Studies from Court and Cloister: being essays, historical and literary dealing mainly with subjects relating to the XVIth and XVIIth centuries eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 413 pages of information about Studies from Court and Cloister.

Studies from Court and Cloister: being essays, historical and literary dealing mainly with subjects relating to the XVIth and XVIIth centuries eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 413 pages of information about Studies from Court and Cloister.

* Acts and Monuments vol v., p 765; Cattley’s ed.

By Foxe’s own showing, when brought before the bishops, the “marytrs” frequently twitted their judges, gave them homethrusts and “privy nips,” and behaved themselves generally in a very provocative and irritating manner.  It is surprising, nevertheless, to find how very seldom the examiners lost their tempers, bearing with a considerable amount of insolence in a singularly good-humoured spirit, doing their best to give the accused a chance of escape.  Of the six who came under Bonner’s examination on the 8th February 1555, Foxe affirms that the Bishop of London sentenced them the day after they were charged, and killed them out of hand without mercy, “such quick speed these men could make in dispatching their business at once”—­a terrible indictment if there were a shadow of truth in it.  But Bonner not only knew all about the six heretics long before the 8th February, three of them having been in prison for months, where he had again and again reasoned with them; but after sentence had been passed, an interval of five weeks was the shortest respite granted to them for reflection before any one of them was executed.  The others suffered consecutively on the 26th, 28th, and 29th March, the last of the six on the 10th June.

With as little regard for truth did Foxe pen the remarkable distich, which well served his purpose of villifying Bonner in the minds of his confiding and credulous readers:—­

This cannibal in three years’ space three hundred martyrs slew, They were his food, he loved so blood, he spared none he knew.”

Lingard estimates that about two hundred persons suffered for their religious opinions during the reign of Mary.  The fact is no doubt an appalling one, and horrifies us with a sense of the barbarism that prevailed so recently as three and a half centuries ago in England.  But when we consider the outrages of which numbers of them were guilty, the danger which they constituted to the realm, we cannot help agreeing with Cobbett when he says that “the real truth about these martyrs is that they were generally a set of most wicked wretches who sought to destroy the queen and her government, and under the pretence of conscience and superior piety, to obtain the means of again preying upon the people."*

* History of the Reformation, edited by Abbot Gasquet, p. 207.

Moreover, portentous as the numbers appear to us, they are small compared with those which represented Henry’s ruthless severity after the Northern Rising, when the whole country was covered with gibbets, and with those of Elizabeth’s victims who were hanged, cut down alive, drawn and quartered, for practising the religion that had been taught in England since it was a Christian country.  Nor did the persecution of Catholics cease at the death of Elizabeth, and the reigns of the Stuart kings, the Commonwealth, and even the Hanoverian regime testify to the cruel insistance with which Catholic priests were hunted to death, and the Catholic laity imprisoned and impoverished for their loyalty to the oldest faith of Christendom.

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Studies from Court and Cloister: being essays, historical and literary dealing mainly with subjects relating to the XVIth and XVIIth centuries from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.