maintenance he applyed himself busily to the practise of the law and because he would haue his wife neare vnto his father he placed her in Bucklers-bury By her he had one sonne called Iohn More my owne grandfather who was his youngest childe and three daughters his eldest daughter Margarett a woman of singular witt and wisedome rare ãâã and extraordinarie learning was wife vnto William Rooper of Eltham in the Countie of Kent Esquier whose grandchilde now liuing is Sir William Rooper his second daughter called Elizabeth was afterward matched with Sir Iohn Dancy's sonne and heyre the third called ãâã was married to Mr. Giles Heron of shakclvvell in the Countie of Middlesex esquier his sonne my grandfather married Anne Cresacre sole daughter and heyre of E'dvvard Cresacre deceased of Baronborough in the Countie of Yorke esquier whome Sir THOMAS bought of the King being his warde vpon errour for another bodie 's land lying in the same towne as was afterware proued 2. My great grandmother hauing brought forth these foure children dyed soone after and within two or three yeares he married a widdow called Mris Alce Middleton by whome he had no children this he did not of anie concupiscence for he would often affirme that Chastitie is more hardly kept in wedlock then in a single life but because she might haue care of his children that were verie yong from whome of necessitie he must be verie often absent she was of good yeares of no good fauour nor complexion nor very rich by disposition verie neare and worldlie I haue heard it reported he woed her for a friend of his not once thinking to haue her himselfe but she wisely answering him that he might speede if he would speake in his owne behalfe telling his friend what she had sayd vnto him with his good liking he married her and did that which otherwise he would perhaps neuer haue thought to haue donne And indeede her fauour as I thinke could not haue bewitched or scarce euer moued anie man to loue her but yet she proued a kinde and carefull mother-in-law to his children as he was alwaies a most louing father vnto them and not only to his owne but to her daughter also who was married to M. r Alington and mother to Sir Giles Alington He brought vp togeather with this owne children as one of them Margarett Gigs after wife to Doctour Clement a famous phisitian and she proued also very famous for her manie excellent partes as learning vertue and wisedome All these he bred most carefully to learning and godlie exercises often exhorting them to take vertue for their meate and play for their sawce getting them good meanes to maintaine them by his practise in the law which he had first studied in an Inne of Chancerie called New-Inne where he profited exceedingly and from thence went to Lincolnes-Inne of which house his father then was where he allotted him small allowance for the reasons before alleaged and as it seemed then his great patron the good Cardinal was dead 3. But he plyed that studie whereto he gaue himself being apt to anie that in short time he was made and accounted a worrhie Outer-barister yea still proceeding with most notable fame he became a double reader to which few but rare and singular lawyers doe euer attaine Euerie one beganne to admire him both for a man of iudgement vprightnesse and other excellent partes a readie deliuerie boldenesse in a iust cause and diligence in his Clients case and no great taker of money vnlesse he had througly deserued For which causes euerie man striued to haue him of their Counsell in all suits The Cittie of London chose him within a while Iudge of the Shrief's Court some say Recorder of London which I thinke not yea there was not at that time anie matter of importance in anie of the King's Courts of this realme but he was of counsell to one of the parties still choosing the iustest side and therefore for the most parte he went away victorious By all which meanes he gott yearely as he tolde his sonne Rooper without anie grudge of conscience to the value of foure hundred pounds which was a large gaynes in those daies when lawyers spedde not so well as now they doe neither were they then so plentiefull but his fame exceeded all other Wherefore he was chosen twice Agent for the Stillyard-marchents which busines he dispatched with singuler dexteritie 4. King Henrie the Seauenth then raigning was a prince of singuler vertues as wisedome and religion if that couetousnesse the roote of all mischiefe had not seized vpon him towards his latter daies which caused him to lay vpon his subiects manie Impositions and to raise sore exactions by two Caterpillers of the Common-wealth Emson and Dudley who in the beginning of Henrie the Eighth's raigne were rewarded according to their deserts for their wicked counsell to teache other men by their deathes how Iniustice and rapine is punished by God This King I say had called to geather a Parlement wherein he demaunded one Subsidie and three Fifteenes for the marriage of his eldest daughter the Ladie Margaret's Grace who then should be as she was in deede shortly after bestowed vpon the King of Scotts It chanced that Sir THOMAS was then one of the Burgesses For manie had now taken notice of his great sufficiencie When the consent of the Lower house was demaunded to these impositions most of the rest either holding their peace or not daring to gainesay them though they were vnwilling to grant them Sir THOMAS making a
would say that he was neuer moued with frieÌdshipp stirred vp with hope of gaine nor wrested by anie threates but still performed his dutie and that he shutt vp alwaies his left eie to all affection of friendshipp and from all briberie Cambden also reporteth of him for proofe of his pleasantnesse of witt that he would compare the multitude of women which are to be chosen for wiues vnto a bagge full of snakes hauing amongst them but one eele now if a man should putt his hand into this bagg he may chance to light on the eele but it is a hundred to one he shall be stung with a snake Manie such like wittie similitudes would he vse in his priuate discourses and in publike auditorie By these his perfections of witt and grace one might guesse that this Childe was likelie to proue singular hauing so good a father but he farre surpassed him in all these and manie more excellencies so that our Familie hath bene much more dignified by this sonne then he anie way drew worth and dignitie from his Anncestours the consideration whereof hath caused manie to thinke and say that SIR THOMAS was of meane parentage and the first of his house yea some haue not stucke to write by birth no gentleman grounding their errour vpon these wordes which he setteth downe in his Epitaphe Thomas More borne of noble familie but of an honest stock which is true as we here in England take Nobilitie and Noble For none vnder a Baron except he be of the Priuie Councell doth challenge it and in this sence he meaneth it but as the Latine word Nobilis is taken in other Countries for Gentrie it was otherwise For Iudge More bare Armes from his birth hauing his Coate quartered which doth argue that he came to his inheritannce by descent and therefore although by reason of king Henries seasure of all our Euidences we can not certainely tell who were Sir Iohn's Anncestours yet must they needes be Gentlemen and as I haue heard they either came out of the Mores of Ireland or they of Ireland came out of vs. And as for SIR THOMAS he was as I haue sayd a Knight's eldest sonne and sole heyre to a Iudge of this realme But whatsoeuer the Familie was or is if Vertue can ennoble anie surely it hath by these two excellent men bene made much more to be respected yet if we as God forbidde we should degenerate from their footestepps we may cause it soone to be base of small reckoning vice being the chiefe stayne that tainteth euen the noblest Families The name of SIR THOMAS his mother was ãâã of Holicvvell in the Countie of Bedford yet Doctour Stapleton had not heard so much who sayth that her name was vnknowne by reason of which wordes some haue taken greate exceptions as though she had bene a base woman though he doth in the same place tell this reason thereof because she dyed soone after she had brought forth this childe but to haue bene a woman of more then ordinarie vertue that which Doctor Clement reporteth from SIR THOMAS his owne mouth of a vision which she had the next night after her marriage seemeth in my iudgement forcible to argue in which she sawe in her sleepe as it were ingrauen in her wedding ring the number and fauour of all her children she was to haue whereof the face of one was so darke and obscure that she could not well discerne it and indeede afterwards she suffered of one of her children an vntimclie deliuerie but the face of one of her other she beheld shining most gloriously whereby no doubt Sir THOMAS his fame and sanctitie was foreshened and presignifyed She brought forth before him to Sir Iohn two daughters one called Iane afterwards married to à noble gentleman Mr. Richard StaffretoÌ Elizabeth wife to the worthie geÌtleman Mr. Iohn Rastall Iudge Rastall's father Sir Iohn after his first wife's death married successiuely two others whereof the last as I haue heard was called Alice one of the Mores of Surrey and great aunte to Sir William More whose sonne now liuing is Sir George lieftennant of the Tower a man little inferiour to his noble Anncestours if his religion were answerable to theirs This Ladie outliued her sonne in law Sir THOMAS dwelling vpon her Iointure in Hartfordshire at a Capitall messuage then called More-place now Gubbons in the parish of Northmimes but being a little before her death thrust out of all by king Henry's furie she dyed at Northall a mile from thence and lieth buried in the church there 2. Sir THOMAS MORE was borne at London in Milke-streete where the Iudge his father for the most parte dwelt in the yeare of our Lord 1480. in the twentieth yeare of Edvvard the Fourth Shortly after his birth God would shew by another signe how deare this babe was vnto him For his nurce chancing to ride with him ouer à water and her horse stepping aside into a deepe place putt both her and her Childe in great danger and ieopardie whose harmes she seeking suddenly to preuent threw the infant ouer a hedge into a fielde neere adioyning and after by God's helpe escaping safe also when she came to take him vp againe she found him to haue no hurt at all but sweetely smiled vpon her that it might well be sayd of him Angelis suis Deus mandauit de te ne fortè offendas ad lapidem pedem tuum and not his foote only but his whole bodie 3. This was no doubt a happie presage of his future holinesse and putt his parents in minde that he was that shining Childe of whome his mother had that former vision wherefore his father had the greater care to bring him vp in learning as soone as his tender age would permit it and so he putt him to the Free-schoole of London called S. Anthonies where he had a famous and learned man called Nicolas Holt for his maister vnder whome when he had rather greedily deuoured then leasurely chewed his Grammar rules he outstripped farre both in towardnesse of witt and diligence of endeauours all his schoole fellowes with whome he was matched And being borne to farre greater matters his father procured him to be placed shortly after in the house of the most worthie prelate that then liued in England both for wisedome learning and vertue whose like the world scarcely had Cardinall Morton Archbishopp of Canterburie and Lord high Chancellour of England whose graue countenance and carriage was such that he easily allured all men to honour and loue him a man as Sir THOMAS MORE describeth him in his Vtopia of incomparable iudgement a memorie more then is credible eloquent in speach and which is most to be wished in Clergiemen of singular wisedome and vertue so that the King and the Common wealth relyed chiefly vpon this mans counsell as he by whose policie King Henrie the Seauenth both gott the Crowne of
and so enflamed incensed his hart withall to heaueÌward that the good and holesome instructions and counsell that he gaue to other men in his bookes he himselfe afterward in most patient suffering the losse of his goods and landes imprisonment death for the defence of iustice and of the Catholike Fayth experimented worthily practised in himselfe And these be in effect the bookes he made either in Latine or English which his English bookes yf they had bene written by him in the Latine toung also or might be with the like grace that they now haue be translated into the Latine speach they would surely much augmente and increase the estimation which the world already hath in forraine Countries of his incomparable witt learning and vertue F I N I S H ãâã end ãâã ãâã of this vvork Though beyond my ability and capacity Yet vndertaken out of zeale and loue to the memory of S. Th. M. And for speciall cause knovvn to my self alone As also for being borne on the day of his martyrdom And by his prayers haning the honour to be the heyre of his family Not persuming only vpoÌ his merits VVhich lay à greater burden of imitation vpon ãâã But trusting ãâã his pray ers and setting his life death as a sampler ãâã our eyes S. Thom. Moores pareÌtage and nobility S. Iohn Moor Knight father of Sir Thomas and his virtues DesceÌded of asÌucucÌt gentry Sir Tho. ãâã mother a very vircuous gentle vvoman Her visioÌ concer ning her children and especially Sir Thomas Sir John Moore his secoÌd vvife out liued Sir Thomas 2. The place and time of S. Th. Mor. birthe An ãâã daÌger strangely escaped in his child hood 3. His first studies imployments ãâã S. ãâã ãâã schoole in London In Cardinal ãâã house The praise of the I. Cardinal S Thom. Moore his tovvardlynes in the Cardinals retinevv The Cardinal sendeth him to Oxenlord Brought vp there neerly ãâã by his father The great ãâã vvhich he alvvays bare to his father 4. His first vvorkes and ãâã Hovv much esteemed of by learned men A quartel stirred vp betvveen him and Germanus Brixius Easily giuen ouer by S. Th. Moor. 5. His MortificatioÌs Hearshirt Watching fasting Exercises amoÌg the Charthusians Not permitted by God to take an ecclesiasticall course To be a paterne of maried men 6. His de ãâã prayers At dayly masse His dayly orisons Much pleased with the life of Picus Mirandula His diligence in frequenting good preachers Doctour Colets excellent employments Doctore Colet chose by S. Th. M. for his ghostly father 5. Th. his letter to D. Colet ãâã left London He professeth vvhat spirituall confort he receaued from D. Colet Populous cities suller of daÌgers of sinne then the country life The plesure and innoceÌce of a coÌutry life Cities staÌd more in ãâã of skil full pastours theÌ couÌtry mansions Preachers that liue not vvell edyfy no thing He inuiteth D. Colet to returne to the city to help soules The inestimable profit of a good ghostly father Sir Tho. Mo. learned more by prayer then by study 7. His sober diet And plaine apparrell 8. He dissembled his virtuous mortification by pleasunt and ãâã conuersatioÌ 1. S. Thom. Moor his mariage and first vvife Chosen out of 2 charitable compassion against his ovvne affection His children by her Iohn More Margaret Roper Elizabeth ãâã Cecily Heron. Anne Cresacre vvife to M. Iohn More His secoÌd mariage vvith a vvidovv Not very faire but kind stepmother M. Alington his step-step-daughter Margaret Clement Carefull gouetn ment of his famyly His knovvledge and rare integrity in profession of the lavv He is made ludge of the sherif of Londons court His pleÌtyfull but honest gaines 4. K Henry the 7. offended vvith S. Tho. For crossing him in parlement in an vnjust imposition Sir Iohn More the father imprisond to be reuenged vpon the ãâã Bad couÌcel giuen by a politik bishop Auoided by councel of the religious bishops chaplain He ãâã to his quieter studies Empsou and Dadley put to death for vvicked couÌscl The happines of a good conscieÌce 5. The beginning of S. Th. Mores fauour vvith K. Henry ãâã Warily at the first declined by S. Th. He is employed by the K. on an embassage into FraÌce To Flanders and BurguÌdy 6. His more serious vvritings His ãâã greatly ãâã me I by all learned men By Bidxus By I. Paludanus By P. AEgidius By Buslidius By Paulus Iouius His story of K. Richard the 3. He vvas vvonderfully studious amidst his setious affaires The office of a discreet housholder His lectures publik vpoÌ S. Austinde ciuit Dei 7. By pleading for the Pope against the K. he makes him of his priuy Councel K. HeÌrie 8. learning and courtesy A gracious King for his first ãâã yeares S. Thom. More ãâã and made ãâã of the ãâã The familiarity of K. HeÌry vvith S. Thom. More Discreetly lessened by S. Th. him self He is ãâã by the K. to appease the prentises of London 8. He is by the King chosen speaker of the lovver house of Parlament A suÌmary of his first speetch in ParlameÌt 9. Cardinal Wolseys entry into parlament And a motioÌ to the lovver house Frustrated by S. Tho. Mores vvisdome Who pleasantly and vvittily diuerteth the Cardinals displeasure And obtaineth against him not to be seut Leger embassadour into Spaine 10. He is made chaucellour of the Dutchy of ãâã S. Thom. Mores judgemet of K. HeÌries extraordinary fauour Queen Catherins judgement of S. Th-Mores loyalty Cardinal VVolseys vaniglory Flattered by most ãâã But nothing at all by S. Th. More 1. His courteous behaueour in midst of honour His ãâã in ãâã 2. His readines of vvitt in all occasions 3. Hisfrind ship and estimatioÌ vvith the learned of all Christendom Cuthbert Tunstall Bishop of Durtham Tunstall a glorious ãâã in Q. Elizabeths dayes Frindship of S. Th. More vvith B. Fisher. With Cardinal Poole in his yonger dayes VVith D. Lea Archebishop of yorke VVith Lupsetus Grocinus Linacre Montjoy G. ãâã I Crocus 4. With learned meÌ of other nations as I. Coclaeus G. Budaeus M. Dorpius Lascarus Philip Beroaldus Hierom Buslidius Peter AEgidius B. Rhenanus Cranuild Vikes C. Goclenius Sir Tho. Mores frindship to D. Erasmus Roderodamus ForsakeÌ vvhen he perceaued Erasmus balt in ãâã Erasmus liued alvvayes a Catholique Priest S. T. Mores constancy in frindship 5. His pleasaunt ãâã proceeding froÌ a quiet ãâã A ãâã and mery ãâã His candour and innocence 1. S T. Mores home-entertain ments deuotioÌs The excellent order of his family His vviues employmeÌt His ãâã discipline Euening prayers Vigils His deuotioÌ on good fryday His ãâã 2. His behaueour tovvard his vvife and children and counsels giueÌ theÌ To desire heaueÌly matters To beare afflictioÌs patieÌtly So vvithstand teÌptations of the diuel Against too much curiosity in dressing A happy houshold Their ordinary recreations 3. S. T. More studiously vvrate against heresies in midst of of his affaires The
Lordshipps haue in the matter of this marriage hitherto kept your selues virgins yet take heede you keepe your virginitie still for some there be that by procuring your Lordshipps first to be present at the CoronatioÌ next to preache for the setting forth thereof sinally to write bookes in defence of it are desirous to deflowre you and when they haue deflowred you they will not sayle soone after to deuoure you As for myself it lyeth not in my power but that they may deuoure me but God being my good Lord I will prouide so that they shall neuer deflower me In which speach he most liuely prophecieth both of all the Bishopp's fall to Schisme which after besell and his owne death which followed not long after These wordes of his it is probable that they came to Q. Anne's eares who as impatient as an Herodias not abiding that anie in the realme should finde fault with her greate catche she incensed King Henrie more against Sir THOMAS MORE then anie other man And a moneth after this sollemnitie was not past but she gott him to be sent prisonner to the Tower little knowing that her Fortune's wheele would soone turne after When the king perceaued he could not winne Sir THOMAS to the bent of his lust by no manner of benefitts then loe the fayre sun-shine day of his fauours became ouercast and there ensued a terrible storme he now going about by terrours and threates to driue him to consent vnto it full little imagining that he was a steadie rocke against which noe waues of his rage could preuaile But marke how Sir THOMAS prepared himself for this valiant combatt hauing giuen ouer his office of Chancellourshipp he neuer busied himself in State-matters anie more but gaue himself wholy during that yeare which was betweene that and his troubles not only to confute heretikes as I haue sayd but also addicted himselfe to great acts of mortisication prayer and pietie he lessened his familie placing his men in other seruices he soulde his housholde stuffe to the value of one hundred pounds he disposed his Children into their owne houses As he lay by his wife's side manie nights he slept not forethinking the worst that could happen vnto him and by his praiers and teares he ouercame the frayltie of his flesh which as he confesseth of himself could not endure a fillipp He hired a pursiuant to come suddenly to his house when he was one time at dinner and knocking hastily at his doore to warne him the next day to appeare before the Commissioners to arme his familie the better to future calamitie imitating herein the acte of S. Iohn the Almes-giuer who hired a man to come to him at meales to tell him that his graue was not yet finished and that he should take order for it for the hower of death was vncertaine 5. But see how the beginning of this trouble grew first by occasion of a certaine Nunne called Elizabeth Berton dwelling in Canterburie who for her vertue and holinesse was not a little sett by amongst the common people vnto whome for that cause manie religious persons Doctors of Diuinitie and diuerse lay men of good worshipp vsed to resorte she affirming to them constantly that she had reuelations oftentimes from God charging her to giue the king warning of his wicked life and of his abusing of the sword and authoritie committed from almightie God vnto him She moreouer knowing that my Lo of Rochester Bishopp Fisher was of a singular and rare vertuous life and of admirable learning repaired to Rochester and there disclosed vnto him all her reuelations desiring his aduise and counsell therein which the holie Bishopp perceauing might well stande with the lawes of God and his holie Church aduised her as she before had warning to doe and intended it to goe to the king herselfe and lett him vnderstande all the circumstances thereof which she perfourmed stoutely telling him all the reuelations and so returned to her cloyster againe In a short space after he making a iourney to the Nunnes of Sion by meanes of one Fa Reynold a priest of that house there she happened to enter into talke with Sir THOMAS MORE concerning such secretts as had bene reuealed vnto her some parte thereof touching deepely the matter of the king's supremacie which shortly after this followed and about the vnlawfullnesse of the king's marriage Sir THOMAS though he might well at that time without danger of anie lawe of which there was then none freely talke with her therein yet notwithstanding he demeaned himself so discreetely in all his talke with her that he deserued no blame but rather great coÌmendations as it was proued after most euidently when it was sore layd to his charge 6. After the diuorce was pronounced there was sett out a booke by authoritie from the Councell which layde downe the reasons why this diuorce was donne wherein amongst other matters it was sayde that therefore the king would not stay for the Pope's sentence because he had already appealed from him to the next Generall Councell Strayte after it was rumoured abroad that Sir THOMAS MORE had answered and refuted this booke of which slaunder Sir THOMAS purged himselfe by a letter to M. r Cromevvell now Secretarie and in the king's greate fauour shewing by manie arguments that he neither would nor could confute that booke which letter is at large in the latter ende of Sir THOMAS his workes But for all his purging himselfe accusations still came thicke and threefolde vpon him For the king by thereates and sifting of his former deedes would either winne him to his minde or else finde some occasion to except against his doings and had he not bene a man of singular integritie free from all bribes and corruption in all his offices euerie light matter would haue bene layde now heaure vpon him as of some things he was indeede accused which addes more to his honour and reputation There was one Parnell that grieuously complayned against Sir THOMAS because when he was Lo Chancellour at the suite of one M. r Vaughan his aduersarie he had made a decree against him for which at his wife's handes Sir THOMAS had taken a greate guilt Cuppe as a bribe for the clearing of which accusation Sir THOMAS being called before the bodie of the Councell the whole matter was in grieuous manner layde to his charge and when Sir THOMAS confessed the taking thereof saying that for as much as that Cuppe was giuen him long after the decree for a new yeares guift he at her importunitie of courtesie refused not to take it Then the Lo of Wiltshire Q. Anne's father who was the preferrer of the suite hated Sir THOMAS both for his religion and for that he had not consented to his daughter's marriage with much ioy sayd vnto the other Lords Loe did I not tell you that you should finde the matter true
vvhich thinke as I doe I am not bouÌd to coÌforme my selfe to these alone hauing the Doctours of the Church on my side vvho could not be dravven neither for hopes nor feares Finally to the last he wisely answered that although to denye the decree of a generall Councell vvere a damnable acte yet to vvithstande a statute of one realme's making vvhich contradicteth the constant opinion of the vvhole Church is neither a rash deede nor an obstinate but most laudable and Christianlike All which disputation my aunte Rooper sett downe in a letter to her sister Alington printed togeather with Sir THOMAS his letters After all this my aunte Rooper sought to fright him with the danger of death which might perhaps moue him to relente when he cannot hinder his mishappes but now he might preueÌt all being yet not too late wherevnto how huÌbly he speaketh of his owne frailtie and how confidently he relyeth vpon Gods mercie may be seene at large whose wordes are so humble so zealous so godlie that they are able to pierce anie mans hart that will reade them in the latter ende of his workes they breathe out an Angelicall spiritt farre different from the presumptuous speaches of either heretike or desperate man Lord helpe me yf God for my manie and grieuous sinnes vvill suffer me to be damned his Iustice shal be praised in me but I hope he vvill procure for me that his mercie shall haue the vpper hand nothing can happen but that vvhich God pleaseth and vvhat that is though it should seeme euill vnto vs yet it is truly the best 4. At another time when he had questioned with my aunte Rooper of his wife childreÌ and state of his house in his absence he asked her at last how Q. Anne did In sayth Father sayd she neuer better there is nothing else in the Courte but dancing and sporting Neuer better sayd he alas Megg alas it pittieth me to remember vnto what miserie poore soule she will shortly come these dances of hers will proue such dances that she will spurne our heads of like foote bals but it will not be loÌg ere her head will dance the like dance And how prophetically he spoke these words the ende of her Tragedie proued it most true M. r Lieutenant coming into his chamber to visite him rehearsed the manie benefitts and friendshipps that he had often receaued from him and therefore that he was bound to entertaine him friendly and make him good cheare but the case standing as it did he could not doe it without the king's displeasure wherefore he hoped that he would accept of his good will of the poore fare he had whereto he answered I verily belieue you good M. r Lieutenant and I thanke you most hartily for it and assure yourselfe I doe not mislike my fare but whensoeuer I doe then spare not to thrust me out of your doores Now whereas the oath of Supremacie and marriage was comprized in few wordes in the first Statute the Lo Chancellour and M. r Secretarie did of their owne heads adde more wordes vnto it to make it seeme more plausible to the king's eares and this Oath so amplifyed they had exhibited to Sir THOMAS and others of which their deede Sir THOMAS sayde to his daughter I may tell thee Megg that they who haue committed me hither for refusing an oath not agreable with their owne statute are not able by their owne law to iustifye mine imprisonment wherefore it is great pittie that anie Christian prince should be drawen to followe his affections by flexible counsell and by a weake Clergie lacking grace for want of which they stande weakely to their learning abuse themselues with flatterie so shamefully Which wordes coming to the Councell's eares they caused another Statute espying their ouersight to be enacted with all these conditions Another time looking out of his windowe to beholde one M. r Reynolds a religious learned and vertuous Father of Sion and three monkes of the Cbarterhouse going forth of the Tower to their executioÌ for now king Henry beganne to be fleshed in bloud hauing putt to death the Nunne and diuerse others and manie after for the Supremacie and his marriage Sir THOMAS as one that longed to accompanie them in that iourney sayde to his daughter theÌ standing besides him Loe doest not thou see Megg that these blessed Fathers be now as chearefully going to death as if they were bridegroomes going to be married whereby good daughter thou maist see what a great difference there is betweene such as haue in effect spentall their daies in a straight hard and penitentiall life religiously and such as haue in the world like worldlie wretches as thy poore father hath donne consumed all their time in pleasure and ease licentiously For God considering their loÌg continued life in most sore and grieuous pennance will not suffer them anie longer to remaine in this vale of miserie but taketh them speedily hence to the fruitioÌ of his euerlasting deitie whereas thy sillie father who hath most like a wicked Caytife passed forth most sinfully the whole course of his miserable life God thinketh him not worthie to come so soone to that eternall felicitie but leaueth him still in the world further to be plunged and turmoiled with miserie By which most humble and heauenlie meditation we may easily guesse what a spirite of Charitie he had gotten by often meditation that euerie sight brought him new matter to practise most heroicall resolutions Within a while after this M. r Secretarie coming to him from the king who still gaped more for Sir THOMAS his relenting then all his other subiects pretended much friendshipp towards Sir THOMAS and for his comfort tolde him that the king was his good and gratious Lord and minded not to vrge him to anie matter wherein he should haue anie cause of scruple from thenceforth to trouble his conscieÌce As soone as M. Secretarie was gone to expresse what comfort he receaued of his words he wrote with a coale as he did vsually manie other letters because all his Inke had bene taken from him by the king's expresse commaundement certaine wittie verses which are printed in his booke All the while Sir THOMAS was in the Tower he was not idle but busied himself in writing with a coale for the most parte spirituall treatises as the Three bookes of Comfort in Tribulation where in a dialogue manner vander the names of two Hungarians fearing the Turkes running ouer their Countrie who had made great preparations therefore he paynteth out in liuelie coulours both the danger that England stoode then in to be ouerwhelmed with heresie and how good Catholikes should prepare themselues to loose libertie life and lands and whatsoeuer can be most deare vnto them rather then to forsake their fayth It is a most excellent booke full of spirituall and forcible motiues expressing liuely Sir THOMAS his singular resolution to apply all those
so low an estate Honourable pouerty of so great ãâã personage 8. How ãâã and confidently he deposed his office An excellent letter to ãâã shop ãâã to ãâã parpose Great offices ãâã vndertaken and as dangrous to be given ouer A ãâã valuar ãâã of ãâã ãâã S ãâã Mores humble estimation of himself He sends his ãâã to the ãâã His innocence in his office Testified in priuat and publik by the King The ãâã ãâã of As thaÌkfull to ãâã ãâã for as for the office itself Another ãâã for his weak health ConteÌpt of all vaioglory 1. His ãâã ãâã to ãâã 1 Hatred to heresie Yet in his ãâã no heretik pur to death 2. Continuall talk of spirituall matters 3. Desire to suffer for Christ ãâã A notable lesson for all ãâã ãâã to M. r ãâã But not kept by the sayd M. CroÌwell Bad Counsellours make bad Princes The reward of bad couÌsel exaÌplified in CroÌwell Of good Counsellours in S. Tho. More 3. The ãâã of Q. Anne ãâã CraÌmers good qualities He concludes the mariage to be lawful The cause of EnglaÌds separation froÌ Rome Sir Tho. Mores propheticall ghesse of the oath of supremacy 4. Sir Tho. M. refused to be at Q. Annes coronatioÌ His couÌsel and predictioÌ to the Bishops his good fâânds A notable story wonderfully and prophetically applied His purpose rather to be denoured then ãâã Q Annes ãâã ãâã Thomas And the kings displeasure Sir Thomas disposeth him self more immediatly to suffer death A ChristiaÌ ãâã 5. The ãâã ãâã occasioÌ of calling into question for Q. Anne The holy Nunne of Kent Warned by reuelation to rebuke K. HeÌry Conferreth her reuelations with B. Fisher Her talk with Sir Thomas More Waryly handled by him Accusations pronounced against Sir Thomas That he impugned the K. mariage Quarrels picked against his ChauÌcellourship A supposed bribe pleasantly consuced A contteous refusall of an honest reward Another of like nature Sir Tho. More a wise marchaÌt traffiking for heauen 7. Sir T. M. his first ãâã A parlament to attaint true ãâã of ãâã The Kings deputies ãâã examin Sir Tho. M. The ãâã saires words ãâã winne Sir Tho. Fairly answered with a mild and constant refusall The Deputies threats Sir T. M. accused for autour of the kings book for the Pope His constant reply and euident ãâã Wise ãâã wary counsel of Sir Tho. to the King The king acknowledgeth obligatioÌ of his crowne to Rome 8. His merry hart after his examination A fail giuen to the ãâã The Kings indignatioÌ against Sir Tho. Prndent and politikaduise in so bad a cause Proceeding against Sit Tho. M. disterred A braue answer to a frinds feare 1. The ãâã of ãâã Sir Tho. M. cited to takesit His preparation before his going His discreet behaue our in that cause He refuseth the sath for conscieÌco sake All the clergy but Bishop fisher and D. Wilson did take the oath Vnder what coÌditioÌs Sir T. M of ãâã to set ãâã his reason of refusall Sir T. M offer proceede h not of uncertaly but because he was certain his reasons were unanswerable All Christendom of more autority then all england The oath of ãâã 2. Sir ãâã ãâã prisonmeÌt First in Westminster Then by Q. Anne importunity in the Tower His vvillingnesse to leese all for Christ. The vpper garment the porters fee. His mans oath His wonderfull courage 3. His ãâã with his daughter ãâã PreueÌted with prayers The coÌfort he found in his emprisonment Fiue reasons vsed by his daughter to make him ãâã 1. Obedience to the King 2. Autority of wise meÌ 3 Only B. Fisher of his mind 4. Him self a lay man 5. against a pariament Sir T. M. answers All the saints of God acknowleged the Popessupremacy Why he ãâã touche i that point in his writings ãâã with which many deceaue their owne coÌsciences He knew not of B. Fishers mind The Doctours of the Church greater then Doctours of England And generall CouÌcels then a ParlameÌt His trust in Gods mercy against the fear of death A heaueÌly resignation 4. Sir T. M. Prophecieth Q. Annes death His plesant answer to his ãâã honest excuse The ãâã constaÌcy andignorance of the oath makers His meditation vpon the martyrdom of 24. religious meÌ Maister Secretary Cromwells visit Sir T. M. writ in the tower his book of comfort 5. A prety dialogue between Sir T. M. and his wife Her worldly obiectioÌ His heauenly answer Prison as neer heauen as our owne house Eternity to be preferred before temporallity An other visit 6. M. Rich his sophisticall case A poor ground for an inditement of treasoÌ 7. A remarkably accident at the taking away his bookes His mery ieast vpoÌ it 8. How great care he took not to offend the king The substance of his inditement 1. The arrangement of Sir Th. More His Iudges His ãâã The iudges chargos His Christian resolution 2. Sir Th. his ãâã to the ãâã 1. How sincerly he had always told the K. his mind touching the ãâã The durance of his emprisonment and afflictioÌs 2. Why he refused to tell his iudgemeÌt of the law of supremacy Lay men not touched withthat law No law can punish fileÌce that is without malice ãâã his silence were malicious ObedieÌce first to God and then to man 3. That he neuer counselled or induced B. Fisher. The contents of his letters to the said Bishop 4. The law of supremacy like a two ed ged sword 3. M. ãâã ãâã against Sir T ãâã ãâã ãâã by Sir Tho. Mores oath to contrary By iust exceptioÌ against the witnesse vnworthy of credit Yf it had been true that had been no malice Malice in law The improbability of M. Rich his deposition M. Rich his witnesses do faile him 4. The Excepted against by Sir Thomas The act of parlament against Gods law No lay man can be head of the churche Against the lawes of the realme Against the kings owne oath Against the peculiar obligation of England to Rome Against all Christendom that euer ãâã 5. The ãâã of S. Tho. More By yfs ands ãâã no proofes The sentence Mitigated by the king 6. Sir Thomas fully deliuereth his iudgement of the act of suoremacy to be vnlawfull Against all the churche of God ãâã no ãâã Sir Tho. Mores blessed charity to his Iudges The truth of this relation froÌ present witnesses of credit 1. The manner of Sir Thomas his ãâã to the ãâã His soÌne asketh him blessing Great costancy courtesy and ãâã 2. His childrens ãâã to him His daughter Matgarets laudable passion A ponderation vpon this mutuall passioÌ of Father daughter Cardinal Pooles estimatio of Sir Thomas his death 3. How deuoutly cheerfully he ãâã his ãâã A pleasaunt coÌceipt vpoÌ a leight courtyer His last letters To Antony BoÌuise To his daughter Margaret His desito dy vpoÌ the octaue of S. Peter which was also S. Thom. of Canterburys commemoratioÌ An blessing to his heire God graÌted him his desires to dy the day he wished His heir-shirt and discipline 4. Aduertisment giuë him of the day of his ãâã ãâã the K. Most welcome vnto him The K. willed him to vse but few words at his exequution His wise childreÌ permitted to be at his ãâã His com fortable courage He put on his best apparell that day Liberally to his executioÌ 5. The for me of his ãâã and ãâã Persons hired to disgrace him A good ãâã He freeth one from the teÌtation of despairo by his prayers His ãâã at his death His prayers ãâã couereth his eyes himself His happy ãâã 6. The ãâã ãâã ãâã the ãâã of his ãâã The place of his buriall A notable accideÌt about his windnig sheet His ãâã ãâã His head His martyrdom encouraged many other to the like M. r Gardiner Euen his ãâã Parish priest 7. A ãâã vpon the blessing which he gaue to his ãâã children A praisa of M. Iohn More sonne heire to Sir Thomas The ãâã dealing of K. ãâã ãâã Sir Tho. Mores heires With the Lady his widow M. Iohn More coÌmitted to the tovver for denial of the oath The imprisonment of his daughter Margaret 8. The fauour and physiognomie of ãâã Tho. ãâã 1. Cardinal Pooles lamentatioÌ vpon Sir Tho. Mores death 2. ãâã of ãâã 3. Doctour Cochleus of Germany Iob 12. 4. Bishop Iouius of Italy 5. W Paradin a ãâã historiaÌ of France 6. Riuius a ProtestaÌt 7. Charles the Emperour 8. Circumstances notable in the death of Sir Tho. More From the kings part From Sir Thomas Mores part Nota. An apology for his mery ãâã A fit coÌparison between ãâã seuerity and Sir T. M. his pleasauÌt disposition 10. Sir Tho. More a lay man martyr for Ecclesiasticall autority neuer before questioned Epigrammes History of K. Richard the 3 in English and Latin His ãâã Many deemed Vtopia to be a true nation and country Sheep deuour men in England Sir Tho. More his book against Luther His epistle against Pomeranus His English writings The dialog with the messinger Great sincerity in his writing and loue of the truth He writt neither for ãâã nor report His ãâã almost incredible in so greate a man Sir Tho. M no partiall ãâã to the clergy Tindals false traÌslation of the scripture CoÌsuted learnedly by Sir Th. M. The wilfulnes of heretikes Tindal falsifieth Sir T. M. words ãâã ãâã of ãâã The notable disagreemeÌt of heretikes among theÌacute selues Hereticall scoffing Heretikes Hypoctisy Against the supplication of beggars Against Iohn Frith Sir Tho. Mores Apologie How heretikes recite the catholik argumeÌts Touching the length of Sir Tho. Mores bookes Heretiks blaspheming the fathers would theÌselues be reuerently handled WheÌ heretikes railings are to be neglected Heretikes excellent railours The pacificatioÌ CoÌfuted by Sir T. M. The debellation ãâã ãâã and Bizance How the Pacifier ãâã ãâã in controuersy Sir T. M. his book of the blessed Sacrament The heretiks supper of the Lord wants the best dishe Sir Tho Mores bookes written in the tower Comfort in tribulation Of CoÌmunion Of the Passion The ãâã of the ãâã of Comfort The said book a preparation against the persequutioÌ which he did forsee Written when ãâã had no book about him Written with ãâã Like Esaias his cole that purified his lippes