Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n head_n king_n supreme_a 4,443 5 9.1068 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A00173 The life or the ecclesiasticall historie of S. Thomas Archbishope of Canterbury; Annales ecclesiastici. English. Selections Baronio, Cesare, 1538-1607.; A. B., fl. 1639. 1639 (1639) STC 1019; ESTC S100557 287,552 468

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

euery where honoring him and pressing about him not only for these rare cures soe oftē shewed but also to see the Popes Legate the messinger of peace the enemy of warre whose bloody discord was euen now ready to confound both kindomes euery one for reuerence of his sanctity and for remedy of theyr maladyes striuing to gett but some little peece of his garment At the Blaud Mountayne the confine of France and Normandie Henry King of England hasted to meete him and no sooner sawe him but * Alighting leaping from his horse hee ran to him and imbracing his feete instantly got his vpper garment yea although hee refused although hee resisted although hee and others disswaded yet the king persisted and one of the Legates followers saying and what should an old torne cloake doe in akinges royal wardrobe The king answered you would neuer vse these wordes did you but know the great cures that haue bin wrought by his girdle which now some yeeres since was giuen mee About this place rested the Legate treating with the prime men of the kingdomes concerning a conclusion of peace where a poore woman whose daughter was dumb from her natiuity more respecting her childes cure then the glory of the kinges and state of theyr kingdomes could not bee restrayned but that she broke in through the greatest of them leading with her the childe neyther did this humble Legate for all this noble assembly refuse her but praying and putting his thumb dipped in his owne spittle into the childes mouth and then signing her tongue and lippes with the Crosse bad her speake after him which presently shee did and afterwardes continued the vse of her speech And instantly a yong man brought his feeble and lame mother who signed with the Legates benediction recouered The Legate an other tyme conferring with the king of France the young prynce of England and the Earle of Flanders about this weyghty busines a woeman pressed towardes him with her sonne beeing twelue yeeres of age and seauen yeeres blind whom when the Courtyers and attenders would haue kept backe the Legate commanded her weeping as she was to bee brought with her child vnto him and the Legate asking the childe what hee desired my lord sayd he that I may see the Legate put a peece of money into the childes hand and weeting his fingers in his owne spittle signed the crowne of the childes head and his eyes with the Crosse and prayed the princes wondred what the Legate meante thinking hee had iested but the child instantly recouered sight sawe the money in his hand and all thinges else the Princes and all admyred and the deuoute king of France beeing certaynly assured of the miracle falling on his knees kissed the childes head and eyes At the Monastery of Mortimer the legate on Ash-wednesday giuing hallowd ashes to the king of England and others a knight who by reason of a wound receaued in his temples from a Crossebowe had lost now long since the sight of one of his eyes importunately beesought the Legate to restore him his eye the Legate excusing himselfe and intreating the knight not to presse him aboue his power the knight still instantly vrged him till in the end the Legate touched blessed and dismissed him whereupon hee receaued the sight of his lost eye The knight published this to his lord the king and others wherupon God was more praysed and honored and his seruant more reuerenced In all which miracles wrought by this Archbishop the Popes Legate Almighty God did show his approbation of Alexanders election The Emperour and Octauian neuerthelesse desperate in theyr malice Octauians Conuenticles An Dom. 1162 Alexanders voyage into France from the coaste of Moūt Circe to Genua continued theyr scysmaticall Conuenticles beegun at Pauy next at Crema and then at Laude Alexander beeing not able to execute the function of his supreme authority in Italie beecause all that euer had recourse to him there were robbed and imprisoned by Octauians souldiers resolued vpon France and within the Octaues of our Lordes Natiuity taking shipp with his Cardinalles about Mount Circe on the feast of saint Agnes God prospering his voyage came to Genua where contrary to the Emperours command hee was royally entertayned by the Cleargie and Layetie From Genua to an Iland of Liguria Launching from Genua on Passion sunday hee prosperously arryued on Palme sunday in an Iland of Liguria where hee celebrated Easter The Iland beeing not long able to contayne him and beesides a mighty number of Prelates expecting him on the mayne land From the Iland to Mount Pessula hee came towardes a populous village of Mount Pessula where such a presse of people went forth to meete him as clad in his Pontificialty hee was hardly able to take his horse soe great a concurse there was to kisse his feete The Popes entertainment in France and happie was hee thought that could but touch the hemme of his garment The lord of the towne for a myle leading his horse with Barones and a comely trayne of souldiers wayting on him hee entred the village with solemne Procession where among the Christian nobility that humbled themselues at his feete came a Prince of the Saracenes pompeously attended and falling on his knees before him with great reuerence bowing lowe and k●ssing his feete A Saracens great reuerence and solēne embassage to the Pope deliuered him from his lord a king of the Mahometans an embassage in his barbarous language but expounded by an interpreter whom the Pope courteously answered honorably entertayned placing him at his feete among others of the nobility Soe the infidells reuerenced him whom the scismaticall Emperour persecuted On sunday following the Pope Octauian againe excommunicated A greate famine in Aquitaine declaring openly in the Church before a great multitude of all sortes his lawfull election and the perfidious attemptes of the s●ysmatickes solemnly excommunicated Octauian and his complices An outragious famine at that time encreasing and consuming Aquitaine with the adiacent cōtreyes threatened all France wherefore the Pope sent two of his Cardinalles to the king of France signifying his arryual within his Dominions and requesting to knowe in what parte of his kingdome hee would appoint him and his to remayne whom the king for the honor of sainct Peeter reuerently vsed returning them backe with all contentment to Pope Alexander whom hee called his Lord father and Pastor of his soule And according to the kinges and his counselles designment Alexander about the month of Iune trauelled towardes Aluerne The Pope resided at Claremōt and on the Eeuen of the Assumption of our Blessed Lady came to Claremont The Emperour now seeing the whole Christian world except himselfe followe Pope Alexander was confounded but not conuerted for standing on his owne power hee knewe the limitts of his Empire to bee extraordinarily enlarged and allmost all Italie subiect to his Dominion moreouer hee feared if Pope Alexander preuayled hee
ioy departed The Pope trauelling from thence to towers celebrated there the feast of Christmas This yeere also lewis king of France and Henry king of England meeting Pope Alexāder at Tociacke which is situated on the riuer of Loyre both kinges attending on foote did leade the Popes horse hee ryding thereon That kinges of Frāce and Englād together lead ioyntly the Popes horse The Pope vniteth the kinges of France and and Englād in perfect amity the king of France houlding the right and the king of England the left cheeke of his brydle and soe conducting him to a Pauylion prepared for him where hee by godes assistance vnited them in a perfect leage of amity Soe these two kinges diuided long in bloudy warres agreed both in one to honor in this sorte ioyntly together Christes vicar A thing though often vsed by Emperours and kinges to Popes yet neuer beefore excecuted by two kinges at once Soe God did honor him whom the Emperour sought to depresse rewarded the kinges for theyr humble seruice with a Benediction of Peace Now heere is to bee showed how Waldemar king of Denmark sonne of king Canutus the Martyr beeing deluded by the Emperour and Octauian Waldemar king of Dēmarke deluded by the Emperour beecame his homager yet deliuered by God from his scysme was drawne within the Lyons pawes and soe inforced to bee his homager yet mercifully deliuered by Christ from the contamination of this scysme The king beeing sollicited by the Scysmatickes and not vnderstanding the matter sent Rafe his secretary a man of more wordes then wisedome to the Emperour where ouercome with the curtesies and rewards of Fredericke and Octauian and allured also with large promises made to the king his Master of a Prouince in Italy and the gouerment of Sclauia and beeing moreouer informed how pyous an acte it was and how well beeseeming the zeale and great discretion of soe worthy a kinge to come and yeeld his assistance for vniting the Catholikes thus disioynted neyther yet Octauians humility submitting himselfe to the counsell nor Alexanders refusal to obey their iudgments beeing forgotten was thus perswaded and sent backe to relate all this to his king who more bold heerin then discreete and not soe much vpon a Religious yeale as a curiosity to see the fashons of other countreys entertayned these suggestions At that tyme Octauians Legate was in Denmarke Absolon Bishop of Rochildens a wise and vertuous Prelate but rather scorned then accepted After whose dimission the king went to Absalon Bishop of Roschildens his foster brother and faythful freind a man of rare vertues grauity and wisedome to whom laying all open hee declared his intended iourney desiring the Bishop to accompany him The Bishop discouering Frederickes deceytes condemned them assuring hee could not without violating his religion entertayne the Emperours freindship beeing more passionately then iustly transported with this scysme and for his owne parte that hee was altogether vnprouided for such a iourney The king offering to furnish him with all thinges necessary the Bishop answered hee would not hazard his soule among the professed enemyes of Gods Church The king replying hee therfore desired to haue him along beecause if his conscience should bee any wayes endangered the Bishop might rescue and deliuer him the Bishop ouercome with his importunity happily yeelded whereupon the king with a royal trayne sett forward neyther with any dangers or dissuasiōs of his faythfull counsellors could hee be-recalled but neuerthelesse preceeded on with great iustice and religion which purchassed him in all Countreyes where hee passed both loue and reuerence for though his company encreasing amounted in showe to an army yet would hee not suffer them to offer the least wrong to any The singular iustice of the king of Denmarke yea his seuere equity was such both at home and abroade as when afterwardes vpon want of prouision for his horses complayning to the Emperour hee desired hee might haue the same for money and the Emperour willed that his seruantes as others who followed those warres should gett it by spoyle of the Countrey hee cryed out hee was no theife nor would purchase by robbery and although in eases of necessity this was tolerated yet would hee not allow that in other nations which hee condemned in his owne or suffer his subiectes with forraine offences to corrupt their domesticall lawes Wherupon the Germane Princes admyring protested that happy was the Realme where such a king gouerned But to returne to the purpose After a tedious iourney approaching the Emperiall Campe hee found contrary to his expectation a cold entertaynment For Absolon the good Bishop accompanyd with Rafe that ill Embassador deliuered beefore the Emperour the cause of his lords coming But Frederike condemning first the kinges neglecte and delay sayd that hee who held his kingdome by seruice to the Emperiall Maiestie forgot himselfe much in omitting thus long his attendance Absolon answering The Emperour should haue signifyd soe much to the king before hee vndertooke his iourney and not to inuite him with such faire and large promises The Emperour wondering answered who fed the king with such hopes and promises Absolon produced Rafe saying this is hee who with your high promises abused the goodnes of our credulous king But Rafe abashed at the Emperours denyall gaue the Bishop leaue to vnfould the whole matter The Emperour still gaynsaying all Absolon desired his kinge might haue then a safe conduct backe into his Countrey But Fredericke yeelding to nothing affirmed that as hee medled not with his comming soe hee would not assist him in his goeing Heerupon the king repenting his rashnes sayd allthough the swoard hung ouer his head neuertheles hee would rather dye then inthrall his countrey to bondage And for a remedy to this mischeife lying with the Emperour on the confines of France determined by Absolons counsell to flye thither by stealth for refuge But the Emperour altering his mynde sought to win him by giftes whom hee could not bend by terror and giuing the gouerment of Sclauia allured the king to doe him Homage yet soe as it should neyther preiudice his posterity nor kingdome alleadgeing for example the glorious king of Englād who in like case for his principallityes in France did Homage to the king of France And now to descend to Octauians absurd conuenticle where the Archbishop of Clen declaymed of the iniury offered the Romane Emperour by other kinges who would intermedle with choosing the Pope of Rome where the Emperour on the contrary side neuer interposed himselfe about the elections of any Bishoppes in Cittyes subiect to their dominions And the Emperour saying also that hee doubted not but the kinges there present assembled by him for that purpose would concurre with the Bishoppes in ratifying Octauians authority When Octauian heereupon proceeded in his counterfeit solemnity to accurse Pope Alexander The king of Denmarke by the aduise of Bishop Absolon flyinge Octauian followeth Alexander the king
the Courte and continually to bee wrestling with a certaine Protheus as the Prouerb 15. so as if the grace of God and his owne industry had not preserued him hee was like euery houre haue bin throwne downe head long into ruyne and destruction In the time of his Chancellorship hee found so great fauour with the king that after the decease of the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury hee succeeded in that Sea to gouern the Church of England for the king hauing had manifold tryall of him Hee was made L. Archi-Bishop of Canterb. deemed his fidelity and magnanimity to bee fit for so high a dignity and also that thee would haue a care of his profit and gouerne all thinges in the Church and Common wealth to his good liking and moreouer hee did fore see if it should please God to cut him of by vntimely death that hee would bee a faithfull Tutor for the education of his children for surely hee was a man of wonderfull great experience in the world and one that would wisely coniecture of the euent of things to comme A faithfull Tutor to the kings issue hauing by long experience learned the charge and honor both belonging to his place hee knew also the kings conditions and the pride of his officers and how powerfull the malice of his Parasites was whervppon hee coniectured euidently that by the acceptance of that dignity hee should lose the fauor of God or else of the king for it was impossible for him to please God and to obserue the kinges humor neither could hee please the king and preferre the lawe of God before his He refused that promotion and therefore for a season hee would not accept of the promotion which the king and other of his freindes perswaded him vnto But the prouidence of God preuayled so as by the instant and vrgent perswasion of that honorable Cardinal Preist Pisanus Legate of the Sea Apostolick hee did satisfie the kinges desire and the perswasion of his freindes chusing rather to hazard the kinges displeasure then to giue way vnto the desolation of the Church and resoluing either to protect it from so imminent danger of seruitude or else after the example of Christ to lay downe his life for his sheepe for the lay power beereauing the Church of her ancient priuiledges tooke vpon it to determine all causes as well Ecclesiasticall as temporal and as the people so was the Clergie troaden vnder foote also wherfore hee whom God had preordained to bee so greate à Prelate and Martyr notwithstanding that some of his enemyes did labour against the ordinance of God was elected with the general consent of all men After his consecration forth with His discipline putting of the old man hee put on haire-cloth to Crucify the flesh with the concupiscence therof and remembring that hee had taken vpon him the office of a Pastor and Doctour hee performed the ministerie of à Preacher All the time which hee could spare from his affaires of greatest importance His pronesse to prayer hee beestowed it for the most parte in prayer and reading when hee was solitary hee did maruilousely abound in teares and in his celebration at the Aultar his behauiour was such as if hee had beheld our lordes Passion in the flesh before his eyes Hee did minister the Sacramēts with so great reuerence that the very handling of them was able to informe the faith and manners of them that beheld him Hee kept backe his hand from bribery and giftes and cast away from him the filth of couetousnes in counsell hee was prouidēt Hee was a prouident Counsellor in hearing of causes a diligent and indifferent iudge in questions subtil in answers ready in iudgment iust without respect of persons and a strict executor of the law in all pointes Vnder outward decency of apparrel hee was inwardly apparelled with the armour of à Christian souldier which that the merrit therof might not bee diminished through vaineglory hee was very carefull to hide from the world and that according to the saying of the wise man his outward semblance might bee agreable to the world His charitable releife of the poore whenas inwardly all thinges were contrary In his place hee sat not downe to meate vntill the poore were sent in before him and that they might the better bee releiued with that which was left hee would haue his table th● more plentifull Such as begged from dore to dore went not away empty handed from his gate Hee caused his seruantes to visit the houses of sicke and feeble persons and hee did visit them himselfe effectually with his beneuolence sustaining many of them dayly with meate drinke and cloth He doubled the largiss of his Predecessor for wheras his predecessor Theobald of happie memory did double the expences of his Predecessor beestowed in almes hee likewise of a certaine religious emulation thought good to redouble the like expences of his Predecessor also for the performance of which charitable worke hee did consecrate the tenth parte of all his reuenues to that purpose Hee daily washt the feete of 13. poore people Hee vsed daily in a certaine secret Cell vpon his knees to wash the feete of thirteene poore folke in remembrance of Christ giuing to euery one of them after they had well dyned fourepēce which if any time hee could not attend in his owne person which seldome hapned hee caused it diligently to bee supplyed by a substitute Hee entertained religious persons with so great a respect as if hee had receaued a dinine presence Hee was very liberal or an Angel in their persons In hospitality and other workes of liberality hee was so plentifull that his riches seemed the common treasury of all mē and albeeit his house was garnished with rich and pretious furniture His contempt of worldly riches He was temperate in his diet yet did hee contemne riches and worldly treasure as dung for Christ vsing transitory thinges to serue his necessity and not to satisfie his concupiscences and pleasure In his diet he was temperate obseruing therewith a mediocrity that by too much austerity hee might not bee taxed of superstition or by ingurgitation esteemed a Glutton He detested hypocrisie Hee detested no lesse the note of hypocrisie then hee did the imputation of dishonesty esteeming it the best kind of fasting to obserue the measure of sobrietie in which attire being poore in spiritt vnder a merri countenance couering a contrite harte in a delicate table preferring penury rising often from the bourde rather empty then full bellied and more often refreshed then satisfyed in keeping himselfe euer within the compasse of sobrietie Hee conformed himselfe to the manners of those hee accompanyed withall after the example of the Apostles who by wholsom dispensation became all vnto all to the intent to gaine all Hee deliuered the poore from the hand of the mighty as one that was truly giuen by God to bee a father to
Norwaye to preach the faith in that Prouince Adrian Apostle of Norwaye and purchase to allmighty God their misdebelieuing soules where hee like a worthie and discreete steward and disciple of Christ diligently instructed that rude and Barbarous nation in the Christian lawe and Ecclesiastical ordinances Pope Anastacius After by the diuine prouidence vpon the death of Eugenius and preferment of Anastacius to the Papal throne hee returned to his mother the holy Church of Rome leauing beehind him peace to the kingdome lawes to the barbarous tranquility to the Churches order and discipline to the Cleargie and a people acceptable to God and fruitfull in good workes Within a shorte tyme after dyed Anastacius and the Bishops and Cardinals assembling together in saint Peeters Church by the dispensation of the diuine counsell speedily chose him Pope Pope Ad●iā and with great acclamation of the Cleargie and layetie as a man elected by Allmighty God allthough hee laboured with all his power to auoyde it they inthronized him in the papal chaire calling him Adrian the fourth 3. Non. Decemb. An. Dom. 1156. He was a man of singular benignity The praise of Pope Adrian meeke and patient learned in the Greeke and Latine tongues eloquent in speech a perfect Orator very skillfull in Church musicke a famous preacher seldome angrie willing to pardon bountifull in beestowing a greate Almesmā and for demeanour and beehauiour renowned This much out of the Vaticane library Now to showe that hee esteemed his honor a burden his dignity a misery and that hee would neuer haue vndergone the weighty charge of this supreme authority but only to satisfie the will of almighty God I doe heere recite his owne wordes spoken to that worthie Iohn of Salusbury in Polichrati lib. 8. cap. 23. Hee confessed hee found in that high estate soe great tribulations as in comparison of them all his former bitter aduersitys seemed sweete and pleasing Hee sayd the seate of the Romane Pope was a thorny throne beegirt with most sharpe spurres of that huge weyght as it was able to presse to bend yea breake in peeces the strongest shoulders and but that said hee I will not struggle against the diuine prouidence I would I had neuer gon out of my natiue soyle of England or else euer lurked in my poore Cell of saint Rufus rather then to bee plunged in these extreame difficultyes yea hee professed that in all his ascentes from his solitarie cloyster to the supreame heygth of the Papacy hee found noe contentment or pleasure yea quoth hee god hath stretched out my whole life beetweene the anuile and the hammer but now if it pleaseth his diuine goodnes let him supporte with his allmighty hād the burdē that hee hath imposed on my infirmity or otherwise it is intollerable Thus hee teacheth from the highest throne of this world to flye honors thus hee preacheth from the greatest eminency to all Potentates not to repose themselues in glory riches and pleasures which are but the shadowes of their seates but deepely to consider the charge that by reason of their authority they vndergoe which is to employ their vttermost forces to honor Almighty god in the ryghtuous gouerment of the people subiected to their powers for otherwise Potentes potenter punientur Nether would I euer haue dilated my selfe soe farre in praise of Pope Adrian but that some of our Chronickles ignorantly others willfully omitt his commendation They confesse hee conuerted Norwaye and gaue the dominion of Ireland to the kinges of England but as the first was only for enlargeing the kingdome of Christ soe was the last as you may see in his Epistle to Henry the second Now crauing pardō for my digression in the prayse of this man the glory of our nation who prefered god beefore his contrey and all I will returne to the matter Fredericke king of the Romanes in his first entrance into his royaltie began impiously to encrease his dominion Frederick kinge of the Rom●nes a perpetual enemy of the Church with the suppression of the Church and by how much his power was the greater for hee commanded all Germany and mightily preuayled in Italie so much the more was he enabled to mischeife This wasting flame which soe much endangered the whole Christian world shewed it selfe as a litle sparke in the raigne of Pope Eugenius gathered strength by the conniuancy of his successor Anastacius began to waste the power of our noble Adrian and lastly fired Alexander the third out of Italie and deuoured for the time all his iurisdiction in Germany and had not Christ maintayned his Church against the gates of Hell France England Spayne with all the rest had bene ruinated The original of the discord beetweene the Church and the Emperor The original was the first yeare of his raigne in the Church of Magdeburghe the Metropolitane of Saxony where vpon the death of the Archbishop a dissention aryseing about choosing his successor they appealed to Fredericke then residing in Saxonie who not able to compose the controuersie perswaded the Deane and Chapter of Magdebourghe to accept of Guicman Bishop of Cicens a noble yong gentleman to gouerne their Church pretending that when such questions arose the king with aduice of his counsell ought to dispose therin nether was any Bishop in that case to bee consecrated till hee had receaued his authority from the kingly scepter But all this was a false pretence for it lay not in the kinges or Emperors power causelessly to translate Bishoppes from seate to seate without assent of the Apostolike Sea which holy Pope Eugenius righty considering with singular constancy withstood the kinges vnlawfull attempt sharpely reprouing the Bishoppes of Germany that laboured for him because they rather sought to flatter their prince in concurring with his sinne then to please God and this did hee not only with his learned and pious Epistle but also vehemently persued the same by his Legates But Eugenius preuented by death lefte all to his successour Anastacius a man of a gentle and yeelding disposition For notwithstanding his Legate was disgracefully abused by Fredericke and ended his life in his returne home hee neuerthelesse ratifyd the kinges election and granted Guicman his Pall whereupon Fredericke declining from his religious zeale increased yeere by yeere in obstinacy against the Church And Anastacius not long after departing the world our countreyman beeing instantly elected by the name of Adrian the fourth Pope Adriā assaulted by the King of Cecil The king of Cecill excōmunicated Pope Adriā terrifyed by Fredericke king of the Romanes found the kinges insolency much strengthned against him by his predecessors facility of nature In the beeginning of his Popedome hee was troubled with the inuasions of William king of Cecil wherefore against his temporall sword hee drewe his spirituall sword and excommunicated him Fredericke also king of the Romans with his suddaine approach towarde the Citty terrifyed him whereupon hee sent Legates to treate
rule and commodiously to gouerne your kingdome according as our lord hath appointed you to the honor of God and the peace tranquillity of his Chrch for which only end you haue receiued into your hand the reynes of the realme That hee by whom kings raigne whose seruice is a kingdome may preserue to you your heires a temporal kingdome after the expiration thereof an eternal one without end Thus Alexander to King Henry which is also set forth by Roger in his Chronicle But what Thomas in this passage of time beefore hee fledd into France with patience endured is to bee declared out of the afore-mentioned Authors for thus is it related The kinge in the meane while vnderstood that my Lord of Canterbury would flie off from that promise especially in that hee openly gaynesayd to seale the deede of those conditions in sorte as beefore was appointed Whereupon the Prince inraged more with fury beegan to afflicte my lord of Canterbury with more greeuous and exquisite vexations soe far forth as it was apparant to vnderstanding men that his bloud and life was thirsted after Wherefore Thomas fearing that determined to flie the Realme and comming to his Mannor called Aluter while all the rest were a sleepe accompanyd only with two with drewe himselfe secretly and getting a ship committed himselfe to the seas but long outwearyd with a contrary winde returning backe hee hardly recouered early in the morning the land againe with hazard of his life In the end his departure beeing knowne his familiars and seruantes were thereupon seuerally dispersed Yet one of them boulder then the rest comming to Canterbury S Thomas ●tt●mp●ing 〈◊〉 passe aw●● by seas 〈◊〉 contrary ●indes ●●●●en backe againe retyred himselfe the next night into the Bishoppes owne chamber and supper being ended began carefully with sorrowe to lament the misfortunes and afflictions of his lord and hauing thus spent the beeginning of the night desirous to take his rest Goe quoth hee to his Boy and shutt the vttermost dore of the hall to the end wee may sleepe more securely this seruant therefore comming thither with a candle lighted the dore beeing open sawe my lord of Canterbury sitt alone in a corner terrifyd with which specctacle hee ran away imagining hee beheld a vision and telling his Master thereof this Clearke whom hee serued would in no case belieue it vntill himselfe made tryal of the truth and comming found all in sorte a foresayde My lord of Canterbury calling together some of his brethren of Canterbury Church declared to them what had beefallen him and how as yet it was not Godes pleasure he should departe and beeing refreshed with a light supper rested The next morning came the kinges officers to confiscate the whole estate of the Archbishop as a fugitiue but hearing and seeing hee was present confounded they helde theire peace The kinge therfore with a more heauy hand increased the afflictions of my lord of Canterbury causing him to bee peremptorily cyted for answering his Maiestie at a certayne day concerning matters The Parliament at North-Hampton to bee obiected against him The tyme being come they who were summoned assembled and a Parliament beeing helde at North-Hamptonne my lord is called to answer his cause The Archbishop together with the rest of the Bishops beeing sate and sequestred in a roome a parte the dores by the Kings commandemēt beeing shutt so as there could be no passage forth it was on his Majesties beehalfe alleaged against him that in the tyme of his Chancellorship hauing many vacancyes of Bishopprickes and Abbeys with great rentes for very many yeeres in his handes hee neuer gaue vp his accompt for the same which now the kinge required of him Heereunto sayd the Archbishop wee will consult with our counsell and answer by aduice While therefore The opinions of the Bishoppes they remayned all in deepe silence Gilbert Bishop of London Deane of the Church of Canterbury and in that respecte cheefest of his Councell in authority next vnder the Archbishop my lord of Canterbury requiring him to speake sayd if father you consider frō whence the king hath exalted you what hee hath beestowed on you and weygh alsoe the malice of these tymes how miserable a reigne you haue prepared for the Catholike Church and vs by withstandinge the kinge heerein you ought not only to yeelde him the Archbishoppricke of Canterbury but also the same were it tenne tymes better And if perchance hee could but seein you that humility hee would restore you whatsoeuer you haue lost Wee sufficiently perceaue quoth my lord of Canterbury what you haue aduisedly answered Then Henry Bishop of Winchester sayd This manner of Counsell beeing absolutely pernicious to the Catholicke Church byndeth and confoundeth vs all because if our Archbishop and Primate of England should leaue vs such an example as that euery Bishop should yeelde and forsake at the becke and threatning of his Prince his authority ād care ouer the soules committed to his charge what will bee then afterwardes the state of the Churches but only this that nothing will bee ordered according to law but all will be confounded as the king listeth and such as the Preist such will bee the people Next Hilary Bishop of Chichester a man glorious in wordes adding his opinion sayd if this instant time and the troubles of the Catholike Church did not require at our handes an other course wee ought doubtlesse to assent to your sentence But when the authority of the Cannons staggereth wee ought very much to withdrawe the rigor of seuerity that sweete dispensatiō may profit there where sharpe correctiō may otherwise destroy wherefore I thinke wee ought to yeeld to the kinges pleasure yet only but for a tyme least otherwise wee run on rashly to decree that whereupon may followe a more greeuous retractation not without confusion Afterwardes the Bishop of Lincolne a man truly simple and of lesse discretion sayd it is apparant they seeke the life and blood of this man and of necessity one of these must followe that hee must suffer eyther in his Archbishoppricke or in his life now what fruite hee can reape of his Archbishoppricke if hee loseth his life therefore I see not But Bartholomewe Bishop of Excester spoake thus it is playne that these dayes are euill wherefore if wee may vnder the shadowe of dissimulation auoyd the force of this tempest without hurte or losse it were especially to bee procured neither can wee easily attayne thereunto vnlesse there bee a great relaxation of seuerity the instance of this tyme requireth it cheefely since this persecution is not generall but particular It is better therefore one head should in parte bee subiect to danger then the whole Church of England exposed to an ineuitable perill Roger the Bishop of Worcester beeing also asked his opinion soe tempered his answer as in his very negatiue hee made apparant what his minde was In this quoth hee I will giue no aduice
endeauour for her deliuery Vnlesse perchance you will imagin hee leaueth the shipp who entreth the Cock-boate to drawe her into the hauen This and much more in the beehalfe of saint Thomas wryteth his defendant Iohn of Salisbury But heare what the King of England did Cod Vatis lib 1 epistola 23. vpon the reporte of his departure Henry thus deluded hearing by some that saint Thomas was escaped by flight published his Edictes in this sorte against him and the Clearkes his followers Henry King of England to the seuerall Bishoppes ordayned in England Yee are not Ignorant in what euill sorte Thomas Archbisoppe of Canterbury hath proceeded against mee and my kindome and in what bad manner hee is departed And therefore I cōmand yee none of his Clearkes who after that his flight accompanyd him not any other Clearkes who derogated from the honor of mee and the honor of my kingdome receaue any renttes beelonging to them in your Bishoppickes otherwise then by my permission nor haue any assistance or aduice from yee Hee set out also an other proclamation for sequestring the reuenewes of the Archbishoppricke of Canterbury into the kinges handes Likewise hee published other decrees signifyed to S. Thomas from his friend by wryting in these wordes Please i● you to vnderstand Ibid epist 15 ibid. ep 14. Lawes on asted after the flight of S. Thamas that this is the tenor of the commissions sent by King Henry into England to wit That euery hauen bee most carefully guarded least any letters of interdiction bee any way brought into the land and if any Reguler person bringeth them in let his feete bee cut of if hee bee a Clearke let him lose his eyes and priuy members if a laye man let him bee hanged If a Leper let him be burned and if any Bishop for dread of this interdictiō will trauell out of the realme let him cary nothing with him beesides his staffe It is also his will that all schollers bee compelled to returne into their countrey or else to bee depriued of their Benefices and they that stay shall remayne without euer hope of returne likewise for those Priests who refuse to sing let them lose their priuy partes And let all who rebell bee depriued of their Benefices Thomas in the meane while hauing suffered this banishment sent these letters to Pope Alexander which Roger in his Chronickes of England recyteth the yeere following yet truly appertayning to this present S Thomas concerning hi● appeal to the Pope written with these wordes I flye for refuge most holy father vnto your audience that you who with soe greate a hazard of your selfe haue rescued the Churches liberty may now consider the only or cheifest cause of the persecution of my selfe who haue followed your example For I greeued to see the state of the Church by litle and litle to perish and her lawes infringed by the Auarice of Princes and thought this danger of sicknes was to bee preuented and by how much I knewe my selfe more bound to that lord of myne vnto whom next vnder God I am most ingaged soe much the more securely I supposed his vniust attemptes were to bee resisted vntill they preuayled who clowded from mee the cleere beames of his fauor Afterwardes as it is accustomed with Princes they raysed against mee slanders and false accusations whereby they might prosecute mee and I rather chose banishment then to yeelde to iniustice and to multiplye these mischeifes I was as a laye man called beefore the King to mak● satisfaction and where I hoped in my resistance for most assistance there was I especially deceaued for I found my lordes and fellowe brethren the Bishoppes prepared at the pleasure of the Courtiers to punish mee Thus allmost strangled with the inuasions of soe many I haue fled for succour to the audience of your Holines who neglecteth not those who are plunged in extremityes and vnder whom I stand ready to make good that I am nether to bee iudged there nor by them for what is this else father then to diminish and withdrawe from you the authority of your lawes yea what else then to submit spirituall Power to temporal iurisdiction this once suffered would open an example to many and therefore I iudged Christ fauoreth Caesar not a tia tirant it was with more constancy to bee withstood because the headlong way to doe hurte is to see but a weake resistance But they will say Those thinges are to bee giuen to Caesar which are Caesars yet allthough in many matters the king is to bee obeyed hee is neuerthelesse not to bee obeyed in those by which hee ceaseth to bee a king for such appertayne not to Caesar but to a Tyrant wherein the Bishoppes if not for my sake yet for their owne should haue resisted him For if the last iudgment is reserued for him who hath power to iudge both body and soule shall the highest Tribunal among men bee attributed to him who iudgeth according to his owne sense if these Bishoppes mayntaine the parte of iustice why did they assault mee why doe they reproue mee for appealing vnto him to auoyde whose determination of controuersyes is either vnlawfull or not expedient wherefore they haue vniustly accused mee or distrusted of your iustice for otherwise it were a double confusion to mee to bee conuicted before your Holines And haue I deserued persecution at their handes for whose cause I defended the bullwarke against soe greate a battery and had won the victory if only they would haue assisted but in all case is the head beeing left destitute by the members for how would it bee if the eyes should vse the tongue against th● head if they had well foreseene it they deuis●d but mischeefe to their owne confusion and our principall aduersaryes abused their assistance to bring them into slauery Because they haue accomplished all this How many wayes the Bishoppes of England offended against S. Thomas vpon soe greate a malice that to vndoe mee they would withall ouerthrowe themselues they haue herein neglected spirituall treasures for temporall trifles and fayled in the end of both Againe what an offence was it that when I cryed out against this iniustice and appealed to your audience they durst in iudgment comdemne mee their father what if they conspire with the Prince our aduersary against the whole Catholicke Church and truly most holy father you might haue bin suspitious thereof Yet wille they say they were bounde to their king as their temporal lord but to him in their bodyes to mee in their soules and to whom could they bee more obliged then to themselues Is it not better to lose corporall then spiritual riches But they will againe reply the king was not in this perilous tyme to bee prouoked O how subtilly doe they argue for their owne slauery yea they prouoke him who by their excesses giue winges to his will and pleasure For they might haue bin quiet had they not to quietly