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14 <Metadata name="Content">Secondary Sources: The Divorce of Catherine of Aragon, by JA Froude: Introduction</Metadata>
15 <Metadata name="Page_topic">Secondary Sources: The Divorce of Catherine of Aragon, by JA Froude: Introduction</Metadata>
16 <Metadata name="Author">Marilee Mongello</Metadata>
17 <Metadata name="Title">Secondary Sources: The Divorce of Catherine of Aragon, by JA Froude: Introduction</Metadata>
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38 &lt;td valign=&quot;top&quot; width=&quot;50%&quot; height=&quot;29&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/td&gt;
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40 &lt;/tr&gt;
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48 &lt;td valign=&quot;top&quot; width=&quot;50%&quot; height=&quot;610&quot;&gt;
49 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;
50 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;7&quot;&gt;The Divorce of&lt;br&gt;Catherine of Aragon&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
51 &lt;font size=&quot;5&quot;&gt;by
52 JA Froude, 1891&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
53 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;
54 &lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/aragon-new1.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;miniature portrait of Katharine of Aragon by Lucas Horenbout&quot; width=&quot;325&quot; height=&quot;321&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
55 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;610&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
56 &lt;/tr&gt;
57&lt;/table&gt;
58&lt;blockquote&gt;
59 &lt;blockquote&gt;
60 &lt;font style=&quot;font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif&quot;&gt;&lt;/font&gt;
61 &lt;font face=&quot;Times New Roman&quot;&gt;
62 &lt;div align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;
63 &lt;b&gt;INTRODUCTION&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
64 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;THE mythic element cannot be eliminated out of history. Men
65 who play leading parts on the world's stage gather about them the admiration
66 of friends and the animosity of disappointed rivals or political enemies.
67 The atmosphere becomes charged with legends of what they have said or done
68 -- some inventions, some distortions of facts, but rarely or never accurate.
69 Their outward acts, being public, cannot be absolutely misstated; their
70 motives, being known only to themselves, are an open field for imagination;
71 and as the disposition is to believe evil rather than good, the portraits
72 drawn may vary indefinitely, according to the sympathies of the describer,
73 but are seldom too favourable. The more distinguished a man is the more he
74 is talked about. Stories are current about him in his own lifetime,
75 guaranteed apparently by the highest authorities; related, insisted upon;
76 time, place, and circumstance accurately given -- most of them mere
77 malicious lies; yet, if written down, to reappear in memoirs a hundred years
78 hence, they are likely to pass for authentic, or at least probable. Even
79 where there is no malice, imagination will still be active. People believe
80 or disbelieve, repeat or suppress, according to their own inclinations; and
81 death, which ends the feuds of unimportant persons, lets loose the tongues
82 over the characters of the great. Kings are especially sufferers; when alive
83 they hear only flattery; when they are gone men revenge, themselves by
84 drawing hideous portraits of them, and the more distinguished they may have
85 been the more minutely their weaknesses are dwelt upon. &lt;i&gt;&amp;quot;C'est un plaisir
86 indicible,&amp;quot;&lt;/i&gt; says Voltaire, &lt;i&gt;&amp;quot;de donner des décrets contre des
87 souverains morts quand on ne peut en lancer contre eux de leur vivant de
88 peur de perdre ses oreilles.&amp;quot;&lt;/i&gt; The dead sovereigns go their way. Their
89 real work for good or evil lives after them; but they themselves are where
90 the opinions expressed about their character affect them no more. To CÊsar
91 or Napoleon it matters nothing what judgment the world passes upon their
92 conduct. It is of more importance for the ethical value of history that acts
93 which as they are related appear wicked should be duly condemned, that acts
94 which are represented as having advanced the welfare of mankind should be
95 duly honoured, than that the real character of individuals should be
96 correctly appreciated. To appreciate any single man with complete accuracy
97 is impossible. To appreciate him even proximately is extremely difficult.
98 Rulers of kingdoms may have public reasons for what they do, which at the
99 time may be understood or allowed for. Times change, and new interests rise.
100 The circumstances no longer exist which would explain their conduct. The
101 student looks therefore for an explanation in elements which he thinks he
102 understands -- in pride, ambition, fear, avarice, jealousy, or sensuality;
103 and, settling the question thus to his own satisfaction, resents or
104 ridicules attempts to look for other motives.&lt;/p&gt;
105 &lt;/font&gt;&lt;font style=&quot;font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif&quot;&gt;
106 &lt;font style=&quot;font-family: Times New Roman&quot;&gt;
107 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;So long as his moral judgment is generally correct, he
108 inflicts no injury, and he suffers none. Cruelty and lust are proper objects
109 of abhorrence; he learns to detest them in studying the Tiberius of Tacitus,
110 though the character described by the great Roman historian may have been a
111 mere creation of the hatred of the old Roman aristocracy. The manifesto of
112 the Prince of Orange was a libel against Philip the Second; but the Philip
113 of Protestant tradition is an embodiment of the persecuting spirit of
114 Catholic Europe which it would be now useless to disturb. The tendency of
115 history is to fall into wholesome moral lines whether they be accurate or
116 not, and to interfere with harmless illusions may cause greater errors than
117 it aspires to cure. Crowned offenders are arraigned at the tribunal of
118 history for the crimes which they are alleged to have committed. It may be
119 sometimes shown that the crimes were not crimes at all, that the sufferers
120 had deserved their fate, that the severities were useful and essential for
121 some great and valuable purpose. But the reader sees in the apology for acts
122 which he had regarded as tyrannical a defence of tyranny itself. Preoccupied
123 with the received interpretation, he finds deeds excused which he had learnt
124 to execrate; and in learning something which, even if true, is of no real
125 moment to him, he suffers in the maiming of his perceptions of the
126 difference between right and wrong. The whitewashing of the villains of
127 tradition is, therefore, justly regarded as waste of labour. If successful,
128 it is of imperfect value; if unsuccessful, it is a misuse of industry which
129 deserves to be censured. Time is too precious to be squandered over
130 paradoxes. The dead are gone; the censure of mankind has written their
131 epitaphs, and so they may be left. Their true award will be decided
132 elsewhere. &lt;/p&gt;
133 &lt;/font&gt;&lt;font face=&quot;Times New Roman&quot;&gt;
134 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;This is the commonsense verdict. When the work of a man is
135 done and ended; when, except indirectly and invisibly, he affects the living
136 world no more, the book is closed, the sentence is passed, and there he may
137 be allowed to rest. The case is altered, however, when the dead still live
138 in their actions, when their principles and the effects of their conduct are
139 still vigorous and operative, and the movements which they initiated
140 continue to be fought over. It sometimes happens that mighty revolutions can
141 be traced to the will and resolution of a single man, and that the conflict
142 continues when he is gone. The personal character of such a man becomes then
143 of intrinsic importance as an argument for attack or defence. The changes
144 introduced by Henry VIII. are still denounced or defended with renewed
145 violence; the ashes of a conflict which seemed to have been decided are
146 again blown into a flame; and what manner of man Henry was, and what the
147 statesmen and churchmen were who stood by him and assisted him in reshaping
148 the English constitution, becomes a practical question of our own time. By
149 their fruits ye shall know them. A good tree cannot bear evil fruit, neither
150 can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit. Roman Catholics argue from the
151 act to the man, and from the man back to the act. The Reformation, they say,
152 was a rebellion against an authority appointed by God for the rule of the
153 world; it was a wicked act in itself; the author or the authors of it were
154 presumably, therefore, themselves wicked; and the worst interpretation of
155 their conduct is antecedently probable, because a revolt against the Church
156 of Christ could only have originated in depraved hearts. Or again, inverting
157 the argument, they say with sufficient plausibility that the sins and crimes
158 of the King are acknowledged facts of history; that from so bad a man no
159 good thing could ever rise; that Henry was a visible servant of the devil,
160 and therefore the Reformation, of which he was the instrument, was the
161 devil's work. If the picture drawn of him by his Catholic contemporaries is
162 correct, the inference is irresistible. That picture, however, was drawn by
163 those whose faith he wounded and whose interests he touched, and therefore
164 might be regarded with suspicion. Religious animosity is fertile in calumny,
165 because it assumes beforehand that every charge is likely to be true in
166 proportion to its enormity, and Catholic writers were credulous of evil when
167 laid to the charge of so dangerous an adversary. But the Catholics have not
168 been Henry's only accusers; all sorts and sects have combined in the general
169 condemnation. The Anglican High Churchman is as bitter against him as
170 Reginald Pole himself. He admits and maintains the separation from Rome
171 which Henry accomplished for him; but he abhors as heartily as Pole or
172 Lingard the internal principles of the Reformation. He resents the control
173 of the clergy by the civil power. He demands the restoration of the
174 spiritual privileges which Henry and his parliaments took away from them. He
175 aspires to the recovery of ecclesiastical independence. He therefore with
176 equal triumph points to the blots in Henry's character, and deepens their
177 shade with every accusation, proved or unproved, which he can find in
178 contemporary records. With him, too, that a charge was alleged at the time
179 is evidence sufficient to entitle him to accept it as a fact. &lt;/p&gt;
180 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Again, Protestant writers have been no less unsparing, from
181 an imprudent eagerness to detach their cause from a disreputable ally. In
182 Elizabeth's time it was a point of honour and loyalty to believe in the
183 innocence of her mother. If Anne Boleyn was condemned on forged or false
184 evidence to make way for Jane Seymour, what appears so clearly to us must
185 have been far clearer to Henry and his Council; of all abominable crimes
186 committed by tyrannical princes there was never one more base or cowardly
187 than Anne's execution; and in insisting on Anne's guiltlessness they have
188 condemned the King, his ministers, and his parliaments. Having discovered
189 him to have murdered his wife, they have found him also to have been a
190 persecutor of the truth. The Reformation in England was at its outset
191 political rather than doctrinal. The avarice and tyranny of the Church
192 officials had galled the limbs of the laity. Their first steps were to break
193 the chains which fretted them, and to put a final end to the temporal power
194 of the clergy. Spiritual liberty came later, and came slowly from the
195 constitution of the English mind. Superstition had been familiarised by
196 custom, protected by natural reverence, and shielded from inquiry by the
197 peculiar horror attaching to unbelief. The nation had been taught from
198 immemorial time that to doubt on the mysteries of faith was the worst crime
199 which man could commit; and while they were willing to discover that on
200 their human side the clergy were but brother mortals of questionable
201 character, they drew a distinction between the Church as a national
202 institution and the doctrines which it taught. An old creed could not yield
203 at once. The King did much; he protected individual Lutherans to the edge of
204 rashness. He gave the nation the English Bible. He made Latimer a bishop. He
205 took away completely and for ever the power of the prelates to punish what
206 they called heresy &lt;i&gt;ex officio&lt;/i&gt; and on their own authority; but the
207 zeal of the ultra-Protestants broke loose when the restraint was taken off;
208 the sense of the country was offended by the irreverence with which objects
209 and opinions were treated which they regarded as holy, and Parliament, which
210 had put a bit in the mouth of the ecclesiastical courts, was driven to a
211 substitute in the Bill of the Six Articles. The advanced section in popular
212 movements is usually unwise. The characteristic excellence of the English
213 Reformation is, that throughout its course it was restrained by the law, and
214 the Six Articles Bill, tempered as it was in the execution, was a
215 permissible, and perhaps useful, measure in restraint of intemperance. It
216 was the same in Germany. Anabaptists continued to be burnt in Saxony and
217 Hesse long after Luther's revolt; Calvin thought the stake a fitting penalty
218 for doubts upon the Trinity. John Knox, in Scotland, approved of
219 witch-burning and sending mass-priests to the gallows. Henry could not
220 disregard the pronounced feeling of the majority of the English people. He
221 was himself but one of them, and changed slowly as they changed. Yet
222 Protestant tradition has assumed that the bloody whip with six strings was
223 an act of arbitrary ferocity. It considers that the King could, and ought
224 to, have advanced at once into an understanding of the principle of
225 toleration -- toleration of the new opinions, and a more severe repression
226 of the old. The Puritans and Evangelicals forgot that he had given them the
227 English Testament. They forgot that by setting his foot upon the bishops he
228 had opened the pulpits to themselves, and they classed him among the
229 persecutors, or else joined in the shallow laughs of the ultramontane
230 Catholics at what they pleased to call his inconsistency. &lt;/p&gt;
231 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Thus from all sides a catena of invective has been wrapped
232 about Henry's character. The sensible part of the country held its tongue.
233 The speakers and writers were the passionate and fanatical of both
234 persuasions, and by them the materials were supplied for the Henry VIII. who
235 has been brought down to us by history, while the candid and philosophic
236 thinkers of the last and present centuries have accepted the traditional
237 figure. In their desire to be impartial they have held the balance equal
238 between Catholics and Protestants, inclining slightly to the Catholic side,
239 from a wish to conciliate a respectable body who had been unjustly maligned
240 and oppressed; while they have lavished invectives upon the early Reformers
241 violent enough to have satisfied even Pole himself, whose rhetoric has
242 formed the base of their declamation. &lt;/p&gt;
243 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Liberal philosophy would have had a bad time of it in
244 England, perhaps in all Europe, if there had been no Henry VIII. to take the
245 Pope by the throat. But one service writers like Macaulay have undoubtedly
246 accomplished. They have shown that it is entirely impossible to separate the
247 King from his ministers -- to condemn Henry and to spare Cranmer. Protestant
248 writers, from Burnet to Southey, have tried to save the reforming bishops
249 and statesmen at Henry's expense. Cranmer, and Latimer, and Ridley have been
250 described as saints, though their master was a villain. But the cold
251 impartiality of Macaulay has pointed out unanswerably that in all Henry's
252 most questionable acts his own ministers and his prelates were active
253 participants -- that his Privy Council, his parliaments, his judges on the
254 bench, the juries empanelled to try the victims of his tyranny, were equally
255 his accomplices; some actively assisting; the rest, if these acts were
256 really criminal, permitting themselves to be bribed or terrified into
257 acquiescence. The leading men of all descriptions, the nation itself,
258 through the guilt of its representatives, were all stained in the same
259 detestable colours. It may be said, indeed, that they were worse than the
260 King himself. For the King at least may be pleaded the coarse temptations of
261 a brutal nature; but what palliation can be urged for the peers and judges
262 who sacrificed Anne Boleyn, or More, or Fisher, according to the received
263 hypothesis? Not even the excuse of personal fear of an all-powerful despot.
264 For Henry had no Janissaries or PrÊtorians to defend his person or execute
265 his orders. He had but his hundred yeomen of the guard, not more numerous
266 than the ordinary followers of a second-rate noble. The Catholic leaders,
267 who were infuriated at his attacks upon the Church, and would if they could
268 have introduced foreign armies to dethrone him, insisted on his weakness as
269 an encouragement to an easy enterprise. Beyond those few yeomen they urged
270 that he had no protection save in the attachment of the subjects whom he was
271 alienating. What strange influence was such a king able to exercise that he
272 could overawe the lords and gentry of England, the learned professions, the
273 municipal authorities? How was it that he was able to compel them to be the
274 voluntary instruments of his cruelty? Strangest of all, he seems to have
275 needed no protection, but rather to have been personally popular, even among
276 those who disapproved his public policy. The air was charged with threats of
277 insurrection, but no conspiracy was ever formed to kill him, like those
278 which so often menaced the life of his daughter. When the North was in arms
279 in the Pilgrimage of Grace, and a question rose among the leaders whether in
280 the event of victory the King was to be deposed, it was found that anyone
281 who proposed to remove him would be torn in pieces by the people.&lt;/p&gt;
282 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Granting that Henry VIII. was, as Dickens said of him, &amp;quot;a
283 spot of blood and grease&amp;quot; on the page of English history, the contemporary
284 generation of Englishmen must have been fit subjects of such a sovereign.
285 Every country, says Carlyle, gets as good a government as it deserves. The
286 England of the Cromwells and the Cranmers, the Howards and the Fitzwilliams,
287 the Wriothesleys and the Pagets, seems to have been made of baser materials
288 than any land of which mankind has preserved a record. Roman Catholics may
289 fairly plead that out of such a race no spiritual reform is likely to have
290 arisen which could benefit any human soul. Of all the arguments which can be
291 alleged for the return of England to the ancient fold, this is surely the
292 most powerful. &lt;/p&gt;
293 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Yet England shows no intention of returning. History may say
294 what it pleases, yet England remains tenacious of the liberties which were
295 then won for us, and unconscious of the disgrace attaching to them;
296 unconscious, also, that the version of the story which it accepts contains
297 anything which requires explanation. The legislation of Henry VIII., his
298 Privy Council, and his parliaments is the Magna Charta of the modern world.
299 The Act of Appeals and the Act of Supremacy asserted the national
300 independence, and repudiated the interference of foreign bishop, prince, or
301 potentate within the limits of the English empire. The clergy had held for
302 many centuries an &lt;i&gt;imperium in imperio.&lt;/i&gt; Subject themselves to no law
303 but their own, they had asserted an irresponsible jurisdiction over the
304 souls and bodies of the people. The Act for the submission of these persons
305 reduced them to the common condition of subjects under the control of the
306 law. Popes were no longer allowed to dispense with ordinary obligations.
307 Clerical privileges were abolished. The spiritual courts, with their
308 intolerable varieties of iniquity, were swept away, or coerced within
309 rational limits. The religious houses were suppressed, their enormous wealth
310 was applied for the defence of the realm, and the worse than Augean dunghill
311 of abuses was cleared out with resolute hand. These great results were
312 accomplished in the face of papal curses, in defiance of superstitious
313 terrors, so despicable when bravely confronted, so terrible while the
314 spectre of supernatural power was still unexorcised; in the face, too, of
315 earthly perils which might make stout hearts shake, of an infuriated
316 priesthood stirring the people into rebellion, of an exasperated Catholic
317 Europe threatening fire and sword in the name of the Pope. These were
318 distinguished achievements, not likely to have been done at all by an
319 infamous prince and infamous ministers; yet done so well that their work is
320 incorporated in the constitution almost in the form in which they left it;
321 and this mighty revolution, the greatest and most far-reaching in modern
322 times, was accomplished without a civil war, by firmness of hand, by the
323 action of Parliament, and a resolute enforcement of the law. Nor has the
324 effect of Henry's legislation been confined to England. Every great country,
325 Catholic or Protestant, has practically adopted its chief provisions. Popes
326 no longer pretend a power of deposing princes, absolving subjects from their
327 allegiance, or selling dispensations for offences against the law of the
328 land. Appeals are no longer carried from the national courts to the court of
329 the Rota. The papal treasury is no longer supplied by the plunder of the
330 national clergy, collected by resident papal officials. Bishops and
331 convocations have ceased to legislate above and independent of the secular
332 authority, and clerks who commit crimes bear the same penalties as the
333 profane. The high quality of the Reformation statutes is guaranteed by their
334 endurance; and it is hard to suppose that the politicians who conceived and
335 carried them out were men of base conditions. The question is not of the
336 character of the King. If nothing was at issue but the merits or demerits of
337 a single sovereign, he might be left where he lies. The question is of the
338 characters of the reforming leaders, who, jointly with the King, were the
339 authors of this tremendous and beneficent revolution. Henry in all that he
340 did acted with these men and through them. Is it possible to believe that
341 qualities so opposite as the popular theory requires existed in the same
342 persons? Is it possible, for instance, that Cranmer, who composed or
343 translated the prayers in the English Liturgy, was the miserable wretch
344 which Macaulay or Lingard describes? The era of Elizabeth was the outspring
345 of the movement which Henry VIII. commenced, and it was the grandest period
346 in English history. Is it credible that so invigorating a stream flowed from
347 a polluted fountain? &lt;/p&gt;
348 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Before accepting a conclusion so disgraceful -- before
349 consigning the men who achieved so great a victory, and risked and lost
350 their lives in the battle, to final execration -- it is at least permissible
351 to pause. The difficulty can only be made light of by impatience, by
352 prejudice, or by want of thought. To me at any rate, who wished to discover
353 what the real history of the Reformation had been, it seemed so
354 considerable, that, dismissing the polemical invectives of later writers, I
355 turned to the accounts of their conduct, which had been left behind by the
356 authors of it themselves. Among the fortunate anomalies of the situation,
357 Henry departed from previous custom in holding annual parliaments. At every
358 step which he took, either in the rearrangement of the realm or in his own
359 domestic confusions, he took the Lords and Commons into his council, and
360 ventured nothing without their consent. The preambles of the principal
361 statutes contain a narrative clear and precise of the motives of everything
362 that he did -- a narrative which at least may have been a true one, which
363 was not put forward as a defence, but was a mere explanation of acts which
364 on the surface seemed violent and arbitrary. If the explanation is correct,
365 it shows us a time of complications and difficulties, which, on the whole,
366 were successfully encountered. It shows us severe measures severely
367 executed, but directed to public and necessary purpose, involving no
368 sycophancy or baseness, no mean subservience to capricious tyranny, but such
369 as were the natural safeguards during a dangerous convulsion, or remedies of
370 accidents incidental to hereditary monarchy. The story told is clear and
371 distinct; pitiless, but not dishonourable. Between the lines can be read the
372 storm of popular passions, the beating of the national heart when it was
373 stirred to its inmost depths. We see established institutions rooted out,
374 idols overthrown, and injured worshippers exasperated to fury; the air, as
375 was inevitable at such a crisis, full of flying rumours, some lies, some
376 half lies with fragments of truth attaching to them, bred of malice or dizzy
377 brains, the materials out of which the popular tradition has been built. It
378 was no insular revolution. The stake played for was the liberty of mankind.
379 All Europe was watching England, for England was the hinge on which the fate
380 of the Reformation turned. Could it be crushed in England, the Catholics
381 were assured of universal victory, and therefore tongues and pens were busy
382 everywhere throughout Christendom, Catholic imagination representing Henry
383 as an incarnate Satan, for which, it must be admitted, his domestic
384 misadventures gave them tempting opportunities. So thick fell the showers of
385 calumny, that, bold as he was, he at times himself winced under it. He
386 complained to Charles V. of the libels circulated about him in France and
387 Flanders. Charles, too, had suffered in the same way. He answered,
388 humorously, that &amp;quot;if kings gave occasion to be spoken about they would be
389 spoken about; kings were not kings of tongues.&amp;quot; Henry VIII. was an easy mark
390 for slander; but if all slanders are to pass as true which are flung at
391 public men whose policy provides them with an army of calumniators, the
392 reputation of the best of them is but a spotted rag. The clergy were the
393 vocal part of Europe. They had the pulpits; they had the writing of the
394 books and pamphlets. They had cause to hate Henry, and they hated him with
395 an intensity of passion which could not have been more savage had he been
396 the devil himself. But there are men whose enmity is a compliment. They
397 libelled Luther almost as freely as they libelled the English king. I
398 myself, after reading and weighing all that I could find forty years ago in
399 prints or manuscripts, concluded that the real facts of Henry's conduct were
400 to be found in the Statute Book and nowhere else; that the preambles of the
401 Acts of Parliament did actually represent the sincere opinion about him of
402 the educated laymen of England, who had better opportunities of knowing the
403 truth than we can have, and that a modern Englishman may be allowed to
404 follow their authority without the imputation of paradox or folly. &lt;/p&gt;
405 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;With this impression, and with the Statute Book for a guide,
406 I wrote the opening portion of my &amp;quot;History of England, from the Fall of
407 Wolsey to the Defeat of the Armada.&amp;quot; The Published criticisms upon my work
408 were generally unfavourable. Catholic writers inherited the traditions and
409 the temper of their forefathers, and believed the eatena of their own
410 historians. Protestants could not believe in a defence of the author of the
411 Six Articles Bill. Secular reviewers were easily witty at the &amp;quot;model
412 husband&amp;quot; whom they supposed me to be imposing upon them, and resented the
413 interference with a version of the story authenticated by great names among
414 my predecessors. The public, however, took an interest in what I had to say.
415 The book was read, and continues to be read; at the close of my life,
416 therefore, I have to go once more over the ground; and as I am still
417 substantially alone in maintaining an opinion considered heretical by
418 orthodox historians, I have to decide in what condition I am to leave my
419 work behind me. In the thirty-five years which have elapsed since those
420 early volumes appeared large additions have been made to the materials for
421 the history of the period. The vast collection of manuscripts in the English
422 Record Office, which then were only partially accessible, have been sorted,
423 catalogued, and calendared by the industry of my friends Mr. Brewer and Mr.
424 Gairdner. Private collections in great English houses have been examined and
425 reported on by the Historical Manuscripts Commission. Foreign archives at
426 Paris, Simancas, Rome, Venice, Vienna, and Brussels have been searched to
427 some extent by myself, but in a far larger degree by able scholars specially
428 appointed for the purpose. In the despatches, thus made accessible, of the
429 foreign ambassadors resident at Henry's court we have the invaluable, if not
430 impartial, comments of trained and responsible politicians who related from
431 day to day the events which were passing under their eyes. Being Catholics,
432 and representatives of Catholic powers, they were bitterly hostile to the
433 Reformation -- hostile alike on political grounds and religious -- and
434 therefore inclined to believe and report the worst that could be said both
435 of it and of its authors. But they wrote before the traditions had become
436 stereotyped; their accounts are fresh and original; and, being men of the
437 world, and writing in confidence to their own masters, they were as
438 veracious as their prejudices would allow them to be. Unconsciously, too,
439 they render another service of infinite importance. Being in close
440 communication with the disaffected English peers and clergy, and engaged
441 with them secretly in promoting rebellion, the ministers of Charles V.
442 reveal with extraordinary clearness the dangers with which the Government
443 had to deal. They make it perfectly plain that the Act of Supremacy, with
444 its stern and peremptory demands, was no more than a legitimate and
445 necessary defence against organised treason. &lt;/p&gt;
446 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;It was thus inevitable that much would have to be added to
447 what I had already published. When a microscope is applied to the petal of a
448 flower or the wing of an insect, simple outlines and simple surfaces are
449 resolved into complex organisms with curious and beautiful details. The
450 effect of these despatches is precisely the same -- we see with the eyes, we
451 hear with the ears, of men who were living parts of the scenes which they
452 describe. Stories afterwards elaborated into established facts we trace to
453 their origin in rumours of the hour; we read innumerable anecdotes, some
454 with the clear stamp of truth on them, many mere creations of passing wit or
455 malice, no more authentic than the thousands like them which circulate in
456 modern society, guaranteed by the positive assertions of personal witnesses,
457 yet visibly recognisable as lies. Through all this the reader must pick his
458 way and use his own judgment. He knows that many things are false which are
459 reported about his own eminent contemporaries. He may be equally certain
460 that lies were told as freely then as now. He will probably allow his
461 sympathies to guide him. He will accept as fact what fits in with his creed
462 or his theory. He will share the general disposition to believe evil,
463 especially about kings and great men. The exaggerated homage paid to
464 princes, when they are alive, has to be compensated by suspecting the worst
465 of them as soon as they are gone. But the perusal of all these documents
466 leaves the broad aspect of the story, in my opinion, precisely where it was.
467 It is made more interesting by the greater fulness of particulars; it is
468 made more vivid by the clear view which they afford of individual persons
469 who before were no more than names. But I think now, as I thought forty
470 years ago, that through the confusions and contradictions of a stormy and
471 angry time, the statutebook remains the safest guide to follow. If there be
472 any difference, it is that actions which till explained appeared
473 gratuitously cruel, like the execution of Bishop Fisher, are seen beyond
474 dispute to have been reasonable and just. Bishop Fisher is proved by the
475 words of the Spanish Ambassador himself to have invited and pressed the
476 introduction of a foreign Catholic army into England in the Pope's interest.
477 &lt;/p&gt;
478 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Thus I find nothing to withdraw in what I then wrote, and
479 little to alter save in correcting some small errors of trivial moment; but,
480 on the other hand, I find much to add; and the question rises in what way I
481 had better do it, with fair consideration for those who have bought the book
482 as it stands. To take the work to pieces and introduce the new material into
483 the text or the notes will impose a necessity of buying a new copy, or of
484 being left with an inferior one, on the many friends who least deserve to be
485 so treated. I have concluded, therefore, on writing an additional volume,
486 where such parts of the story as have had important light thrown upon them
487 can be told over again in ampler form. The body of the history I leave as it
488 stands. It contains what I believe to be a true account of the time, of the
489 immediate causes which brought about the changes of the sixteenth century,
490 and of the characters and principles of the actors in them. I have only to
491 fill up certain deficiencies and throw light into places hitherto left dark.
492 For the rest, I do not pretend to impartiality. I believe the Reformation to
493 have been the greatest incident in English history; the root and source of
494 the expansive force which has spread the Anglo-Saxon race over the globe,
495 and imprinted the English genius and character on the constitution of
496 mankind. I am unwilling to believe more evil than I can help of my
497 countrymen who accomplished so beneficent a work, and in a book written with
498 such convictions the mythical element cannot be wholly wanting. Even things
499 which immediately surround us, things which we see and touch, we do not
500 perceive as they are; we perceive only our own sensations, and our
501 sensations are a combined result of certain objects and of the faculties
502 which apprehend them. Something of ourselves must always be intermixed
503 before knowledge can reach us; in every conclusion which we form, in every
504 conviction which is forced upon us, there is still a subjective element. It
505 is so in physical science. It is so in art. It is so in our speculations on
506 our own nature. It is so in religion. It is so even in pure mathematics. &lt;/p&gt;
507 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The curved and rectilineal figures on which we reason are
508 our own creation, and have no existence exterior to the reasoning mind. Most
509 of all is it so in history, where we have no direct perceptions to help us,
510 but are dependent on the narratives of others whose beliefs were necessarily
511 influenced by their personal dispositions. The first duty of an historian is
512 to be on his guard against his own sympathies; but he cannot wholly escape
513 their influence. In judging of the truth of particular statements, the
514 conclusion which he will form must be based partly upon evidence and partly
515 upon what he conceives to be likely or unlikely. In a court of justice,
516 where witnesses can be cross-examined, uncertain elements can in some degree
517 be eliminated; yet, after all care is taken, judges and juries have been
518 often blinded by passion and prejudice. When we have nothing before us but
519 rumours set in circulation, we know not by whom or on what authority, and we
520 are driven to consider probabilities, the Protestant, who believes the
521 Reformation to have been a victory of truth over falsehood, cannot come to
522 the same conclusion as the Catholic, who believes it to have been a curse,
523 or perhaps to the same conclusion as the indifferent philosopher, who
524 regards Protestant and Catholic alike with benevolent contempt. For myself,
525 I can but say that I have discriminated with such faculty as I possess. I
526 have kept back nothing. I have consciously distorted nothing which conflicts
527 with my own views. I have accepted what seems sufficiently proved. I have
528 rejected what I can find no support for save in hearsay or prejudice. But
529 whether accepting or rejecting, I have endeavoured to follow the rule that
530 incidents must not be lightly accepted as authentic which are inconsistent
531 with the universal laws of human nature, and that to disprove a calumny it
532 is sufficient to show that there is no valid witness for it. &lt;/p&gt;
533 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Finally, I do not allow myself to be tempted into
534 controversy with particular writers whose views disagree with my own. To
535 contradict in detail every hostile version of Henry VIII.'s or his
536 ministers' conduct would be as tedious as it would be irritating and
537 unprofitable. My censors have been so many that a reply to them all is
538 impossible, and so distinguished that a selection would be invidious. Those
539 who wish for invectives against the King, or Cranmer, or Cromwell, can find
540 them everywhere, from school manuals to the grave works of elaborate
541 historians. For me, it is enough to tell the story as it presents itself to
542 my own mind, and to leave what appears to me to be the truth to speak for
543 itself. &lt;/p&gt;
544 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The English nation throughout their long history have borne
545 an honourable reputation. Luther quotes a saying of Maximilian that there
546 were three real sovereigns in Europe -- the Emperor, the King of France, and
547 the King of England. The Emperor was a king of kings. If he gave an order to
548 the princes of the Reich, they obeyed or disobeyed as they pleased. The King
549 of France was a king of asses. He ordered about his people at his will, and
550 they obeyed like asses. The King of England was king of a loyal nation who
551 obeyed him with heart and mind as loyal and faithful subjects. This was the
552 character borne in the world by the fathers of the generation whom popular
553 historians represent as having dishonoured themselves by subserviency to a
554 bloodthirsty tyrant. It is at least possible that popular historians have
555 been mistaken, and that the subjects of Henry VIII. were neither much better
556 nor much worse than those who preceded or came after them. &lt;/p&gt;
557 &lt;hr&gt;
558 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;From &lt;i&gt;The Divorce of Catherine of Aragon:
559 The Story as Told by the Imperial Ambassadors Resident at the Court of Henry
560 VIII&lt;/i&gt; by J.A. Froude.&amp;nbsp; Published in New York by C. Scribner's Sons,
561 1891.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
562 &lt;/blockquote&gt;
563&lt;/blockquote&gt;
564
565&lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2ffroudeone.html&quot;&gt;
566&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;to Chapter One&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
567&lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fsecondary.html&quot;&gt;
568&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;to Secondary Sources&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
569&lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;
570&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2faragon.html&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;to
571Katharine of Aragon website&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
572 &lt;/font&gt;
573 &lt;/font&gt;
574&lt;blockquote&gt;
575 &lt;blockquote&gt;
576 &lt;font style=&quot;font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif&quot;&gt;
577 &lt;font face=&quot;Times New Roman&quot;&gt;
578 &lt;/font&gt;&lt;font style=&quot;FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif&quot;&gt;
579 &lt;/font&gt;
580 &lt;p class=&quot;3text&quot; align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;
581 &lt;/font&gt;
582 &lt;/blockquote&gt;
583&lt;/blockquote&gt;
584
585
586
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589</Content>
590</Section>
591</Archive>
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