FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS CHAPTER V An Account of the Inquisition
FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS
CHAPTER V
An Account of the Inquisition
When the reformed religion began to diffuse the Gospel light
throughout Europe, Pope Innocent III entertained great fear for the Romish
Church. He accordingly instituted a number of inquisitors, or persons who were
to make inquiry after, apprehend, and punish, heretics, as the reformed were
called by the papists.
At the head of these inquisitors was one Dominic, who had been canonized by the
pope, in order to render his authority the more respectable. Dominic, and the
other inquisitors, spread themselves into various Roman Catholic
countries, and treated the Protestants with the utmost
severity. In process of time, the pope, not finding these roving inquisitors so
useful as he had imagined, resolved upon the establishment of fixed and regular
courts of Inquisition. After the order for these regular courts, the first
office of Inquisition was established in the city of Toulouse, and Dominic
became the first regular inquisitor, as he had before been the first roving
inquisitor.
Courts of Inquisition were now erected in several countries; but the Spanish Inquisition became the most powerful, and the most dreaded of any. Even the kings of Spain themselves, though arbitrary in all other respects, were taught to dread the power of the lords of the Inquisition; and the horrid cruelties they exercised compelled multitudes, who differed in opinion from the Roman Catholics, carefully to conceal their sentiments.
The most zealous of all the popish monks, and those who most implicitly obeyed the Church of Rome, were the Dominicans and Franciscans: these, therefore, the pope thought proper to invest with an exclusive right of presiding over the different courts of Inquisition, and gave them the most unlimited powers, as judges delegated by him, and immediately representing his person: they were permitted to excommunicate, or sentence to death whom they thought proper, upon the most slight information of heresy. They were allowed to publish crusades against all whom they deemed heretics, and enter into leagues with sovereign princes, to join their crusades with their forces.
In 1244, their power was further increased by the emperor Frederic II, who declared himself the protector and friend of all the inquisitors, and published the cruel edicts, viz., 1. That all heretics who continue obstinate, should be burnt. 2. That all heretics who repented, should be imprisoned for life.
This zeal in the emperor, for the inquisitors of the Roman Catholic persuasion, arose from a report which had been propagated throughout Europe, that he intended to renounce Christianity, and turn Mahometan; the emperor therefore, attempted, by the height of bigotry, to contradict the report, and to show his attachment to popery by cruelty.
The officers of the Inquisition are three inquisitors, or judges, a fiscal proctor, two secretaries, a magistrate, a messenger, a receiver, a jailer, an agent of confiscated possessions; several assessors, counsellors, executioners, physicians, surgeons, doorkeepers, familiars, and visitors, who are sworn to secrecy.
The principal accusation against those who are subject to this tribunal is heresy, which comprises all that is spoken, or written, against any of the articles of the creed, or the traditions of the Roman Church. The inquisition likewise takes cognizance of such as are accused of being magicians, and of such who read the Bible in the common language, the Talmud of the Jews, or the Alcoran of the Mahometans.
Upon all occasions the inquisitors carry on their processes with the utmost severity, and punish those who offend them with the most unparalleled cruelty. A Protestant has seldom any mercy shown him, and a Jew, who turns Christian, is far from being secure.
A defence in the Inquisition is of little use to the prisoner, for a suspicion only is deemed sufficient cause of condemnation, and the greater his wealth the greater his danger. The principal part of the inquisitors' cruelties is owing to their rapacity: they destroy the life to possess the property; and, under the pretence of zeal, plunder each obnoxious individual.
A prisoner in the Inquisition is never allowed to see the face of his accuser, or of the witnesses against him, but every method is taken by threats and tortures, to oblige him to accuse himself, and by that means corroborate their evidence. If the jurisdiction of the Inquisition is not fully allowed, vengeance is denounced against such as call it in question for if any of its officers are opposed, those who oppose them are almost certain to be sufferers for the temerity; the maxim of the Inquisition being to strike terror, and awe those who are the objects of its power into obedience. High birth, distinguished rank, great dignity, or eminent employments, are no protection from its severities; and the lowest officers of the Inquisition can make the highest characters tremble.
When the person impeached is condemned, he is either severely whipped, violently tortured, sent to the galleys, or sentenced to death; and in either case the effects are confiscated. After judgment, a procession is performed to the place of execution, which ceremony is called an auto da fe, or act of faith.
The following is an account of an auto da fe, performed at Madrid in the year 1682.
The officers of the Inquisition, preceded by trumpets,
kettledrums, and their banner, marched on the thirtieth of May, in cavalcade,
to the palace of the great square, where they declared by proclamation, that,
on the thirtieth of June, the sentence of the prisoners would be put in
execution.
Of these prisoners, twenty men and women, with one renegade Mahometan, were
ordered to be burned; fifty Jews and Jewesses, having never before been
imprisoned, and repenting of their crimes, were sentenced to a long
confinement, and to wear a yellow cap. The whole court of Spain was present on
this occasion. The grand inquisitor's chair was placed in a sort of tribunal
far above that of the king.
Among those who were to suffer, was a young Jewess of exquisite beauty, and but
seventeen years of age. Being on the same side of the scaffold where the queen
was seated, she addressed her, in hopes of obtaining a pardon, in the following
pathetic speech: "Great queen, will not your royal presence be of some
service to me in my miserable condition? Have regard to my youth; and, oh!
consider, that I am about to die for professing a religion imbibed from my
earliest infancy!" Her majesty seemed greatly to pity her distress, but
turned away her eyes, as she did not dare to speak a word in behalf of a person
who had been declared a heretic.
Now Mass began, in the midst of which the priest came from the altar, placed
himself near the scaffold, and seated himself in a chair prepared for that purpose.
The chief inquisitor then descended from the amphitheater, dressed in his cope,
and having a miter on his head. After having bowed to the altar, he advanced
towards the king's balcony, and went up to it, attended by some of his
officers, carrying a cross and the Gospels, with a book containing the oath by
which the kings of Spain oblige themselves to protect the Catholic faith, to
extirpate heretics, and to support with all their power and force the
prosecutions and decrees of the Inquisition: a like oath was administered to
the counsellors and whole assembly. The Mass was begun about twelve at noon,
and did not end until nine in the evening, being protracted by a proclamation
of the sentence of the several criminals, which were already separately rehearsed
aloud one after the other.
After this followed the burnings of the twenty-one men and women, whose
intrepidity in suffering that horrid death was truly astonishing. The king's
near situation to the criminals rendered their dying groans very audible to
him; he could not, however, be absent from this dreadful scene, as it is
esteemed a religious one; and his coronation oath obliged him to give a
sanction by his presence to all the acts of the tribunal.
What we have already said may be applied to inquisitions in general, as well as
to that of Spain in particular. The Inquisition belonging to Portugal is
exactly upon a similar plan to that of Spain, having been instituted much about
the same time, and put under the same regulations. The inquisitors allow the
torture to be used only three times, but during those times it is so severely
inflicted, that the prisoner either dies under it, or continues always after a
cripple, and suffers the severest pains upon every change of weather. We shall
give an ample description of the severe torments occasioned by the torture,
from the account of one who suffered it the three respective times, but happily
survived the cruelties he underwent.
At the first time of torturing, six executioners entered, stripped him naked to
his drawers, and laid him upon his back on a kind of stand, elevated a few feet
from the floor. The operation commenced by putting an iron collar round his
neck, and a ring to each foot, which fastened him to the stand. His limbs being
thus stretched out, they wound two ropes round each thigh; which ropes being
passed under the scaffold, through holes made for that purpose, were all drawn
tight at the same instant of time, by four of the men, on a given signal.
It is easy to conceive that the pains which immediately succeeded were
intolerable; the ropes, which were of a small size, cut through the prisoner's
flesh to the bone, making the blood to gush out at eight different places thus
bound at a time. As the prisoner persisted in not making any confession of what
the inquisitors required, the ropes were drawn in this manner four times
successively.
The manner of inflicting the second torture was as follows: they forced his
arms backwards so that the palms of his hands were turned outward behind him;
when, by means of a rope that fastened them together at the wrists, and which
was turned by an engine, they drew them by degrees nearer each other, in such a
manner that the back of each hand touched, and stood exactly parallel to each
other. In consequence of this violent contortion, both his shoulders became
dislocated, and a considerable quantity of blood issued from his mouth. This
torture was repeated thrice; after which he was again taken to the dungeon, and
the surgeon set the dislocated bones.
Two months after the second torture, the prisoner being a little recovered, was
again ordered to the torture room, and there, for the last time, made to
undergo another kind of punishment, which was inflicted twice without any
intermission. The executioners fastened a thick iron chain round his body,
which crossing at the breast, terminated at the wrists. They then placed him
with his back against a thick board, at each extremity whereof was a pulley,
through which there ran a rope that caught the end of the chain at his wrists.
The executioner then, stretching the end of his rope by means of a roller,
placed at a distance behind him, pressed or bruised his stomach in proportion
as the ends of the chains were drawn tighter. They tortured him in this manner
to such a degree, that his wrists, as well as his shoulders, were quite
dislocated. They were, however, soon set by the surgeons; but the barbarians,
not yet satisfied with this species of cruelty, made him immediately undergo
the like torture a second time, which he sustained (though, if possible,
attended with keener pains,) with equal constancy and resolution. After this,
he was again remanded to the dungeon, attended by the surgeon to dress his
bruises and adjust the part dislocated, and here he continued until their auto
da fe, or jail delivery, when he was discharged, crippled and diseased for
life.
An Account of the Cruel Handling and Burning of Nicholas Burton, an English Merchant, in Spain
The fifth day of November, about the year of our Lord 1560,
Mr. Nicholas Burton, citizen sometime of London, and merchant, dwelling in the
parish of Little St. Bartholomew, peaceably and quietly, following his traffic
in the trade of merchandise, and being in the city of Cadiz, in the party of
Andalusia, in Spain, there came into his lodging a Judas, or, as they term
them, a familiar of the fathers of Inquisition; who asking for the said
Nicholas Burton, feigned that he had a letter to deliver into his own hands; by
which means he spake with him immediately. And having no letter to deliver to
him, then the said promoter, or familiar, at the motion of the devil his
master, whose messenger he was, invented another lie, and said he would take
lading for London in such ships as the said Nicholas Burton had freighted to
lade, if he would let any; which was partly to know where he loaded his goods,
that they might attach them, and chiefly to protract the time until the
sergeant of the Inquisition might come and apprehend the body of the said
Nicholas Burton; which they did incontinently.
He then well perceiving that they were not able to burden or charge him that he
had written, spoken, or done any thing there in that country against the
ecclesiastical or temporal laws of the same realm, boldly asked them what they
had to lay to his charge that they did so arrest him, and bade them to declare
the cause, and he would answer them. Notwithstanding they answered nothing, but
commanded him with threatening words to hold his peace, and not speak one word
to them.
And so they carried him to the filthy common prison of the town of Cadiz where
he remained in irons fourteen days amongst thieves.
All which time he so instructed the poor prisoners in the Word of God,
according to the good talent which God had given him in that behalf, and also
in the Spanish tongue to utter the same, that in that short space he had well
reclaimed several of those superstitiuous and ignorant Spaniards to embrace the
Word of God, and to reject their popish traditions.
Which being known unto the officers of the Inquisition, they conveyed him laden
with irons from thence to a city called Seville, into a more cruel and straiter
prison called Triana, where the said fathers of the Inquisition proceeded
against him secretly according to their accustomable cruel tyranny, that never
after he could be suffered to write or speak to any of his nation: so that to
this day it is unknown who was his accuser.
Afterward, the twentieth of December, they brought the said Nicholas Burton,
with a great number of other prisoners, for professing the true Christian
religion, into the city of Seville, to a place where the said inquisitors sat
in judgment which they called auto, with a canvas coat, whereupon in divers
parts was painted the figure of a huge devil, tormenting a soul in a flame of
fire, and on his head a copping tank of the same work.
His tongue was forced out of his mouth with a cloven stick fastened upon it,
that he should not utter his conscience and faith to the people, and so he was
set with another Englishman of Southampton, and divers other condemned men for
religion, as well Frenchmen as Spaniards, upon a scaffold over against the said
Inquisition, where their sentences and judgments were read and pronounced
against them.
And immediately after the said sentences given, they were carried from there to
the place of execution without the city, where they most cruelly burned them,
for whose constant faith, God is praised.
This Nicholas Burton by the way, and in the flames of fire, had so cheerful a
countenance, embracing death with all patience and gladness, that the
tormentors and enemies which stood by, said, that the devil had his soul before
he came to the fire; and therefore they said his senses of feeling were past
him.
It happened that after the arrest of Nicholas Burton aforesaid, immediately all
the goods and merchandise which he brought with him into Spain by the way of
traffic, were (according to their common usage) seized, and taken into the
sequester; among which they also rolled up much that appertained to another
English merchant, wherewith he was credited as factor. Whereof as soon as news
was brought to the merchant as well of the imprisonment of his factor, as of
the arrest made upon his goods, he sent his attorney into Spain, with authority
from him to make claim to his goods, and to demand them; whose name was John
Fronton, citizen of Bristol.
When his attorney was landed at Seville, and had shown all his letters and
writings to the holy house, requiring them that such goods might be delivered
into his possession, answer was made to him that he must sue by bill, and
retain an advocate (but all was doubtless to delay him,) and they forsooth of
courtesy assigned him one to frame his supplication for him, and other such
bills of petition, as he had to exhibit into their holy court, demanding for
each bill eight reals, albeit they stood him in no more stead than if he had
put up none at all. And for the space of three or four months this fellow
missed not twice a day attending every morning and afternoon at the
inquisitors' palace, suing unto them upon his knees for his despatch, but
especially to the bishop of Tarracon, who was at that very time chief of the
Inquisition at Seville, that he of his absolute authority would command
restitution to be made thereof; but the booty was so good and great that it was
very hard to come by it again.
At length, after he had spent four whole months in suits and requests, and also
to no purpose, he received this answer from them, that he must show better
evidence, and bring more sufficient certificates out of England for proof of
this matter, than those which he had already presented to the court. Whereupon
the party forthwith posted to London, and with all speed returned to Seville
again with more ample and large letters testimonial, and certificates,
according to their requests, and exhibited them to the court.
Notwithstanding, the inquisitors still shifted him off, excusing themselves by
lack of leisure, and for that they were occupied in more weighty affairs, and
with such answers put him off, four months after.
At last, when the party had well nigh spent all his money, and therefore sued
the more earnestly for his despatch, they referred the matter wholly to the
bishop, of whom, when he repaired unto him, he made answer, 'That for himself,
he knew what he had to do, howbeit he was but one man, and the determination
appertained to the other commissioners as well as unto him;' and thus by
posting and passing it from one to another, the party could obtain no end of
his suit. Yet for his importunity's sake, they were resolved to despatch him:
it was on this sort: one of the inquisitors, called Gasco, a man very well
experienced in these practices, willed the party to resort unto him after
dinner.
The fellow being glad to hear this news, and supposing that his goods should be
restored unto him, and that he was called in for that purpose to talk with the
other that was in prison to confer with him about their accounts, rather
through a little misunderstanding, hearing the inquisitors cast out a word,
that it should be needful for him to talk with the prisoner, and being
thereupon more than half persuaded, that at length they meant good faith, did
so, and repaired thither about the evening. Immediately upon his coming, the
jailer was forthwith charged with him, to shut him up close in such a prison
where they appointed him.
The party, hoping at the first that he had been called for about some other
matter, and seeing himself, contrary to his expectation, cast into a dark
dungeon, perceived at length that the world went with him far otherwise than he
supposed it would have done.
But within two or three days after, he was brought into the court, where he
began to demand his goods: and because it was a device that well served their
turn without any more circumstance, they bid him say his Ave Maria: Ave Maria,
gratia plena, Dominus tecum, benedicta tu in mulieribus, et benedictus fructus
ventris tui Jesus Amen.
The same was written word by word as he spake it, and without any more talk of
claiming his goods, because it was needless, they commanded him to prison
again, and entered an action against him as a heretic, forasmuch as he did not
say his Ave Maria after the Romish fashion, but ended it very suspiciously, for
he should have added moreover; Sancta Maria mater Dei, ora pro nobis
peccatoribus: by abbreviating whereof, it was evident enough (said they) that
he did not allow the mediation of saints.
Thus they picked a quarrel to detain him in prison a longer season, and
afterward brought him forth upon their stage disguised after their manner;
where sentence was given, that he should lose all the goods which he sued for,
though they were not his own, and besides this, suffer a year's imprisonment.
Mark Brughes, an Englishman, master of an English ship called the Minion, was
burned in a city in Portugal.
William Hoker, a young man about the age of sixteen years, being an Englishman,
was stoned to death by certain young men in the city of Seville, for the same
righteous cause.
Some Private Enormities of the Inquisition Laid Open, by a Very Singular
Occurrence
When the crown of Spain was contested for in the beginning of the present
century, by two princes, who equally pretended to the sovereignty, France
espoused the cause of one competitor, and England of the other.
The duke of Berwick, a natural son of James II who abdicated England, commanded
the Spanish and French forces, and defeated the English at the celebrated
battle of Almanza. The army was then divided into two parts; the one consisting
of Spaniards and French, headed by the duke of Berwick, advanced towards
Catalonia; the other body, consisting of French troops only, commanded by the
duke of Orleans, proceeded to the conquest of Arragon.
As the troops drew near to the city of Arragon, the magistrates came to offer
the keys to the duke of Orleans; but he told them haughtily that they were
rebels, and that he would not accept the keys, for he had orders to enter the
city through a breach.
He accordingly made a breach in the walls with his cannon, and then entered the
city through it, together with his whole army. When he had made every necessary
regulation here, he departed to subdue other places, leaving a strong garrison
at once to overawe and defend, under the command of his lieutenant-general M.
de Legal. This gentleman, though brought up a Roman Catholic, was totally free
from superstition; he united great talents with great bravery; and was the
skilful officer, and accomplished gentleman.
The duke, before his departure, had ordered that heavy contributions should be
levied upon the city in the following manner:
- 1. That the magistrates and principal inhabitants should pay a thousand crowns per month for the duke's table.
- 2. That every house should pay one pistole, which would monthly amount to 18,000 pistoles.
- 3. That every convent and monastery should pay a donative, proportionable to its riches and rents.
The two last contributions to be appropriated to the
maintenance of the army.
The money levied upon the magistrates and principal inhabitants, and upon every
house, was paid as soon as demanded; but when the persons applied to the heads
of convents and monasteries, they found that the ecclesiastics were not so
willing, as other people, to part with their cash.
Of the donatives to be raised by the clergy:
The College of Jesuits to pay - 2000 pistoles.
- Carmelites, - 1000
- Augustins, - 1000
- Dominicans, - 1000
M. de Legal sent to the Jesuits a peremptory order to pay
the money immediately. The superior of the Jesuits returned for answer that for
the clergy to pay money for the army was against all ecclesiastical immunities;
and that he knew of no argument which could authorize such a procedure. M. de
Legal then sent four companies of dragoons to quarter themselves in the
college, with this sarcastic message. "To convince you of the necessity of
paying the money, I have sent four substantial arguments to your college, drawn
from the system of military logic; and, therefore, hope you will not need any
further admonition to direct your conduct."
These proceedings greatly perplexed the Jesuits, who despatched an express to
court to the king's confessor, who was of their order; but the dragoons were
much more expeditious in plundering and doing mischief, than the courier in his
journey: so that the Jesuits, seeing everything going to wreck and ruin,
thought proper to adjust the matter amicably, and paid the money before the
return of their messenger. The Augustins and Carmelites, taking warning by what
had happened to the Jesuits, prudently went and paid the money, and by that
means escaped the study of military arguments, and of being taught logic by
dragoons.
But the Dominicans, who were all familiars of, or agents dependent on, the
Inquisition, imagined that that very circumstance would be their protection;
but they were mistaken, for M. de Legal neither feared nor respected the
Inquisition. The chief of the Dominicans sent word to the military commander
that his order was poor, and had not any money whatever to pay the donative;
for, says he, "The whole wealth of the Dominicans consists only in the
silver images of the apostles and saints, as large as life, which are placed in
our church, and which it would be sacrilege to remove."
This insinuation was meant to terrify the French commander, whom the
inquisitors imagined would not dare to be so profane as to wish for the
possession of the precious idols.
He, however, sent word that the silver images would make admirable substitutes
for money, and would be more in character in his possession, than in that of
the Dominicans themselves, "For [said he] while you possess them in the
manner you do at present, they stand up in niches, useless and motionless,
without being of the least benefit to mankind in general, or even to
yourselves; but, when they come into my possession, they shall be useful; I
will put them in motion; for I intend to have them coined, when they may travel
like the apostles, be beneficial in various places, and circulate for the
universal service of mankind."
The inquisitors were astonished at this treatment, which they never expected to
receive, even from crowned heads; they therefore determined to deliver their
precious images in a solemn procession, that they might excite the people to an
insurrection. The Dominican friars were accordingly ordered to march to de
Legal's house, with the silver apostles and saints, in a mournful manner,
having lighted tapers with them and bitterly crying all the way, "heresy,
heresy."
M. de Legal, hearing these proceedings, ordered four companies of grenadiers to
line the street which led to his house; each grenadier was ordered to have his
loaded fuzee in one hand, and a lighted taper in the other; so that the troops
might either repel force with force, or do honor to the farcical solemnity.
The friars did all they could to raise the tumult, but the common people were
too much afraid of the troops under arms to obey them; the silver images were,
therefore, of necessity delivered up to M. de Legal, who sent them to the mint,
and ordered them to be coined immediately.
The project of raising an insurrection having failed, the inquisitors
determined to excommunicate M. de Legal, unless he would release their precious
silver saints from imprisonment in the mint, before they were melted down, or
otherwise mutilated. The French commander absolutely refused to release the
images, but said they should certainly travel and do good; upon which the
inquisitors drew up the form of excommunication, and ordered their secretary to
go and read it to M. de Legal.
The secretary punctually performed his commission, and read the excommunication
deliberately and distinctly. The French commander heard it with great patience,
and politely told the secretary that he would answer it the next day.
When the secretary of the Inquisition was gone, M. de Legal ordered his own
secretary to prepare a form of excommunication, exactly like that sent by the
Inquisition; but to make this alteration, instead of his name to put in those
of the inquisitors.
The next morning he ordered four regiments under arms, and commanded them to
accompany his secretary, and act as he directed.
The secretary went to the Inquisition, and insisted upon admittance, which,
after a great deal of altercation, was granted. As soon as he entered, he read,
in an audible voice, the excommunication sent by M. de Legal against the
inquisitors. The inquisitors were all present, and heard it with astonishment,
never having before met with any individual who dared to behave so boldly. They
loudly cried out against de Legal, as a heretic; and said, "This was a
most daring insult against the Catholic faith." But to surprise them still
more, the French secretary told them that they must remove from their present
lodgings; for the French commander wanted to quarter the troops in the
Inquisition, as it was the most commodious place in the whole city.
The inquisitors exclaimed loudly upon this occasion, when the secretary put
them under a strong guard, and sent them to a place appointed by M. de Legal to
receive them. The inquisitors, finding how things went, begged that they might
be permitted to take their private property, which was granted; and they
immediately set out for Madrid, where they made the most bitter complaints to
the king; but the monarch told them that he could not grant them any redress,
as the injuries they had received were from his grandfather, the king of
France's troops, by whose assistance alone he could be firmly established in
his kingdom. "Had it been my own troops, [said he] I would have punished
them; but as it is, I cannot pretend to exert any authority."
In the mean time, M. de Legal's secretary set open all the doors of the
Inquisition, and released the prisoners, who amounted in the whole to four
hundred; and among these were sixty beautiful young women, who appeared to form
a seraglio for the three principal inquisitors.
This discovery, which laid the enormity of the inquisitors so open, greatly
alarmed the archbishop, who desired M. de Legal to send the women to his
palace, and he would take proper care of them; and at the same time he
published an ecclesiastical censure against all such as should ridicule, or
blame, the holy office of the Inquisition.
The French commander sent word to the archbishop, that the prisoners had either
run away, or were so securely concealed by their friends, or even by his own
officers, that it was impossible for him to send them back again; and,
therefore, the Inquisition having committed such atrocious actions, must now
put up with their exposure.
Some may suggest, that it is strange crowned heads and eminent nobles did not
attempt to crush the power of the Inquisition, and reduce the authority of
those ecclesiastical tyrants, from whose merciless fangs neither their families
nor themselves were secure.
But astonishing as it is, superstition hath, in this case, always overcome
common sense, and custom operated against reason. One prince, indeed, intended
to abolish the Inquisition, but he lost his life before he became king, and
consequently before he had the power so to do; for the very intimation of his
design procured his destruction.
This was that amiable prince Don Carlos, son of Philip the Second, king of
Spain, and grandson of the celebrated emperor Charles V. Don Carlos possessed
all the good qualities of his grandfather, without any of the bad ones of his
father; and was a prince of great vivacity, admirable learning, and the most
amiable disposition. He had sense enough to see into the errors of popery, and
abhorred the very name of the Inquisition. He inveighed publicly against the
institution, ridiculed the affected piety of the inquisitors, did all he could
to expose their atrocious deeds, and even declared, that if he ever came to the
crown, he would abolish the Inquisition, and exterminate its agents.
These things were sufficient to irritate the inquisitors against the prince:
they, accordingly, bent their minds to vengeance, and determined on his
destruction.
The inquisitors now employed all their agents and emissaries to spread abroad
the most artful insinuations against the prince; and, at length raised such a
spirit of discontent among the people that the king was under the necessity of
removing Don Carlos from court. Not content with this, they pursued even his
friends, and obliged the king likewise to banish Don John, duke of Austria, his
own brother, and consequently uncle to the prince; together with the prince of
Parma, nephew to the king, and cousin to the prince, because they well knew
that both the duke of Austria, and the prince of Parma, had a most sincere and
inviolable attachment to Don Carlos.
Some few years after, the prince having shown great lenity and favor to the
Protestants in the Netherlands, the Inquisition loudly exclaimed against him,
declaring, that as the persons in question were heretics, the prince himself
must necessarily be one, since he gave them countenance. In short, they gained
so great an ascendency over the mind of the king, who was absolutely a slave to
superstition, that, shocking to relate, he sacrificed the feelings of nature to
the force of bigotry, and, for fear of incurring the anger of the Inquisition,
gave up his only son, passing the sentence of death on him himself.
The prince, indeed, had what was termed an indulgence; that is, he was
permitted to choose the manner of his death. Roman-like, the unfortunate young
hero chose bleeding and the hot bath; when the veins of his arms and legs were
opened, he expired gradually, falling a martyr to the malice of the
inquisitors, and the stupid bigotry of his father.
The Persecution of Dr. Aegidio
Dr. Aegidio was educated at the university of Alcala, where
he took his several degrees, and particularly applied himself to the study of
the sacred Scriptures and school divinity. When the professor of theology died,
he was elected into his place, and acted so much to the satisfaction of every
one that his reputation for learning and piety was circulated throughout
Europe.
Aegidio, however, had his enemies, and these laid a complaint against him to
the inquisitors, who sent him a citation, and when he appeared to it, cast him
into a dungeon.
As the greatest part of those who belonged to the cathedral church at Seville,
and many persons belonging to the bishopric of Dortois highly approved of the
doctrines of Aegidio, which they thought perfectly consonant with true
religion, they petitioned the emperor in his behalf. Though the monarch had
been educated a Roman Catholic, he had too much sense to be a bigot, and
therefore sent an immediate order for his enlargement.
He soon after visited the church of Valladolid, and did every thing he could to
promote the cause of religion. Returning home he soon after fell sick, and died
in an extreme old age.
The inquisitors having been disappointed of gratifying their malice against him
while living, determined (as the emperor's whole thoughts were engrossed by a
military expedition) to wreak their vengeance on him when dead. Therefore, soon
after he was buried, they ordered his remains to be dug out of the grave; and a
legal process being carried on, they were condemned to be burnt, which was
executed accordingly.
The Persecution of Dr. Constantine
Dr. Constantine, an intimate acquaintance of the already
mentioned Dr. Aegidio, was a man of uncommon natural abilities and profound
learning; exclusive of several modern tongues, he was acquainted with the
Latin, Greek, and Hebrew languages, and perfectly well knew not only the
sciences called abstruse, but those arts which come under the denomination of
polite literature.
His eloquence rendered him pleasing, and the soundness of his doctrines a
profitable preacher; and he was so popular that he never preached but to a
crowded audience. He had many opportunities of rising in the Church, but never
would take advantage of them; for if a living of greater value than his own was
offered him, he would refuse it, saying, "I am content with what I
have"; and he frequently preached so forcibly against simony, that many of
his superiors, who were not so delicate upon the subject, took umbrage at his
doctrines upon that head.
Having been fully confirmed in Protestantism by Dr. Aegidio, he preached boldly
such doctrines only as were agreeable to Gospel purity, and uncontaminated by
the errors which had at various times crept into the Romish Church. For these
reasons he had many enemies among the Roman Catholics, and some of them were
fully determined on his destruction.
A worthy gentleman named Scobaria, having erected a school for divinity
lectures, appointed Dr. Constantine to be reader therein. He immediately
undertook the task, and read lectures, by portions, on the Proverbs,
Ecclesiastes, and Canticles; and was beginning to expound the Book of Job, when
he was seized by the inquisitors.
Being brought to examination, he answered with such precaution that they could
not find any explicit charge against him, but remained doubtful in what manner
to proceed, when the following circumstances occurred to determine them.
Dr. Constantine had deposited with a woman named Isabella Martin, several
books, which to him were very valuable, but which he knew, in the eyes of the
Inquisition, were exceptionable.
This woman having been informed against as a Protestant, was apprehended, and,
after a small process, her goods were ordered to be confiscated. Previous,
however, to the officers coming to her house, the woman's son had removed away
several chests full of the most valuable articles; among these were Dr.
Constantine's books.
A treacherous servant gave intelligence of this to the inquisitors, and an
officer was despatched to the son to demand the chests. The son, supposing the
officer only came for Constantine's books, said, "I know what you come
for, and I will fetch them to you immediately." He then fetched Dr.
Constantine's books and papers, when the officer was greatly surprised to find
what he did not look for. He, however, told the young man that he was glad
these books and papers were produced, but nevertheless he must fulfill the end
of his commission, which was to carry him and the goods he had embezzled before
the inquisitors, which he did accordingly; for the young man knew it would be
in vain to expostulate, or resist, and therefore quietly submitted to his fate.
The inquisitors being thus possessed of Constantine's books and writings, now
found matter sufficient to form charges against him. When he was brought to a
re-examination, they presented one of his papers, and asked him if he knew the
handwriting? Perceiving it was his own, he guessed the whole matter, confessed
the writing, and justified the doctrine it contained: saying, "In that,
and all my other writings, I have never departed from the truth of the Gospel,
but have always kept in view the pure precepts of Christ, as He delivered them
to mankind."
After being detained upwards of two years in prison, Dr. Constantine was seized
with a bloody flux, which put an end to his miseries in this world. The
process, however, was carried on against his body, which, at the ensuing auto
da fe, was publicly burnt.
The Life of William Gardiner
William Gardiner was born at Bristol, received a tolerable
education, and was, at a proper age, placed under the care of a merchant, named
Paget.
At the age of twenty-six years, he was, by his master, sent to Lisbon to act as
factor. Here he applied himself to the study of the Portuguese language,
executed his business with assiduity and despatch, and behaved with the most
engaging affability to all persons with whom he had the least concern. He
conversed privately with a few, whom he knew to be zealous Protestants; and, at
the same time cautiously avoided giving the least offence to any who were Roman
Catholics; he had not, however, hitherto gone into any of the popish churches.
A marriage being concluded between the king of Portugal's son, and the Infanta
of Spain, upon the wedding-day the bridegroom, bride, and the whole court went
to the cathedral church, attended by multitudes of all ranks of people, and
among the rest William Gardiner, who stayed during the whole ceremony, and was
greatly shocked at the superstitions he saw.
The erroneous worship which he had seen ran strongly in his mind; he was
miserable to see a whole country sunk into such idolatry, when the truth of the
Gospel might be so easily obtained. He, therefore, took the inconsiderate,
though laudable design, into his head, of making a reform in Portugal, or
perishing in the attempt; and determined to sacrifice his prudence to his zeal,
though he became a martyr upon the occasion.
To this end, he settled all his worldly affairs, paid his debts, closed his
books, and consigned over his merchandise. On the ensuing Sunday he went again
to the cathedral church, with a New Testament in his hand, and placed himself
near the altar.
The king and the court soon appeared, and a cardinal began Mass, at that part
of the ceremony in which the people adore the wafer. Gardiner could hold out no
longer, but springing towards the cardinal, he snatched the host from him, and
trampled it under his feet.
This action amazed the whole congregation, and one person, drawing a dagger,
wounded Gardiner in the shoulder, and would, by repeating the blow, have
finished him, had not the king called to him to desist.
Gardiner, being carried before the king, the monarch asked him what countryman
he was: to which he replied, "I am an Englishman by birth, a Protestant by
religion, and a merchant by occupation. What I have done is not out of contempt
to your royal person, God forbid it should, but out of an honest indignation,
to see the ridiculous superstitious and gross idolatries practiced here."
The king, thinking that he had been stimulated by some other person to act as
he had done, demanded who was his abetter, to which he replied, "My own
conscience alone. I would not hazard what I have done for any man living, but I
owe that and all other services to God."
Gardiner was sent to prison, and a general order issued to apprehend all
Englishmen in Lisbon. This order was in a great measure put into execution,
(some few escaping) and many innocent persons were tortured to make them
confess if they knew any thing of the matter; in particular, a person who
resided in the same house with Gardiner was treated with unparalleled barbarity
to make him confess something which might throw a light upon the affair.
Gardiner himself was then tormented in the most excruciating manner; but in the
midst of all his torments he gloried in the deed. Being ordered for death, a
large fire was kindled near a gibbet, Gardiner was drawn up to the gibbet by
pulleys, and then let down near the fire, but not so close as to touch it; for
they burnt or rather roasted him by slow degrees. Yet he bore his sufferings
patiently and resigned his soul to the Lord cheerfully.
It is observable that some of the sparks that were blown from the fire, (which
consumed Gardiner) towards the haven, burnt one of the king's ships of war, and
did other considerable damage. The Englishmen who were taken up on this
occasion were, soon after Gardiner's death, all discharged, except the person
who resided in the same house with him, who was detained two years before he
could procure his liberty.
An Account of the Life and Sufferings of Mr. William Lithgow, a Native of Scotland
This gentleman was descended from a good family, and having
a natural propensity for travelling, he rambled, when very young, over the
northern and western islands; after which he visited France, Germany,
Switzerland, and Spain. He set out on his travels in the month of March, 1609,
and the first place he went to was Paris, where he stayed for some time. He
then prosecuted his travels through Germany and other parts, and at length
arrived at Malaga, in Spain, the seat of all his misfortunes.
During his residence here, he contracted with the master of a French ship for
his passage to Alexandria, but was prevented from going by the following
circumstances. In the evening of the seventeenth of October, 1620, the English
fleet, at that time on a cruise against the Algerine rovers, came to anchor
before Malaga, which threw the people of the town into the greatest
consternation, as they imagined them to be Turks. The morning, however,
discovered the mistake, and the governor of Malaga, perceiving the cross of
England in their colors, went on board Sir Robert Mansel's ship, who commanded
on that expedition, and after staying some time returned, and silenced the fears
of the people.
The next day many persons from on board the fleet came ashore. Among these were
several well known by Mr. Lithgow, who, after reciprocal compliments, spent
some days together in festivity and the amusements of the town. They then
invited Mr. Lithgow to go on board, and pay his respects to the admiral. He
accordingly accepted the invitation, was kindly received by him, and detained
till the next day when the fleet sailed. The admiral would willingly have taken
Mr. Lithgow with him to Algiers; but having contracted for his passage to
Alexandria, and his baggage, etc., being in the town, he could not accept the
offer.
As soon as Mr. Lithgow got on shore, he proceeded towards his lodgings by a
private way, (being to embark the same night for Alexandria) when, in passing
through a narrow uninhabited street, he found himself suddenly surrounded by
nine sergeants, or officers, who threw a black cloak over him, and forcibly
conducted him to the governor's house. After some little time the governor appeared
when Mr. Lithgow earnestly begged he might be informed of the cause of such
violent treatment. The governor only answered by shaking his head, and gave
orders that the prisoner should be strictly watched until he (the governor)
returned from his devotions; directing, at the same time, that the captain of
the town, the alcade major, and town notary, should be summoned to appear at
his examination, and that all this should be done with the greatest secrecy, to
prevent the knowledge reaching the ears of the English merchants then residing
in the town.
These orders were strictly discharged, and on the governor's return, he, with
the officers, having seated themselves, Mr. Lithgow was brought before them for
examination. The governor began by asking several questions, namely, of what
country he was, whither bound, and how long he had been in Spain. The prisoner,
after answering these and other questions, was conducted to a closet, where, in
a short space of time, he was visited by the town captain, who inquired whether
he had ever been at Seville, or was lately come from thence; and patting his
cheeks with an air of friendship, conjured him to tell the truth, "For
(said he) your very countenance shows there is some hidden matter in your mind,
which prudence should direct you to disclose." Finding himself, however,
unable to extort any thing from the prisoner, he left him, and reported the
same to the governor and the other officers; on which Mr. Lithgow was again
brought before them, a general accusation was laid against him, and he was
compelled to swear that he would give true answers to such questions as should
be asked him.
The governor proceeded to inquire the quality of the English commander, and the
prisoner's opinion what were the motives that prevented his accepting an
invitation from him to come on shore. He demanded, likewise, the names of the
English captains in the squadron, and what knowledge he had of the embarkation,
or preparation for it before his departure from England. The answers given to
the several questions asked were set down in writing by the notary; but the
junto seemed surprised at his denying any knowledge of the fitting out of the
fleet, particularly the governor, who said he lied; that he was a traitor and a
spy, and came directly from England to favor and assist the designs that were
projected against Spain, and that he had been for that purpose nine months in
Seville, in order to procure intelligence of the time the Spanish navy was
expected from the Indies. They exclaimed against his familiarity with the
officers of the fleet, and many other English gentlemen, between whom, they
said, unusual civilities had passed, but all these transactions had been
carefully noticed.
Besides to sum up the whole, and put the truth past all doubt, they said he
came from a council of war, held that morning on board the admiral's ship, in
order to put in execution the orders assigned him. They upbraided him with
being accessory to the burning of the island of St. Thomas, in the West Indies.
"Wherefore (said they) these Lutherans, and sons of the devil, ought to
have no credit given to what they say or swear."
In vain did Mr. Lithgow endeavor to obviate every accusation laid against him,
and to obtain belief from his prejudiced judges. He begged permission to send
for his cloak bag which contained his papers, and might serve to show his
innocence. This request they complied with, thinking it would discover some
things of which they were ignorant. The cloak bag was accordingly brought, and
being opened, among other things, was found a license from King James the
First, under the sign manual, setting forth the bearer's intention to travel
into Egypt; which was treated by the haughty Spaniards with great contempt. The
other papers consisted of passports, testimonials, etc., of persons of quality.
All these credentials, however, seemed rather to confirm than abate the
suspicions of these prejudiced judges, who, after seizing all the prisoner's
papers, ordered him again to withdraw.
In the meantime a consultation was held to fix the place where the prisoner
should be confined. The alcade, or chief judge, was for putting him into the
town prison; but this was objected to, particularly by the corregidor, who
said, in Spanish, "In order to prevent the knowledge of his confinement
from reaching his countrymen, I will take the matter on myself, and be
answerable for the consequences"; upon which it was agreed that he should
be confined in the governor's house with the greatest secrecy.
This matter being determined, one of the sergeants went to Mr. Lithgow, and
begged his money, with liberty to search him. As it was needless to make any
resistance, the prisoner quietly complied, when the sergeant (after rifling his
pockets of eleven ducatoons) stripped him to his shirt; and searching his
breeches he found, inclosed in the waistland, two canvass bags, containing one
hundred and thirty-seven pieces of gold. The sergeant immediately took the
money to the corregidor, who, after having told it over, ordered him to clothe
the prisoner, and shut him up close until after supper.
About midnight, the sergeant and two Turkish slaves released Mr. Lithgow from
his then confinement, but it was to introduce him to one much more horrible.
They conducted him through several passages, to a chamber in a remote part of
the palace, towards the garden, where they loaded him with irons, and extended
his legs by means of an iron bar above a yard long, the weight of which was so
great that he could neither stand nor sit, but was obliged to lie continually
on his back. They left him in this condition for some time, when they returned
with a refreshment of food, consisting of a pound of boiled mutton and a loaf,
together with a small quantity of wine; which was not only the first, but the
best and last of the kind, during his confinement in this place. After
delivering these articles, the sergeant locked the door, and left Mr. Lithgow
to his own private contemplations.
The next day he received a visit from the governor, who promised him his
liberty, with many other advantages, if he would confess being a spy; but on
his protesting that he was entirely innocent, the governor left him in a rage,
saying, 'He should see him no more until further torments constrained him to
confess'; commanding the keeper, to whose care he was committed, that he should
permit no person whatever to have access to, or commune with him; that his
sustenance should not exceed three ounces of musty bread, and a pint of water
every second day; that he shall be allowed neither bed, pillow, nor coverlid.
"Close up (said he) this window in his room with lime and stone, stop up
the holes of the door with double mats: let him have nothing that bears any
likeness to comfort." These, and several orders of the like severity, were
given to render it impossible for his condition to be known to those of the
English nation.
In this wretched and melancholy state did poor Lithgow continue without seeing
any person for several days, in which time the governor received an answer to a
letter he had written, relative to the prisoner, from Madrid; and, pursuant to
the instructions given him, began to put in practice the cruelties devised,
which were hastened, because Christmas holy-days approached, it being then the
forty-seventh day since his imprisonment.
About two o'clock in the morning, he heard the noise of a coach in the street,
and sometime after heard the opening of the prison doors, not having had any
sleep for two nights; hunger, pain, and melancholy reflections having prevented
him from taking any repose.
Soon after the prison doors were opened, the nine sergeants, who had first
seized him, entered the place where he lay, and without uttering a word,
conducted him in his irons through the house into the street, where a coach
waited, and into which they laid him at the bottom on his back, not being able
to sit. Two of the sergeants rode with him, and the rest walked by the coach
side, but all observed the most profound silence. They drove him to a vinepress
house, about a league from the town, to which place a rack had been privately
conveyed before; and here they shut him up for that night.
At daybreak the next morning, arrived the governor and the alcade, into whose
presence Mr. Lithgow was immediately brought to undergo another examination. The
prisoner desired he might have an interpreter, which was allowed to strangers
by the laws of that country, but this was refused, nor would they permit him to
appeal to Madrid, the superior court of judicature. After a long examination,
which lasted from morning until night, there appeared in all his answers so
exact a conformity with what he had before said, that they declared he had
learned them by heart, there not being the least prevarication. They, however,
pressed him again to make a full discovery; that is, to accuse himself of
crimes never committed, the governor adding, "You are still in my power; I
can set you free if you comply, if not, I must deliver you to the alcade."
Mr. Lithgow still persisting in his innocence, the governor ordered the notary
to draw up a warrant for delivering him to the alcade to be tortured.
In consequence of this he was conducted by the sergeants to the end of a stone
gallery, where the rack was placed. The encarouador, or executioner,
immediately struck off his irons, which put him to very great pains, the bolts
being so closely riveted that the sledge hammer tore away half an inch of his
heel, in forcing off the bolt; the anguish of which, together with his weak
condition, (not having the least sustenance for three days) occasioned him to
groan bitterly; upon which the merciless alcade said, "Villain, traitor,
this is but the earnest of what you shall endure."
When his irons were off, he fell on his knees, uttering a short prayer, that
God would be pleased to enable him to be steadfast, and undergo courageously
the grievous trial he had to encounter. The alcade and notary having placed
themselves in chairs, he was stripped naked, and fixed upon the rack, the
office of these gentlemen being to be witness of, and set down the confessions
and tortures endured by the delinquent.
It is impossible to describe all the various tortures inflicted upon him.
Suffice it to say that he lay on the rack for above five hours, during which
time he received above sixty different tortures of the most hellish nature; and
had they continued them a few minutes longer, he must have inevitably perished.
These cruel persecutors being satisfied for the present, the prisoner was taken
from the rack, and his irons being again put on, he was conducted to his former
dungeon, having received no other nourishment than a little warm wine, which
was given him rather to prevent his dying, and reserve him for future
punishments, than from any principle of charity or compassion.
As a confirmation of this, orders were given for a coach to pass every morning
before day by the prison, that the noise made by it might give fresh terrors
and alarms to the unhappy prisoner, and deprive him of all possibility of
obtaining the least repose.
He continued in this horrid situation, almost starved for want of the common
necessaries to preserve his wretched existence, until Christmas day, when he
received some relief from Mariane, waiting-woman to the governor's lady. This
woman having obtained leave to visit him, carried with her some refreshments,
consisting of honey, sugar, raisins, and other articles; and so affected was
she at beholding his situation that she wept bitterly, and at her departure
expressed the greatest concern at not being able to give him further assistance.
In this loathsome prison was poor Mr. Lithgow kept until he was almost devoured
by vermin. They crawled about his beard, lips, eyebrows, etc., so that he could
scarce open his eyes; and his mortification was increased by not having the use
of his hands or legs to defend himself, from his being so miserably maimed by
the tortures. So cruel was the governor, that he even ordered the vermin to be
swept on him twice in every eight days. He, however, obtained some little
mitigation of this part of his punishment, from the humanity of a Turkish slave
that attended him, who, when he could do it with safety, destroyed the vermin,
and contributed every refreshment to him that laid in his power.
From this slave Mr. Lithgow at length received information which gave him
little hopes of ever being released, but, on the contrary, that he should
finish his life under new tortures. The substance of this information was that
an English seminary priest, and a Scotch cooper, had been for some time
employed by the governor to translate from the English into the Spanish
language, all his books and observations; and that it was commonly said in the
governor's house, that he was an arch-heretic.
This information greatly alarmed him, and he began, not without reason, to fear
that they would soon finish him, more especially as they could neither by
torture or any other means, bring him to vary from what he had all along said
at his different examinations.
Two days after he had received the above information, the governor, an inquisitor,
and a canonical priest, accompanied by two Jesuits, entered his dungeon, and
being seated, after several idle questions, the inquisitor asked Mr. Lithgow if
he was a Roman Catholic, and acknowledged the pope's supremacy? He answered
that he neither was the one nor did the other, adding that he was surprised at
being asked such questions, since it was expressly stipulated by the articles
of peace between England and Spain that none of the English subjects should be
liable to the Inquisition, or any way molested by them on account of diversity
in religion, etc. In the bitterness of his soul he made use of some warm
expressions not suited to his circumstances: "As you have almost murdered
me (said he) for pretended treason, so now you intend to make a martyr of me
for my religion." He also expostulated with the governor on the ill return
he made to the king of England, (whose subject he was) for the princely
humanity exercised towards the Spaniards in 1588, when their armada was
shipwrecked on the Scotch coast, and thousands of the Spaniards found relief,
who must otherwise have miserably perished.
The governor admitted the truth of what Mr. Lithgow said, but replied with a
haughty air that the king, who then only ruled Scotland, was actuated more by
fear than love, and therefore did not deserve any thanks. One of the Jesuits
said there was no faith to be kept with heretics. The inquisitor then rising,
addressed himself to Mr. Lithgow in the following words: "You have been
taken up as a spy, accused of treachery, and tortured, as we acknowledge,
innocently:
(which appears by the account lately received from Madrid of the intentions of
the English) yet it was the divine power that brought those judgments upon you,
for presumptuously treating the blessed miracle of Loretto with ridicule, and
expressing yourself in your writings irreverently of his holiness, the great
agent and Christ's vicar upon earth; therefore you are justly fallen into our
hands by their special appointment: thy books and papers are miraculously
translated by the assistance of Providence influencing thy own
countrymen."
This trumpery being ended, they gave the prisoner eight days to consider and
resolve whether he would become a convert to their religion; during which time
the inquisitor told him he, with other religious orders, would attend, to give
him such assistance thereto as he might want. One of the Jesuits said, (first
making the sign of the cross upon his breast), "My son, behold, you
deserve to be burnt alive; but by the grace of our lady of Loretto, whom you
have blasphemed we will both save your soul and body."
In the morning the inquisitor, with three other ecclesiastics, returned, when
the former asked the prisoner what difficulties he had on his conscience that
retarded his conversion; to which he answered, 'he had not any doubts in his
mind, being confident in the promises of Christ, and assuredly believing his
revealed will signified in the Gospels, as professed in the reformed Catholic
Church, being confirmed by grace, and having infallible assurance thereby of
the Christian faith.' To these words the inquisitor replied, "Thou art no
Christian, but an absurd heretic, and without conversion a member of
perdition." The prisoner then told him that it was not consistent with the
nature and essence of religion and charity to convince by opprobrious speeches,
racks, and torments, but by arguments deduced from the Scriptures; and that all
other methods would with him be totally ineffectual.
The inquisitor was so enraged at the replies made by the prisoner, that he
struck him on the face, used many abusive speeches, and attempted to stab him,
which he had certainly done had he not been prevented by the Jesuits; and from
this time he never again visited the prisoner.
The next day the two Jesuits returned, and putting on a very grave,
supercilious air, the superior asked him what resolution he had taken. To which
Mr. Lithgow replied that he was already resolved, unless he could show
substantial reasons to make him alter his opinion. The superior, after a
pedantic display of their seven sacraments, the intercession of saints,
transubstantiation, etc., boasted greatly of their Church, her antiquity,
universality, and uniformity; all of which Mr. Lithgow denied: "For (said
he) the profession of the faith I hold hath been ever since the first days of
the apostles, and Christ had ever his own Church (however obscure) in the
greatest time of your darkness."
The Jesuits, finding their arguments had not the desired effect, that torments
could not shake his constancy, nor even the fear of the cruel sentence he had
reason to expect would be pronounced and executed on him, after severe menaces,
left him. On the eighth day after, being the last of their Inquisition, when
sentence is pronounced, they returned again, but quite altered both in their
words and behavior after repeating much of the same kind of arguments as
before, they with seeming tears in their eyes, pretended they were sorry from
their heart he must be obliged to undergo a terrible death, but above all, for
the loss of his most precious soul; and falling on their knees, cried out,
"Convert, convert, O dear brother, for our blessed Lady's sake
convert!" To which he answered, "I fear neither death nor fire, being
prepared for both."
The first effects Mr. Lithgow felt of the determination of this bloody tribunal
was, a sentence to receive that night eleven different tortures, and if he did
not die in the execution of them, (which might be reasonably expected from the
maimed and disjointed condition he was in) he was, after Easter holy-days, to
be carried to Grenada, and there burnt to ashes. The first part of this
sentence was executed with great barbarity that night; and it pleased God to
give him strength both of body and mind, to stand fast to the truth, and to
survive the horrid punishments inflicted on him.
After these barbarians had glutted themselves for the present, with exercising
on the unhappy prisoner the most distinguished cruelties, they again put irons
on, and conveyed him to his former dungeon. The next morning he received some
little comfort from the Turkish slave before mentioned, who secretly brought
him, in his shirt sleeve, some raisins and figs, which he licked up in the best
manner his strength would permit with his tongue. It was to this slave Mr.
Lithgow attributed his surviving so long in such a wretched situation; for he
found means to convey some of these fruits to him twice every week. It is very
extraordinary, and worthy of note, that this poor slave, bred up from his infancy,
according to the maxims of his prophet and parents, in the greatest detestation
of Christians, should be so affected at the miserable situation of Mr. Lithgow
that he fell ill, and continued so for upwards of forty days. During this
period Mr. Lithgow was attended by a negro woman, a slave, who found means to
furnish him with refreshments still more amply than the Turk, being conversant
in the house and family. She brought him every day some victuals, and with it
some wine in a bottle.
The time was now so far elapsed, and the horrid situation so truly loathsome,
that Mr. Lithgow waited with anxious expectation for the day, which, by putting
an end to his life, would also end his torments. But his melancholy
expectations were, by the interposition of Providence, happily rendered
abortive, and his deliverance obtained from the following circumstances.
It happened that a Spanish gentleman of quality came from Grenada to Malaga,
who being invited to an entertainment by the governor, informed him of what had
befallen Mr. Lithgow from the time of his being apprehended as a spy, and
described the various sufferings he had endured. He likewise told him that
after it was known the prisoner was innocent, it gave him great concern. That
on this account he would gladly have released him, restored his money and
papers, and made some atonement for the injuries he had received, but that,
upon an inspection into his writings, several were found of a very blasphemous
nature, highly reflecting on their religion, that on his refusing to abjure
these heretical opinions, he was turned over to the Inquisition, by whom he was
finally condemned.
While the governor was relating this tragical tale, a Flemish youth (servant to
the Spanish gentleman) who waited at the table, was struck with amazement and
pity at the sufferings of the stranger described. On his return to his master's
lodgings he began to revolve in his mind what he had heard, which made such an
impression on him that he could not rest in his bed. In the short slumbers he
had, his imagination pointed to him the person described, on the rack, and
burning in the fire. In this anxiety he passed the night; and when the morning
came, without disclosing his intentions to any person whatever, he went into
the town, and inquired for an English factor. He was directed to the house of a
Mr. Wild, to whom he related the whole of what he had heard pass the preceding
evening, between his master and the governor, but could not tell Mr. Lithgow's
name. Mr. Wild, however, conjectured it was he, by the servant's remembering
the circumstance of his being a traveller, and his having had some acquaintance
with him.
On the departure of the Flemish servant, Mr. Wild immeidately sent for the
other English factors, to whom he related all the paritculars relative to their
unfortunate countryman. After a short consultation it was agreed that an
information of the whole affair should be sent, by express, to Sir Walter
Aston, the English ambassador to the king of Spain, then at Madrid. This was
accordingly done, and the ambassador having presented a memorial to the king
and council of Spain, obtained an order for Mr. Lithgow's enlargement, and his
delivery to the English factor. This order was directed to the governor of
Malaga; and was received with great dislike and surprise by the whole assembly
of the bloody Inquisition.
Mr. Lithgow was released from his confinement on the eve of Easter Sunday, when
he was carried from his dungeon on the back of the slave who had attended him,
to the house of one Mr. Bosbich, where all proper comforts were given him. It
fortunately happened that there was at this time a squadron of English ships in
the road, commanded by Sir Richard Hawkins, who being informed of the past
sufferings and present situation of Mr. Lithgow, came the next day ashore, with
a proper guard, and received him from the merchants. He was instantly carried
in blankets on board the Vanguard, and three days after was removed to another
ship, by direction of the general Sir Robert Mansel, who ordered that he should
have proper care taken of him. The factor presented him with clothes, and all
necessary provisions, besides which they gave him two hundred reals in silver;
and Sir Richard Hawkins sent him two double pistoles.
Before his departure from the Spanish coast, Sir Richard Hawkins demanded the
delivery of his papers, money, books, etc., but could not obtain any
satisfactory answer on that head.
We cannot help making a pause here to reflect how manifestly Providence
interfered in behalf of this poor man, when he was just on the brink of
destruction; for by his sentence, from which there was no appeal, he would have
been taken, in a few days, to Grenada, and burnt to ashes; and that a poor
ordinary servant, who had not the least knowledge of him, nor was any ways
interested in his preservation, should risk the displeasure of his master, and
hazard his own life, to disclose a thing of so momentous and perilous a nature,
to a strange gentleman, on whose secrecy depended his own existence. By such
secondary means does Providence frequently interfere in behalf of the virtuous
and oppressed; of which this is a most distinguished example.
After lying twelve days in the road, the ship weighed anchor, and in about two
months arrived safe at Deptford. The next morning, Mr. Lithgow was carried on a
feather bed to Theobalds, in Hertfordshire, where at that time was the king and
royal family. His majesty happened to be that day engaged in hunting, but on
his return in the evening, Mr. Lithgow was presented to him, and related the
particulars of his sufferings, and his happy delivery. The king was so affected
at the narrative, that he expressed the deepest concern, and gave orders that
he should be sent to Bath, and his wants properly supplied from his royal
munificence. By these means, under God, after some time, Mr. Lithgow was
restored from the most wretched spectacle, to a great share of health and
strength; but he lost the use of his left arm and several of the smaller bones
were so crushed and broken, as to be ever after rendered useless.
Notwithstanding that every effort was used, Mr. Lithgow could never obtain any
part of his money or effects, although his majesty and the ministers of state
interested themselves in his behalf. Gondamore, the Spanish ambassador, indeed,
promised that all his effects should be restored, with the addition of 1000
Pounds English money, as some atonement for the tortures he had undergone,
which last was to be paid him by the governor of Malaga. These engagements,
however, were but mere promises; and although the king was a kind of guarantee
for the well performance of them, the cunning Spaniard found means to elude the
same. He had, indeed, too great a share of influence in the English council
during the time of that pacific reign, when England suffered herself to be
bullied into slavish compliance by most of the states and kings in Europe.
The Story of Galileo
The most eminent men of science and philosophy of the day
did not escape the watchful eye of this cruel despotism. Galileo, the chief
astronomer and mathematician of his age, was the first who used the telescope
successfully in solving the movements of the heavenly bodies. He discovered
that the sun is the center of motion around which the earth and various planets
revolve. For making this great discovery Galileo was brought before the
Inquisition, and for a while was in great danger of being put to death.
After a long and bitter review of Galileo's writings, in which many of his most
important discoveries were condemned as errors, the charge of the inquisitors
went on to declare, "That you, Galileo, have upon account of those things
which you have written and confessed, subjected yourself to a strong suspicion
of heresy in this Holy Office, by believing, and holding to be true, a doctrine
which is false, and contrary to the sacred and divine Scripture- viz., that the
sun is the center of the orb of the earth, and does not move from the east to
the west; and that the earth moves, and is not the center of the world."
In order to save his life. Galileo admitted that he was wrong in thinking that
the earth revolved around the sun, and swore that-"For the future, I will
never more say, or assert, either by word or writing, anything that shall give
occasion for a like suspicion." But immediately after taking this forced
oath he is said to have whispered to a friend standing near, "The earth
moves, for all that."
Summary of the Inquisition
Of the multitudes who perished by the Inquisoition
throughout the world, no authentic record is now discoverable. But wherever
popery had power, there was the tribunal. It had been planted even in the east,
and the Portuguese Inquisition of Goa was, until within these few years, fed
with many an agony. South America was partitioned into provinces of the Inquisition;
and with a ghastly mimickry of the crimes of the mother state, the arrivals of
viceroys, and the other popular celebrations were thought imperfect without an
auto da fe. The Netherlands were one scene of slaughter from the time of the
decree which planted the Inquisition among them. In Spain the calculation is
more attainable. Each of the seventeen tribunals during a long period burned
annually, on an average, ten miserable beings! We are to recollect that this
number was in a country where persecution had for ages abolished all religious
differences, and where the difficulty was not to find the stake, but the
offering. Yet, even in Spain, thus gleaned of all heresy, the Inquisition could
still swell its lists of murders to thirty-two thousand! The numbers burned in
effigy, or condemned to penance, punishments generally equivalent to exile,
confiscation, and taint of blood, to all ruin but the mere loss of worthless
life, amounted to three hundred and nine thousand. But the crowds who perished
in dungeons of torture, of confinement, and of broken hearts, the millions of
dependent lives made utterly helpless, or hurried to the grave by the death of
the victims, are beyond all register; or recorded only before HIM, who has
sworn that "He that leadeth into captivity, shall go into captivity: he
that killeth with the sword must be killed with the sword."
Such was the Inquisition, declared by the Spirit of God to be at once the
offspring and the image of the popedom. To feel the force of the parentage, we
must look to the time. In the thirteenth century, the popedom was at the summit
of mortal dominion; it was independent of all kingdoms; it ruled with a rank of
influence never before or since possessed by a human scepter; it was the
acknowledged sovereign of body and soul; to all earthly intents its power was
immeasurable for good or evil. It might have spread literature, peace, freedom,
and Christianity to the ends of Europe, or the world. But its nature was
hostile; its fuller triumph only disclosed its fuller evil; and, to the shame
of human reason, and the terror and suffering of human virtue, Rome, in the
hour of its consummate grandeur, teemed with the monstrous and horrid birth of
the INQUISITION!
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