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16 <Metadata name="Content">Secondary Sources: The Divorce of Catherine of Aragon, by JA Froude: Chapter One</Metadata>
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19 <Metadata name="Title">Secondary Sources: The Divorce of Catherine of Aragon, by JA Froude: Chapter One</Metadata>
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34&lt;table border=&quot;0&quot; cellpadding=&quot;3&quot; width=&quot;100%&quot; height=&quot;667&quot;&gt;
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48 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;
49 &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;
50 &lt;font size=&quot;5&quot;&gt;by
51 JA Froude, 1891&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
52 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;
53 &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;
54 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;610&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
55 &lt;/tr&gt;
56&lt;/table&gt;
57&lt;blockquote&gt;
58 &lt;blockquote&gt;
59 &lt;font face=&quot;Times New Roman&quot;&gt;
60 &lt;div align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;
61 &lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;4&quot;&gt;CHAPTER ONE&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
62 &lt;blockquote&gt;
63 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;4&quot;&gt;Prospects of a disputed succession to the
64 crown -- Various claimants -Catherine incapable of having further children
65 -- Irregularity of her marriage with the King -- Papal dispensations --
66 First mention of the divorce -- Situation of the Papacy -- Charles V. --
67 Policy of Wolsey -- Anglo-French alliance -- Imperial troops in Italy --
68 Appeal of the Pope -- Mission of Inigo de Mendoza -- The Bishop of Tarbes
69 -Legitimacy of the Princess Mary called in question -- Secret meeting of
70 the Legates' court -- Alarms of Catherine -- Sack of Rome by the Duke of
71 Bourbon -- Proposed reform of the Papacy -- The divorce promoted by Wolsey
72 -- Unpopular in England -- Attempts of the Emperor to gain Wolsey.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
73 &lt;/blockquote&gt;
74 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;IN the year 1526 the political prospects of England became
75 seriously clouded. A disputed succession had led in the previous century to
76 a desperate civil war. In that year it became known in private circles that
77 if Henry VIII. was to die the realm would again be left without a certain
78 heir, and that the strife of the Roses might be renewed on an even more
79 distracting scale. The sons who had been born to Queen Catherine had died in
80 childbirth or had died immediately after it. The passionate hope of the
81 country that she might still produce a male child who would survive had been
82 constantly disappointed, and now could be entertained no longer. She was
83 eight years older than her husband. She had &amp;quot;certain diseases&amp;quot; which made it
84 impossible that she should be again pregnant, and Henry had for two years
85 ceased to cohabit with her. He had two children still living -- the Princess
86 Mary, Catherine's daughter, then a girl of eleven, and an illegitimate son
87 born in 1519, the mother being a daughter of Sir John Blount, and married
88 afterwards to Sir Gilbert Talboys. By presumptive law the Princess was the
89 next heir; but no woman had ever sat on the throne of England alone and in
90 her own right, and it was doubtful whether the nation would submit to a
91 female sovereign. The boy, though excluded by his birth from the prospect of
92 the crown, was yet brought up with exceptional care, called a prince by his
93 tutors, and probably regarded by his father as a possible successor should
94 his sister go the way of her brothers. In 1525, after the King had
95 deliberately withdrawn from Catherine, he was created Duke of Richmond -- a
96 title of peculiar significance, since it had been borne by his grandfather,
97 Henry VII. -- and he was granted precedence over the rest of the peerage.
98 Illegitimacy was a serious, but, it might be thought, was not an absolute,
99 bar. The Conqueror had been himself a bastard. The Church, by its habits of
100 granting dispensations for irregular marriages or of dissolving them on
101 pleas of affinity or consanguinity or other pretext, had confused the
102 distinction between legitimate and illegitimate. A Church Court had
103 illegitimatised the children of Edward IV. and Elizabeth Grey, on the ground
104 of one of Edward's previous connections; yet no one regarded the princes
105 murdered in the Tower as having been illegitimate in reality; and to prevent
106 disputes and for an adequate object, the Duke of Richmond, had he grown to
107 manhood, might, in the absence of other claims, have been recognised by
108 Parliament. But the Duke was still a child, and might die as Henry's other
109 sons had died; and other claims there were which, in the face of the bar
110 sinister, could not fail to be asserted. James V. of Scotland was next in
111 blood, being the son of Henry's eldest sister, Margaret. There were the
112 Greys, inheriting from the second sister, Mary. Outside the royal house
113 there were the still popular representatives of the White Rose, the Marquis
114 of Exeter, who was Edward IV.'s grandson; the Countess of Salisbury,
115 daughter of Edward's brother the Duke of Clarence, and sister of the
116 murdered Earl of Warwick; and Henry's life was the only obstacle between the
117 collision of these opposing pretensions. James, it was quite certain, would
118 not be allowed to succeed without a struggle. National rivalry forbade it.
119 Yet it was no less certain that he would try, and would probably be backed
120 by France. There was but one escape from convulsions which might easily be
121 the ruin of the realm. The King was in the flower of his age, and might
122 naturally look for a Prince of Wales to come after him if he was married to
123 a woman capable of bearing one. It is neither unnatural nor, under the
124 circumstances, a matter to be censured if he and others began to reflect
125 upon the peculiar character of his connection with Catherine of Aragon. It
126 is not sufficiently remembered that the marriage of a widow with her
127 husband's brother was then, as it is now, forbidden by the laws of all
128 civilised countries. Such a marriage at the present day would be held &lt;i&gt;
129 ipso facto&lt;/i&gt; invalid and not a marriage at all. An irregular power was
130 then held to rest with the successors of St. Peter to dispense, under
131 certain conditions, with the inhibitory rules. The popes are now understood
132 to have never rightly possessed such an authority, and therefore, according
133 to modern law and sentiment, Henry and Catherine never were husband and wife
134 at all. At the time it was uncertain whether the dispensing power extended
135 so far as to sanction such a union, and when the discussion rose upon it the
136 Roman canonists were themselves divided. Those who maintained the widest
137 view of thepapal faculty yet agreed that such a dispensation could only be
138 granted for urgent cause, such as to prevent foreign wars or internal
139 seditions, and no such cause was alleged to have existed when Ferdinand and
140 Henry VII. arranged the marriage between their children. The dispensation
141 had been granted by Pope Julius with reluctance, had been acted upon after
142 considerable hesitation, and was of doubtful validity, since the necessary
143 conditions were absent. The marriages of kings were determined with little
144 reference to the personal affection of the parties. Between Henry and
145 Catherine there was probably as much and as little personal attachment as
146 there usually is in such cases. He respected and perhaps admired her
147 character; but she was not beautiful, she was not attractive, while she was
148 as proud and intractable as her mother Isabella. Their union had been
149 settled by the two fathers to cement the alliance between England and Spain.
150 Such connections rest on a different foundation from those which are
151 voluntarily entered into between private persons. What is made up for
152 political reasons may pardonably be dissolved when other reasons of a
153 similar kind require it; and when it became clear that Catherine could never
154 bear another child, that the penalty threatened in the Levitical law against
155 marriages of this precise kind had been literally enforced in the death of
156 the male offspring, and that civil war was imminent in consequence upon the
157 King's death, Henry may have doubted in good faith whether she had ever been
158 his wife at all -- whether, in fact, the marriage was not of the character
159 which everyone would now allow to attach to similar unions. Had there been a
160 Prince of Wales, the question would never have arisen, and Henry, like other
161 kings, would have borne his fate. But there was no prince, and the question
162 had risen, and there was no reason why it should not. There was no trace at
163 the outset of an attachment to another woman. If there had been, there would
164 be little to condemn; but Anne Boleyn, when it was first mooted, was no more
165 to the King than any other lady of the court. He required a wife who could
166 produce a son to secure the succession. The powers which had allowed an
167 irregular marriage could equally dissolve it, and the King felt that he had
168 a right to demand a familiar concession which other sovereigns had often
169 applied for in one form or another, and rarely in vain. &lt;/p&gt;
170 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Thus as early as 1526 certainly, and probably as much as a
171 year before, Cardinal Wolsey had been feeling his way at Rome for a
172 separation between Henry and Catherine. On September 7 in that year the
173 Bishop of Bath, who was English Ambassador at Paris, informed the Cardinal
174 of the arrival there of a confidential agent of Pope Clement VII. The agent
175 had spoken to the Bishop on this especial subject, and had informed him that
176 there would be difficulties about it. The &amp;quot;blessed divorce&amp;quot; -- &lt;i&gt;benedictum
177 divorcium&lt;/i&gt; the Bishop calls it -- had been already under consideration at
178 Rome. The difficulties were not specified, but the political features of the
179 time obliged Clement to be circumspect, and it was these that were probably
180 referred to. Francis I. had been defeated and taken prisoner by the
181 Imperialists at Pavia. He had been carried to Spain, and had been released
182 at Henry's intercession, under severe conditions, to which he had
183 reluctantly consented, and his sons had been left at Madrid as hostages for
184 the due fulfilment of them. The victorious army, half Spanish, half German,
185 remained under the Duke of Bourbon to complete the conquest of Italy; and
186 Charles V., with his already vast dominions and a treasury which the world
187 believed to be inexhaustibly supplied from the gold mines of the New World,
188 seemed advancing to universal empire. &lt;/p&gt;
189 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;France in the preceding centuries had been the hereditary
190 enemy of England; Spain and Burgundy her hereditary friends. The marriage of
191 Catherine of Aragon had been a special feature of the established alliance.
192 She was given first to Prince Arthur, and then to Henry, as link in the
193 confederacy which was to hold in check French ambition. Times were changing.
194 Charles V. had been elected emperor, largely through English influence; but
195 Charles was threatening to be a more serious danger to Europe than France
196 had been. The Italian princes were too weak to resist the conqueror of Pavia.
197 Italy once conquered, the Papacy would become a dependency of the empire,
198 and, with Charles's German subjects in open revolt against it, the Church
199 would lose its authority, and the organisation of the Catholic world would
200 fall into hopeless decrepitude. So thought Wolsey, the most sharp-sighted of
201 English ministers. He believed that the maintenance of the Papacy was the
202 best defence of order and liberty. The only remedy which he could see was a
203 change of partners. England held the balance between the great rival powers.
204 If the English alliance could be transferred from the Empire to France, the
205 Emperor could be held in check, and his supposed ambition neutralised.
206 Wolsey was utterly mistaken; but the mistake was not an unnatural one.
207 Charles, busy with his Italian wars, had treated the Lutheran schism with
208 suspicious forbearance. Notwithstanding his Indian ingots his finances were
209 disordered. Bourbon's lansquenets had been left to pay themselves by
210 plunder. They had sacked monasteries, pillaged cathedral plate, and ravished
211 nuns with irreverent ferocity. The estates of the Church had been as little
212 spared by them as Lombardy; and to Clement VII. the invasion was another
213 inroad of barbarians, and Bourbon a second Attila. What Bourbon's master
214 meant by it, and what he might intend to do, was as uncertain to Clement as
215 perhaps it was to Charles himself. In the prostrate, degraded, and desperate
216 condition into which the Church was falling, any resolution was possible. To
217 the clearest eyes in Europe the Papacy seemed tottering to its fall, and
218 Charles's hand, if he chose to raise it, might precipitate the catastrophe.
219 To ask a pope at such a time to give mortal offence to the Spanish nation by
220 agreeing to the divorce of Catherine of Aragon was to ask him to sign his
221 death-warrant. No wonder, therefore, that he found difficulties. Yet it was
222 to France and England that Clement had to look for help in his extremities.
223 The divorce perhaps had as yet been no more than a suggestion, a part of a
224 policy which was still in its infancy. It could wait at any rate for a more
225 convenient season. Meantime he sent his secretary, Sanga, to Paris to beg
226 aid; and to Henry personally he made a passionate appeal, imploring him not
227 to desert the Apostolic See in its hour of extreme need. He apologised for
228 his importunacy, but he said he hoped that history would not have to record
229 that Italy had been devastated in the time of Clement VII. to the dishonour
230 of the King and of Wolsey. If France and England failed him, he would
231 himself be ruined. The Emperor would be universal monarch. They would open
232 their eyes at last, but they would open them too late. So piteous was the
233 entreaty that Henry when he read the Pope's letter burst into tears. Clement
234 had not been idle. He had brought his own small army into the field to
235 oppose Bourbon; he joined the Italian League, and prepared to defend
236 himself. He was called the father of Christendom, yet he was at open war
237 with the most Catholic king. But Wolsey reasonably considered that unless
238 the Western powers interfered the end would come. &lt;/p&gt;
239 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;If England was to act, she could act only in alliance with
240 France. The change of policy was ill understood, and was not popular among
241 Henry's subjects. The divorce as yet had not been spoken of. No breath of
242 such a purpose had gone abroad. But English sentiment was imperial, and
243 could endure with equanimity even the afflictions of a pope. The King was
244 more papal than his people; he allowed Wolsey to guide him, and negotiations
245 were set on foot at once for a special treaty with France, one of the
246 conditions of which was to be the marriage of the Princess Mary -- allotted
247 like a card in a game -- either to Francis or to one of his sons; another
248 condition being that the English crown should be settled upon her should
249 Henry die without a legitimate son. Sir John Russell was simultaneously
250 despatched to Rome with money to help the Pope in paying his troops and
251 garrisoning the city. The ducats and the &amp;quot;kind words&amp;quot; which accompanied them
252 &amp;quot;created incredible joy,&amp;quot; encouraged his Holiness to reject unjust
253 conditions which had been offered, and restored him, if for the moment only,
254 &amp;quot;from death to life.&amp;quot; If Russell described correctly what he saw in passing
255 through Italy, Clement had good cause for anxiety. &amp;quot;The Swabians and
256 Spaniards,&amp;quot; he wrote, &amp;quot;had committed horrible atrocities. They had burnt
257 houses to the value of two hundred million ducats, with all the churches,
258 images, and priests that fell into their hands. They had compelled the
259 priests and monks to violate the nuns. Even where they were received without
260 opposition they had burned the place; they had not spared the boys, and they
261 had carried off the girls; and whenever they found the Sacrament of the
262 Church they had thrown it into a river or into the vilest place they could
263 find. If God did not punish such cruelty and wickedness, men would infer
264 that He did not trouble Himself about the affairs of this world.&amp;quot;&lt;/p&gt;
265 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The news from Italy gave a fresh impulse to Wolsey's policy
266 and the Anglo-French Alliance, which was pushed forward in spite of popular
267 disapproval. The Emperor, unable to pay, and therefore unable to control,
268 his troops, became himself alarmed. He found himself pressed into a course
269 which was stimulating the German revolt against the Papacy, and he professed
270 himself anxious to end the war. Inigo de Mendoza, the Bishop of Burgos, was
271 despatched to Paris to negotiate for a general pacification. From Paris he
272 was to proceed to London to assure Henry of the Emperor's inalienable
273 friendship, and above all things to gain over Wolsey by the means which
274 experience had shown to be the nearest way to Wolsey's heart. The great
275 Cardinal was already Charles's pensionary, but the pension was several years
276 in arrear. Mendoza was to tell him not only that the arrears should be
277 immediately paid up, but that a second pension should be secured to him on
278 the revenues of Milan, and that the Emperor would make him a further grant
279 of 6,000 ducats annually out of the income of Spanish bishoprics. No means
280 was to be spared to divert the hostility of so dangerous an enemy.&lt;/p&gt;
281 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Wolsey was not to be so easily gained. He had formed large
282 schemes which he did not mean to part with, and in the matter of pensions
283 Francis I. was as liberal in promises as Charles. The Pope's prospects were
284 brightening. Besides the English money, he had improved his finances by
285 creating six new cardinals, and making 240,000 crowns out of the disposition
286 of these sacred offices. A French embassy, with the Bishop of Tarbes at its
287 head, came to England to complete the treaty with Henry in the Pope's
288 defence. Demands were to be made upon the Emperor; if those demands were
289 refused, war was to follow, and the cement of the alliance was to be the
290 marriage of Mary with a French prince. It is likely that other secret
291 projects were in view also of a similar kind. The marriage of Henry with
292 Catherine had been intended to secure the continuance of the alliance with
293 Spain. Royal ladies were the counters with which politicians played; and
294 probably enough there were thoughts of placing a French princess in
295 Catherine's place. However this may be, the legality of the King's marriage
296 with his nominal queen was suddenly and indirectly raised in the discussion
297 of the terms of the treaty, when the Bishop of Tarbes inquired whether it
298 was certain that Catherine's daughter was legitimate. &lt;/p&gt;
299 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Mr. Brewer, the careful and admirable editor of the &amp;quot;Foreign
300 and Domestic Calendar of State Papers,&amp;quot; doubts whether the Bishop did
301 anything of the kind. I cannot agree with Mr. Brewer. The Bishop of Tarbes
302 was among the best-known diplomatists in Europe. He was actively concerned
303 during subsequent years in the process of the divorce case in London, in
304 Paris, and at Rome. The expressions which he used on this occasion were
305 publicly appealed to by Henry in his addresses to the peers and to the
306 country, in the public pleas which he laid before the English prelates, in
307 the various repeated defences which he made for his conduct. It is
308 impossible that the Bishop should have been ignorant of the use which was
309 made of his name, and impossible equally to suppose that he would have
310 allowed his name to be used unfairly. The Bishop of Tarbes was
311 unquestionably the first person to bring the question publicly forward. It
312 is likely enough, however, that his introduction of so startling a topic had
313 been privately arranged between himself and Wolsey as a prelude to the
314 further steps which were immediately to follow. For the divorce had by this
315 time been finally resolved on as part of a general scheme for the alteration
316 of the balance of power. The domestic reasons for it were as weighty as ever
317 were alleged for similar separations. The Pope's hesitation, it might be
318 assumed, would now be overcome, since he had flung himself for support upon
319 England and France, and his relations with the Emperor could hardly be worse
320 than they were. &lt;/p&gt;
321 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;The outer world, and even the persons principally concerned,
322 were taken entirely by surprise. For the two years during which it had been
323 under consideration the secret had been successfully preserved. Not a hint
324 had reached Catherine herself, and even when the match had been lighted by
325 the Bishop of Tarbes the full meaning of it does not seem to have occurred
326 to her. Mendoza, on his arrival in England, had found her disturbed; she was
327 irritated at the position which had been given to the Duke of Richmond; she
328 was angry, of course, at the French alliance; she complained that she was
329 kept in the dark about public affairs; she was exerting herself to the
330 utmost among the friends of the imperial connection to arrest Wolsey's
331 policy and maintain the ancient traditions; but of the divorce she had not
332 heard a word. It was to come upon her like a thunderstroke.&lt;/p&gt;
333 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Before the drama opens a brief description will not be out
334 of place of the two persons who were to play the principal parts on the
335 stage, as they were seen a year later by Ludovico Falieri, the Venetian
336 ambassador in England. Of Catherine his account is brief. &lt;/p&gt;
337 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&amp;quot;The Queen is of low stature and rather stout; very good and
338 very religious; speaks Spanish, French, Flemish, and English; more beloved
339 by the Islanders than any queen that has ever reigned; about forty-five
340 years old, and has been in England thirty years. She has had two sons and
341 one daughter. Both the sons died in infancy. One daughter survives.&amp;quot; &lt;/p&gt;
342 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;On the King, Falieri is more elaborate. &lt;/p&gt;
343 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&amp;quot;In the 8th Henry such beauty of mind and body is combined
344 as to surprise and astonish. Grand stature, suited to his exalted position,
345 showing the superiority of mind and character; a face like an angel's, so
346 fair it is; his head bald like CÊsar's, and he wears a beard, which is not
347 the English custom. He is accomplished in every manly exercise, sits his
348 horse well, tilts with his lance, throws the quoit, shoots with his bow
349 excellent well; he is a fine tennis player, and he practises all these gifts
350 with the greatest industry. Such a prince could not fail to have cultivated
351 also his character and his intellect. He has been a student from his
352 childhood; he knows literature, philosophy, and theology; speaks and writes
353 Spanish, French, and Italian, besides Latin and English. He is kind,
354 gracious, courteous, liberal, especially to men of learning, whom he is
355 always ready to help. He appears religious also, generally hears two masses
356 a day, and on holy days High Mass besides. He is very charitable, giving
357 away ten thousand gold ducats annually among orphans, widows, and cripples.&amp;quot;&lt;/p&gt;
358 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Such was the King, such the Queen, whom fate and the
359 preposterous pretensions of the Papacy to dispense with the established
360 marriage laws had irregularly mated, and whose separation was to shake the
361 European world. Pope Clement complained in subsequent years that the burden
362 of decision should have been thrown in the first instance upon himself. If
363 the King had proceeded at the outset to try the question in the English
364 courts; if a judgment had been given unfavourable to the marriage, and had
365 he immediately acted upon it, Queen Catherine might have appealed to the
366 Holy See; but accomplished facts were solid things. Her case might have been
367 indefinitely protracted by legal technicalities till it died of itself. It
368 would have been a characteristic method of escape out of the difficulty, and
369 it was a view which Wolsey himself perhaps at first entertained. He knew
370 that the Pope was unwilling to take the first step.&lt;/p&gt;
371 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;On the 17th of May, 1527, after a discussion of the Treaty
372 with France, he called a meeting of his Legatine court at York Place.
373 Archbishop Warham sate with him as assessor. The King attended, and the
374 Cardinal, having stated that a question had arisen on the lawfulness of his
375 marriage, enquired whether the King, for the sake of public morals and the
376 good of his own soul, would allow the objections to be examined into. The
377 King assented, and named a proctor. The Bull of Julius II. was introduced
378 and considered. Wolsey declared that in a case so intricate the canon
379 lawyers must be consulted, and he asked for the opinions of the assembled
380 bishops. The bishops, one only excepted, gave dubious answers. The aged
381 Bishop of Rochester, reputed the holiest and wisest of them, said decidedly
382 that the marriage was good, and the Bull which legalised it sufficient. &lt;/p&gt;
383 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;These proceedings were not followed up, but the secrecy
384 which had hitherto been observed was no longer possible, and Catherine and
385 her friends learnt now for the first time the measure which was in
386 contemplation. Mendoza, writing on the day following the York Place meeting
387 to the Emperor, informed him, as a fact which he had learnt on reliable
388 authority, that Wolsey, for a final stroke of wickedness, was scheming to
389 divorce the Queen. She was so much alarmed that she did not venture herself
390 to speak of it, but it was certain that the lawyers and bishops had been
391 invited to sign a declaration that, being his brother's widow, she could not
392 be the wife of the King. The Pope, she was afraid, might be tempted to take
393 part against her, or the Cardinal himself might deliver judgment as Papal
394 Legate. Her one hope was in the Emperor. The cause of the action taken
395 against her was her fidelity to the Imperial interests. Nothing as yet had
396 been made formally public, and she begged that the whole matter might be
397 kept as private as possible.&lt;/p&gt;
398 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;That the Pope would be willing, if he dared, to gratify
399 Henry at Charles's expense was only too likely. The German Lutherans and the
400 German Emperor were at the moment his most dangerous enemies. France and
401 England were the only Powers who seemed willing to assist him, and a week
402 before the meeting of Wolsey's court he had experienced in the most terrible
403 form what the imperial hostility might bring upon him. On the 7th of that
404 same month of May the army of the Duke of Bourbon had taken Rome by storm.
405 The city was given up to pillage. Reverend cardinals were dragged through
406 the streets on mules' backs, dishonoured and mutilated. Convents of nuns
407 were abandoned to the licentious soldiery. The horrors of the capture may
408 have been exaggerated, but it is quite certain that to holy things or holy
409 persons no respect was paid, and that the atrocities which in those days
410 were usually perpetrated in stormed towns were on this occasion eminently
411 conspicuous. The unfortunate Pope, shut up in the Castle of St. Angelo,
412 looked down from its battlements upon scenes so dreadful that it must have
413 appeared as if the Papacy and the Church itself had been overtaken by the
414 final judgment. We regard the Spaniards as a nation of bigots, we consider
415 it impossible that the countrymen of Charles and Philip could have been
416 animated by any such bitterness against the centre of Catholic Christendom.
417 Charles himself is not likely to have intended the humiliation of the Holy
418 See. But Clement had reason for his misgivings, and Wolsey's policy was not
419 without excuse. Lope de Soria was Charles's Minister at Genoa, and Lope de
420 Soria's opinions, freely uttered, may have been shared by many a Catholic
421 besides himself. On the 25th of May, a fortnight after the storm, he wrote
422 to his master the following noticeable letter: -- &lt;/p&gt;
423 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&amp;quot;The sack of Rome must be regarded as a visitation from God,
424 who permits his servant the Emperor to teach his Vicar on earth and other
425 Christian princes that their wicked purposes shall be defeated, the unjust
426 wars which they have raised shall cease, peace be restored to Christendom,
427 the faith be exalted, and heresy extirpated. . . . Should the Emperor think
428 that the Church of God is not what it ought to be, and that the Pope's
429 temporal power emboldens him to promote war among Christian princes, I
430 cannot but remind your Majesty that it will not be a sin, but a meritorious
431 action, to reform the Church; so that the Pope's authority be confined
432 exclusively to his own spiritual affairs, and temporal affairs to be left to
433 CÊsar, since by right what is God's belongs to God, and what is CÊsar's to
434 CÊsar. I have been twenty-eight years in Italy, and I have observed that the
435 Popes have been the sole cause of all the wars and miseries during that
436 time. Your Imperial Majesty, as Supreme Lord on earth, is bound to apply a
437 remedy to that evil.&amp;quot;&lt;/p&gt;
438 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Heretical English and Germans were not the only persons who
439 could recognise the fitness of the secular supremacy of princes over popes
440 and Churches. Such thoughts must have passed through the mind of Charles
441 himself, and of many more besides him. De Soria's words might have been
442 dictated by Luther or Thomas Cromwell. Had the Emperor at that moment placed
443 himself at the head of the Reformation, all later history would have been
444 different. One statesman at any rate had cause to fear that this might be
445 what was about to happen. Wolsey was the embodiment of everything most
446 objectionable and odious to the laity in the ecclesiastical administration
447 of Europe. To defend the Papacy and to embarrass Charles was the surest
448 method of protecting himself and his order. The divorce was an incident in
449 the situation, but not the least important. Catherine represented the
450 Imperialist interest in England. To put her away was to make the breach with
451 her countrymen and kindred irreparable. He took upon himself to assure the
452 King that after the last outrage the Pope would agree to anything that
453 France and England demanded of him, and would trust to his allies to bear
454 him harmless. That the divorce was a thing reasonable in itself to ask for,
455 and certain to be conceded by any pope who was free to act on his own
456 judgment, was assumed as a matter of course. Sir Gregory Casalis, the
457 English agent at Rome, was instructed to obtain access to Clement in St.
458 Angelo, to convey to him the indignation felt in England at his treatment,
459 and then to insist on the illegality of the King's relations with Catherine,
460 on the King's own scruples of conscience, and on the anxiety of his subjects
461 that there should be a male heir to the crown. The &amp;quot;urgent cause&amp;quot; such as
462 was necessary to be produced when exceptional actions were required of the
463 popes was the imminence or even certainty of civil war if no such heir was
464 born. &lt;/p&gt;
465 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Catherine meanwhile had again communiated with Mendoza. She
466 had spoken to her husband, and Henry, since further reticence was
467 impossible, had told her that they had been living in mortal sin, and that a
468 separation was necessary. A violent scene had followed, with natural tears
469 and reproaches. The King endeavoured to console her, but it was not a matter
470 where consolation could avail. Wolsey advised him to deal with her gently,
471 till it was seen what the Pope and the King of France would do in the
472 matter. Wolsey himself was to go immediately to Paris to see Francis, and
473 consult with him on the measures necessary to be taken in consequence of the
474 Pope's imprisonment. It was possible that Clement, finding himself helpless,
475 might become a puppet in the Emperor's hands. Under such circumstances he
476 could not be trusted by other countries with the spiritual authority
477 attaching to his office, and schemes were being formed for some interim
478 arrangement by which France and England were to constitute themselves into a
479 separate patriarchate, with Wolsey at its head as Archbishop of Rouen.
480 Mendoza says that this proposal had been actually made to Wolsey by the
481 French Ambassador. In Spain it was even believed to be contemplated as a
482 permanent modification of the ecclesiastical system. The Imperial
483 Councillors at Valladolid told the Venetian Minister that the Cardinal
484 intended to separate the Churches of England and France from that of Rome,
485 saying that as the Pope was a prisoner he was not to be obeyed, and that
486 even if the Emperor released him, he still would not be free unless his
487 fortresses and territory now in the Emperor's hands were restored to him.
488 Wolsey had reason for anxiety, for Catherine and Mendoza were writing to the
489 Emperor insisting that he should make the Pope revoke Wolsey's Legatine
490 powers. &lt;/p&gt;
491 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;In spite of efforts to keep secret the intended divorce, it
492 soon became known thoughout England. The Queen was personally popular. The
493 nation generally detested France, and looked on the Emperor as their
494 hereditary friend. The reasons for the divorce might influence statesmen,
495 but did not touch the body of the people. They naturally took the side of an
496 injured wife, and if Mendoza can be believed (and there is no reason why he
497 should not be believed), the first impression was decidedly unfavourable to
498 a project which was regarded as part of the new policy. Mendoza made the
499 most of the opposition. He told the Emperor that if six or seven thousand
500 men were landed in Cornwall, forty thousand Englishmen would rise and join
501 them. He saw Wolsey -- he reasoned with him, and when he found reason
502 ineffectual, he named the bribe which the Emperor was willing to give.
503 Knowing what Francis was bidding, he baited his hook more liberally. He
504 spoke of the Papacy: &amp;quot;how the chair was now in the Emperor's hands, and the
505 Emperor, if Wolsey deserved it, would no doubt promote his elevation.&amp;quot; The
506 glittering temptation was unavailing. The papal chair had been Wolsey's
507 highest ambition, but he remained unmoved. He said that he had served the
508 Emperor in the past out of disinterested regard. He still trusted that the
509 Emperor would replace the Pope and restore the Church. Mendoza's answer was
510 not reassuring to an English statesman. He said that both the spiritual and
511 temporal powers were now centred in his master, and he advised Wolsey, if he
512 desired an arrangement, to extend his journey from France, go on to Spain,
513 and see the Emperor in person. It was precisely this centering which those
514 who had charge of English liberties had a right to resent. Divorce or no
515 divorce, they could not allow a power possessed of so much authority in the
516 rest of Christendom to be the servant of a single prince. The divorce was
517 but an illustration of the situation, and such a Papacy as Mendoza
518 contemplated would reduce England and all Catholic Europe into fiefs of the
519 Empire. &lt;/p&gt;
520 &lt;/font&gt;
521 &lt;font face=&quot;Times New Roman&quot; style=&quot;font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif&quot;&gt;
522 &lt;hr&gt;
523 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;From &lt;i&gt;The Divorce of Catherine of Aragon:
524 The Story as Told by the Imperial Ambassadors Resident at the Court of Henry
525 VIII&lt;/i&gt; by J.A. Froude.&amp;nbsp; Published in New York by C. Scribner's Sons,
526 1891.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
527 &lt;/blockquote&gt;
528&lt;/blockquote&gt;
529
530&lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;
531&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2ffroudetwo.html&quot;&gt;to Chapter Two&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
532&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;
533&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;to Secondary Sources&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
534&lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;
535&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
536Katharine of Aragon website&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
537 &lt;/font&gt;
538&lt;blockquote&gt;
539 &lt;blockquote&gt;
540 &lt;font style=&quot;font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif&quot;&gt;
541 &lt;font face=&quot;Times New Roman&quot;&gt;
542 &lt;/font&gt;&lt;font style=&quot;FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif&quot;&gt;
543 &lt;/font&gt;
544 &lt;p class=&quot;3text&quot; align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;
545 &lt;/font&gt;
546 &lt;/blockquote&gt;
547&lt;/blockquote&gt;
548
549
550
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553</Content>
554</Section>
555</Archive>
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