FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS CHAPTER XVI Persecutions in England During the Reign of Queen Mary
FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS
CHAPTER XVI
Persecutions in England During the Reign of Queen Mary
The premature death of that celebrated young monarch, Edward
VI, occasioned the most extraordinary and wonderful occurrences, which had ever
existed from the times of our blessed Lord and Savior's incarnation in human
shape. This melancholy event became speedily a subject of general regret. The
succession to the British throne was soon made a matter of contention; and the
scenes which ensued were a demonstration of the serious affliction in which the
kingdom was involved. As his loss to the nation was more and more unfolded, the
remembrance of his government was more and
more the basis of grateful recollection. The very awful
prospect, which was soon presented to the friends of Edward's administration,
under the direction of his counsellors and servants, was a contemplation which
the reflecting mind was compelled to regard with most alarming apprehensions.
The rapid approaches which were made towards a total reversion of the
proceedings of the young king's reign, denoted the advances which were thereby
represented to an entire resolution in the management of public affairs both in
Church and state.
Alarmed for the condition in which the kingdom was likely to be involved by the king's death, an endeavor to prevent the consequences, which were but too plainly foreseen, was productive of the most serious and fatal effects. The king, in his long and lingering affliction, was induced to make a will, by which he bequeathed the English crown to Lady Jane, the daughter of the duke of Suffolk, who had been married to Lord Guilford, the son of the duke of Northumberland, and was the granddaughter of the second sister of King Henry, by Charles, duke of Suffolk. By this will, the succession of Mary and Elizabeth, his two sisters, was entirely superseded, from an apprehension of the returning system of popery; and the king's council, with the chief of the nobility, the lord-mayor of the city of London, and almost all the judges and the principal lawyers of the realm, subscribed their names to this regulation, as a sanction to the measure. Lord Chief Justice Hale, though a true Protestant and an upright judge, alone declined to unite his name in favor of the Lady Jane, because he had already signified his opinion that Mary was entitled to assume the reins of government. Others objected to Mary's being placed on the throne, on account of their fears that she might marry a foreigner, and thereby bring the crown into considerable danger. Her partiality to popery also left little doubt on the minds of any, that she would be induced to revive the dormant interests of the pope, and change the religion which had been used both in the days of her father, King Henry, and in those of her brother Edward: for in all his time she had manifested the greatest stubbornness and inflexibility of temper, as must be obvious from her letter to the lords of the council, whereby she put in her claim to the crown, on her brother's decease.
When this happened, the nobles, who had associated to prevent Mary's succession, and had been instrumental in promoting, and, perhaps, advising the measures of Edward, speedily proceeded to proclaim Lady Jane Gray, to be queen of England, in the city of London and various other populous cities of the realm. Though young, she possessed talents of a very superior nature, and her improvements under a most excellent tutor had given her many very great advantages.
Her reign was of only five days' continuance, for Mary, having succeeded by false promises in obtaining the crown, speedily commenced the execution of her avowed intention of extirpating and burning every Protestant. She was crowned at Westminster in the usual form, and her elevation was the signal for the commencement of the bloody persecution which followed.
Having obtained the sword of authority, she was not sparing in its exercise. The supporters of Lady Jane Gray were destined to feel its force. The duke of Northumberland was the first who experienced her savage resentment. Within a month after his confinement in the Tower, he was condemned, and brought to the scaffold, to suffer as a traitor. From his varied crimes, resulting out of a sordid and inordinate ambition, he died unpitied and unlamented.
The changes, which followed with rapidity, unequivocally declared that the queen was disaffected to the present state of religion. Dr. Poynet was displaced to make room for Gardiner to be bishop of Winchester, to whom she also gave the important office of lord-chancellor. Dr. Ridley was dismissed from the see of London, and Bonne introduced. J. Story was put out of the bishopric of Chichester, to admit Dr. Day. J. Hooper was sent prisoner to the Fleet, and Dr. Heath put into the see of Worcestor. Miles Coverdale was also excluded from Exeter, and Dr. Vesie placed in that diocese. Dr. Tonstall was also promoted to the see of Durham. These things being marked and perceived, great heaviness and discomfort grew more and more to all good men's hearts; but to the wicked great rejoicing. They that could dissemble took no great care how the matter went; but such, whose consciences were joined with the truth, perceived already coals to be kindled, which after should be the destruction of many a true Christian.
The Words and Behavior of the Lady Jane upon the Scaffold
The next victim was the amiable Lady Jane Gray, who, by her
acceptance of the crown at the earnest solicitations of her friends, incurred
the implacable resentment of the bloody Mary. When she first mounted the
scaffold, she spoke to the specators in this manner: "Good people, I am
come hither to die, and by a law I am condemned to the same. The fact against
the queen's highness was unlawful, and the consenting thereunto by me: but,
touching the procurement and desire thereof by me, or on my behalf, I do wash
my hands thereof in innocency before God, and the face of you, good Christian
people, this day:" and therewith she wrung her hands, wherein she had her
book. Then said she, "I pray you all, good Christian people, to bear me
witness, that I die a good Christian woman, and that I do look to be saved by
no other mean, but only by the mercy of God in the blood of His only Son Jesus
Christ: and I confess that when I did know the Word of God, I neglected the
same, loved myself and the world, and therefore this plague and punishment is
happily and worthily happened unto me for my sins; and yet I thank God, that of
His goodness He hath thus given me a time and a respite to repent. And now,
good people, while I am alive, I pray you assist me with your prayers."
And then, kneeling down, she turned to Feckenham, saying, "Shall I say
this Psalm?" and he said, "Yea." Then she said the Psalm of Miserere
mei Deus, in English, in a most devout manner throughout to the end; and then
she stood up, and gave her maid, Mrs. Ellen, her gloves and handkerchief, and
her book to Mr. Bruges; and then she untied he gown, and the executioner
pressed upon her to help her off with it: but she, desiring him to let her
alone, turned towards her two gentlewomen, who helped her off therewith, and
also with her frowes, paaft, and neckerchief, giving to her a fair handkerchief
to put about her eyes.
Then the executioner kneeled down, and asked her forgiveness, whom she forgave
most willingly. Then he desired her to stand upon the straw, which doing, she
saw the block. Then she said, "I pray you, despatch me quickly." Then
she kneeled down, saying, "Will you take it off before I lay me
down?" And the executioner said, "No, madam." Then she tied a
handkerchief about her eyes, and feeling for the block, she said, "What
shall I do? Where is it? Where is it?" One of the standers-by guiding her
therunto, she laid her head upon the block, and then stretched forth her body,
and said, "Lord, into Thy hands I commend my spirit;" and so finished
her life, in the year of our Lord 1554, the twelfth day of February, about the
seventeenth year of her age.
Thus died Lady Jane; and on the same day Lord Guilford, her husband, one of the
duke of Northumberland's sons, was likewise beheaded, two innocents in
comparison with them that sat upon them. For they were both very young, and
ignorantly accepted that which others had contrived, and by open proclamation
consented to take from others, and give to them.
Touching the condemnation of this pious lady, it is to be noted that Judge
Morgan, who gave sentence against her, soon after he had condemned her, fell
mad, and in his raving cried out continually to have the Lady Jane taken away
from him, and so he ended his life.
On the twenty-first day of the same month, Henry, duke of Suffolk, was beheaded
on Tower-hill, the fourth day after his condemnation: about which time many
gentlemen and yeomen were condemned, whereof some were executed at London, and
some in the country. In the number of whom was Lord Thomas Gray, brother to the
said duke, being apprehended not long after in North Wales, and executed for
the same. Sir Nicholas Throgmorton, also, very narrowly escaped.
John Rogers, Vicar of St. Sepulchre's, and Reader of St.
Paul's, London
John Rogers was educated at Cambridge, and was afterward
many years chaplain to the merchant adventurers at Antwerp in Brabant. Here he
met with the celebrated martyr William Tyndale, and Miles Coverdale, both
voluntary exiles from their country for their aversion to popish superstition
and idolatry. They were the instruments of his conversion; and he united with
them in that translation of the Bible into English, entitled "The
Translation of Thomas Matthew." From the Scriptures he knew that unlawful
vows may be lawfully broken; hence he married, and removed to Wittenberg in
Saxony, for the improvement of learning; and he there learned the Dutch
language, and received the charge of a congregation, which he faithfully
executed for many years. On King Edward's accession, he left Saxony to promote
the work of reformation in England; and, after some time, Nicholas Ridley, then
bishop of London, gave him a prebend in St. Paul's Cathedral, and the dean and
chapter appointed him reader of the divinity lesson there. Here he continued
until Queen Mary's succession to the throne, when the Gospel and true religion
were banished, and the Antichrist of Rome, with his superstition and idolatry,
introduced.
The circumstance of Mr. Rogers having preached at Paul's cross, after Queen
Mary arrived at the Tower, has been already stated. He confirmed in his sermon
the true doctrine taught in King Edward's time, and exhorted the people to beware
of the pestilence of popery, idolatry, and superstition. For this he was called
to account, but so ably defended himself that, for that time, he was dismissed.
The proclamation of the queen, however, to prohibit true preaching, gave his
enemies a new handle against him. Hence he was again summoned before the
council, and commanded to keep his house. He did so, though he might have
escaped; and though he perceived the state of the true religion to be
desperate. Heknew he could not want a living in Germany; and he could not
forget a wife and ten children, and to seek means to succor them. But all these
things were insufficient to induce him to depart, and, when once called to
answer in Christ's cause, he stoutly defended it, and hazarded his life for that
purpose.
After long imprisonment in his own house, the restless Bonner, bishop of
London, caused him to be committed to Newgate, there to be lodged among thieves
and murderers.
After Mr. Rogers had been long and straitly imprisoned, and lodged in Newgate
among thieves, often examined, and very uncharitably entreated, and at length
unjustly and most cruelly condemned by Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester,
the fourth day of February, in the year of our Lord 1555, being Monday in the
morning, he was suddenly warned by the keeper of Newgate's wife, to prepare
himself for the fire; who, being then sound asleep, could scarce be awaked. At
length being raised and awaked, and bid to make haste, then said he, "IKf
it be so, I need not tie my points." And so was had down, first to bishop
Bonner to be degraded: which being done, he craved of Bonner but one petition;
and Bonner asked what that should be. Mr. Rogers replied that he might speak a
few words with his wife before his burning, but that could not be obtained of
him.
When the time came that he should be brought out of Newgate to Smithfield, the
place of his execution, Mr. Woodroofe, one of the sheriffs, first came to Mr.
Rogers, and asked him if he would revoke his abominable doctrine, and the evil
opinion of the Sacrament of the altar. Mr. Rogers answered, "That which I
have preached I will seal with my blood." Then Mr. Woodroofe said,
"Thou art an heretic." "That shall be known," quoth Mr.
Rogers, "at the Day of Judgment." "Well," said Mr.
Woodroofe, "I will never pray for thee." "But I will pray for
you," said Mr. Rogers; and so was brought the same day, the fourth of
February, by the sheriffs, towards Smithfield, saying the Psalm Miserere by the
way, all the people wonderfully rejoicing at his constancy; with great praises
and thanks to God for the same. And there in the presence of Mr. Rochester,
comptroller of the queen's household, Sir Richard Southwell, both the sheriffs,
and a great number of people, he was burnt to ashes, washing his hands in the flame
as he was burning. A little before his burning, his pardon was brought, if he
would have recanted; but he utterly refused it. He was the first martyr of all
the blessed company that suffered in Queen Mary's time that gave the first
adventure upon the fire. His wife and children, being eleven in number, ten
able to go, and one sucking at her breast, met him by the way, as he went
towards Smithfield. TGhis sorrowful sight of his own flesh and blood could
nothing move him, but that he constantly and cheerfully took his death with
wonderful patience, in the defence and quarrel of the Gospel of Christ."
The Rev. Lawrence Saunders
Mr. Saunders, after passing some time in the school of
Eaton, was chosen to go to King's College in Cambridge, where he continued three
years, and profited in knowledge and learning very much for that time. Shortly
after he quitted the university, and went to his parents, but soon returned to
Cambridge again to his study, where he began to add to the knowledge of the
Latin, the study of the Greek and Hebrew tongues, and gave himself up to the
study of the Holy Scriptures, the better to qualify himself for the office of
preacher.
In the beginning of King Edward's reign, when God's true religion was
introduced, after license obtained, he began to preach, and was so well liked
of them who then had authority that they appointed him to read a divinity
lecture in the College of Forthringham. The College of Fothringham being
dissolved he was placed to be a reader in the minster at Litchfield. After a
certain space, he departed from Litchfield to a benefice in Leicestershire,
called Church-langton, where he held a residence, taught diligently, and kept a
liberal house. Thence he was orderly called to take a benefice in the city of
London, namely, All-hallows in Bread-street. After this he preached at
Northhampton, nothing meddling with the state, but boldly uttering his
conscience against the popish doctrines which were likely to spring up again in
England, as a just plague for the little love which the English nation then
bore to the blessed Word of God, which had been so plentifully offered unto
them.
The queen's party who were there, and heard him, were highly displeased with
him for his sermon, and for it kept him among them as a prisoner. But partly
for love of his brethren and friends, who were chief actors for the queen among
them, and partly because there was no law broken by hbis preaching, they
dismissed him.
Some of his friends, perceiving such fearful menacing, counselled him to fly
out of the realm, which he refused to do. But seeing he was with violence kept
from doing good in that place, he returned towards London, to visit his flock.
In the afternoon of Sunday, October 15, 1554, as he was reading in his church
to exhort his people, the bishop of London interrupted him, by sending an
officer for him.
His treason and sedition the bishop's charity was content to let slip until
another time, but a heretic he meant to prove him, and all those, he said, who
taught and believed that the administration of the Sacraments, and all orders
of the Church, are the most pure, which come the nearest to the order of the
primitive Church.
After much talk concerning this matter, the bishop desired him to write what he
believed of transubstantiation. Lawrence Saunders did so, saying, "My
Lord, you seek my blood, and you shall have it: I pray God that you may be so
baptized in it that you may ever after loathe blood-sucking, and become a
better man." Upon being closely charged with contumacy, the severe replies
of Mr. Saunders to the bishop, (who had before, to get the favor of Henry VIII
written and set forth in print, a book of true obedience, wherein he had openly
declared Queen Mary to be a bastard) so irritated him that he exclaimed,
"Carry away this frenzied fool to prison."
After this good and faithful martyr had been kept in prison one year and a
quarter, the bishops at length called him, as they did his fellow-prisoners,
openly to be examined before the queen's council.
His examination being ended, the officers led him out of the place, and stayed
until the rest of his fellow-prisoners were likewise examined, that they might
lead them all together to prison.
After his excommunication and delivery over to the secular power, he was
brought by the sheriff of London to the Compter, a prison in his own parish of
Bread-street, at which he rejoiced greatly, both because he found there a
fellow-prisoner, Mr. Cardmaker, with whom he had much Christian and comfortable
discourse; and because out of prison, as before in his pulpit, he might have an
opportunity of preaching to his parishioners. On the fourth of February,
Bonner, bishop of London, came to the prison to degrade him; the day following,
in the morning the sheriff of London delivered him to certain of the queen's
guard, who were appointed to carry him to the city of Coventry, there to be
burnt.
When they had arrived at Coventry, a poor shoemaker, who used to serve him with
shoes, came to him, and said, "O my good master, God strengthen and
comfort you." "Good shoemaker," Mr. Saunders replied, "I
desire thee to pray for me, for I am the most unfit man for this high office,
that ever was appointed to it; but my gracious God and dear Father is able to
make me strong enough." The next day, being the eighth of February, 1555,
he was led to the place of execution, in the park, without the city. He went in
an old gown and a shirt, barefooted, and oftentimes fell flat on the ground,
and prayed. When he was come to nigh the place, the officer, appointed to see
the execution done, said to Mr. Saunders that he was one of them who marred the
queen's realm, but if he would recant, there was pardon for him. "Not
I," replied the holy martyr, "but such as you have injured the realm.
The blessed Gospel of Christ is what I hold; that do I believe, that have I
taught, and that will I never revoke!" Mr. Saunders then slowly moved
towards the fire, sank to the earth and prayed; he then rose up, embraced the
stake, and frequently said, "Welcome, thou cross of Christ! welcome everlasting
life!" Fire was then put to the fagots, and, he was overwhelmed by the
dreadful flames, and sweetly slept in the Lord Jesus.
The History, Imprisonment, and Examination of Mr. John Hooper,
Bishop of Worcester and Gloucester
John Hooper, student and graduate in the University of
Oxford, was stirred with such fervent desire to the love and knowledge of the
Scriptures that he was compelled to move from thence, and was retained in the
house of Sir Thomas Arundel, as his steward, until Sir Thomas had intelligence
of his opinions and religion, which he in no case did favor, though he
exceedingly favored his person and condition and wished to be his friend. Mr.
Hooper now prudently left Sir Thomas' house and arrived at Paris, but in a
short time returned to England, and was retained by Mr. Sentlow, until the time
that he was again molested and sought for, when he passed through France to the
higher parts of Germany; where, commencing acquaintance with learned men, he
was by them free and lovingly entertained, both at Basel, and especially at
Zurich, by Mr. Bullinger, who was his singular friend; here also he married his
wife, who was a Burgonian, and applied very studiously to the Hebrew tongue.
At length, when God saw it good to stay the bloody time of the six articles,
and to give us King Edward to reign over this realm, with some peace and rest
unto the Church, amongst many other English exiles, who then repaired homeward,
Mr. Hooper also, moved in conscience, thought not to absent himself, but seeing
such a time and occasion, offered to help forward the Lord's work, to the
uttermost of his ability.
When Mr. Hooper had taken his farewell of Mr. Bullinger, and his friends in
Zurich, he repaired again to England in the reign of King Edward VI, and coming
to London, used continually to preach, most times twice, or at least once a
day.
In his sermons, according to his accustomed manner, he corrected sin, and
sharply inveighed against the iniquity of the world and the corrupt abuses of
the Church. The people in great flocks and companies daily came to hear his
voice, as the most melodious sound and tune of Orpheus' harp, insomuch, that
oftentimes when he was preaching, the church would be so full that none could
enter farther than the doors thereof. In his doctrine he was earnest, in tongue
eloquent, in the Scriptures perfect, in pains indefatigable, in his life
exemplary.
Having preached before the king's majesty, he was soon after made bishop of
Gloucester. In that office he continued two years, and behaved himself so well
that his very enemies could find no fault with him, and after that he was made
bishop of Worcester.
Dr. Hooper executed the office of a most careful and vigilant pastor, for the
space of two years and more, as long as the state of religion in King Edward's
time was sound and flourishing.
After he had been cited to appear before Bonner and Dr. Heath, he was led to
the Council, accused falsely of owing the queen money, and in the next year,
1554, he wrote an account of his severe treatment during near eighteen months'
confinement in the Fleet, and after his third examination, January 28, 1555, at
St. Mary Overy's, he, with the Rev. Mr. Rogers, was conducted to the Compter in
Southwark, there to remain until the next day at nine o'clock, to see whether
they would recant. "Come, Brother Rogers," said Dr. Hooper,
"must we two take this matter first in hand, and begin to fry in these
fagots?" "Yes, Doctor," said Mr. Rogers, "by God's
grace." "Doubt not," said Dr. Hooper, "but God will give us
strength;" and the people so applauded their constancy that they had much
ado to pass.
January 29, Bishop Hooper was degraded and condemned, and the Rev. Mr. Rogers
was treated in like manner. At dark, Dr. Hooper was led through the city to
Newgate; notwithstanding this secrecy, many people came forth to their doors
with lights, and saluted him, praising God for his constancy.
During the few days he was in Newgate, he was frequently visited by Bonner and
others, but without avail. As Christ was tempted, so they tempted him, and then
maliciously reported that he had recanted. The place of his martyrdom being
fixed at Gloucester, he rejoiced very much, lifting up his eyes and hands to
heaven, and praising God that he saw it good to send him among the people over
whom he was pastor, there to confirm with his death the truth which he had
before taught them.
On February 7, he came to Gloucester, about five o'clock, and lodged at one
Ingram's house. After his first sleep, he continued in prayer ujntil morning;
and all the day, except a little time at his meals, and when conversing such as
the guard kindly permitted to speak to him, he spent in prayer.
Sir Anthony Kingston, at one time Dr. Hooper's good friend, was appointed by
the queen's letters to attend at his execution. As soon as he saw the bishop he
burst into tears. WIth tender entreaties he exhorted him to live. "True it
is," said the bishop, "that death is bitter, and life is sweet; but
alas! consider that the death to come is more bitter, and the life to come is
more sweet."
The same day a blind boy obtained leave to be brought into Dr.
Hooper's presence. The same boy, not long before, had suffered imprisonment at
Gloucester for confessing the truth. "Ah! poor boy," said the bishop,
"though God hath taken from thee thy outward sight, for what reason He
best knoweth, yet He hath endued thy soul with the eye of knowledge and of
faith. God give thee grace continually to pray unto Him, that thou lose not
that sight, for then wouldst thou indeed be blind both in body and soul."
When the mayor waited upon him preparatory to his execution, he expressed his
perfect obedience, and only requested that a quick fire might terminate his
torments. After he had got up in the morning, he desired that no man should be
suffered to come into the chamber, that he might be solitary until the hour of
execution.
About eight o'clock, on February 9, 1555, he was led forth, and many thousand
persons were collected, as it was market-day. All the way, being straitly
charged not to speak, and beholding the people, who mourned bitterly for him,
he would sometimes lift up his eyes towards heaven, and look very cheerfully
upon such as he knew: and he was never known, during the time of his being
among them, to look with so cheerful and ruddy a countenance as he did at that
time. When he came to the place appointed where he should die, he smilingly
beheld the stake and preparation made for him, which was near unto the great
elm tree over against the college of priests, where he used to preach.
Now, after he had entered into prayer, a box was brought and laid before him
upon a stool, with his pardon from the queen, if he would turn. At the sight
whereof he cried, "If you love my soul, away with it!" The box being
taken away, Lord Chandois said, "Seeing there is no remedy; despatch him
quickly."
Command was now given that the fire should be kindled. But because there were
not more green fagots than two horses could carry, it kindled not speedily, and
was a pretty while also before it took the reeds upon the fagots. At length it
burned about him, but the wind having full strength at that place, and being a
lowering cold morning, it blew the flame from him, so that he was in a manner
little more than touched by the fire.
Within a space after, a few dry fagots were brought, and a new fire kindled
with fagots, (for there were no more reeds) and those burned at the nether
parts, but had small power above, because of the wind, saving that it burnt his
hair and scorched his skin a little. In the time of which fire, even as at the
first flame, he prayed, saying mildly, and not very loud, but as one without
pain, "O Jesus, Son of David, have mercy upon me, and receive my
soul!" After the second fire was spent, he wiped both his eyes with his
hands, and beholding the people, he said with an indifferent, loud voice,
"For God's love, good people, let me have more fire!" and all this
while his nether parts did burn; but the fagots were so few that the flame only
singed his upper parts.
The third fire was kindled within a while after, which was more extreme than
the other two. In this fire he prayed with a loud voice, "Lord Jesus, have
mercy upon me! Lord Jesus receive my spirit!" And these were the last
words he was heard to utter. But when he was black in the mouth, and his tongue
so swollen that he could not speak, yet his lips went until they were shrunk to
the gums: and he knocked his breast with his hands until one of his arms fell
off, and then knocked still with the other, while the fat, water, and blood
dropped out at his fingers' ends, until by renewing the fire, his strength was
gone, and his hand clave fast in knocking to the iron upon his breast. Then
immediately bowing forwards, he yielded up his spirit.
Thus was he three quarters of an hour or more in the fire.
Even as a lamb, patiently he abode the extremity thereof, neither moving
forwards, backwards, nor to any side; but he died as quietly as a child in his
bed. And he now reigneth, I doubt not, as a blessed martyr in the joys of
heaven, prepared for the faithful in Christ before the foundations of the
world; for whose constancy all Christians are bound to praise God.
The Life and Conduct of Dr. Rowland Taylor of Hadley
Dr. Rowland Taylor, vicar of Hadley, in Suffolk, was a man
of eminent learning, and had been admitted to the degree of doctor of the civil
and canon law.
His attachment to the pure and uncorrupted principles of Christianity
recommended him to the favor and friendship of Dr. Cranmer, archbishop of
Canterbury, with whom he lived a considerable time, until through his interest
he obtained the living at Hadley.
Not only was his word a preaching unto them, but all his life and conversation
was an example of unfeigned Christian life and true holiness. He was void of
all pride, humble and meek as any child; so that none were so poor but they
might boldly, as unto their father, resort unto him; neither was his lowliness
childish or fearful, but, as occasion, time, and place required, he would be
stout in rebuking the sinful and evildoers; so that none was so rich but he
would tell them plainly his fault, with such earnest and grave rebukes as
became a good curate and pastor. He was a man very mild, void of all rancor,
grudge or evil will; ready to do good to all men; readily forgiving his
enemies; and never sought to do evil to any.
To the poor that were blind, lame, sick, bedrid, or that had many children, he
was a very father, a careful patron, and diligent provider, insomuch that he
caused the parishioners to make a general provision for them; and he himself (beside
the continual relief that they always found at his house) gave an honest
portion yearly to the common almsbox. His wife also was an honest, discreet,
and sober matron, and his children well nurtured, brought up in the fear of God
and good learning.
He was a good salt of the earth, savorly biting the corrupt manners of evil
men; a light in God's house, set upon a candlestick for all good men to imitate
and follow.
Thus continued this good shepherd among his flock, governing and leadning them
through the wilderness of this wicked world, all the days of the most innocent
and holy king of blessed memory, Edward VI. But on his demise, and the
succession of Queen Mary to the throne, he escaped not the cloud that burst on
so many besdie; for two of his parishioners, Foster, an attorney, and Clark, a
tradesman, out of blind zeal, resolved that Mass should be celebrated, in all
its superstitious forms, in the parish church of Hadley, on Monday before
Easter. This Dr. Taylor, entering the church, strictly forbade; but Clark
forced the Doctor out of the church, celebrated Mass, and immediately informed
the lord-chancellor, bishop of Winchester of his behavior, who summoned him to
appear, and answer the complaints that were alleged against him.
The doctor upon the receipt of the summons, cheerfully prepared to obey the
same; and rejected the advice of his friends to fly beyond sea. When Gardiner
saw Dr. Taylor, he, according to his common custom, reviled him. Dr. Taylor
heard his abuse patiently, and when the bishop said, "How darest thou look
me in the face! knowest thou not who I am?" Dr. Taylor replied, "You
are Dr. Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, and lord-chancellor, and yet
but a mortal man. But if I should be afraid of your lordly looks, why fear ye
not God, the Lord of us all? With what countenance will you appear before the
judgment seat of Christ, and answer to your oath made first unto King Henry
VIII, and afterward unto King Edward VI, his son?"
A long conversation ensued, in which Dr. Taylor was so piously collected and
severe upon his antagonist, that he exclaimed:
"Thou art a blasphemous heretic! Thou indeed blasphemist the blessed
Sacrament, (here he put off his cap) and speakest against the holy Mass, which
is made a sacrifice for the quick and the dead." The bishop afterward
committed him into the king's bench.
When Dr. Taylor came there, he found the virtuous and vigilant preacher of
God's Word, Mr. Bradford; who equally thanked God that He had provided him with
such a comfortable fellow-prisoner; and they both together praised God, and
continued in prayer, reading and exhorting one another.
After Dr. Taylor had lain some time in prison, he was cited to appear in the
arches of Bow-church.
Dr. Taylor being condemned, was committed to the Clink, and the keepers were
charged to treat him roughly; at night he was removed to the Poultry Compter.
When Dr. Taylor had lain in the Compter about a week on the fourth of February,
Bonner came to degrade him, bringing with him such ornaments as appertained to the
massing mummery; but the Doctor refused these trappings until they were forced
upon him.
The night after he was degraded his wife came with John Hull, his servant, and
his son Thomas, and were by the gentleness of the keepers permitted to sup with
him.
After supper, walking up and down, he gave God thanks for His grace, that had
given him strength to abide by His holy Word. With tears they prayed together,
and kissed one another. Unto his son Thomas he gave a Latin book, containing
the notable sayings of the old martyrs, and in the end of that he wrote his
testament:
"I say to my wife, and to my children, The Lord gave you unto me, and the
Lord hath taken me from you, and you from me: blessed be the name of the Lord!
I believe that they are blessed which die in the Lord. God careth for sparrows,
and for the hairs of our heads. I have ever found Him more faithful and
favorable, than is any father or husband. Trust ye therefore in Him by the
means of our dear Savior Christ's merits: believe, love, fear, and obey Him:
pray to Him, for He hath promised to help. Count me not dead, for I shall
certainly live, and never die. I go before, and you shall follow after, to our
long home."
On the morrow the sheriff of London with his officers came to the Compter by
two o'clock in the morning, and brought forth Dr. Taylor; and without any light
led him to the Woolsack, an inn without Aldgate. Dr. Taylor's wife, suspecting
that her husband should that night be carried away, watched all night in St.
Botolph's church-porch beside Aldgate, having her two children, the one named
Elizabeth, of thirteen years of age (whom, being left without father or mother,
Dr. Taylor had brought up of alms from three years old), the other named Mary,
Dr. Taylor's own daughter.
Now, when the sheriff and his company came against St.
Botolph's church, Elizabeth cried, saying, "O my dear father! mother,
mother, here is my father led away." Then his wife cried, "Rowland,
Rowland, where art thou?"-for it was a very dark morning, that the one
could not well see the other. Dr. Taylor answered, "Dear wife, I am
here"; and stayed. The sheriff's men would have led him forth, but the
sheriff said, "Stay a little, masters, I pray you; and let him speak to
his wife"; and so they stayed.
Then came she to him, and he took his daughter Mary in his arms; and he, his
wife, and Elizabeth kneeled down and said the Lord's Prayer, at which sight the
sheriff wept apace, and so did divers others of the company. After they had
prayed, he rose up and kissed his wife, and shook her by the hand, and said,
"Farewell, my dear wife; be of good comfort, for I am quiet in my
conscience. God shall stir up a father for my children."
All the way Dr. Taylor was joyful and merry, as one that ccounted himself going
to a most pleasant banquet or bridal. He spake many notable things to the
sheriff and yeomen of the guard that conducted him, and often moved them to
weep, through his much earnest calling upon them to repent, and to amend their
evil and wicked living. Oftentimes also he caused them to wonder and rejoice,
to see him so constant and steadfast, void of all fear, joyful in heart, and
glad to die.
When Dr. Taylor had arrived at Aldham Common, the place where he should suffer,
seeing a great multitude of people, he asked, "What place is this, and
what meaneth it that so much people are gathered hither?" It was answered,
"It is Aldham Common, the place where you must suffer; and the people have
come to look upon you." Then he said, "Thanked be God, I am even at home";
and he alighted from his horse and with both hands rent the hood from his head.
His head had been notched and clipped like as a man would clip a fool's; which
cost the good bishop Bonner had bestowed upon him. But when the people saw his
reverend and ancient face, with a long white beard, they burst out with weeping
tears, and cried, saying: "God save thee, good Dr. Taylor! Jesus Christ
strengthen thee, and help thee! the Holy Ghost comfort thee!" with such
other like good wishes.
When he had prayed, he went to the stake and kissed it, and set himself into a
pitch barrel, which they had put for him to stand in, and stood with his back
upright against the stake, with his hands folded together, and his eyes towards
heaven, and continually prayed.
They then bound him with the chains, and having set up the fagots, one Warwick
cruelly cast a fagot at him, which struck him on his head, and cut his face,
sot hat the blood ran down. Then said Dr. Taylor, "O friend, I have harm
enough; what needed that?"
Sir John Shelton standing by, as Dr. Taylor was speaking, and saying the Psalm
Miserere in English, struck him on the lips:
"You knave," he said, "speak Latin: I will make thee." At
last they kindled the fire; and Dr. Taylor holding up both his hands, calling
upon God, and said, "Merciful Father of heaven! for Jesus Christ, my
Savior's sake, receive my soul into Thy hands!" So he stood still without
either crying or moving, with his hands folded together, until Soyce, with a
halberd struck him on the head until his brains fell out, and the corpse fell
down into the fire.
Thus rendered up this man of God his blessed soul into the hands of his
merciful Father, and to his most dear Savior Jesus Christ, whom he most
entirely loved, faithfully and earnestly preached, obediently followed in living,
and constantly glorified in death.
Martyrdom of William Hunter
William Hunter had been trained to the doctrines of the
Reformation from his earliest youth, being descended from religious parents,
who carefully instructed him in the principles of true religion.
Hunter, then nineteen years of age, refusing to receive the communion at Mass,
was threatened to be brought before the bishop; to whom this valiant young
martyr was conducted by a constable.
Bonner caused William to be brought into a chamber, where he began to reason
with him, proimising him security and pardon if he would recant. Nay, he would
have been content if he would have gone only to receive and to confession, but
William would not do so for all the world.
Upon this the bishop commanded his men to put William in the stocks in his gate
house, where he sat two days and nights, with a crust of brown bread and a cup
of water only, which he did not touch.
At the two days' end, the bishop came to him, and finding him steadfast in the
faith, sent him to the convict prison, and commanded the keeper to lay irons
upon him as many as he could bear. He continued in prison three quarters of a
year, during which time he had been before the bishop five times, besides the
time when he was condemned in the consistory in St. Paul's, February 9, at
which time his brother, Robert Hunter, was present.
Then the bishop, calling William, asked him if he would recant, and finding he
was unchangeable, pronounced sentence upon him, that he should go from that
place to Newgate for a time, and thence to Brentwood, there to be burned.
About a month afterward, William was sent down to Brentwood, where he was to be
executed. On coming to the stake, he knelt down and read the Fifty-first Psalm,
until he came to these words, "The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit;
a broken and a contrite heart, O God, Thou wilt not despise." Steadfast in
refusing the queen's pardon, if he would become an apostate, at length one
Richard Ponde, a bailiff, came, and made the chain fast about him.
William now cast his psalter into his brother's hand, who said, "William,
think on the holy passion of Christ, and be not afraid of death."
"Behold," answered William, "I am not afraid." Then he
lifted up his hands to heaven, and said, "Lord, Lord, Lord, receive my
spirit;" and casting down he head again into the smothering smoke, he
yielded up his life for the truth, sealing it with his blood to the praise of
God.
Dr. Robert Farrar
This worthy and learned prelate, the bishop of St. David's
in Wales, having in the former reign, as well as since the accession of Mary,
been remarkably zealous in promoting the reformed doctrines, and exploding the
rrors of popish idolatry, was summoned, among others, before the persecuting
bishop of Winchester, and other commissioners set apart for the abominable work
of devastation and massacre.
His principal accusers and persecutors, on a charge of praemunire in the reign
of Edward VI were George Constantine Walter, his servant; Thomas Young, chanter
of the cathedral, afterward bishop of Bangor, etc. Dr. Farrar ably replied to
the copies of information laid against him, consisting of fifty-six articles.
The whole process of this trial was long and tedious. Delay succeeded delay,
and after that Dr. Farrar had been long unjustly detained in custody under
sureties, in the reign of King Edward, because he had been promoted by the duke
of Somerset, whence after his fall he found fewer friends to support him
against such as wanted his bishopric by the coming in of Queen Mary, he was
accused and examined not for any matter of praemunire, but for his faith and
doctrine; for which he was called before the bishop of Winchester with Bishop
Hooper, Mr. Rogers, Mr. Bradford, Mr. Saunders, and others, February 4, 1555;
on which day he would also with them have been condemned, but his condemnation
was deferred, and he sent to prison again, where he continued until February
14, and then was sent into Wales to receive sentence. He was six times brought
up before Henry Morgan, bishop of St. David's, who demanded if he would abjure;
from which he zealously dissented, and appealed to Cardinal Pole;
notwithstanding which, the bishop, proceeding in his rage, pronounced him a
heretic excommunicate, and surrendered him to the secular power.
Dr. Farrar, being condemned and degraded, was not long after brought to the
place of execution in the town of Carmathen, in the market-place of which, on
the south side of the market-cross, March 30, 1555, being Saturday next before
Passion Sunday, he most constantly sustained the torments of the fire.
Concerning his constancy, it is said that one Richard Jones, a knight's son,
coming to Dr. Farrar a little before his death, seemed to lament the
painfulness of the death he had to suffer; to whom the bishop answered that if
he saw him once stir in the pains of his burning, he might then give no credit
to his doctrine; and as he said, so did he maintain his promise, patiently
standing without emotion, until one Richard Gravell with a staff struck him
down.
Martyrdom of Rawlins White
Rawlins White was by his calling and occupation a fisherman,
living and continuing in the said trade for the space of twenty years at least,
in the town of Cardiff, where he bore a very good name amongst his neighbors.
Though the good man was altogether unlearned, and withal very simple, yet it
pleased God to remove him from error and idolatry to a knowledge of the truth,
through the blessed Reformation in Edward's reign. He had his son taught to
read English, and after the little boy could read pretty well, his father every
night after supper, summer and winter, made the boy read a portion of the Holy
Scriptures, and now and then a part of some other good book.
When he had continued in his profession the space of five years, King Edward
died, upon whose decease Queen Mary succeeded and with her all kinds of
superstition crept in. White was taken by the officers of the town, as a man
suspected of heresy, brought before the Bishop Llandaff, and committed to
prison in Chepstow, and at last removed to the castle of Cardiff, where he
continued for the space of one whole year. Being brought before the bishop in
his chapel, he counselled him by threats and promises. But as Rawlins would in
no wise recant his opinions, the bishop told him plainly that he must proceed
against him by law, and condemn him as a heretic.
Before they proceeded to this extremity, the bishop proposed that prayer should
be said for his conversion. "This," said White, "is like a godly
bishop, and if your request be godly and right, and you pray as you ought, no
doubt God will hear you; pray you, therefore, to your God, and I will pray to
my God." After the bishop and his party had done praying, he asked Rawlins
if he would now revoke. "You find," said the latter, "your
prayer is not granted, for I remain the same; and God will strengthen me in
support of this truth." After this, the bishop tried what saying Mass
would do; but Rawlins called all the people to witness that he did not bow down
to the host. Mass being ended, Rawlins was called for again; to whom the bishop
used many persuasions; but the blessed man continued so steadfast in his former
profession that the bishop's discourse was to no purpose. The bishop now caused
the definitive sentence to be read, which being ended, Rawlins was carried
again to Cardiff, to a loathsome prison in the town, called Cockmarel, where he
passed his time in prayer, and in the singing of Psalms. In about three weeks
the order came from town for his execution.
When he came to the place, where his poor wife and children stood weeping, the
sudden sight of them so pierced his heart, that the tears trickled down his
face. Being come to the altar of his sacrifice, in going toward the stake, he
fell down upon his knees, and kissed the ground; and in rising again, a little
earth sticking on his face, he said these words. "Earth unto earth, and
dust unto dust; thou art my mother, and unto thee I shall return."
When all things were ready, directly over against the stake, in the face of
Rawlins White, there was a stand erected, whereon stepped up a priest,
addressing himself to the people, but, as he spoke of the Romish doctrines of
the Sacraments, Rawlins cried out, "Ah! thou wicked hypocrite, dost thou
presume to prove thy false doctrine by Scripture? Look in the text that
followeth; did not Christ say, 'Do this in remembrance of me?'"
Then some that stood by cried out, "Put fire! set on fire!" which
being done, the straw and reeds cast up a great and sudden flame. In which
flame this good man bathed his hands so long, until such time as the sinews
shrank, and the fat dropped away, saving that once he did, as it were, wipe his
face with one of them. All this while, which was somewhat long, he cried with a
loud voice, "O Lord, receive my spirit!" until he could not open his
mouth. At last the extremity of the fire was so vehement against his legs that
they were consumed almost before the rest of his body was hurt, which made the
whole body fall over the chains into the fire sooner than it would have done. Thus
died this good old man for his testimony of God's truth, and is now rewarded,
no doubt, with the crown of eternal life.
The Rev. George Marsh
George Marsh, born in the parish of Deane, in the county of
Lancaster, received a good education and trade from his parents; about his
twenty-fifth year he married, and lived, blessed with several children, on his
farm until his wife died. He then went to study at Cambridge, and became the
curate of Rev. Lawrence Saunders, in which duty he constantly and zealously set
forth the truth of God's Word, and the false doctrines of the modern
Antichrist.
Being confined by Dr. Coles, the bishop of Chester, within the precincts of his
own house, he was dept from any intercourse with his friends during four
months; his friends and mother, earnestly wished him to have flown from
"the wrath to come;" but Mr. Marsh thought that such a step would ill
agree with that profession he had during nine years openly made. He, however,
secreted himself, but he had much struggling, and in secret prayer begged that
God would direct him, through the advice of his best friends, for his own glory
and to what was best. At length, determined by a letter he received, boldly to
confess the faith of Christ, he took leave of his mother-in-law and other
friends, recommending his children to their care and departed for Smethehills,
whence he was, with others, conducted to Lathum, to undergo examination before
the earl of Derby, Sir William Nores, Mr. Sherburn, the parson of Garpnal, and
others. The various questions put to him he answered with a good conscience,
but when Mr. Sherburn interrogated him upon his belief of the Sacrament of the
altar, Mr. Marsh answered like a true Protestant that the essence of the bread
and wine was not at all changed, hence, after receiving dreadful threats from
some, and fair words from others, for his opinions, he was remanded to ward,
where he lay two nights without any bed.
On Palm Sunday he underwent a second examination, and Mr.
Marsh much lamented that his fear should at all have induced him to
prevaricate, and to seek his safety, as long as he did not openly deny Christ;
and he again cried more earnestly to God for strength that he might not be
overcome by the subtleties of those who strove to overrule the purity of his
faith. He underwent three examinations before Dr. Coles, who, finding him
steadfast in the Protestant faith, began to read his sentence; but he was
interrupted by the chancellor, who prayed the bishop to stay before it was too
late. The priest then prayed for Mr. Marsh, but the latter, upon being again
solicited to recant, said he durst not deny his Savior Christ, lest he lose His
everlasting mercy, and so obtain eternal death. The bishop then proceeded in
the sentence. He was committed to a dark dungeon, and lay deprived of the
consolation of any one (for all were afraid to relieve or communicate with him)
until the day appointed came that he should suffer. The sheriffs of the city,
Amry and Couper, with their officers, went to the north gate, and took out Mr.
George Marsh, who walked all the way with the Book in his hand, looking upon
the same, whence the people said, "This man does not go to his death as a
thief, nor as one that deserveth to die."
When he came to the place of execution without the city, near Spittal=Boughton,
Mr. Cawdry, deputy chamberlain of Chester, showed Mr. Marsh a writing under a
great seal, saying that it was a pardon for him if he would recant. He answered
that he would gladly accept the same did it not tend to pluck him from God.
After that, he began to speak to the people showing the cause of his death, and
would have exhorted them to stick unto Christ, but one of the sheriffs
prevented him. Kneeling down, he then said his prayers, put off his clothes
unto his shirt, and was chained to the post, having a number of fagots under
him, and a thing made like a firkin, with pitch and tar in it, over his head.
The fire being unskilfully made, and the wind driving it in eddies, he suffered
great extremity, which notwithstanding he bore with Christian fortitude.
When he had been a long time tormented in the fire without moving, having his
flesh so broiled and puffed up that they who stood before him could not see the
chain wherewith he was fastened, and therefore supposed that he had been dead,
suddenly he spread abroad his arms, saying, "Father of heaven have mercy
upon me!" and so yielded his spirit into the hands of the Lord. Upon this,
many of the people said he was a martyr, and died gloriously patient. This
caused the bishop shortly after to make a sermon in the cathedral church, and
therein he affirmed, that the said 'Marsh was a heretic, burnt as such, and is
a firebrand in hell.' Mr. Marsh suffered April 24, 1555.
William Flower
William Flower, otherwise Branch, was born at Snow-hill, in
the county of Cambridge, where he went to school some years, and then came to
the abby of Ely. After he had remained a while he became a professed monk, was
made a priest in the same house, and there celebrated and sang Mass. After
that, by reason of a visitation, and certain injunctions by the authority of
Henry VIII he took upon him the habit of a secular priest, and returned to
Snow-hill, where he was born, and taught children about half a year.
He then went to Ludgate, in Suffolk, and served as a secular priest about a
quarter of a year; from thence to Stoniland; at length to Tewksbury, where he
married a wife, with whom he ever after faithfully and honestly continued.
After marriage he resided at Tewksbury about two years, and thence went to Brosley,
where he practiced physic and surgery; but departing from those parts he came
to London, and finally settled at Lambeth, where he and his wife dwelt
together. However, he was generally abroad, excepting once or twice in a month,
to visit and see his wife. Being at home upon Easter Sunday morning, he came
over the water from lambeth into St. Margaret's Church at Westminster; when
seeing a priest, named John Celtham, administering and giving the Sacrament of
the alter to the people, and being greatly offended in his conscience with the
priest for the same, he struck and wounded him upon the head, and also upon the
arm and hand, with his wood knife, the priest having at the same time in his
hand a chalice with the consecrated host therein, which became sprinkled with
blood.
Mr. Flower, for this injudicious zeal, was heavily ironed, and put into the
gatehouse at Westminster; and afterward summoned before bishop Bonner and his
ordinary, where the bishop, after he had sworn him upon a Book, ministered
articles and interrogatories to him.
After examination, the bishop began to exhort him again to return to the unity
of his mother the Catholic Church, with many fair promises. These Mr. Flower
steadfastly rejecting, the bishop ordered him to appear in the same place in
the afternoon, and in the meantime to consider well his former answer; but he,
neither apologizing for having struck the priest, nor swerving from his faith,
the bishop assigned him the next day, April 20, to receive sentence if he would
not recant. The next morning, the bishop accordingly proceeded to the sentence,
condemning and excommunicating him for a heretic, and after pronouncing him to
be degraded, committed him to the secular power.
On April 24, St. Mark's eve, he was brought to the place of martyrdom, in St.
Margaret's churchyard, Westminster, where the fact was committed: and there
coming to the stake, he prayed to Almighty God, made a confession of his faith,
and forgave all the world.
This done, his hand was held up against the stake, and struck off, his left
hand being fastened behind him. Fire was then set to him, and he burning
therein, cried with a loud voice, "O Thou Son of God receive my
soul!" three times. His speech being now taken from him, he spoke no more,
but notwithstanding he lifted up the stump with his other arm as long as he
could.
Thus he endured the extremity of the fire, and was cruelly tortured, for the
few fagots that were brought being insufficient to burn him they were compelled
to strike him down into the fire, where lying along upon the ground, his lower
part was consumed in the fire, whilst his upper part was little injured, his
tongue moving in his mouth for a considerable time.
The Rev. John Cardmaker and John Warne
May 30, 1555, the Rev. John Cardmaker, otherwise called
Taylor, prebendary of the Church of Wells, and John Warne, upholsterer, of St.
John's, Walbrook, suffered together in Smithfield. Mr. Cardmaker, who first was
an observant friar before the dissolution of the abbeys, afterward was a
married minister, and in King Edward's time appointed to be a reader in St.
Paul's; being apprehended in the beginning of Queen Mary's reign, with Dr.
Barlow, bishop of Bath, he was brought to London, and put in the Fleet prison,
King Edward's laws being yet in force. In Mary's reign, when brought before the
bishop of Winchester, the latter offered them the queen's mercy, if they would
recant.
Articles having been preferred against Mr. John Warne, he was examined upon
them by Bonner, who earnestly exhorted him to recant his opinions, to whom he
answered, "I am persuaded that I am in the right opinion, and I see no
cause to recant; for all the filthiness and idolatry lies in the Church of
Rome."
The bishop then, seeing that all his fair promises and terrible threatenings
could not prevail, pronounced the definitive sentence of condemnation, and
ordered May 30, 1555, for the execution of John Cardmaker and John Warne, who
were brought by the sheriffs to Smithfield. Being come to the stake, the
sheriffs called Mr. Cardmaker aside, and talked with him secretly, during which
Mr. Warne prayed, was chained to the stake, and had wood and reeds set about
him.
The people were greatly afflicted, thinking that Mr. Cardmaker would recant at
the burning of Mr. Warne. At length Mr. Cardmaker departed from the sheriffs,
and came towards the stake, knelt down, and made a long prayer in silence to
himself. He then rose up, put off his clothes to his shirt, and went with a
bold courage unto the stake and kissed it; and taking Mr. Warne by the hand, he
heartily comforted him, and was bound to the stake, rejoicing. The people
seeing this so suddenly done, contrary to their previous expectation, cried
out, "God be praised! the Lord strengthen thee, Cardmaker! the Lord Jesus
receive thy spirit!" And this continued while the executioner put fire to
them, and both had passed through the fire to the blessed rest and peace among
God's holy saints and martyrs, to enjoy the crown of triumph and victory
prepared for the elect soldiers and warriors of Christ Jesus in His blessed
Kingdom, to whom be glory and majesty forever. Amen.
John Simpson and John Ardeley
John Simpson and John Ardeley were condemned on the same day with Mr. Carmaker and John Warne, which was the twenty-fifth of May. They were shortly after sent down from London to Essex, where they were burnt in one day, John Simpson at Rochford, and John Ardeley at Railey, glorifying God in His beloved Son, and rejoicing that they were accounted worthy to suffer.
Thomas Haukes, Thomas Watts, and Anne Askew
Thomas Haukes, with six others, was condemned on the ninth
of February, 1555. In education he was erudite; in person, comely, and of good
stature; in manners, a gentleman, and a sincere Christian. A little before
death, several of Mr. Hauke's friends, terrified by the sharpness of the
punishment he was going to suffer, privately desired that in the midst of the
flames he should show them some token, whether the pains of burning were so
great that a man might not collectedly endure it. This he promised to do; and
it was agreed that if the rage of the pain might be suffered, then he should
lift up his hands above his head towards heaven, before he gave up the ghost.
Not long after, Mr. Haukes was led away to the place appointed for slaughter by
Lord Rich, and being come to the stake, mildly and patiently prepared himself
for the fire, having a strong chain cast about his middle, with a multitude of
people on every side compassing him about, unto whom after he had spoken many
things, and poured out his soul unto God, the fire was kindled.
When he had continued long in it, and his speech was taken away by violence of
the flame, his skin drawn together, and his fingers consumed with the fire, so
that it was thought that he was gone, suddenly and contrary to all expectation,
this good man being mindful of his promise, reached up his hands burning in
flames over his head to the living God, and with great rejoicings as it seemed,
struck or clapped them three times together. A great shout followed this
wonderful circumstance, and then this blessed martyr of Christ, sinking down in
the fire, gave up his spirit, June 10, 1555.
Thomas Watts, of Billerica, in Essex, of the diocese of London, was a linen
draper. He had daily expected to be taken by God's adversaries, and this came
to pass on the fifth of April, 1555, when he was brought before Lord Rich, and
other commissioners at Chelmsford, and accused for not coming to the church.
Being consigned over to the bloody bishop, who gave him several hearings, and,
as usual, many arguments, with much entreaty, that he would be a disciple of
Antichrist, but his preaching availed not, and he resorted to his last
revenge-that of condemnation.
At the stake, after he had kissed it, he spake to Lord Rich, charging him to
repent, for the Lord would revenge his death. Thus did this good martyr offer
his body to the fire, in defence of the true Gospel of the Savior.
Thomas Osmond, William Bamford, and Nicholas Chamberlain, all of the town of
Coxhall, being sent up to be examined, Bonner, after several hearings,
pronounced them obstinate heretics, and delivered them to the sheriffs, in
whose custody they remained until they were delivered to the sheriff of Essex
county, and by him were executed, Chamberlain at Colchester, the fourteenth of
June; Thomas Osmond at Maningtree, and William Bamford, alias Butler, at
Harwich, the fifteenth of June, 1555; all dying full of the glorious hope of
immortality.
Then Wriotheseley, lord chancellor, offered Anne Askew the king's pardon if she
would recant; who made this answer, that she came not thither to deny her Lord
and Master. And thus the good Anne Askew, being compassed in with flames of
fire, as a blessed sacrifice unto God, slept in the Lord, A.D. 1546, leaving
behind her a singular example of Christian constancy for all men to follow.
Rev. John Bradford, and John Leaf, an Apprentice
Rev. John Bradford was born at Manchester, in Lancashire; he
was a good Latin scholar, and afterward became a servant of Sir John
Harrington, knight.
He continued several years in an honest and thriving way; but the Lord had
elected him to a better function. Hence he departed from his master, quitting
the Temple, at London, for the University of Cambridge, to learn, by God's law,
how to further the building of the Lord's temple. In a few years after, the
university gave him the degree of master of arts, and he became a fellow of
Pembroke Hall.
Martin Bucer first urged him to preach, and when he modestly doubted his
ability, Bucer was wont to reply, "If thou hast not fine wheat bread, yet
give the poor people barley bread, or whatsoever else the Lord hath committed
unto thee." Dr. Ridley, that worthy bishop of London, and glorious martyr
of Christ, first called him to take the degree of a deacon and gave him a
prebend in his cathedral Church of St. Paul.
In this preaching office Mr. Bradford diligently labored for the space of three
years. Sharply he reproved sin, sweetly he preached Christ crucified, ably he
disproved heresies and errors, earnestly he persuaded to godly life. After the
death of blessed King Edward VI Mr. Bradford still continued diligent in
preaching, until he was suppressed by Queen Mary.
An act now followed of the blackest ingratitude, and at which a pagan would
blush. It has been recited, that a tumult was occasioned by Mr. Bourne's (then
bishop of Bath) preaching at St. Paul's Cross; the indignation of the people
placed his life in imminent danger; indeed a dagger was thrown at him. In this
situation he entreated Mr. Bradford, who stood behind him. to speak in his
place, and assuage the tumult. The people welcomed Mr. Bradford, and the latter
afterward kept close to him, that his presence might prevent the populace from
renewing their assaults.
The same Sunday in the afternoon, Mr. Bradford preached at Bow Church in
Cheapside, and reproved the people sharply for their seditious misdemeanor.
Notwithstanding this conduct, within three days after, he was sent for to the
Tower of London, where the queen then was, to appear before the Council. There
he was charged with this act of saving Mr. Bourne, which was called seditious,
and they also objected against him for preaching. Thus he was committed, first
to the Tower, then to other prisons, and, after his condemnation, to the
Poultry Compter, where he preached twice a day continually, unless sickness
hindered him. Such as his credit with the keeper of the king's Bench, that he
permitted him in an evening to visit a poor, sick person near the steel-yard,
upon his promise to return in time, and in this he never failed.
The night before he was sent to Newgate, he was troubled in his sleep by
foreboding dreams, that on Monday after he should be burned in Smithfield. In
the afternoon the keeper's wife came up and announced this dreadful news to
him, but in him it excited only thankfulness to God. At night half a dozen
friends came, with whom he spent all the evening in prayer and godly exercises.
When he was removed to Newgate, a weeping crowd accompanied him, and a rumor
having been spread that he was to suffer at four the next morning, an immense
multitude attended. At nine o'clock Mr. Bradford was brought into Smithfield.
The cruelty of the sheriff deserves notice; for his brother-in-law, Roger
Beswick, having taken him by the hand as he passed, Mr. Woodroffe, with his staff,
cut his head open.
Mr. Bradford, being come to the place, fell flat on the ground, and putting off
his clothes unto the shirt, he went to the stake, and there suffered with a
young man of twenty years of age, whose name was John Leaf, an apprentice to
Mr. Humphrey Gaudy, tallow-chandler, of Christ-church, London. Upon Friday
before Palm Sunday, he was committed to the Compter in Bread-street, and
afterward examined and condemned by the bloody bishop.
It is reported of him, that, when the bill of his confession was read unto him,
instead of pen, he took a pin, and pricking his hand, sprinkled the blood upon
the said bill, desiring the reader thereof to show the bishop that he had
sealed the same bill with his blood already.
They both ended this mortal life, July 12, 1555, like two lambs, without any
alteration of their countenances, hoping to obtain that prize they had long run
for; to which may Almighty God conduct us all, through the merits of Christ our
Savior!
We shall conclude this article with mentioning that Mr.
Sheriff Woodroffe, it is said, within half a year after, was struck on the
right side with a palsy, and for the space of eight years after, (until his
dying day,) he was unable to turn himself in his bed; thus he became at last a
fearful object to behold.
The day after Mr. Bradford and John Leaf suffered in Smithfield William Minge,
priest, died in prison at Maidstone. With as great constancy and boldness he
yielded up his life in prison, as if it had pleased God to have called him to
suffer by fire, as other godly men had done before at the stake, and as he
himself was ready to do, had it pleased God to have called him to this trial.
Rev. John Bland, Rev. John Frankesh, Nicholas Shetterden, and
Humphrey Middleton
These Christian persons were all burnt at Canterbury for the
same cause. Frankesh and Bland were ministers and preachers of the Word of God,
the one being parson of Adesham, and the other vicar of Rolvenden. Mr. Bland
was cited to answer for his opposition to antichristianism, and underwent
several examinations before Dr. Harpsfield, archdeacon of Canterbury, and
finally on the twenty-fifth of June, 1555, again withstanding the power of the
pope, he was condemned, and delivered to the secular arm. On the same day were
condemned John Frankesh, Nicholas Shetterden, Humphrey Middleton, Thacker, and
Crocker, of whom Thacker only recanted.
Being delivered to the secular power, Mr. Bland, with the three former, were
all burnt together at Canterbury, July 12, 1555, at two several stakes, but in
one fire, when they, in the sight of God and His angels, and before men, like
true soldiers of Jesus Christ, gave a constant testimony to the truth of His
holy Gospel.
Dirick Carver and John Launder
The twenty-second of July, 1555, Dirick Carver, brewer, of
Brighthelmstone, aged forty, was burnt at Lewes. And the day following John
Launder, husbandman, aged twenty-five, of Godstone, Surrey, was burnt at
Stening.
Dirick Carver was a man whom the Lord had blessed as well with temporal riches
as with his spiritual treasures. At his coming into the town of Lewes to be
burnt, the people called to him, beseeching God to strengthen him in the faith
of Jesus Christ; and, as he came to the stake, he knelt down, and prayed
earnestly. Then his Book was thrown into the barrel, and when he had stripped
himself, he too, went into a barrel. As soon as he was in, he took the Book,
and threw it among the people, upon which the sheriff commanded, in the name of
the king and queen, on pain of death , to throw in the Book again. And
immediately the holy martyr began to address the people. After he had prayed a
while, he said, "O Lord my God, Thou hast written, he that will not
forsake wife, children, house, and every thing that he hath, and take up Thy
cross and follow Thee, is not worthy of Thee! but Thou, Lord, knowest that I
have forsaken all to come unto Thee. Lord, have mercy upon me, for unto Thee I
commend my spirit! and my soul doth rejoice in Thee!" These were the last
words of this faithful servant of Christ before enduring the fire. And when the
fire came to him, he cried, "O Lord, have mercy upon me!" and sprang
up in the fire, calling upon the name of Jesus, until he gave up the ghost.
James Abbes. This young man wandered about to escape apprehension, but was at
last informed against, and brought before the bishop of Norwich, who influenced
him to recant; to secure him further in apostasy, the bishop afterward gave him
a piece of money; but the interference of Providence is here remarkable. This bribe
lay so heavily upon his conscience, that he returned, threw back the money, and
repented of his conduct. Like Peter, he was contrite, steadfast in the faith,
and sealed it with his blood at Bury, August 2, 1555, praising and glorifying
God.
John Denley, John Newman, and Patrick Packingham
Mr. Denley and Newman were returning one day to Maidstone,
the place of their abode, when they were met by E. Tyrrel, Esq., a bigoted
justice of the peace in Essex, and a cruel persecutor of the Protestants. He
apprehended them merely on suspicion. On the fifth of July, 1555, they were
condemned, and consigned to the sheriffs, who sent Mr. Denley to Uxbridge,
where he perished, August eighth, 1555. While suffering in agony, and singing a
Psalm, Dr. Story inhumanly ordered one of the tormentors to throw a fagot at
him, which cut his face severely, caused him to cease singing, and to raise his
hands to his face. Just as Dr. Story was remarking in jest that he had spoiled
a good song, the pious martyr again changed, spread his hands abroad in the
flames, and through Christ Jesus resigned his soul into the hands of his Maker.
Mr. Packingham suffered at the same town on the twenty-eigth of the same month.
Mr. Newman, pewterer, was burnt at Saffron Waldon, in Essex, August 31, for the
same cause, and Richard Hook about the same time perished at Chichester.
W. Coker, W. Hooper, H. Laurence, R. Colliar, R. Wright and W.
Stere
These persons all of Kent, were examined at the same time
with Mr. Bland and Shetterden, by Thornton, bishop of Dover, Dr. Harpsfield,
and others. These six martyrs and witnesses of the truth were consigned to the
flames in Canterbury, at the end of August, 1555.
Elizabeth Warne, widow of John Warne, upholsterer, martyr, was burnt at
Stratford-le-bow, near London, at the end of August, 1555.
George Tankerfield, of London, cook, born at York, aged twenty-seven, in the
reign of Edward VI had been a papist; but the cruelty of bloody Mary made him
suspect the truth of those doctrines which were enforced by fire and torture.
Tankerfield was imprisoned in Newgate about the end of February, 1555, and on
August 26, at St. Alban's, he braved the excruciating fire, and joyfully died
for the glory of his Redeemer.
Rev. Robert Smith was first in the service of Sir T. Smith, provost of Eton;
and was afterward removed to Windsor, where he had a clerkship of ten pounds a
year.
He was condemned, July 12, 1555, and suffered August 8, at Uxbridge. He doubted
not but that God would give the spectators some token in support of his own
cause; this actually happened; for, when he was nearly half burnt, and supposed
to be dead, he suddenly rose up, moved the remaining parts of his arms and
praised God, then, hanging over the fire, he sweetly slept in the Lord Jesus.
Mr. Stephen Harwood and Mr. Thomas Fust suffered about the same time with Smith
and Tankerfield, with whom they were condemned. Mr. William Hale also, of
Thorp, in Essex, was sent to Barnet, where about the same time he joined the
ever-blessed company of martyrs.
George King, Thomas Leyes, and John Wade, falling sick in Lollard's Tower, were
removed to different houses, and died. Their bodies were thrown out in the
common fields as unworthy of burial, and lay until the faithful conveyed them
away at night.
Mr. William Andrew of Horseley, Essex, was imprisoned in Newgate for heresy;
but God chose to call him to himself by the severe treatment he endured in
Newgate, and thus to mock the snaguinary expectations of his Catholic
persecutors. His body was thrown into the open air, but his soul was received
into the everlasting mansions of his heavenly Creator.
The Rev. Robert Samuel
This gentleman was minister ofr Bradford, Suffolk, where he industriously taught the flock committed to his charge, while he was openly permitted to discharge his duty. He was first persecuted by Mr. Foster, of Copdock, near Ipswich, a severe and bigoted persecutor of the followers of Christ, according to the truth in the Gospel. Notwithstanding Mr. Samuel was ejected from his living, he continued to exhort and instruct privately; nor would he obey the order for putting away his wife, whom he had married in King Edward's reign; but kept her at Ipswich, where Foster, by warrant, surprised him by night with her. After being imprisoned in Ipswich jail, he was taken before Dr. Hopton, bishop of Norwich, and Dr. Dunnings, his chancellor, two of the most sanguinary among the bigots of those days. To intimidate the worthy pastor, he was in prison chained to a post in such a manner that the weight of his body was supported by the points of his toes: added to this his allowance of provision was reduced to a quantity so insufficient to sustain nature that he was almost ready to devour his own flesh. From this dreadful extremity there was even a degree of mercy in ordering him to the fire. Mr. Samuel suffered August 31, 1555.
Bishop Ridley and Bishop Latimer
These reverend prelates suffered October 17, 5555, at
Oxford, on the same day Wolsey and Pygot perished at Ely. Pillars of the Church
and accomplished ornaments of human nature, they were the admiration of the
realm, amiably conspicuous in their lives, and glorious in their deaths.
Dr. Ridley was born in Northumberland, was first tauht grammar at Newcastle,
and afterward removed to Cambridge, where his aptitude in education raised him
gradually until he came to be the head of Pembroke College, where he received
the title of Doctor of Divinity. Having returned from a trip to Paris, he was
appointed chaplain by Henry VIII and bishop of Rochester, and was afterwards translated
to the see of London in the time of Edward VI.
To his sermons the people resorted, swarming about him like bees, coveting the
sweet flowers and wholesome juice of the fruitful doctrine, which he did not
only preach, but showed the same by his life, as a glittering lanthorn to the
eyes and senses of the blind, in such pure order that his very enemies could
not reprove him in any one jot.
His tender treatment of Dr. Heath, who was a prisoner with him during one year,
in Edward's reign, evidently proves that he had no Catholic cruelty in his
disposition. In person he was erect and well proportioned; in temper forgiving;
in self-mortification severe. His first duty in the morning was private prayer:
he remained in his study until ten o'clock, and then attended the daily prayer
used in his house. Dinner being done, he sat about an hour, conversing
pleasantly, or playing at chess. His study next engaged his attention, unless
business or visits occurred; about five o'clock prayers followed; and after he
would recreate himself at chess for about an hour, then retire to his study
until eleven o'clock, and pray on his knees as in the morning. In brief, he was
a pattern of godliness and virtue, and such he endeavored to make men wherever
he came.
His attentive kindness was displayed particularly to old Mrs.
Bonner, mother of Dr. Bonner, the cruel bishop of London. Dr. Ridley, when at
his manor at Fulham, always invited her to his house, placed her at the head of
his table, and treated her like his own mother; he did the same by Bonner's
sister and other relatives; but when Dr. Ridley was under persecution, Bonner
pursued a conduct diametrically opposite, and would have sacrificed Dr.
Ridley's sister and her husband, Mr. George Shipside, had not Providence
delivered him by the means of Dr. Heath, bishop of Worcester.
Dr. Ridley was first in part converted by reading Bertram's book on the
Sacrament, and by his conferences with archbishop Cranmer and Peter Martyr.
When Edward VI was removed from the throne, and the bloody Mary succeeded,
Bishop Ridley was immediately marked as an object of slaughter. He was first
sent to the Tower, and afterward, at Oxford, was consigned to the common prison
of Bocardo, with archbishop Cranmer and Mr. Latimer. Being separated from them,
he was placed in the house of one Irish, where he remained until the day of his
martyrdom, from 1554, until October 16, 1555.
It will easily be supposed that the conversations of these chiefs of the
martyrs were elaborate, learned, and instructive. Such indeed they were, and
equally beneficial to all their spiritual comforts. Bishop Ridley's letters to
various Christian brethren in bonds in all parts, and his disputations with the
mitred enemies of Christ, alike proved the clearness of his head and the integrity
of his heart. In a letter to Mr. Grindal, (afterward archbishop of Canterbury,)
he mentions with affection those who had preceded him in dying for the faith,
and those who were expected to suffer; he regrets that popery is re-established
in its full abomination, which he attributes to the wrath of God, made manifest
in return for the lukewarmness of the clergy and the people in justly
appreciating the blessed light of the Reformation.
This old practiced soldier of Christ, Master Hugh Latimer, was the son of one
Hugh Latimer, of Thurkesson in the county of Leicester, a husbandman, of a good
and wealthy estimation; where also he was born and brought up until he was four
years of age, or thereabout: at which time his parents, having him as then left
for their only son, with six daughters, seeing his ready, prompt, and sharp
wit, purposed to train him up in erudition, and knowledge of good literature;
wherein he so profited in his youth at the common schools of his own country,
that at the age of fourteen years, he was sent to the University of Cambridge;
where he entered into the study of the school divinity of that day, and was
from principle a zealous observer of the Romish superstitions of the time. In
his oration when he commenced bachelor of divinity, he inveighed against the
reformer Melancthon, and openly declaimed against good Mr. Stafford, divinity
lecturer in Cambridge.
Mr. Thomas Bilney, moved by a brotherly pity towards Mr.
Latimer, begged to wait upon him in his study, and to explain to him the groundwork
of his (Mr. Bilney's) faith. This blessed interview effected his conversion:
the persecutor of Christ became his zealous advocate, and before Dr. Stafford
died he became reconciled to him.
Once converted, he became eager for the conversion of others, and commenced to
be public preacher, and private instructor in the university. His sermons were
so pointed against the absurdity of praying in the Latin tongue, and
withholding the oracles of salvation from the people who were to be saved by
belief in them, that he drew upon himself the pulpit animadversions of several
of the resident friars and heads of houses, whom he subsequently silenced by
his severe criticisms and eloquent arguments. This was at Christmas, 1529. At
length Dr. West preached against Mr. Latimer at Barwell Abbey, and prohibited
him from preaching again in the churches of the university, notwithstanding
which, he continued during three years to advocate openly the cause of Christ,
and even his enemies confessed the power of those talents he possessed. Mr.
Bilney remained here some time with Mr. Latimer, and thus the place where they
frequently walked together obtained the name of Heretics' Hill.
Mr. Latimer at this time traced out the innocence of a poor woman, accused by
her husband of the murder of her child. Having preached before King Henry VIII
at Windsor, he obtained the unfortunate mother's pardon. This, with many other
benevolent acts, served only to excite the spleen of his adversaries. He was
summoned before Cardinal Wolsey for heresy, but being a strenuous supporter of
the king's supremacy, in opposition to the pope's, by favor of Lord Cromwell
and Dr. Buts, (the king's physician,) he obtained the living of West Kingston,
in Wiltshire. For his sermons here against purgatory, the immaculacy of the
Virgin, and the worship of images, he was cited to appear before Warham,
archbishop of Canterbury, and John, bishop of London. He was required to
subscribe certain articles, expressive of his conformity to the accustamed
usages; and there is reason to think, after repeated weekly examinations, that
he did subscribe, as they did not seem to involve any important article of
belief.
Guided by Providence, he escaped the subtle nets of his persecutors, and at
length, through the powerful friends before mentioned, became bishop of
Worcester, in which function he qualified or explained away most of the papal
ceremonies he was for form's sake under the necessity of complying with. He
continued in this active and dignified employment some years.
Beginning afresh to set forth his plow he labored in the Lord's harvest most
fruitfully, discharging his talent as well in divers places of this realm, as
before the king at the court. In the same place of the inward garden, which was
before applied to lascivious and courtly pastimes, there he dispensed the
fruitful Word of the glorious Gospel of Jesus Christ, preaching there before
the king and his whole court, to the edification of many.
He remained a prisoner in the Tower until the coronation of Edward VI, when he
was again called to the Lord's harvest in Stamford, and many other places: he
also preached at London in the convocation house, and before the young king;
indeed he lectured twice every Sunday, regardless of his great age (then above
sixty-seven years,) and his weakness through a bruise received from the fall of
a tree. Indefatigable in his private studies, he rose to them in winter and in
summer at two o'clock in the morning.
By the strength of his own mind, or of some inward light from above, he had a
prophetic view of what was to happen to the Church in Mary's reign, asserting
that he was doomed to suffer for the truth, and that Winchester, then in the
Tower, was preserved for that purpose. Soon after Queen Mary was proclaimed, a
messenger was sent to summon Mr. Latimer to town, and there is reason to
believe it was wished that he should make his escape.
Thus Master Latimer coming up to London, through Smithfield (where merrily he
said that Smithfield had long groaned for him), was brought before the Council,
where he patiently bore all the mocks and taunts given him by the scornful
papists. He was cast into the Tower, where he, being assisted with the heavenly
grace of Christ, sustained imprisonment a long time, notwithstanding the cruel
and unmerciful handling of the lordly papists, which thought then their kingdom
would never fall; he showed himself not only patient, but also cheerful in and
above all that which they could or would work against him. Yea, such a valiant
spirit the Lord gave him, that he was able not only to despise the terribleness
of prisons and torments, but also to laugh to scorn the doings of his enemies.
Mr. Latimer, after remaining a long time in the Tower, was transported to
Oxford, with Cranmer and Ridley, the disputations at which place have been
already mentioned in a former part of this work. He remained imprisoned until
October, and the principal objects of all his prayers were three-that he might
stand faithful to the doctrine he had professed, that God would restore his
Gospel to England once again, and preserve the Lady Elizabeth to be queen; all
of which happened. When he stood at the stake without the Bocardo gate, Oxford,
with Dr. Ridley, and fire was putting to the pile of fagots, he raised his eyes
benignantly towards heaven, and said, "God is faithful, who will not
suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able." His body was forcibly
penetrated by the fire, and the blood flowed abundantly from the heart; as if
to verify his constant desire that his heart's blood might be shed in defence
of the Gospel. His polemical and friendly letters are lasting monuments of his
integrity and talents. It has been before said, that public disputation took
place in April, 1554, new examinations took place in October, 1555, previous to
the degradation and condemnation of Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer. We now draw
to the conclusion of the lives of the two last.
Dr. Ridley, the night before execution, was very facetious, had himself shaved,
and called his supper a marriage feast; he remarked upon seeing Mrs. Irish (the
keeper's wife) weep, "Though my breakfast will be somewhat sharp, my
supper will be more pleasant and sweet."
The place of death was on the northside of the town, opposite Baliol College.
Dr. Ridley was dressed in a black gown furred, and Mr. Latimer had a long
shroud on, hanging down to his feet. Dr. Ridley, as he passed Bocardo, looked
up to see Dr. Cranmer, but the latter was then engaged in disputation with a
friar. When they came to the stake, Mr. Ridley embraced Latimer fervently, and
bid him: "Be of good heart, brother, for God will either assuage the fury
of the flame, or else strengthen us to abide it." He then knelt by the
stake, and after earnestly praying together, they had a short private conversation.
Dr. Smith then preached a short sermon against the martyrs, who would have
answered him, but were prevented by Dr. Marshal, the vice-chancellor. Dr.
Ridley then took off his gown and tippet, and gave them to his brother-in-law,
Mr. Shipside. He gave away also many trifles to his weeping friends, and the
populace were anxious to get even a fragment of his garments. Mr. Latimer gave
nothing, and from the poverty of his garb, was soon stripped to his shroud, and
stood venerable and erect, fearless of death.
Dr. Ridley being unclothed to his shirt, the smith placed an iron chain about
their waists, and Dr. Ridley bid him fasten it securely; his brother having
tied a bag of gunpowder about his neck, gave some also to Mr. Latimer.
Dr. Ridley then requested of Lord Williams, of Fame, to advocate with the queen
the cause of some poor men to whom he had, when bishop, granted leases, but
which the present bishop refused to confirm. A lighted fagot was now laid at
Dr. Ridley's feet, which caused Mr. Latimer to say: "Be of good cheer,
Ridley; and play the man. We shall this day, by God's grace, light up such a
candle in England, as I trust, will never be put out."
When Dr. Ridley saw the fire flaming up towards him, he cried with a wonderful
loud voice, "Lord, Lord, receive my spirit." Master Latimer, crying
as vehemently on the other side, "O Father of heaven, receive my
soul!" received the flame as it were embracing of it. After that he had
stroked his face with his hands, and as it were, bathed them a little in the
fire, he soon died (as it appeareth) with very little pain or none.
Well! dead they are, and the reward of this world they have already. What
reward remaineth for them in heaven, the day of the Lord's glory, when he
cometh with His saints, shall declare.
In the following month died Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester and lord
chancellor of England. This papistical monster was born at Bury, in Suffolk,
and partly educated at Cambridge. Ambitious, cruel, and bigoted, he served any
cause; he first espoused the king's part in the affair of Anne Boleyn: upon the
establishment of the Reformation he declared the supremacy of the pope an
execrable tenet; and when Queen Mary came to the crown, he entered into all her
papistical bigoted views, and became a second time bishop of Winchester. It is
conjectured it was his intention to have moved the sacrifice of Lady Elizabeth,
but when he arrived at this point, it pleased God to remove him.
It was on the afternoon of the day when those faithful soldiers of Christ,
Ridley and Latimer, perished, that Gardiner sat down with a joyful heart to
dinner. Scarcely had he taken a few mouthfuls, when he was seized with illness,
and carried to his bed, where he lingered fifteen days in great torment, unable
in any wise to evacuate, and burnt with a devouring fever, that terminated in
death. Execrated by all good Christians, we pray the Father of mercies, that he
may receive that mercy above he never imparted below.
Mr. John Philpot
This martyr was the son of a knight, born in Hampshire, and
brought up at New College, Oxford, where for several years he studied the civil
law, and became eminent in the Hebrew tongue. He was a scholar and a gentleman,
zealous in religion, fearless in disposition, and a detester of flattery. After
visiting Italy, he returned to England, affairs in King Edward's days wearing a
more promising aspect. During this reign he continued to be archdeacon of
Winchester under Dr. Poinet, who succeeded Gardiner. Upon the accession of
Mary, a convocation was summoned, in which Mr. Philpot defended the Reformation
against his ordinary, Gardiner, again made bishop of Winchester, and soon was
conducted to Bonner and other commissioners for examination, October 2, 1555,
after being eighteen months' imprisoned. Upon his demanding to see the
commission, Dr. Story cruelly observed, "I will spend both my gown and my
coat, but I will burn thee! Let him be in Lollard's tower, (a wretched prison,)
for I will sweep the king's Bench and all other prisons of these
heretics!"
Upon Mr. Philpot's second examination, it was intimated to him that Dr. Story
had said that the lord chancellor had commanded that he should be made away
with. It is easy to foretell the result of this inquiry. He was committed to
Bonner's coal house, where he joined company with a zealous minister of Essex,
who had been induced to sign a bill of recantation; but afterward, stung by his
conscience, he asked the bishop to let him see the instrument again, when he
tore it to pieces; which induced Bonner in a fury to strike him repeatedly, and
tear away part of his beard. Mr. Philpot had a private interview with Bonner
the same night, and was then remanded to his bed of straw like other prisoners,
in the coal house. After seven examinations, Bonner ordered him to be set in the
stocks, and on the following Sunday separated him from his fellow-prisoners as
a sower of heresy, and ordered him up to a room near the battlements of St.
Paul's, eight feet by thirteen, on the other side of Lollard's tower, and which
could be overlooked by any one in the bishop's outer gallery. Here Mr. Philpot
was searched, but happily he was successful in secreting some letters
containing his examinations.
In the eleventh investigation before various bishops, and Mr.
Morgan, of Oxford, the latter was so driven into a corner by the close pressure
of Mr. Philpot's arguments, that he said to him, "Instead of the spirit of
the Gospel which you boast to possess, I think it is the spirit of the buttery,
which your fellows have had, who were drunk before their death, and went, I
believe, drunken to it." To this unfounded and brutish remark, Mr. Philpot
indignantly replied, "It appeareth by your communication that you are
better acquainted with that spirit than the Spirit of God; wherefore I tell
thee, thou painted wall and hypocrite, in the name of the living God, whose
truth I have told thee, that God shall rain fire and brimstone upon such
blasphemers as thou art!" He was then remanded by Bonner, with an order
not to allow him his Bible nor candlelight.
On December 4, Mr. Philpot had his next hearing, and this was followed by two
more, making in all, fourteen conferences, previous to the final examination in
which he was condemned; such were the perseverance and anxiety of the
Catholics, aided by rthe argumentative abilities of the most distinguished of
the papal bishops, to bring him into the pale of their Church. Those
examinations, which were very long and learned, were all written down by Mr.
Philpot, and a stronger proof of the imbecility of the Catholic doctors,
cannot, to an unbiased mind, be exhibited.
On December 16, in the consistory of St. Paul's Bishop Bonner, after laying
some trifling accusations to his charge, such as secreting powder to make ink,
writing some private letters, etc., proceeded to pass the awful sentence upon
him, after he and the other bishops had urged him by every inducement to
recant. He was afterward conducted to Newgate, where the avaricious Catholic
keeper loaded him with heavy irons, which by the humanity of Mr. Macham were ordered
to be taken off. On December 17, Mr. Philpot received intimation that he was to
die next day, and the next morning about eight o'clock, he joyfully met the
sheriffs, who were to attend him to the place of execution.
Upon entering Smithfield, the ground was so muddy that two officers offered to
carry him to the stake, but he replied:
"Would you make me a pope? I am content to finish my journey on
foot." Arriving at the stake, he said, "Shall I disdain to suffer at
the stake, when my Redeemer did not refuse to suffer the most vile death upon
the cross for me?" He then meekly recited the One hundred and seventh and
One hundred and eighth Psalms, and when he had finished his prayers, was bound
to the post, and fire applied to the pile. On December 18, 1555, perished this
illustrious martyr, reverenced by man, and glorified in heaven!
John Lomas, Agnes Snoth, Anne Wright, Joan Sole, and Joan
Catmer
These five martyrs suffered together, January 31, 1556. John
Lomas was a young man of Tenterden. He was cited to appear at Catnerbury, and
was examined January 17. His answers being adverse to the idolatrous doctrine
of the papacy, he was condemned on the following day, and suffered January 31.
Agnes Snoth, widow, of Smarden Parish, was several times summoned before the
Catholic Pharisees, and rejecting absolution, indulgences, transubstantiation,
and auricular confession, she was adjudged worthy to suffer death, and endured
martyrdom, January 31, with Anne Wright and Joan Sole, who were placed in
similar circumstances, and perished at the same time, with equal resignation.
Joan Catmer, the last of this heavenly company, of the parish Hithe, was the
wife of the martyr George Catmer.
Seldom in any country, for political controversy, have four women been led to
execution, whose lives were irreproachable, and whom the pity of savages would
have spared. We cannot but remark here that, when the Protestant power first
gained the ascendency over the Catholic superstition, and some degree of force
in the laws was necessary to enforce uniformity, whence some bigoted people
suffered privation in their person or goods, we read of few burnings, savage
cruelties, or poor women brought to the stake, but it is the nature of error to
resort to force instead of argument, and to silence truth by taking away
existence, of which the Redeemer himself is an instance.
The above five persons were burnt at two stakes in one fire, singing hosannahs
to the glorified Savior, until the breath of life was extinct. Sir John Norton,
who was present, wept bitterly at their unmerited sufferings.
Archbishop Cranmer
Dr. Thomas Cranmer was descended from an ancient family, and
was born at the village of Arselacton, in the county of Northampton. After the
usual school education he was sent to Cambridge, and was chosen fellow Jesus
College. Here he married a gentleman's daughter, by which he forfeited his
fellowship, and became a reader in Buckingham College, placing his wife at the
Dolphin Inn, the landlady of which was a relation of hers, whence arose the idle
report that he was an ostler. His lady shortly after dying in childbed; to his
credit he was re-chosen a fellow of the college before mentioned. In a few
years after, he was promoted to be Divinity Lecturer, and appointed one of the
examiners over those who were ripe to become Bachelors or Doctors in Divinity.
It was his principle to judge of their qualifications by the knowledge they
possessed of the Scriptures, rather than of the ancient fathers, and hence many
popish priests were rejected, and others rendered much improved.
He was strongly solicited by Dr. Capon to be one of the fellows on the
foundation of Cardinal Wolsey's college, Oxford, of which he hazarded the
refusal. While he continued in Cambridge, the question of Henry VIII's divorce
with Catharine was agitated. At that time, on account of the plague, Dr.
Cranmer removed to the house of a Mr. Cressy, at Waltham Abbey, whose two sons
were then educating under him. The affair of divorce, contrary to the king's
approbation, had remained undecided above two or three years, from the
intrigues of the canonists and civilians, and though the cardinals Campeius and
Wolsey were commissioned from Rome to decide the question, they purposely
protracted the sentence.
It happened that Dr. Gardiner (secretary) and Dr. Fox, defenders of the king in
the above suit, came to the house of Mr. Cressy to lodge, while the king
removed to Greenwich. At supper, a conversation ensued with Dr. Cranmer, who
suggested that the question whether a man may marry his brother's wife or not,
could be easily and speedily decided by the Word of God, and this as well in
the English courts as in those of any foreign nation. The king, uneasy at the
delay, sent for Dr. Gardiner and Dr. Fox to consult them, regretting that a new
commission must be sent to Rome, and the suit be endlessly protracted. Upon
relating to the king the conversation which had passed on the previous evening
with Dr. Cranmer, his majesty sent for him, and opened the tenderness of
conscience upon the near affinity of the queen. Dr. Cranmer advised that the
matter should be referred to the most learned divines of Cambridge and Oxford,
as he was unwilling to meddle in an affair of such weight; but the king
enjoined him to deliver his sentiments in writing, and to repair for that
purpose to the earl of Wiltshire's, who would accommodate him with books,a nd
everything requisite for the occasion.
This Dr. Cranmer immediately did, and in his declaration not only quoted the
authority of the Scriptures, of general councils, and the ancient writers, but
maintained that the bishop of Rome had no authority whatever to dispense with
the Word of God. The king asked him if he would stand by this bold declaration,
to which replying in the affirmative, he was deputed ambassador to Rome, in
conjunction with the earl of Wiltshire, Dr. Stokesley, Dr. Carne, Dr. Bennet,
and others, previous to which, the marriage was discussed in most of the
universities of Christendom and at home.
When the pope presented his toe to be kissed, as customary, the earl of
Wiltshire and his party refused. Indeed, it is affirmed that a spaniel of the
earl's attracted by the littler of the pope's toe, made a snap at it, whence
his holiness drew in his sacred foot, and kicked at the offender with the
other.
Upon the pope demanding the cause of their embassy, the earl presented Dr.
Cranmer's book, declaring that his learned friends had come to defend it. The
pope treated the embassy honorably, and appointed a day for the discussion,
which he delayed, as if afraid of the issue of the investigation. The earl
returned, and Dr. Cranmer, by the king's desire, visited the emperor, and was
successful in bringing him over to his opinion. Upon the doctor's return to
England, Dr. Warham, archbishop of Canterbury, having quitted this transitory
life, Dr. Cranmer was deservedly, and by Dr. Warham's desire, elevated to that
eminent station.
In this function, it may be said that he followed closely the charge of St.
Paul. Diligent in duty, he rose at five in the morning, and continued in study
and prayer until nine: between then and dinner, he devoted to temporal affairs.
After dinner, if any suitors wanted hearing, he would determine their business
with such an affability that even the defaulters were scarcely displeased. Then
he would play at chess for an hour, or see others play, and at five o'clock he
heard the Common Prayer read, and from this until supper he took the recreation
of walking. At supper his conversation was lively and entertaining; again he
walked or amused himself until nine o'clock, and then entered his study.
He ranked high in favor with King Henry, and even had the purity and the
interest of the English Church deeply at heart. His mild and forgiving
disposition is recorded in the following instance. An ignorant priest, in the
country, had called Cranmer an ostler, and spoken very derogatory of his
learning. Lord Cromwell receiving information of it, the man was sent to the
Fleet, and his case was told to the archbishop by a Mr. Chertsey, a grocer, and
a relation of the priest's. His grace, having sent for the offender, reasoned
with him, and solicited the priest to question him on any learned subject. This
the man, overcome by the bishop's good nature, and knowing his own glaring
incapacity, declined, and entreated his forgiveness, which was immediately
granted, with a charge to employ his time better when he returned to his
parish. Cromwell was much vexed at the lenity displayed, but the bishop was
ever more ready to receive injury than to retaliate in any other manner than by
good advice and good offices.
At the time that Cranmer was raised to be archbishop, he was king's chaplain,
and archdeacon of Taunton; he was also constituted by the pope the penitentiary
general of England. It was considered by the king that Cranmer would be
obsequious; hence the latter married the king to Anne Boleyn, performed her
coronation, stood godfather to Elizabeth, the first child, and divorced the
king from Catharine. Though Cranmer received a confirmation of his dignity from
the pope, he always protested against acknowledging any other authority than
the king's, and he persisted in the same independent sentiments when before
Mary's commissioners in 1555.
One of the first steps after the divorce was to prevent preaching throughout
his diocese, but this narrow measure had rather a political view than a
religious one, as there were many who inveighed against the king's conduct. In
his new dignity Cranmer agitated the question of supremacy, and by his powerful
and just arguments induced the parliament to "render to Caesar the things
that are Caesar's." During Cranmer's residence in Germany, 1531, he became
acquainted with Ossiander, at Nuremberg, and married his niece, but left her
with him while on his return to England. After a season he sent for her
privately, and she remained with him until the year 1539, when the Six Articles
compelled him to return her to her friends for a time.
It should be remembered that Ossiander, having obtained the approbation of his
friend Cranmer, published the laborious work of the Harmony of the Gospels in
1537. In 1534 the archbishop completed the dearest wish of his heart, the
removal of every obstacle to the perfection of the Reformation, by the
subscription of the nobles and bishops to the king's sole supremacy. Only
Bishop Fisher and Sir Thomas More made objection; and their agreement not to
oppose the succession Cranmer was willing to consider at sufficient, but the
monarch would have no other than an entire concession.
Not long after, Gardiner, in a privat einterview with the king, spoke
inimically of Cranmer, (whom he maliciously hated) for assumiong the title of
primate of all England, as derogatory to the supremacy of the king. This
created much jealousy against Cranmer, and his translation of the Bible was
strongly opposed by Stokesley, bishop of London. It is said, upon the demise of
Queen Catharine, that her successor Anne Boleyn rejoiced-a lesson this to show
how shallow is the human judgment! since her own execution took place in the
spring of the following year, and the king, on the day following the beheading
of this sacrificed lady, married the beautiful Jane Seymour, a maid of honor to
the late queen. Cranmer was ever the friend of Anne Boleyn, but it was
dangerous to oppose the will of the carnal tyrannical monarch.
In 1538, the Holy Scriptures were openly exposed to sale; and the places of
worship overflowed everywhere to hear its holy doctrines expounded. Upon the
king's passing into a law the famous Six Articles, which went nearly again to
establish the essential tenets of the Romish creed, Cranmer shone forth with
all the luster of a Christian patiot, in resisting the doctrines they
contained, and in which he was supported by the bishops of Sarum, Worcester,
Ely, and Rochester, the two former of whom resigned their bishoprics. The king,
though now in opposition to Cranmer, still revered the sincerity that marked
his conduct. The death of Lord Cromwell in the Tower, in 1540, the good friend
of Cranmer, was a severe blow to the wavering Protestant cause, but even now
Cranmer, when he saw the tide directly adverse to the truth, boldly waited on
the king in person, and by his manly and heartfelt pleading, caused the Book of
Articles to be passed on his side, to the great confusion of his enemies, who
had contemplated his fall as inevitable.
Cranmer now lived in as secluded a manner as possible, until the rancor of
Winchester preferred some articles against him, relative to the dangerous
opinion he taught in his family, joined to other treasonable charges. These the
king himself delivered to Cranmer, and believing firmly the fidelity and
assertions of innocence of the accused prelate, he caused the matter to be
deeply investigated, and Winchester and Dr. Lenden, with Thornton and Barber,
of the bishop's household, were found by the papers to be the real
conspirators. The mild, forgiving Cranmer would have interceded for all
remission of publishment, had not Henry, pleased with the subsidy voted by
parliament, let them be discharged. These nefarious men, however, again
renewing their plots against Cranmer, fell victims to Henry's resentment, and
Gardiner forever lost his confidence. Sir G. Gostwick soon after laid charges
against the archbishop, which Henry quashed, and the primate was willing to
forgive.
In 1544, the archbishop's palace at Canterbury was burnt, and his
brother-in-law with others perished in it. These various afflictions may serve
to reconcile us to a humble state; for of what happiness could this great and
good man boast, since his life was constantly harassed either by political,
religious, or natural crosses? Again the inveterate Gardfiner laid high charges
against the meek archbishop and would have sent him to the Tower; but the king
was his friend, gave him his signet that he might defend him, and in the
Council not only declared the bishop one of the best affected men in his realm,
but sharpoly rebuked his accusers for their calumny.
A peace having been made, Henry, and the French king, Henry the Great, were
unanimous to have the Mass abolished in their kingdom, and Cranmer set about
this great work; but the death of the English monarch, in 1546, suspended the
precedure, and King Edwarrd his successor continued Cranmer in the same
functions, upon whose coronation he delivered a charge that will ever honor his
memory, for its purity, freedom, and truth. During this reign he prosecuted the
glorious Reformation with unabated zeal, even in the year 1552, when he was
seized with a severe ague, from which it pleased God to restore him that he might
testify by his death the truth of that seed he had diligently sown.
The death of Edward, in 1553, exposed Cranmer to all the rage of his enemies.
Though the archbishop was among those who supported Mary's accession, he was
attainted at the meeting of parliament, and in November adjudged guilty of high
treason at Guildhall, and degraded from his dignities. He sent a humble letter
to Mary, explaining the cause of his signing the will in favor of Edward, and
in 1554 he wrote to the Council, whom he pressed to obtain a pardon from the
queen, by a letter delivered to Dr. Weston, but which the letter opened, and on
seeing its contents, basely returned.
Treason was a charge quite inapplicable to Cranmer, who supported the queen's
right; while others, who had favored Lady Jane were dismissed upon paying a
small fine. A calumny was now spread against Cranmer that he complied with some
of the popish ceremonies to ingratiate himself with the queen, which he dared
publicly to disavow, and justified his articles of faith. The active part which
the prelate had taken in the divorce of Mary's mother had ever rankled deeply
in the heart of the queen, and revenge formed a prominent feature in the death
of Cranmer.
We have in this work noticed the public disputations at Oxford, in which the
talents of Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer shone so conspicuously, and tended to
their condemnation. The first sentence was illegal, inasmuch as the usurped
power of the pope had not yet been re-established by law.
Being kept in prison until this was effected, a commission was despatched from
Rome, appointing Dr. Brooks to sit as the representative of his holiness, and
Drs. Story and Martin as those of the queen. Cranmer was willing to bow to the
authority of Drs. Story and Martin, but against that of Dr. Brooks he
protested. Such were the remarks and replies of Cranmer, after a long
examination, that Dr. Broks observed, "We come to examine you, and
methinks you examine us."
Being sent back to confinement, he received a citation to appear at Rome within
eighteen days, but this was impracticable, as he was imprisoned in England; and
as he stated, even had he been at liberty, he was too poor to employ an
advocate. Absurd as it must appear, Cranmer was condemned at Rome, and on
February 14, 1556, a new commission was appointed, by which, Thirlby, bishop of
Ely, and Bonner, of London, were deputed to sit in judgment at Christ-church,
Oxford. By virtue of this instrument, Cranmer was gradually degraded, by
putting mere rags on him to represent the dress of an archbishop; then
stripping him of his attire, they took off his own gown, and put an old worn
one upon him instead. This he bore unmoved, and his enemies, finding that
severity only rendered him more determined, tried the opposite course, and placed
him in the house of the dean of Christ-church, where he was treated with every
indulgence.
This presented such a contrast to the three years' hard imprisonment he had
received, that it threw him off his guard. His open, generous nature was more
easily to be seduced by a liberal conduct than by threats and fetters. When
Satan finds the Christian proof against one mode of attack, he tries another;
and what form is so seductive as smiles, rewards, and power, after a long,
painful imprisonment? Thus it was with Cranmer: his enemies promised him his
former greatness if he would but recant, as well as the queen's favor, and this
at the very time they knew that his death was determined in council. To soften
the path to apostasy, the first paper brought for his signature was conceived
in general terms; this once signed, five others were obtained as explanatory of
the first, until finally he put his hand to the following detestable
instrument:
"I, Thomas Cranmer, late archbishop of Canterbury, do renounce, abhor, and
detest all manner of heresies and errors of Luther and Zuinglius, and all other
teachings which are contrary to sound and true doctrine. And I believe most
constantly in my heart, and with my mouth I confess one holy and Catholic
Church visible, without which there is no salvation; and therefore I
acknowledge the Bishop of Rome to be supreme head on earth, whom I acknowledge
to be the highest bishop and pope, and Christ's vicar, unto whom all Christian
people ought to be subject.
"And as concerning the sacraments, I believe and worship int he sacrament
of the altar the body and blood of Christ, being contained most truly under the
forms of bread and wine; the bread, through the mighty power of God being
turned into the body of our Savior Jesus Christ, and the wine into his blood.
"And in the other six sacraments, also, (alike as in this) I believe and
hold as the universal Church holdeth, and the Church of Rome judgeth and
determineth.
"Furthermore, I believe that there is a place of purgatory, where souls
departed be punished for a time, for whom the Church doth godily and
wholesomely pray, like as it doth honor saints and make prayers to them.
"Finally, in all things I profess, that I do not otherwise believe than
the Catholic Church and the Church of Rome holdeth and teacheth. I am sorry
that I ever held or thought otherwise. And I beseech Almighty God, that of His
mercy He will vouchsafe to forgive me whatsoever I have offended against God or
His Church, and also I desire and beseech all Christian people to pray for me.
"And all such as have been deceived either by mine example or doctrine, I
require them by the blood of Jesus Christ that they will return to the unity of
the Church, that we may be all of one mind, without schism or division.
"And to conclude, as I submit myself to the Catholic Church of Christ, and
to the supreme head thereof, so I submit myself unto the most excellent
majesties of Philip and Mary, king and queen of this realm of England, etc.,
and to all other their laws and ordinances, being ready always as a faithful
subject ever to obey them. And God is my witness, that I have not done this for
favor or fear of any person, but willingly and of mine own conscience, as to
the instruction of others."
"Let him that standeth take heed lest he fall!" said the apostle, and
here was a falling off indeed! The papists now triumphed in their turn: they
had acquired all they wanted short of his life. His recantation was immediately
printed and dispersed, that it might have its due effect upon the astonished
Protestants. But God counter worked all the designs of the Catholics by the
extent to which they carried the implacable persecution of their prey.
Doubtless, the love of life induced Cranmer to sign the above declaration: yet
death may be said to have been preferable to life to him who lay under the
stings of a goaded conscience and the contempt of every Gospel Christian; this
principle he strongly felt in all its force and anguish.
The queen's revenge was only to be satiated by Cranmer's blood, and therefore
she wrote an order to Dr. Pole, to prepare a sermon to be preached March 21,
directly before his martyrdom, at St. Mary's, Oxford. Dr. Pole visited him the
day previous, and was induced to believe that he would publicly deliver his
sentiments in confirmation of the articles to which he had subscribed. About
nine in the morning of the day of sacrifice, the queen's commissioners,
attended by the magistrates, conducted the amiable unfortunate to St. Mary's
Church. His torn, dirty garb, the same in which they habited him upon his
degradation, excited the commiseration of the people. In the church he found a
low mean stage, erected opposite to the pulpit, on which being placed, he
turned his face, and fervently prayed to God.
The church was crowded with persons of both persuasions, expecting to hear the
justification of the late apostasy: the Catholics rejoicing, and the
Protestants deeply wounded in spirit at the deceit of the human heart. Dr.
Pole, in his sermon, represented Cranmer as having been guilty of the most
atrocious crimes; encouraged the deluded sufferer not to fear death, not to
doubt the support of God in his torments, nor that Masses would be said in all
the churches of Oxford for the repose of his soul. The doctor then noticed his
conversion, and which he ascribed to the evident working of Almighty power and
in order that the people might be convinced of its reality, asked the prisoner
to give them a sign. This Cranmer did, and begged the congregation to pray for
him, for he had committed many and grievous sins; but, of all, there was one
which awfully lay upon his mind, of which he would speak shortly.
During the sermon Cranmer wept bitter tears: lifting up his hands and eyes to
heaven, and letting them fall, as if unworthy to live: his grief now found vent
in words: before his confession he fell upon his knees, and, in the following
words unveiled the deep contrition and agitation which harrowed up his soul.
"O Father of heaven! O Son of God, Redeemer of the world! O Holy Ghost,
three persons all one God! have mercy on me, most wretched caitiff and
miserable sinner. I have offended both against heaven and earth, more than my
tongue can express. Whither then may I go, or whither may I flee? To heaven I
may be ashamed to lift up mine eyes and in earth I find no place of refuge or
succor. To Thee, therefore, O Lord, do I run; to Thee do I humble myself,
saying, O Lord, my God, my sins be great, but yet have mercy upon me for Thy
great mercy. The great mystery that God became man, was not wrought for little
or few offences. Thou didst not give Thy Son, O Heavenly Father, unto death for
small sins only, but for all the greatest sins of the world, so that the sinner
return to Thee with his whole heart, as I do at present. Wherefore, have mercy
on me, O God, whose property is always to have mercy, have mercy upon me, O
Lord, for Thy great mercy. I crave nothing for my own merits, but for Thy
name's sake, that it may be hallowed thereby, and for Thy dear Son, Jesus
Christ's sake. And now therefore, O Father of Heaven, hallowed be Thy
name," etc.
Then rising, he said he was desirous before his death to give them some pious
exhortations by which God might be glorified and themselves edified. He then
descanted upon the danger of a love for the world, the duty of obedience to
their majesties, of love to one another and the necessity of the rich
administering to the wants of the poor. He quoted the three verses of the fifth
chapter of James, and then proceeded, "Let them that be rich ponder well
these three sentences: for if they ever had occasion to show their charity,
they have it now at this present, the poor people being so many, and victual so
dear.
"And now forasmuch as I am come to the last end of my life, whereupon
hangeth all my life past, and all my life to come, either to live with my
master Christ for ever in joy, or else to be in pain for ever with the wicked
in hell, and I see before mine eyes presently, either heaven ready to receive
me, or else hell ready to swallow me up; I shall therefore declare unto you my
very faith how I believe, without any color of dissimulation: for now is no
time to dissemble, whatsoever I have said or written in times past.
"First, I believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth,
etc. And I believe every article of the Catholic faith, every word and sentence
taught by our Savior Jesus Christ, His apostles and prophets, in the New and
Old Testament.
"And now I come to the great thing which so much troubleth my conscience,
more than any thing that ever I did or said in my whole life, and that is the
setting abroad of a writing contrary to the truth, which now here I renounce
and refuse, as things written with my hand contrary to the truth which I
thought in my heart, and written for fear of death, and to save my life, if it
might be; and that is, all such bills or papers which I have written or signed
with my hand since my degradation, wherein I have written many things untrue.
And forasmuch as my hand hath offended, writing contrary to my heart, therefore
my hand shall first be punished; for when I come to the fire it shall first be
burned.
"And as for the pope, I refuse him as Christ's enemy, and Antichrist, with
all his false doctrine."
Upon the conclusion of this unexpected declaration, amazement and indignation
were conspicuous in every part of the church. The Catholics were completely
foiled, their object being frustrated, Cranmer, like Samson, having completed a
greater ruin upon his enemies in the hour of death, than he did in his life.
Cranmer would have proceeded in the exposure of the popish doctrines, but the
murmurs of the idolaters drowned his voice, and the preacher gave an order to
"lead the heretic away!" The savage command was directly obeyed, and
the lamb about to suffer was torn from his stand to the place of slaughter,
insulted all the way by the revilings and taunts of the pestilent monks and
friars.
With thoughts intent upon a far higher object than the empty threats of man, he
reached the spot dyed with the blood of Ridley and Latimer. There he knelt for
a short time in earnest devotion, and then arose, that he might undress and
prepare for the fire. Two friars who had been parties in prevailing upon him to
abjure, now endeavored to draw him off again from the truth, but he was steadfast
and immovable in what he had just professed, and publicly taught. A chain was
provided to bind him to the stake, and after it had tightly encircled him, fire
was put to the fuel, and the flames began soon to ascend.
Then were the glorious sentiments of the martyr made manifest; then it was,
that stretching out his right hand, he held it unshrinkingly in the fire until
it was burnt to a cinder, even before his body wa sinjured, frequently
exclaiming, "This unworthy right hand."
His body did abide the burning with such steadfastness that he seemed to have
no more than the stake to which he was bound; his eyes were lifted up to
heaven, and he repeated "this unworthy right hand," as long as his
voice would suffer him; and using often the words of Stephen, "Lord Jesus,
receive my spirit," in the greatness of the flame, he gave up the ghost.
The Vision of Three Ladders
When Robert Samuel was brought forth to be burned, certain
there were that heard him declare what strange things had happened unto him
during the time of his imprisonment; to wit, that after he had famished or
pined with hunger two or three days together, he then fell into a sleep, as it
were one half in a slumber, at which time one clad all in white seemed to stand
before him, who ministered comfort unto him by these words:
"Samuel, Samuel, be of good cheer, and take a good heart unto thee: for
after this day shalt thou never be either hungry or thirsty."
No less memorable it is, and worthy to be noted, concerning the three ladders
which he told to divers he saw in his sleep, set up toward heaven; of the which
there was one somewhat longer than the rest, but yet at length they became one,
joining (as it were) all three together.
As this godly martyr was going to the fire, there came a certain maid to him,
which took him about the neck, and kissed him, who, being marked by them that
were present, was sought for the next day after, to be had to prison and
burned, as the very party herself informed me: howbeit, as God of His goodness
would have it, she escaped their fiery hands, keeping herself secret in the
town a good while after.
But as this maid, called Rose Nottingham, was marvellously preserved by the
providence of God, so there were other two honest women who did fall into the
rage and fury of that time. The one was a brewer's wife, the other was a
shoemaker's wife, but both together now espoused to a new husband, Christ.
With these two was this maid aforesaid very familiar and well acquainted, who,
on a time giving counsel to the one of them, that she should convey herself
away while she had time and space, had this answer at her hand again: "I
know well," saith she, "that it is lawful enough to fly away; which
remedy you may use, if you list. But my case standeth otherwise. I am tied to a
husband, and have besides young children at home; therefore I am minded, for
the love of Christ and His truth, to stand to the extremity of the
matter."
And so the next day after Samuel suffered, these two godly wives, the one
called Anne Potten, the other called Joan Trunchfield, the wife of Michael
Trunchfield, shoemaker, of Ipswich, were apprehended, and had both into one
prison together. As they were both by sex and nature somewhat tender, so were
they at first less able to endure the straitness of the prison; and especially
the brewer's wife was cast into marvellous great agonies and troubles of mind
thereby. But Christ, beholding the weak infirmity of His servant, did not fail
to help her when she was in this necessity; so at the length they both suffered
after Samuel, in 1556, February 19. And these, no dobut, were those two
ladders, which, being joined with the third, Samuel saw stretched up into
heaven. This blessed Samuel, the servant of Christ, suffered the thirty-first
of August, 1555.
The report goeth among some that were there present, and saw him burn, that his
body in burning did shine in the eyes of them that stood by, as bright and
white as new-tried silver.
When Agnes Bongeor saw herself separated from her prison-fellows, what piteous
moan that good woman made, how bitterly she wept, what strange thoughts came
into her mind, how naked and desolate she esteemed herself, and into what
plunge of despair and care her poor soul was brought, it was piteous and
wonderful to see; which all came because she went not with them to give her
life in the defence of her Christ; for of all things in the world, life was
least looked for at her hands.
For that morning in which she was kept back from burning, had she put on a
smock, that she had prepared only for that purpose. And also having a child, a
little young infant sucking on her, whom she kept with her tenderly all the
time that she was in prison, against that day likewise did she send away to
another nurse, and prepared herself presently to give herself for the testimony
of the glorious Gospel of Jesus Christ. So little did she look for life, and so
greatly did God's gifts work in her above nature, that death seemed a great
deal better welcome than life. After which, she began a little to stay herself,
and gave her whole exercise to reading and prayer, wherein she found no little
comfort.
In a short time came a writ from London for the burning, which according to the
effect thereof, was executed.
Hugh Laverick and John Aprice
Here we perceive that neither the impotence of age nor the
affliction of blindness, could turn aside the murdering fangs of these
Babylonish monsters. The first of these unfortunates was of the parish of
Barking, aged sixty-eight, a painter and a cripple. The other was blind, dark
indeed in his visual faculties, but intellectually illuminated with the
radiance of the everlasting Gospel of truth. Inoffensive objects like these
were informed against by some of the sons of bigotry, and dragged before the
prelatical shark of London, where they underwent examination, and replied to
the articles propounded to them, as other Christian martyrs had done before. On
the ninth day of May, in the consistory of St. Paul's, they were entreated to
recant, and upon refusal, were sent to Fulham, where Bonner, by way of a
dessert after dinner, condemned them to the agonies of the fire. Being
consigned to the secular officers, May 15, 1556, they were taken in a cart from
Newgate to Stratford-le-Bow, where they were fastened to the stake. When Hugh
Laverick was secured by the chain, having no further occasion for his crutch,
he threw it away saying to his fellow-martyr, while consoling him, "Be of
good cheer my brother; for my lord of London is our good physician; he will
heal us both shortly-thee of thy blindness, and me of my lameness." They
sank down in the fire, to rise to immortality!
The day after the above martyrdoms, Catharine Hut, of Bocking, widow; Joan
Horns, spinster, of Billerica; Elizabeth Thackwel, spinster, of Great Burstead,
suffered death in Smithfield.
Thomas Dowry. We have again to record an act of unpitying cruelty, exercised on
this lad, whom Bishop Hooper, had confirmed in the Lord and the knowledge of
his Word.
How long this poor sufferer remained in prison is uncertain.
By the testimony of one John Paylor, register of Gloucester, we learn that when
Dowry was brought before Dr. Williams, then chancellor of Gloucester, the usual
articles were presented him for subscription. From these he dissented; and,
upon the doctor's demanding of whom and where he had learned his heresies, the
youth replied, "Indeed, Mr. Chancellor, I learned from you in that very
pulpit. On such a day (naming the day) you said, in preaching upon the
Sacrament, that it was to be exercised spiritually by faith, and not carnally and
really, as taught by the papists." Dr. Williams then bid him recant, as he
had done; but Dowry had not so learned his duty. "Though you," said
he, "can so easily mock God, the world, and your own conscience, yet will
I not do so."
Preservation of George Crow and His Testament
This poor man, of Malden, May 26, 1556, put to sea, to lade in Lent with fuller's earth, but the boat, being driven on land, filled with water, and everything was washed out of her; Crow, however, saved his Testament, and coveted nothing else. With Crow was a man and a boy, whose awful situation became every minute more alarming, as the boat was useless, and they were ten miles from land, expecting the tide should in a few hours set in upon them. After prayer to God, they got upon the mast, and hung there for the space of ten hours, when the poor boy, overcome by cold and exhaustion, fell off, and was drowned. The tide having abated, Crow proposed to take down the masts, and float upon them, which they did; and at ten o'clock at night they were borne away at the mercy of the waves. On Wednesday, in the night, Crow's companion died through the fatigue and hunger, and he was left alone, calling upon God for succor. At length he was picked up by a Captain Morse, bound to Antwerp, who had nearly steered away, taking him for some fisherman's buoy floating in the sea. As soon as Crow was got on board, he put his hand in his bosom, and drew out his Testament, which indeed was wet, but not otherwise injured. At Antwerp he was well received, and the money he had lost was more than made good to him.
Executions at Stratford-le-Bow
At this sacrifice, which we are about to detail no less than
thirteen were doomed to the fire.
Each one refusing to subscribe contrary to conscience, they were condemned, and
the twenty-seventh of June, 1556, was appointed for their execution at
Stratford-le-Bow. Their constancy and faith glorified their Redeemer, equally
in life and in death.
Rev. Julius Palmer
This gentleman's life presents a singular instance of error and
conversion. In the time of Edward, he was a rigid and obstinate papist, so
adverse to godly and sincere preaching, that he was even despised by his own
party; that this frame of mind should be changed, and he suffer persecution and
death in Queen Mary's reign, are among those events of omnipotence at which we
wonder and admire.
Mr. Palmer was born at Coventry, where his father had been mayor. Being
afterward removed to Oxford, he became, under Mr. Harley, of Magdalen College,
an elegant Latin and Greek scholar. He was fond of useful disputation,
possessed of a lively wit, and a strong memory. Indefatigable in private study,
he rose at four in the morning, and by this practice qualified himself to
become reader in logic in Magralen College. The times of Edward, however,
favoring the Reformation, Mr. Palmer became frequently punished for his
contempt of prayer and orderly behavior, and was at length expelled the house.
He afterwards embraced the doctrines of the Reformation, which occasioned his
arrest and final condemnation.
A certain nobleman offered him his life if he would recant.
"If so," said he, "thou wilt dwell with me. And if thou wilt set
thy mind to marriage, I will procure thee a wife and a farm, and help to stuff
and fit thy farm for thee. How sayst thou?"
Palmer thanked him very courteously, but very modestly and reverently concluded
that as he had already in two places renounced his living for Christ's sake, so
he would with God's grace be ready to surrender and yield up his life also for
the same, when God should send time.
When Sir Richard perceived that he would by no means relent:
"Well, Palmer," saith he, "then I perceive one of us twain shall
be damned: for we be of two faiths, and certain I am there is but one faith
that leadeth to life and salvation."
Palmer: "O sir, I hope that we both shall be saved."
Sir Richard: "How may that be?"
Palmer: "Right well, sir. For as it hath pleased our
merciful Savior, according to the Gospel's parable, to call me at the third
hour of the day, even in my flowers, at the age of four and twenty years, even
so I trust He hath called, and will call you, at the eleventh hour of this your
old age, and give you everlasting life for your portion."
Sir Richard: "Sayest thou so? Well, Palmer, well, I would I might have
thee but one month in my house: I doubt not but I would convert thee, or thou
shouldst convert me."
Then said Master Winchcomb, "Take pity on thy golden years, and pleasant
flowers of lusty youth, before it be too late."
Palmer: "Sir, I long for those springing flowers that shall never fade
away."
He was tried on the fifteenth of July, 1556, together with one Thomas Askin,
fellow prisoner. Askin and one John Guin had been sentenced the day before, and
Mr. Palmer, on the fifteenth, was brought up for final judgment. Execution was
ordered to follow the sentence, and at five o'clock in the same afternoon, at a
place called the Sand-pits, these three martyrs were fastened to a stake. After
devoutly praying together, they sung the Thirty-first Psalm.
When the fire was kindled, and it had seized their bodies, without an
appearance of enduring pain, they continued to cry, "Lord Jesus,
strengthen us! Lord Jesus receive our souls!" until animation was
suspended and human suffering was past. It is remarkable, that, when their
heads had fallen together in a mass as it were by the force of the flames, and
the spectators thought Palmer as lifeless, his tongue and lips again moved, and
were heard to pronounce the name of Jesus, to whom be glory and honor forever!
Joan Waste and Others
This poor, honest woman, blind from her birth, and
unmarried, aged twenty-two, was of the parish of Allhallows, Derby. Her father
was a barber, and also made ropes for a living: in which she assisted him, and
also learned to knit several articles of apparel. Refusing to communicate with
those who maintained doctrines contrary to those she had learned in the days of
the pious Edward, she was called before Dr. Draicot, the chancellor of Bishop
Blaine, and Peter Finch, official of Derby.
With sophisitcal arguments and threats they endeavored to confound the poor
girl; but she proffered to yield to the bishop's doctrine, if he would answer
for her at the Day of Judgment, (as pious Dr. Taylor had done in his sermons)
that his belief of the real presence of the Sacrament was true. The bishop at
first answered that he would; but Dr. Draicot reminding him that he might not
in any way answer for a heretic, he withdrew his confirmation of his own
tenets; and she replied that if their consciences would not permit them to
answer at God's bar for that truth they wished her to subscribe to, she would
answer no more questions. Sentence was then adjudged, and Dr. Draicot appointed
to preach her condemned sermon, which took place August 1, 1556, the day of her
martyrdom. His fulminating discourse being finished, the poor, sightless object
was taken to a place called Windmill Pit, near the town, where she for a time
held her brother by the hand, and then prepared herself for the fire, calling
upon the pitying multitude to pray with her, and upon Christ to have mercy upon
her, until the glorious light of the everlasting Sun of righteousness beamed
upon her departed spirit.
In November, fifteen martyrs were imprisoned in Canterbury castle, of whom all
were either burnt or famished. Among the latter were J. Clark, D. Chittenden,
W. Foster of Stonc, Alice Potkins, and J. Archer, of Cranbrooke, weaver. The
two first of these had not received condemnation, but the others were sentenced
to the fire. Foster, at his examination, observed upon the utility of carrying
lighted candles about on Candlemas-day, that he might as well carry a
pitchfork; and that a gibbet would have as good an effect as the cross.
We have now brought to a close the sanguinary proscriptions of the merciless
Mary, in the year 1556, the number of which amounted to above EIGHTY-FOUR!
The beginning of the year 1557, was remarkable for the visit of Cardinal Pole
to the University of Cambridge, which seemed to stand in need of much cleansing
from heretical preachers and reformed doctrines. One object was also to play
the popish farce of trying Martin Bucer and Paulus Phagius, who had been buried
about three or four years; for which purpose the churches of St. Mary and St.
Michael, where they lay, were interdicted as vile and unholy places, unfit to
worship God in, until they were perfumed and washed with the pope's holy water,
etc., etc. The trumpery act of citing these dead reformers to appear, not
having had the least effect upon them, on January 26, sentence of condemnation
was passed, part of which ran in this manner, and may serve as a specimen of
proceedings of this nature: "We therefore pronounce the said Martin Bucer
and Paulus Phagius excommunicated and anathematized, as well by the common law,
as by letters of process; and that their memory be condemned, we also condemn
their bodies and bones (which in that wicked time of schism, and other heresies
flourishing in this kingdom, were rashly buried in holy ground) to be dug up,
and cast far from the bodies and bones of the faithful, according to the holy
canons, and we command that they and their writings, if any be there found, be
publicly burnt; and we interdict all persons whatsoever of this university,
town, or places adjacent, who shall read or conceal their heretical book, as
well by the common law, as by our letters of process!"
After the sentence thus read, the bishop commanded their bodies to be dug out
of their graves, and being degraded from holy orders, delivered them into the
hands of the secular power; for it was not lawful for such innocent persons as
they were, abhorring all bloodshed, and detesting all desire of murder, to put
any man to death.
February 6, the bodies, enclosed as they were in chests, were carried into the
midst of the market place at Cambrdige, accompanied by a vast concourse of
people. A great post was set fast in the ground, to which the chests were
affixed with a large iron chain, and bound round their centers, in the same
manner as if the dead bodies had been alive. When the fire began to ascend, and
caught the coffins, a number of condemned books were also launched into the
flames, and burnt. Justice, however, was done to the memories of these pious
and learned men in Queen Elizabeth's reign, when Mr. Ackworth, orator of the
university, and Mr. J. Pilkington, pronounced orations in honor of their
memory, and in reprobation of their Catholic persecutors.
Cardinal Pole also inflicted his harmless rage upon the dead body of Peter
Martyr's wife, who, by his command, was dug out of her grave, and buried on a
distant dunghill, partly because her bones lay near St. Fridewide's relics,
held once in great esteem in that college, and partly because he wished to
purify Oxford of heretical remains as well as Cambridge. In the succeeding
reign, however, her remains were restored to their former cemetery, and even
intermingled with those of the Catholic saint, to the utter astonishment and
mortification of the disciples of his holiness the pope.
Cardinal Pole published a list of fifty-four articles, containing instructions
to the clergy of his diocese of Canterbury, some of which are too ludicrous and
puerile to excite any other sentiment than laughter in these days.
Persecutions in the Diocese of Canterbury
In the month of February, the following persons were
committed to prison: R. Coleman, of Waldon, laborer; Joan Winseley, of Horsley
Magna, spinster; S. Glover, of Rayley; R. Clerk, of Much Holland, mariner; W.
Munt, of Much Bentley, sawyer; Marg. Field, of Ramsey, spinster; R. Bongeor,
currier; R. Jolley, mariner;
Allen Simpson, Helen Ewire, C. Pepper, widow; Alice Walley (who recanted), W.
Bongeor, glazier, all of Colchester; R. Atkin, of Halstead, weaver; R. Barcock,
of Wilton, carpenter; R. George, of Westbarhonlt, laborer; R. Debnam of
Debenham, weaver; C. Warren, of Cocksall, spinster; Agnes Whitlock, of
Dover-court, spinster;
Rose Allen, spinster; and T. Feresannes, minor; both of Colchester.
These persons were brought before Bonner, who would have immediately sent them
to execution, but Cardinal Pole was for more merciful measures, and Bonner, in
a letter of his to the cardinal, seems to be sensible that he had displeased
him, for he has this expression: "I thought to have them all hither to
Fulham, and to have given sentence against them; nevertheless, perceiving by my
last doing that your grace was offended, I thought it my duty, before I
proceeded further, to inform your grace." This circumstance verifies the
account that the cardinal was a humane man; and though a zealous Catholic, we,
as Protestants, are willing to render him that honor which his merciful
character deserves. Some of the bitter persecutors denounced him to the pope as
a favorer of heretics, and he was summoned to Rome, but Queen Mary, by
particular entreaty, procured his stay. However, before his latter end, and a
little before his last journey from Rome to England, he was strongly suspected
of favoring the doctrine of Luther.
As in the last sacrifice four women did honor to the truth, so in the following
auto da fe we have the like number of females and males, who suffered June 30,
1557, at Canterbury, and were J. Fishcock, F. White, N. Pardue, Barbary Final,
widow, Bardbridge's widow, Wilson's wife, and Benden's wife.
Of this group we shall more particularly notice Alice Benden, wife of Edward
Bender, of Staplehurst, Kent. She had been taken up in October, 1556, for
non-attendance, and released upon a strong injunction to mind her conduct. Her
husband was a bigoted Catholic, and publicly speaking of his wife's contumacy,
she was conveyed to Canterbury Castle, where knowing, when she should be
removed to the bishop's prison, she should be almost starved upon three
farthings a day, she endeavored to prepare herself for this suffering by living
upon twopence halfpenny per day.
On January 22, 1557, her husband wrote to the bishop that if his wife's
brother, Roger Hall, were to be kept from consoling and relieving her, she
might turn; on this account, she was moved to a prison called Monday's Hole.
Her brother sought diligently for her, and at the end of five weeks
providentially heard her voice in the dungeon, but could not otherwise relieve
her, than by putting soe money in a loaf, and sticking it on a long pole.
Dreadful must have been the situation of this poor victim, lying on straw,
between stone walls, without a change of apparel, or the meanest requisites of
cleanliness, during a period of nine weeks!
On March 25 she was summoned before the bishop, who, with rewards, offered her
liberty if she would go home and be comfortable; but Mrs. Benden had been
inured to suffering, and, showing him her contracted limbs and emaciated
appearance, refused to swerve from the truth. She was however removed from this
black hole to the West Gate, whence, about the end of April, she was taken out
to be condemned, and then committed to the castle prison until the nineteenth
of June, the day of her burning. At the stake, she gave her handkerchief to one
John Banks, as a memorial; and from her waist she drew a white lace, desiring
him to give it to her brother, and tell him that it was the last band that had
bound her, except the chain; and to her father she returned a shilling he had
sent her.
The whole of these seven martyrs undressed themselves with alacrity, and, being
prepared, knelt down, and prayed with an earnestness and Christian spirit that
even the enemies of the cross were affected. After invocation made together,
they were secured to the stake, and, being encompassed with the unsparing
flames, they yielded their souls into the hands of the living Lord.
Matthew Plaise, weaver, a sincere and shrewd Christian, of Stone, Kent, was
brought before Thomas, bishop of Dover, and other inquisitors, whom he
ingeniously teased by his indirect answers, of which the following is a
specimen.
Dr. Harpsfield. Christ called the bread His body; what dost thou say it is?
Plaise. I do believe it was that which He gave them.
Dr. H. What as that?
P. That which He brake.
Dr. H. What did He brake?
P. That which He took.
Dr. H. What did He take?
P. I say, what He gave them, that did they eat indeed.
Dr. H. Well, then, thou sayest it was but bread which the disciples did eat.
P. I say, what He gave them, that did they eat indeed.
A very long disputation followed, in which Plaise was desired to humble himself
to the bishop; but this he refused. Whether this zealous person died in prison,
was executed, or delivered, history does not mention.
Rev. John Hullier
Rev. John Hullier was brought up at Eton College, and in
process of time became curate of Babram, three miles from Cambridge, and went
afterward to Lynn; where, opposing the superstition of the papists, he was
carried before Dr. Thirlby, bishop of Ely, and sent to Cambridge castle: here
he lay for a time, and was then sent to Tolbooth prison, where, after three
months, he was brought to St. Mary's Church, and condemned by Dr. Fuller. On
Maunday Thursday he was brought to the stake: while undressing, he told the
people to bear witness that he was about to suffer in a just cause, and
exhorted them to believe that there was no other rock than Jesus Christ to
build upon. A priest named Boyes, then desired the mayor to silence him. After
praying, he went meekly to the stake, and being bound with a chain, and placed
in a pitch barrel, fire was applied to the reeds and wood; but the wind drove
the fire directly to his back, which caused him under the severe agony to pray
the more fervently. His friends directed the executioner to fire the pile to
windward of his face, which was immediately done.
A quantity of books were now thrown into the fire, one of which (the Communion
Service) he caught, opened it, and joyfully continued to read it, until the
fire and smoke deprived him of sight; then even, in earnest prayer, he pressed
the book to his heart, thanking God for bestowing on him in his last moments
this precious gift.
The day being hot, the fire burnt fiercely; and at a time when the spectators
supposed he was no more, he suddenly exclaimed, "Lord Jesus, receive my
spirit," and meekly resigned his life. He was burnt on Jesus Green, not
far from Jesus College. He had gunpowder given him, but he was dead before it
became ignited. This pious sufferer afforded a singular spectacle; for his
flesh was so burnt from the bones, which continued erect, that he presented the
idea of a skeleton figure chained to the stake. His remains were eagerly seized
by the multitude, and venerated by all who admired his piety or detested
inhuman bigotry.
Simon Miller and Elizabeth Cooper
In the following month of July, received the crown of
martyrdom. Miller dwelt at Lynn, and came to Norwich, where, planting himself
at the door of one of the churches, as the people came out, he requested to
know of them where he could go to receive the Communion. For this a priest
brought him before Dr. Dunning, who committed him to ward; but he was suffered
to go home, and arrange his affairs; after which he returned to the bishop's
house, and to his prison, where he remained until the thirteenth of July, the
day of his burning.
Elizabeth Coope, wife of a pewterer, of St. Andrews, Norwich, had recanted; but
tortured for what she had done by the worm which dieth not, she shortly after
voluntarily entered her parish church during the time of the popish service,
and standing up, audibly proclaimed that she revoked her former recantation,
and cautioned the people to avoid her unworthy example. She was taken from her
own house by Mr. Sutton the sheriff, who very reluctantly complied with the
letter of the law, as they had been servants and in friendship together. At the
stake, the poor sufferer, feeling the fire, uttered the cry of "Oh!"
upon which Mr. Miller, putting his hand behind him towards her, desired her to
be of a good courage, "for (said he) good sister, we shall have a joyful
and a sweet supper." Encouraged by this example and exhortation, she stood
the fiery ordeal without flinching, and, with him, proved the power of faith
over the flesh.
Executions at Colchester
It was before mentioned that twenty-two persons had been
sent up from Colchester, who upon a slight submission, were afterward released.
Of these, William Munt, of Much Bentley, husbandman, with Alice, his wife, and
Rose Allin, her daughter, upon their return home, abstained from church, which
induced the bigoted priest secretly to write to Bonner. For a short time they
absconded, but returniong again, March 7, one Edmund Tyrrel, (a relation of the
Tyrrel who murdered King Edward V and his brother) with the officers, entered
the house while Munt and his wife were in bed, and informed them that they must
go to Colchester Castle. Mrs. Munt at that time being very ill, requested her
daughter to get her some drink; leave being permitted, Rose took a candle and a
mug; and in returning through the house was met by Tyrrel, who cautioned her to
advise her parents to become good Catholics. Rose briefly informed him that
they had the Holy Ghost for their adviser; and that she was ready to lay down
her own life for the same cause. Turning to his company, he remarked that she
was willing to burn; and one of them told him to prove her, and see what she
would do by and by. The unfeeling wretch immediately executed this project;
and, seizing the young woman by the wrist, he held the lighted candle under her
hand, burning it crosswise on the back, until the tendons divided from the
flesh, during which he loaded her with many opprobrious epithets. She endured
his rage unmoved, and then, when he had ceased the torture, she asked him to
begin at her feet or head, for he need not fear that his employer would one day
repay him. After this she took the drink to her mother.
This cruel act of torture does not stand alone on record.
Bonner had served a poor blind harper in nearly the same manner, who had
steadily maintained a hope that if every joint of him were to be burnt, he
should not fly from the faith. Bonner, upon this, privately made a signal to
his men, to bring a burning coal, which they placed in the poor man's hand, and
then by force held it closed, until it burnt into the flesh deeply.
George Eagles, tailor, was indicted for having prayed that 'God would turn
Queen Mary's heart, or take her away'; the ostensible cause of his death was
his religion, for treason could hardly be imagined in praying for the
reformation of such an execrable soul as that of Mary. Being condemned for this
crime, he was drawn to the place of execution upon a sledge, with two robbers,
who were executed with him. After Eagles had mounted the ladder, and been
turned off a short time, he was cut down before he was at all insensible; a
bailiff, named William Swallow, then dragged him to the sledge, and with a
common blunt cleaver, hacked off the head; in a manner equally clumsy and
cruel, he opened his body and tore out the heart.
In all this suffering the poor martyr repined not, but to the last called upon
his Savior. The fury of these bigots did not end here; the intestines were
burnt, and the body was quartered, the four parts being sent to Colchester,
Harwich, Chelmsford, and St. Rouse's. Chelmsford had the honor of retaining his
head, which was affixed to a long pole in the market place. In time it was
blown down, and lay several days in the street, until it was buried at night in
the churchyard. God's judgment not long after fell upon Swallow, who in his old
age became a beggar, and who was affected with a leprosy that made him
obnoxious even to the animal creation; nor did Richard Potts, who troubled
Eagles in his dying moments, escape the visiting hand of God.
Mrs. Joyce Lewes
This lady was the wife of Mr. T. Lewes, of Manchester. She
had received the Romish religion as true, until the burning of that pious
martyr, Mr. Saunders, at Coventry. Understanding that his death arose from a
refusal to receive the Mass, she began to inquire into the ground of his
refusal, and her conscience, as it began to be enlightened, became restless and
alarmed. In this inquietude, she resorted to Mr. John Glover, who lived near,
and requested that he would unfold those rich sources of Gospel knowledge he
possessed, particularly upon the subject of transubstantiation. He easily
succeeded in convincing her that the mummery of popery and the Mass were at
variance with God's most holy Word, and honestly reproved her for following too
much the vanities of a wicked world. It was to her indeed a word in season, for
she soon became weary of her former sinful life and resolved to abandon the
Mass and dilatrous worship. Though compelled by her husband's violence to go to
church, her contempt of the holy water and other ceremonies was so manifest,
that she was accused before the bishop for despising the sacramentals.
A citation, addressed to her, immediately followed, which was given to Mr.
Lewes, who, in a fit of passion, held a dagger to the throat of the officer,
and made him eat it, after which he caused him to drink it down, and then sent
him away. But for this the bishop summoned Mr. Lewest before him as well as his
wife; the former readily submitted, but the latter resolutely affirmed, that,
in refusing holy water, she neither offended God, nor any part of his laws. She
was sent home for a month, her husband being bound for her appearance, during
which time Mr. Glover impressed upon her the necessity of doing what she did,
not from self-vanity, but for the honor and glory of God.
Mr. Glover and others earnestly exhorted Lewest to forfeit the money he was
bound in, rather than subject his wife to certain death; but he was deaf to the
voice of humanity, and delivered her over to the bishop, who soon found
sufficient cause to consign her to a loathsome prison, whence she was several
times brought for examination. At the last time the bishop reasoned with her
upon the fitness of her coming to Mass, and receiving as sacred the Sacrament
and sacramentals of the Holy Ghost. "If these things were in the Word of
God," said Mrs. Lewes, "I would with all my heart receive, believe,
and esteem them." The bishop, with the most ignorant and impious
effrontery, replied, "If thou wilt believe no more than what is warranted
by Scriptures, thou art in a state of damnation!" Astonished at such a
declaration, this worthy sufferer ably rejoined that his words were as impure
as they were profane.
After condemnation, she lay a twelvemonth in prison, the sheriff not being
willing to put her to death in his time, though he had been but just chosen.
When her death warrant came from London, she sent for some friends, whom she
consulted in what manner her death might be more glorious to the name of God,
and injurious to the cause of God's enemies. Smilingly, she said: "As for
death, I think but lightly of. When I know that I shall behold the amiable
countenance of Christ my dear Savior, the ugly face of death does not much
trouble me." The evening before she suffered, two priests were anxious to
visit her, but she refused both their confession and absolution, when she could
hold a better communication with the High Priest of souls. About three o'clock
in the morning, Satan began to shoot his fiery darts, by putting into her mind
to doubt whether she was chosen to eternal life, and Christ died for her. Her
friends readily pointed out to her those consolatory passages of Scripture
which comfort the fainting heart, and treat of the Redeemer who taketh away the
sins of the world.
About eight o'clock the sheriff announced to her that she had but an hour to
live; she was at first cast down, but this soon passed away, and she thanked
God that her life was about to be devoted to His service. The sheriff granted
permission for two friends to accompany her to the stake-an indulgence for
which he was afterward severely handled. Mr. Reniger and Mr. Bernher led her to
the place of execution; in going to which, from its distance, her great
weakness, and the press of the people, she had nearly fainted. Three times she
prayed fervently that God would deliver the land from popery and the idolatrous
Mass; and the people for the most part, as well as the sheriff, said Amen.
When she had prayed, she took the cup, (which had been filled with water to
refresh her,) and said, "I drink to all them that unfeignedly love the
Gospel of Christ, and wish for the abolition of popery." Her friends, and
a great many women of the place, drank with her, for which most of them
afterward were enjoined penance.
When chained to the stake, her countenance was cheerful, and the roses of her
cheeks were not abated. Her hands were extended towards heaven until the fire
rendered them powerless, when her soul was received int o the arms of the
Creator. The duration of her agony was but short, as the under-sheriff, at the
request of her friends, had prepared such excellent fuel that she was in a few
minutes overwhelmed with smoke and flame. The case of this lady drew a tear of
pity from everyone who had a heart not callous to humanity.
Executions at Islington
About the seventeenth of September, suffered at Islington
the following four professors of Christ: Ralph Allerton, James Austoo, Margery
Austoo, and Richard Roth.
James Austoo and his wife, of St. Allhallows, Barking, London, were sentenced
for not believing in the presence. Richard Roth rejected the seven Sacraments,
and was accused of comforting the heretics by the following letter written in
his own blood, and intended to have been sent to his friends at Colchester:
"O dear Brethren and Sisters,
"How much reason have you to rejoice in God, that He hath given you
such faith to overcome this bloodthirsty tyrant thus far! And no doubt He that
hath begun that good work in you, will fulfill it unto the end. O dear hearts
in Christ, what a crown of glory shall ye receive with Christ in the kingdom of
God! O that it had been the good will of God that I had been ready to have gone
with you; for I lie in my lord's Little-ease by day, and in the night I lie in
the Coalhouse, apart from Ralph Allerton, or any other; and we look every day
when we shall be condemned; for he said that I should be burned within ten days
before Easter; but I lie still at the pool's brink, and every man goeth in
before me; but we abide patiently the Lord's leisure, with many bonds, in
fetters and stocks, by which we have received great joy of God. And now fare
you well, dear brethren and sisters, in this world, but I trust to see you in
the heavens face to face.
"O brother Munt, with your wife and my sister Rose, how blessed are you
in the Lord, that God hath found you worthy to suffer for His sake! with all
the rest of my dear brethren and sisters known and unknown. O be joyful even
unto death. Fear it not, saith Christ, for I have overcome death. O dear heart,
seeing that Jesus Christ will be our help, O tarry you the Lord's leisure. Be
strong, let your hearts be of good comfort, and wait you still for the Lord. He
is at hand. Yea, the angel of the Lord pitcheth his tent round about them that
fear him, and delivereth them which way he seeth best. For our lives are in the
Lord's hands; and they can do nothing unto us before God suffer them. Therefore
give all thanks to God.
"O dear hearts, you shall be clothed in long white garments upon the
mount of Sion, with the multitude of saints, and with Jesus Christ our Savior,
who will never forsake us. O blessed virgins, ye have played the wise virgins'
part, in that ye have taken oil in your lamps that ye may go in with the
Bridegroom, when he cometh, into the everlasting joy with Him. But as for the
foolish, they shall be shut out, because they made not themselves ready to
suffer with Christ, neither go about to take up His cross. O dear hearts, how
precious shall your death be in the sight of the Lord! for dear is the death of
His saints. O fare you well, and pray. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be
with you all. Amen, Amen. Pray, pray, pray!
"Written by me, with my own blood,
"RICHARD ROTH."
This letter, so justly denominating Bonner the
"bloodthirsty tyrant," was not likely to excite his compassion. Roth
accused him of bringing them to secret examination by night, because he was
afraid of the people by day. Resisting every temptation to recant, he was
condemned, and on September 17, 1557, these four martyrs perished at Islington,
for the testimony of the Lamb, who was slain that they might be of the redeemed
of God.
John Noyes, a shoemaker, of Laxfield, Suffolk, was taken to Eye, and at
midnight, September 21, 1557, he was brought from Eye to Laxfield to be burned.
On the following morning he was led to the stake, prepared for the horrid
sacrifice. Mr. Noyes, on coming to the fatal spot, knelt down, prayed, and
rehearsed the Fiftieth Psalm. When the chain enveloped him, he said, "Fear
not them that kill the body, but fear him that can kill both body and soul, and
cast it into everlasting fire!" As one Cadman placed a fagot against him,
he blessed the hour in which he was born to die for the truth; and while
trusting only upon the all-sufficient merits of the Redeemer, fire was set to the
pile, and the blazing fagots in a short time stifled his last words,
"Lord, have mercy on me! Christ, have mercy upon me!" The ashes of
the body were buried in a pit, and with them one of his feet, whole to the
ankle, with the stocking on.
Mrs. Cicely Ormes
This young martyr, aged twenty-two, was the wife of Mr.
Edmund Ormes, worsted weaver of St. Lawrence, Norwich. At the death of Miller
and Elizabeth Cooper, before mentioned, she had said that she would pledge them
of the same cup they drank of. For these words she was brought to the
chanellor, who would have discharged her upon promising to go to church, and to
keep her belief to herself. As she would not consent to this, the chancellor
urged that he had shown more lenity to her than any other person, and was
unwilling to condemn her, because she was an ignorant foolish woman; to this
she replied, (perhaps with more shrewdness than he expected,) that however
great his desire might be to spare her sinful flesh, it could not equal her
inclination to surrender it up in so great a quarrel. The chancellor then
pronounced the fiery sentence, and September 23, 1557, she was brought to the
stake, at eight o'clock in the morning.
After declaring her faith to the people, she laid her hand on the stake, and
said, "Welcome, thou cross of Christ." Her hand was sooted in doing
this, (for it was the same stake at which Miller and Cooper were burnt,) and
she at first wiped it; but directly after again welcomed and embraced it as the
"sweet cross of Christ." After the tormentors had kindled the fire,
she said, "My soul doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit doth rejoice in
God my Savior." Then crossing her hands upon her breast, and looking
upwards with the utmost serenity, she stood the fiery furnace. Her hands continued
gradually to rise until the sinews were dried, and then they fell. She uttered
no sigh of pain, but yielded her life, an emblem of that celestial paradise in
which is the presence of God, blessed forever.
It might be contended that this martyr voluntarily sought her own death, as the
chancellor scarcely exacted any other penance of her than to keep her belief to
herself; yet it should seem in this instance as if God had chosen her to be a
shining light, for a twelve-month before she was taken, she had recanted; but
she was wretched until the chancellor was informed, by letter, that she
repented of her recantation from the bottom of her heart. As if to compensate
for her former apostasy, and to convince the Catholics that she meant to more
to compromise for her personal security, she boldly refused his friendly offer
of permitting her to temporize. Her courage in such a cause deserves
commendation-the cause of Him who has said, "Whoever is ashamed of me on
earth, of such will I be ashamed in heaven."
Rev. John Rough
This pious martyr was a Scotchman. At the age of seventeen,
he entered himself as one of the order of Black Friars, at Stirling, in
Scotland. He had been kept out of an inheritance by his friends, and he took
this step in revenge for their conduct to him. After being there sixteen years,
Lord Hamilton, earl of Arran, taking a liking to him, the archbishop of St.
Andrew's induced the provincial of the house to dispense with his habit and
order; and he thus became the earl's chaplain. He remained in this spiritual
employment a year, and in that time God wrought in him a saving knowledge of
the truth; for which reason the earl sent him to preach in the freedom of Ayr,
where he remained four years; but finding danger there from the religious
complexion of the times, and learning that there was much Gospel freedom in
England, he travelled up to the duke of Somerset, then Lord Protector of
England, who gave him a yearly salary of twenty pounds, and authorized him, to
preach at Carlisle, Berwick, and Newcastle, where he married. He was afterward
removed to a benefice at Hull, in which he remained until the death of Edward
VI.
In consequence of the tide of persecution then setting in, he fled with his
wife to Friesland, and at Nordon they followed the occupation of knitting hose,
caps, etc., for subsistence. Impeded in his business by the want of yarn, he
came over to England to procure a quantity, and on November 10, arrived in
London, where he soon heard of a secret society of the faithful, to whom he
joined himself, and was in a short time elected their minister, in which
occupation he strengthened them in every good resolution.
On December 12, through the information of one Taylor, a member of the society,
Mr. Rough, with Cuthbert Symson and others, was taken up in the Saracen's Head,
Islington, where, under the pretext of coming to see a play, their religious
exercises were holden. The queen's vice-chamberlain conducted Rough and Symson
before the Council, in whose presence they were charged with meeting to celebrate
the Communion. The Council wrote to Bonner and he lost no time in this affair
of blood. In three days he had him up, and on the next (the twentieth) resolved
to condemn him. The charges laid against him were, that he, being a priest, was
married, and that he had rejected the service in the Latin tongue. Rough wanted
not arguments to reply to these flimsy tenets. In short, he was degraded and
condemned.
Mr. Rough, it should be noticed, when in the north, in Edward VI's reign, had
saved Dr. Watson's life, who afterward sat with Bishop Bonner on the bench.
This ungrateful prelate, in return for the kind act he had received, boldly
accused Mr. Rough of being the most pernicious heretic in the country. The
godly minister reproved him for his malicious spirit; he affirmed that, during
the thirty years he had lived, he had never bowed the knee to Baal; and that
twice at Rome he had seen the pope born about on men's shoulders with the
false-named Sacrament carried before him, presenting a true picture of the very
Antichrist; yet was more reverence shown to him than to the wafer, which they
accounted to be their God. "Ah?" said Bonner, rising, and making
towards him, as if he would have torn his garment, "Hast thou been at
Rome, and seen our holy father the pope, and dost thou blaspheme him after this
sort?" This said, he fell upon him, tore off a piece of his beard, and
that the day might begin to his own satisfaction, he ordered the object of his
rage to be burnt by half-past five the following morning.
Cuthbert Symson
Few professors of Christ possessed more activity and zeal
than this excellent person. He not only labored to preserve his friends from
the contagion of popery, but he labored to guard them against the terrors of
persecution. He was deacon of the little congregation over which Mr. Rough
presided as minister.
Mr. Symson has written an account of his own sufferings, which he cannot detail
better than in his own words:
"On the thirteenth of December, 1557, I was committed by the Council to
the Tower of London. On the following Thursday, I was called into the
ward-room, before the constable of the Tower, and the recorder of London, Mr.
Cholmly, who commanded me to inform them of the names of those who came to the
English service. I answered that I would declare nothing; in consequence of my
refusal, I was set upon a rack of iron, as I judge for the space of three
hours!
"They then asked me if I would confess: I answered as before.
After being unbound, I was carried back to my lodging. The Sunday after I
was brought to the same place again, before the lieutenant and recorder of
London, and they examined me. As I had answered before, so I answered now. Then
the lieutenant swore by God I should tell; after which my two forefingers were
bound together, and a small arrow placed between them, they drew it through so
fast that the blood followed, and the arrow brake.
"After enduring the rack twice again, I was retaken to my lodging, and
ten days after the lieutenant asked me if I would not now confess that which
they had before asked of me. I answered, that I had already said as much as I
would. Three weeks after I was sent to the priest, where I was greatly
assaulted, and at whose hand I received the pope's curse, for bearing witness
of the resurrection of Christ. And thus I commend you to God, and to the Word
of His grace, with all those who unfeignedly call upon the name of Jesus;
desiring God of His endless mercy, through the merits of His dear Son Jesus
Christ, to bring us all to His everlasting Kingdom, Amen. I praise God for His
great mercy shown upon us. Sing Hosanna to the Highest with me, Cuthbert
Symson. God forgive my sins! I ask forgiveness of all the world, and I forgive
all the world, and thus I leave the world, in the hope of a joyful
resurrection!"
If this account be duly considered, what a picture of repeated tortures does it
present! But even the cruelty of the narration is exceeded by the patient
meekness with which it was endured. Here are no expressions of malice, no
invocations even of God's retributive justice, not a complaint of suffering
wrongfully! On the contrary, praise to God, forgiveness of sin, and a forgiving
all the world, concludes this unaffected interesting narrative.
Bonner's admiration was excited by the steadfast coolness of this martyr.
Speaking of Mr. Symson in the consistory, he said, "You see what a
personable man he is, and then of his patience, I affirm, that, if he were not
a heretic, he is a man of the greatest patience that ever came before me.
Thrice in one day has he been racked in the Tower; in my house also he has felt
sorrow, and yet never have I seen his patience broken."
The day before this pious deacon was to be condemned, while in the stocks in
the bishop's coal-house, he had the vision of a glorified form, which much encouraged
him. This he certainly attested to his wife, to Mr. Austen, and others, before
his death.
With this ornament of the Christian Reformation were apprehended Mr. Hugh Foxe
and John Devinish; the three were brought before Bonner, March 19, 1558, and the
papistical articles tendered. They rejected them, and were all condemned. As
they worshipped together in the same society, at Islington, so they suffered
together in Smithfield, March 28; in whose death the God of Grace was
glorified, and true believers confirmed!
Thomas Hudson, Thomas Carman, and William Seamen
Were condemned by a bigoted vicar of Aylesbury, named Berry.
The spot of execution was called Lollard's Pit, without Bishipsgate, at
Norwich. After joining together in humble petition to the throne of grace, they
rose, went to the stake, and were encircled with their chains. To the great
surprise of the spectators, Hudson slipped from under his chains, and came
forward. A great opinion prevailed that he was about to recant; others thought
that he wanted further time. In the meantime, his companions at the stake urged
every promise and exhortation to support him. The hopes of the enemies of the
cross, however, were disappointed: the good man, far from fearing the smallest
personal terror at the approaching pangs of death, was only alarmed thathis
Savior's face seemed to be hidden from him. Falling upon his knees, his spirit
wrestled with God, and God verified the words of His Son, "Ask, and it
shall be given." The martyr rose in an ecstasy of joy, and exclaimed,
"Now, I thank God, I am strong! and care not what man can do to me!"
With an unruffled countenance he replaced himself under the chain, joined his
fellow-sufferers, and with them suffered death, to the comfort of the godly,
and the confusion of Antichrist.
Berry, unsatiated with this demoniacal act, summoned up two hundred persons in
the town of Aylesham, whom he compelled to kneel to the cross at Pentecost, and
inflicted other punishments. He struck a poor man for a trifling word, with a
flail, which proved fatal to the unoffending object. He also gave a woman named
Alice Oxes, so heavy a blow with his fist, as she met him entering the hall
when he was in an ill-humor, that she died with the violence. This priest was
rich, and possessed great authority; he was a reprobate, and, like the
priesthood, he abstained from marriage, to enjoy the more a debauched and
licentious life. The Sunday after the death of Queen Mary, he was revelling
with one of his concubines, before vespers; he then went to church,
administered baptism, and in his return to his lascivious pastime, he was
smitten by the hand of God. Without a moment given for repentance, he fell to
the ground, and a groan was the only articulation permitted him. In him we may
behold the difference between the end of a martyr and a persecutor.
The Story of Roger Holland
In a retired close near a field, in Islington, a company of
decent persons had assembled, to the number of forty. While they were
religiously engaged in praying and expounding the Scripture, twenty-seven of
them were carried before Sir Roger Cholmly. Some of the women made their
escape, twenty-two were committed to Newgate, who continued in prison seven
weeks. Previous to their examination, they were informed by the keeper,
Alexander, that nothing more was requisite to procure their discharge, than to
hear Mass. Easy as this condition may seem, these martyrs valued their purity
of conscience more than loss of life or property; hence, thirteen were burnt,
seven in Smithfield, and six at Brentford; two died in prison, and the other
seven were providentially preserved. The names of the seven who suffered were,
H. Pond, R. Estland, R. Southain, M. Ricarby, J. Floyd, J. Holiday, and Roger
Holland. They were sent to Newgate, June 16, 1558, and executed on the
twenty-seventh.
This Roger Holland, a merchant-tailor of London, was first an apprentice with
one Master Kemption, at the Black Boy in Watling Street, giving himself to
dancing, fencing, gaming, banqueting, and wanton company. He had received for
his master certain money, to the sum of thirty pounds; and lost every groat at
dice. Therefore he purposed to convey himself away beyond the seas, either into
France or into Flanders.
With this resolution, he called early in the morning on a discreet servant in
the house, named Elizabeth, who professed the Gospel, and lived a life that did
honor to her profession. To her he revealed the loss his folly had occasioned,
regretted that he had not followed her advice, and begged her to give his
master a note of hand from him acknowledging the debt, which he would repay if
ever it were in his power; he also entreated his disgraceful conduct might be
kept secret, lest it would bring the gray hairs to his father with sorrow to a
premature grave.
The maid, with a generosity and Christian principle rarely surpassed, conscious
that his imprudence might be his ruin, brought him the thirty pounds, which was
part of a sum of money recently left her by legacy. "Here," said she,
"is the sum requisite: you shall take the money, and I will keep the note;
but expressly on this condition, that you abandon all lewd and vicious company;
that you neither swear nor talk immodestly, and game no more; for, should I
learn that you do, I will immediately show this note to your master. I also
require, that you shall promise me to attend the daily lecture at Allhallows,
and the sermon at St. Paul's every Sunday; that you cast away all your books of
popery, and in their place substitute the Testament and the Book of Service,
and that you read the Scriptures with reverence and fear, calling upon God for
his grace to direct you in his truth. Pray also fervently to God, to pardon
your former offences, and not to remember the sins of your youth, and would you
obtain his favor ever dread to break his laws or offend his majesty. So shall
God have you in His keeping, and grant you your heart's desire." We must
honor the memory of this excellent domestic, whose pious endeavors were equally
directed to benefit the thoughtless youth in this life and that which is to
come. God did not suffer the wish of this excellent domestic to be thrown upon
a barren soil; within half a year after the licentious Holland became a zealous
professor of the Gospel, and was an instrument of conversion to his father and
others whom he visited in Lancashire, to their spiritual comfort and
reformation from popery.
His father, pleased with his change of conduct, gave him forty pounds to
commence business with in London.
Then Roger repaired to London again, and came to the maid that lent him the
money to pay his master withal, and said unto her, "Elizabeth, here is thy
money I borrowed of thee; and for the friendship, good will, and the good
counsel I have received at thy hands, to recompense thee I am not able,
otherwise than to make thee my wife." And soon after they were married,
which was in the first year of Queen Mary.
After this he remained in the congregations of the faithful, until, the last
year of Queen Mary, he, with the six others aforesaid, were taken.
And after Roger Holland there was none suffered in Smithfield for the testimony
of the Gospel, God be thanked.
Flagellations by Bonner
When this Catholic hyena found that neither persuasions,
threats, nor imprisonment, could produce any alteration in the mind of a youth
named Thomas Hinshaw, he sent him to Fulham, and during the first night set him
in the stocks, with no other allowance than bread and water. The following
morning he came to see if this punishment had worked any change in his mind,
and finding none, he sent Dr. Harpsfield, his archdeacon, to converse with him.
The doctor was soon out f humor at his replies, called him peevish boy, and
asked him if he thought he went about to damn his soul? "I am
persuaded," said Thomas, "that you labor to promote the dark kingdom
of the devil, not for the love of the truth." These words the doctor
conveyed to the bishop, who, in a passion that almost prevented articulation,
came to Thomas, and said, "Dost thou answer my archdeacon thus, thou
naughty boy? But I'll soon handle thee well enough for it, be assured!"
Two willow twigs were then brought him, and causing the unresisting youth to
kneel against a long bench, in an arbor in his garden, he scourged him until he
was compelled to cease for want of breath and fatigue. One of the rods was worn
quite away.
Many other conflicts did Hinsaw undergo from the bishop; who, at length, to
remove him effectually, procured false witnesses to lay articles against him,
all of which the young man denied, and, in short, refused to answer any
interrogatories administered to him. A fortnight after this, the young man was
attacked by a burning ague, and at the request of his master. Mr. Pugson, of
St. Paul's church-yard, he was removed, the bishop not doubting that he had
given him his death in the natural way; he however remained ill above a year,
and in the mean time Queen Mary died, by which act of providence he escaped
Bonner's rage.
John Willes was another faithful person, on whom the scourging hand of Bonner
fell. He was the brother of Richard Willes, before mentioned, burnt at
Brentford. Hinshaw and Willes were confined in Bonner's coal house together,
and afterward removed to Fulham, where he and Hinshaw remained during eight or
ten days, in the stocks. Bonner's persecuting spirit betrayed itself in his
treatment of Willes during his examinations, often striking him on the head
with a stick, seizing him by the ears, and filliping him under the chin, saying
he held down his head like a thief. This producing no signs of recantation, he
took him into his orchard, and in a small arbor there he flogged him first with
a willow rod, and then with birch, until he was exhausted. This cruel ferocity
arose from the answer of the poor sufferer, who, upon being asked how long it
was since he had crept to the cross, replied, 'Not since he had come to years
of discretion, nor would he, though he should be torn to pieces by wild
horses.' Bonner then bade him make the sign of the cross on his forehead, which
he refused to do, and thus was led to the orchard.
One day, when in the stocks, Bonner asked him how he liked his lodging and
fare. "Well enough," said Willes, "might I have a little straw
to sit or lie upon." Just at this time came in Willes' wife, then largely
pregnant, and entreated the bishop for her husband, boldly declaring that she
would be delivered in the house, if he were not suffered to go with her. To get
rid of the good wife's importunity, and the trouble of a lying-in woman in his
palace, he bade Willes make the sign of the cross, and say, In nomine Patris,
et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti, Amen. Willes omitted the sign, and repeated the
words, "in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost,
Amen." Bonner would have the words repeated in Latin, to which Willes made
no objection, knowing the meaning of the words. He was then permitted to go
home with his wife, his kinsman Robert Rouze being charged to bring him to St.
Paul's the next day, whither he himself went, and subscribing to a Latin
instrument of little importance, was liberated. This is the last of the
twenty-two taken at Islington.
Rev. Richard Yeoman
This devout aged person was curate to Dr. Taylor, at Hadley,
and eminently qualified for his sacred function. Dr. Taylor left him the curacy
at his departure, but no sooner had Mr. Newall gotten the benefice, than he
removed Mr. Yeoman, and substituted a Romish priest. After this he wandered
from place to place, exhorting all men to stand faithfully to God's Word,
earnestly to give themselves unto prayer, with patience to bear the cross now
laid upon them for their trial, with boldness to confess the truth before their
adversaries, and with an undoubted hope to wait for the crown and reward of
eternal felicity. But when he perceived his adversaries lay wait for him, he
went into Kent, and with a little packet of laces, pins, points, etc., he
travelled from village to village, selling such things, and in this manner
subsisted himself, his wife, and children.
At last Justice Moile, of Kent, took Mr. Yeoman, and set him in the stocks a
day and a night; but, having no evident matter to charge him with, he let him
go again. Coming secretly again to Hadley, he tarried with his poor wife, who
kept him privately, in a chamber of the town house, commonly called the
Guildhall, more than a year. During this time the good old father abode in a
chamber locked up all the day, spending his time in devout prayer, in reading
the Scriptures, and in carding the wool which his wife spun. His wife also
begged bread for herself and her children, by which precarious means they
supported themselves. Thus the saints of God sustained hunger and misery, while
the prophets of Baal lived in festivity, and were costily pampered at Jezebel's
table.
Information being at length given to Newall, that Yeoman was secreted by his
wife, he came, attended by the constables, and broke into the room where the
object of his search lay in bed with his wife. He reproached the poor woman
with being a whore, and would have indecently pulled the clothes off, but
Yeoman resisted both this act of violence and the attack upon his wife's
character, adding that he defied the pope and popery. He was then taken out,
and set in stocks until day.
In the cage also with him was an old man, named John Dale, who had sat there
three or four days, for exhorting the people during the time service was
performing by Newall and his curate. His words were, "O miserable and
blind guides, will ye ever be blind leaders of the blind? Will ye never amend?
Will ye never see the truth of God's Word? Will neither God's threats nor
promises enter into your hearts? Will the blood of the martyrs nothing mollify
your stony stomachs? O obdurate, hard-hearted, perverse, and crooked
generation! to whom nothing can do good."
These words he spake in fervency of spirit agains tthe superstitious religion
of Rome; wherefore Newall caused him forthwith to be attached, and set in the
stocks in a cage, where he was kept until Sir Henry Doile, a justice, came to
Hadley.
When Yeoman was taken, the parson called earnestly upon Sir Henry Doile to send
them both to prison. Sir Henry Doile as earnestly entreated the parson to
consider the age of the men, and their mean condition; they were neither
persons of note nor preachers; wherefore he proposed to let them be punished a
day or two and to dismiss them, at least John Dale, who was no priest, and
therefore, as he had so long sat in the cage, he thought it punishment enough
for this time. When the parson heard this, he was exceedingly mad, and in a
great rage called them pestilent heretics, unfit to live in the commonwealth of
Christians.
Sir Henry, fearing to appear too merciful, Yeoman and Dale were pinioned, bound
like thieves with their legs under the horses' bellies, and carried to Bury
jail, where they were laid in irons; and because they continually rebuked
popery, they were carried into the lowest dungeon, where John Dale, through the
jail-sickness and evil-keeping, died soon after: his body was thrown out, and
buried in the fields. He was a man of sixty-six years of age, a weaver by
occupation, well learned in the holy Scriptures, steadfast in his confession of
the true doctrines of Christ as set forth in King Edward's time; for which he
joyfully suffered prison and chains, and from this worldly dungeon he departed
in Christ to eternal glory, and the blessed paradise of everlasting felicity.
After Dale's death, Yeoman was removed to Norwich prison, where, after strait
and evil keeping, he was examined upon his faith and religion, and required to
submit himself to his holy father the pope. "I defy him, (quoth he), and
all his detestable abomination: I will in no wise have to do with him."
The chief articles objected to him, were his marriage and the Mass sacrifice.
Finding he continued steadfast in the truth, he was condemned, degraded, and
not only burnt, but most cruelly tormented in the fire. Thus he ended this poor
and miserable life, and entered into that blessed bosom of Abraham, enjoying
with Lazarus that rest which God has prepared for His elect.
Thomas Benbridge
Mr. Benbridge was a single gentleman, in the diocese of
Winchester. He might have lived a gentleman's life, in the wealthy possessions
of this world; but he chose rather to enter through the strait gate of
persecution to the heavenly possession of life in the Lord's Kingdom, than to
enjoy present pleasure with disquietude of conscience. Manfully standing
against the papists for the defence of the sincere doctrine of Christ's Gospel,
he was apprehended as an adversary to the Romish religion, and led for
examination before the bishop of Winchester, where he underwent several
conflicts for the truth against the bishop and his colleague; for which he was
condemned, and some time after brought to the place of martyrdom by Sir Richard
Pecksal, sheriff.
When standing at the stake he began to untie his points, and to prepare
himself; then he gave his gown to the keeper, by way of fee. His jerkin was
trimmed with gold lace, which he gave to Sir Richard Pecksal, the high sheriff.
His cap of velvet he took from his head, and threw away. Then, lifting his mind
to the Lord, he engaged in prayer.
When fastened to the stake, Dr. Seaton begged him to recant, and he should have
his pardon; but when he saw that nothing availed, he told the people not to
pray for him unless he would recant, no more than they would pray for a dog.
Mr. Benbridge, standing at the stake with his hands together in suchj a manner
as the priest holds his hands in his Memento, Dr. Seaton came to him again, and
exhorted him to recant, to whom he said, "Away, Babylon, away!" One
that stood by said, "Sir, cut his tongue out"; another, a temporal
man, railed at him worse than Dr. Seaton had done.
When they saw he would not yield, they bade the tormentors to light the pile,
before he was in any way covered with fagots. The fire first took away a piece
of his beard, at which he did not shrink. Then it came on the other side and
took his legs, and the nether stockings of his hose being leather, they made
the fire pierce the sharper, so that the intolerable heat made him exclaim,
"I recant!" and suddenly he trust the fire from him. Two or three of
his friends being by, wished to save him; they stepped to the fire to help
remove it, for which kindness they were sent to jail. The sheriff also of his
own authority took him from the stake, and remitted him to prison, for which he
was sent to the Fleet, and lay there sometime. Before, however, he was taken
from the stake, Dr. Seaton wrote articles for him to subscribe to. To these Mr.
Benbridge made so many objections that Dr. Seaton ordered them to set fire
again to the pile. Then with much pain and grief of heart he subscribed to them
upon a man's back.
This done, his gown was given him again, and he was led to prison. While there,
he wrote a letter to Dr. Seaton, recanting those words he had spoken at the
stake, and the articles which he had subscribed, for he was grieved that he had
ever signed them. The same day se'night he was again brought to the stake,
where the vile tormentors rather broiled than burnt him. The Lord give his
enemies repentance!
Mrs. Prest
From the number condemned in this fanatical reign, it is
almost impossible to obtain the name of every martyr, or to embellish the
history of all with anecdotes and exemplifications of Christian conduct. Thanks
be to Providence, our cruel task begins to draw towards a conclusion, with the
end of the reign of papal terror and bloodshed. Monarchs, who sit upon thrones
possessed by hereditary right, should, of all others, consider that the laws of
nature are the laws of God, and hence that the first law of nature is the
preservation of their subjects. Maxims of persecutions, of torture, and of
death, they should leave to those who have effected sovereignty by fraud or by
sword; but where, except among a few miscreant emperors of Rome, and the Roman
pontiffs, shall we find one whose memory is so "damned to everlasting
fame" as that of Queen Mary? Nations bewail the hour which separates them
forever from a beloved governor, but, with respect to that of Mary, it was the
most blessed time of her whole reign. Heaven has ordained three great scourges
for national sins-plague, pestilence, and famine. It was the will of God in
Mary's reign to bring a fourth upon this kingdom, under the form of papistical
persecution. It was sharp, but glorious; the fire which consumed the martyrs
has undermined the popedom; and the Catholic states, at present the most
bigoted and unenlightened, are those which are sunk lowest in the scale of
moral dignity and political consequence. May they remain so, until the pure
light of the Gospel shall dissipate the darkness of fanaticism and
superstition! But to return.
Mrs. Prest for some time lived about Cornwall, where she had a husband and
children, whose bigotry compelled her to frequent the abominations of the
Church of Rome. Resolving to act as her conscience dictated, she quitted them,
and made a living by spinning. After some time, returning home, she was accused
by her neighbors, and brought to Exeter, to be examined before Dr. Troubleville,
and his chancellor Blackston. As this martyr was accounted of inferior
intellect, we shall put her in competition with the bishop, and let the reader
judge which had the most of that knowledge conducive to everlasting life. The
bishop bringing the question to issue, respecting the bread and wine being
flesh and blood, Mrs. Prest said, "I will demand of you whether you can
deny your creed, which says, that Christ doth perpetually sit at the right hand
of His Father, both body and soul, until He come again; or whether He be there
in heaven our Advocate, and to make prayer for us unto God His Father? If He be
so, He is not here on earth in a piece of bread. If He be not here, and if He
do not dwell in temples made with hands, but in heaven, what! shall we seek Him
here? If He did not offer His body once for all, why make you a new offering?
If with one offering He made all perfect, why do you with a false offering make
all imperfect? If He be to be worshipped in spirit and in truth, why do you
worship a piece of bread? If He be eaten and drunken in faith and truth, if His
flesh be not profitable to be among us, why do you say you make His flesh and
blood, and say it is profitable for body and soul? Alas! I am a poor woman, but
rather than to do as you do, I would live no longer. I have said, Sir."
Bishop. I promise you, you are a jolly Protestant. I pray you in what school
have you been brought up?
Mrs. Prest. I have upon the Sundays visited the sermons, and there have I
learned such things as are so fixed in my breast, that death shall not separate
them.
B. O foolish woman, who will waste his breath upon thee, or such as thou art?
But how chanceth it that thou wentest away from thy husband? If thou wert an
honest woman, thou wouldst not have left thy husband and children, and run
about the country like a fugitive.
Mrs. P. Sir, I labored for my livingl; and as my Master Christ counselleth me,
when I was persecuted in one city, I fled into another.
B. Who persecuted thee?
Mrs. P. My husband and my children. For when I would have them to leave
idolatry, and to worship God in heaven, he would not hear me, but he with his
children rebuked me, and troubled me. I fled not for whoredom, nor for theft,
but because I would be no partaker with him and his of that foul idol the Mass;
and wheresoever I was, as oft as I could, upon Sundays and holydays. I made
excuses not to go to the popish Church.
B. Belike then you are a good housewife, to fly from your husband the Church.
Mrs. P. My housewifery is but small; but God gave me grace to go to the true
Church.
B. The true Church, what dost thou mean?
Mrs. P. Not your popish Church, full of idols and abominations, but where two
or three are gathered together in the name of God, to that Church will I go as
long as I live.
B. Belike then you have a church of your own. Well, let this mad woman be put
down to prison until we send for her husband.
Mrs. P. No, I have but one husband, who is here already in this city, and in
prison with me, from whom I will never depart.
Some persons present endeavoring to convince the bishop she was not in her
right senses, she was permitted to depart. The keeper of the bishop's prisons
took her into his house, where she either spun worked as a servant, or walked
about the city, discoursing upon the Sacrament of the altar. Her husband was
sent for to take her home, but this she refused while the cause of religion
could be served. She was too active to be idle, and her conversation, simple as
they affected to think her, excited the attention of several Catholic priests
and friars. They teased her with questions, until she answered them angrily,
and this excited a laugh at her warmth.
"Nay," said she, "you have more need to weep than to laugh, and
to be sorry that ever you were born, to be the chaplains of that whore of
Babylon. I defy him and all his falsehood; and get you away from me, you do but
trouble my conscience. You would have me follow your doings; I will first lose
my life. I pray you depart."
"Why, thou foolish woman," said they, "we come to thee for thy
profit and soul's health." To which she replied, "What profit ariseth
by you, that teach nothing but lies for truth? how save you souls, when you
preach nothing but lies, and destroy souls?"
"How provest thou that?" said they.
"Do you not destroy your souls, when you teach the people to worship
idols, stocks, and stones, the works of men's hands? and to worship a false God
of your own making of a piece of bread, and teach that the pope is God's vicar,
and hath power to forgive sins? and that there is a purgatory, when God's Son
hath by His passion purged all? and say you make God and sacrifice Him, when
Christ's body was a sacrifice once for all? Do you not teach the people to
number their sins in your ears, and say they will be damned if they confess not
all; when God's Word saith, Who can number his sins? Do you not promise them
trentals and dirges and Masses for souls, and sell your prayers for money, and
make them buy pardons, and trust to such foolish inventions of your
imaginations? Do you not altogether act against God? Do you not teach us to
pray upon beads, and to pray unto saints, and say they can pray for us? Do you
not make holy water and holy bread to fray devils? Do you not do a thousand
more abominations? And yet you say, you come for my profit, and to save my
soul. No, no, one hath saved me. Farewell, you with your salvation."
During the liberty granted her by the bishop, before-mentioned, she went into
St. Peter's Church, and there found a skilful Dutchman, who was affixing new noses
to certain fine images which had been disfigured in King Edward's time; to whom
she said, "What a madman art thou, to make them new noses, which within a
few days shall all lose their heads?" The Dutchman accused her and laid it
hard to her charge. And she said unto him, "Thou art accursed, and so are
thy images." He called her a whore. "Nay," said she, "thy
images are whores, and thou art a whore-hunter; for doth not God say, 'You go a
whoring after strange gods, figures of your own making? and thou art one of
them.'" After this she was ordered to be confined, and had no more
liberty.
During the time of her imprisonment, many visited her, some sent by the bishop,
and some of their own will, among these was one Daniel, a great preacher of the
Gospel, in the days of King Edward, about Cornwall and Devonshire, but who,
through the grievous persecution he had sustained, had fallen off. Earnestly
did she exhort him to repent with Peter, and to be more constant in his
profession.
Mrs. Walter Rauley and Mr. William and John Kede, persons of great
respectability, bore ample testimony of her godly conversation, declaring, that
unless God were with her, it were impossible she could have so ably defended
the cause of Christ. Indeed, to sum up the character of this poor woman, she
united the serpent and the dove, abounding in the highest wisdom joined to the
greatest simplicity. She endured imprisonment, threatenings, taunts, and the
vilest epithets, but nothing could induce her to swerve; her heart was fixed;
she had cast anchor; nor could all the wounds of persecution remove her from
the rock on which her hopes of felicity were built.
Such was her memory, that, without learning, she could tell in what chapter any
text of Scripture was contained: on account of this singular property, one
Gregory Basset, a rank papist, said she was deranged, and talked as a parrot,
wild without meaning. At length, having tried every manner without effect to
make her nominally a Catholic, they condemned her. After this, one exhorted her
to leave her opinions, and go home to her family, as she was poor and
illiterate. "True, (said she) though I am not learned, I am content to be
a witness of Christ's death, and I pray you make no longer delay with me; for
my heart is fixed, and I will never say otherwise, nor turn to your
superstitious doing."
To the disgrace of Mr. Blackston, treasurer of the church, he would often send
for this poor martyr from prison, to make sport for him and a woman whom he
kept; putting religious questions to her, and turning her answers into
ridicule. This done, he sent her back to her wretched dungeon, while he
battened upon the good things of this world.
There was perhaps something simply ludicrous in the form of Mrs. Prest, as she
was of a very short stature, thick set, and about fifty-four years of age; but
her countenance was cheerful and lively, as if prepared for the day of her
marriage with the Lamb. To mock at her form was an indirect accusation of her
Creator, who framed her after the fashion He liked best, and gave her a mind
that far excelled the transient endowments of perishable flesh. When she was
offered money, she rejected it, "because (said she) I am going to a city
where money bears no mastery, and while I am here God has promised to feed me."
When sentence was read, condemning her to the flames, she lifted up her voice
and praised God, adding, "This day have I found that which I have long
sought." When they tempted her to recant, "That will I not, (said
she) God forbid that I should lose the life eternal, for this carnal and short
life. I will never turn from my heavenly husband to my earthly husband; from
the fellowship of angels to mortal children; and if my husband and children be
faithful, then am I theirs. God is my father, God is my mother, God is my
sister, my brother, my kinsman; God is my friend, most faithful."
Being delivered to the sheriff, she was led by the officer to the place of
execution, without the walls of Exeter, called Sothenhey, where again the
superstitious priests assaulted her. While they were tying her to the stake,
she continued earnestly to exclaim "God be merciful to me, a sinner!"
Patiently enduring the devouring conflagration, she was consumed to ashes, and
thus ended a life which in unshaken fidelity to the cause of Christ, was not
surpassed by that of any preceding martyr.
Richard Sharpe, Thomas Banion, and Thomas Hale
Mr. Sharpe, weaver, of Bristol, was brought the ninth day of
March, 1556, before Dr. Dalby, chancellor of the city of Bristol, and after
examination concerning the Sacrament of the altar, was persuaded to recant; and
on the twenty-ninth, he was enjoined to make his recantation in the parish
church. But, scarcely had he publicly avowed his backsliding, before he felt in
his conscience such a tormenting fiend, that he was unable to work at his
occupation; hence, shortly after, one Sunday, he came into the parish church,
called Temple, and after high Mass, stood up in the choir door, and said with a
loud voice, "Neighbors, bear me record that yonder idol (pointing to the
altar) is the greatest and most abominable that ever was; and I am sorry that
ever I denied my Lord God!" Notwithstanding the constables were ordered to
apprehend him, he was suffered to go out of the church; but at night he was
apprehended and carried to Newgate. Shortly after, before the chancellor,
denying the Sacrament of the altar to be the body and blood of Christ, he was
condemned to be burned by Mr. Dalby. He was burnt the seventh of May, 1558, and
died godly, patiently, and constantly, confessing the Protestant articles of
faith.With him suffered Thomas Hale, shoemaker, of Bristol, who was condemned
by Chcnallor Dalby. These martyrs were bound back to back.
Thomas Banion, a weaver, was burnt on August 27, of the same year, and died for
the sake of the evangelical cause of his Savior.
J. Corneford, of Wortham; C. Browne, of Maidstone; J. Herst,
of Ashford; Alice Snoth, and Catharine Knight, an Aged Woman
With pleasure we have to record that these five martyrs were
the last who suffered in the reign of Mary for the sake of the Protestant
cause; but the malice of the papists was conspicuous in hastening their
martyrdom, which might have been delayed until the event of the queen's illness
was decided. It is reported that the archdeacon of Canterbury, judging that the
sudden death of the queen would suspend the execution, travelled post from
London, to have the satisfaction of adding another page to the black list of
papistical sacrifices.
The articles against them were, as usual, the Sacramental elements and the
idolatry of bending to images. They quoted St. John's words, "Beware of
images!" and respecting the real presence, they urged according to St.
Paul, "the things which are seen are temporal." When sentence was
about to be read against them, and excommunication to take place in the regular
form, John Corneford, illuminated by the Holy Spirit, awfully turned the latter
proceeding against themselves, and in a solemn impressive manner, recriminated
their excommunication in the following words: "In the name of our Lord
Jesus Christ, the Son of the most mighty God, and by the power of His Holy
Spirit, and the authority of His holy Catholic and apostolic Church, we do here
give into the hands of Satan to be destroyed, the bodies of all those blasphemers
and heretics that maintain any error against His most holy Word, or do condemn
His most holy truth for heresy, to the maintenance of any false church or
foreign religion, so that by this Thy just judgment, O most mighty God, against
Thy adversaries, Thy true religion may be known to Thy great glory and our
comfort and to the edifying of all our nation. Good Lord, so be it. Amen."
This sentence was openly pronounced and registered, and, as if Providence had
awarded that it should not be delivered in vain, within six days after, Queen
Mary died, detested by all good men and accursed of God!
Though acquainted with these circumstances, the archdeacon's implacability
exceeded that of his great exemplary, Bonner, who, though he had several
persons at that time under his fiery grasp, did not urge their deaths hastily,
by which delay he certainly afforded them an opportunity of escape. At the
queen's decease, many were in bonds: some just taken, some examined, and others
condemned. The writs indeed were issued for several burnings, but by the death
of the three instigators of Protestant murder-the chancellor, the bishop, and
the queen, who fell nearly together, the condemned sheep were liberated, and
lived many years to praise God for their happy deliverance.
These five martyrs, when at the stake, earnestly prayed that their blood might
be the last shed, nor did they pray in vain. They died gloriously, and
perfected the number God had selected to bear witness of the truth in this
dreadful reign, whose names are recorded in the Book of Life; though last, not
least among the saints made meet for immortality through the redeeming blood of
the Lamb!
Catharine Finlay, alias Knight, was first converted by her son's expounding the
Scriptures to her, which wrought in her a perfect work that terminated in
martyrdom. Alice Snoth at the stake sent for her grandmother and godfather, and
rehearsed to them the articles of her faith, and the Commandments of God,
thereby convincing the world that she knew her duty. She died calling upon the
spectators to bear witness that she was a Christian woman, and suffered
joyfully for the testimony of Christ's Gospel.
Among the numberless enormities committed by the merciless and uhnfeeling
Bonner, the murder of this innocent and unoffending child may be ranged as the
most horrid. His father, John Fetty, of the parish of Clerkenwell, by trade a
tailor, and only twenty-four years of age, had made blessed election; he was
fixed secure in eternal hope, and depended on Him who so builds His Church that
the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. But alas! the very wife of his
bosom, whose heart was hardened against the truth, and whose mind was
influenced by the teachers of false doctrine, became his accuser. Brokenbery, a
creature of the pope, and parson of the parish, received the information of
this wedded Delilah, in consequence of which the poor man was apprehended. But
here the awful judgment of an ever-righteous God, who is "of purer eyes
than to behold evil," fell upon this stone-hearted and perfidious woman;
for no sooner was the injured husband captured by her wicked contriving, than
she also was suddenly seized with madness, and exhibited an awful and awakening
instance of God's power to punish the evil-doer. This dreadful circumstance had
some effect upon the hearts of the ungodly hunters who had eagerly grasped
their prey; but, in a relenting moment, they suffered him to remain with his
unworthy wife, to return her good for evil, and to comfort two children, who,
on his being sent to prison, would have been left without a protector, or have
become a burden to the parish. As bad men act from little motives, we may place
the indulgence shown him to the latter account.
We have noticed in the former part of our narratives of the martyrs, some whose
affection would have led them even to sacrifice their own lives, to preserve
their husbands; but here, agreeable to Scripture language, a mother proves,
indeed, a monster in nature! Neither conjugal nor maternal affection could
impress the heart of this disgraceful woman.
Although our afflicted Christian had experienced so much cruelty and falsehood
from the woman who was bound to him by every tie both human and divine, yet,
with a mild and forbearing spirit, he overlooked her misdeeds, during her
calamity endeavoring all he could to procure relief for her malady, and
soothing her by every possible expression of tenderness: thus she became in a
few weeks nearly restored to her senses. But, alas! she returned again to her
sin, "as a dog returneth to his vomit." Malice against the saints of
the Most High was seated in her heart too firmly to be removed; and as her
strength returned, her inclination to work wickedness returned with it. Her
heart was hardened by the prince of darkness; and to her may be applied these
afflicting and soul-harrowing words, "Can the Ethiopian change his skin,
or the leopard his spots? then may ye also do good, that are accustomed to do
evil." Weighing this text duly with another, "I will have mercy on
whom I will have mercy," how shall we presume to refine away the
sovereignty of God by arrainging Jehovah at the bar of human reason, which, in
religious matters, is too often opposed by infinite wisdom? "Broad is the
way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat. Narrow
is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it." The
ways of heaven are indeed inscrutable, and it is our bounden duty to walk ever
dependent on God, looking up to Him with humble confidence, and hope in His goodness,
and ever confess His justice; and where we "cannot unravel, there learn to
trust." This wretched woman, pursuing the horrid dictates of a heart
hardened and depraved, was scarcely confirmed in her recovery, when, stifling
the dictates of honor, gratitude, and every natural affection, she again
accused her husband, who was once more apprehended, and taken before Sir John
Mordant, knight, and one of Queen Mary's commissioners.
Upon examination, his judge finding him fixed in opinions which militated
against those nursed by superstition and maintained by cruelty, he was
sentenced to confinement and torture in Lollard's Tower. Here he was put into
the painful stocks, and had a dish of water set by him, with a stone put into
it, to what purpose God knoweth,e xcept it were to show that he should look for
little other subsistence: which is credible enough, if we consider their like
practices upon divers before mentioned in this history; as, among others, upon
Richard Smith, who died through their cruel imprisonment touching whom, when a
godly woman came to Dr. Story to have leave she might bury him, he asked her if
he had any straw or blood in his mouth; but what he means thereby, I leave to
the judgment of the wise.
On the first day of the third week of our martyr's sufferings, an object
presented itself to his view, which made him indeed feel his tortures with all
their force, and to execrate, with bitterness only short of cursing, the author
of his misery. To mark and punish the proceedings of his tormentors, remained
with the Most High, who noteth even the fall of a sparrow, and in whose sacred
Word it is written, "Vengeance is mine; I will repay." This object
was his own son, a child of the tender age of eight years. For fifteen days,
had its hapless father been suspended by his tormentor by the right arm and
left leg, and sometimes by both, shifting his positions for the purpose of
giving him strength to bear and to lengthen the date of his sufferings. When
the unoffending innocent, desirous of seeing and speaking to its parent,
applied to Bonner for permission to do so, the poor child being asked by the
bishop's chaplain the purport of his errand, he replied he wished to see his
father. "Who is thy father?" said the chaplain. "John
Fetty," returned the boy, at the same time pointing to the place where he
was confined. The interrogating miscreant on this said, "Why, thy father
is a heretic!" The little champion again rejoined, with energy sufficient
to raise admiration in any breast, except that of this unprincipled and
unfeeling wretch-this miscreant, eager to execute the behests of a remoseless
queen-"My father is no heretic: for you have Balaam's mark."
Irritated by reproach so aptly applied, the indignant and mortified priest
concealed his resentment for a moment, and took the undaunted boy into the
house, where having him secure, he presented him to others, whose baseness and
cruelty being equal to his own, they stripped him to the skin, and applied
their scourges to so violent a degree, that, fainting beneath the stripes
inflicted on his tender frame, and covered with the blood that flowed from
them, the victim of their ungodly wrath was ready to expire under his heavy and
unmerited punishment.
In this bleeding and helpless state was the suffering infant, covered only with
his shirt, taken to his father by one of the actors in the horrid tragedy, who,
while he exhibited the heart-rending spectacle, made use of the vilest taunts,
and exulted in what he had done. The dutiful child, as if recovering strength
at the sight of his father, on his knees implored his blessing. "Alas!
Will," said the afflicted parent, in trembling amazement, "who hath
done this to thee!" the artless innocent related the circumstances that
led to the merciless correction which had been so basely inflicted on him; but
when he repeated the reproof bestowed on the chaplain, and which was prompted
by an undaunted spirit, he was torn from his weeping parent, and conveyed again
to the house, where he remained a close prisoner.
Bonner, somewhat fearful that what had been done could not be justified even
among the bloodhounds of his own voracious pack, concluded in his dark and
wicked mind, to release John Fetty, for a time at least, from the severities he
was enduring in the glorious cause of everlasting truth! whose bright rewards
are fixed beyond the boundaries of time, within the confines of eternity; where
the arrow of the wicked cannot wound, even "where there shall be no more
sorrowing for the blessed, who, in the mansion of eternal bliss shall glorify
the Lamb forever and ever." He was accordingly by order of Bonner, (how
disgraceful to all dignity, to say bishop!) liberated from the painful bonds,
and led from Lollard's Tower, to the chamber of that ungodly and infamous
butcher, where he found the bishop bathing himself before a great fire; and at
his first entering the chamber, Fetty said, "God be here and peace!"
"God be here and peace, (said Bonner,) that is neither God speed nor good
morrow!" "If ye kick against this peace, (said Fetty), then this is
not the place that I seek for."
A chaplain of the bishop, standing by, turned the poor man about, and thinking
to abash him, said, in mocking wise, "What have we here-a player!"
While Fetty was thus standing in the bishop's chamber, he espied, hanging about
the bishop's bed, a pair of great black beads, whereupon he said, "My
Lord, I think the hangman is not far off: for the halter (pointing to the
beads) is here already!" At which words the bishop was in a marvellous
rage. Then he immediately after espied also, standing in the bishop's chamber,
in the window, a little crucifix. Then he asked the bishop what it was, and he
answered, that it was Christ. "Was He handled as cruelly as He is here
pictured!" said Fetty. "Yea, that He was," said the bishop.
"And even so cruelly will you handle such as come before you; for you are
unto God's people as Caiaphas was unto Christ!" The bishop, being in a
great fury, said, "Thou art a vile heretic, and I will burn thee, or else
I will spend all I have, unto my gown." "Nay, my Lord, (said Fetty)
you were better to give it to some poor body, that he may pray for you."
Bonner, notwithstanding his passion, which was raised to the utmost by the calm
and pointed remarks of this observing Christian, thought it most prudent to
dismiss the father, on account of the nearly murdered child. His coward soul
trembled for the consequences which might ensue; fear is inseparable from
little minds; and this dastardly pampered priest experienced its effects so far
as to induce him to assume the appearance of that he was an utter stranger to,
namely, MERCY.
The father, on being dismissed, by the tyrant Bonner, went home with a heavy
heart, with his dying child, who did not survive many days the cruelties which
had been inflicted on him.
How contrary to the will of our great King and Prophet, who mildly taught His
followers, was the conduct of this sanguinary and false teacher, this vile
apostate from his God to Satan! But the archfiend had taken entire possession
of his heart, and guided every action of the sinner he had hardened; who, given
up to terrible destruction, was running the race of the wicked, marking his
footsteps with the blood of the saints, as if eager to arrive at the goal of
eternal death.
Deliverance of Dr. Sands
This eminent prelate, vice-chancellor of Cambridge, at the
request of the duke of Northumberland, when he came down to Cambridge in
support of Lady Jane Grey's claim to the throne, undertook at a few hours'
notice, to preach before the duke and the university. The text he took was such
as presented itself in opening the Bible, and a more appropriate one he could
not have chosen, namely, the three last verses of Joshua. As God gave him the
text, so He gave him also such order and utterance that it excited the most
lively emotions in his numerous auditors. The sermon was about to be sent to
London to be printed, when news arrived that the duke had returned and Queen
Mary was proclaimed.
The duke was immediately arrested, and Dr. Sands was compelled by the university
to give up his office. He was arrested by the queen's order, and when Mr.
Mildmay wondered that so learned a man could wilfully incur danger, and speak
against so good a princess as Mary, the doctor replied, "If I would do as
Mr. Mildmay has done, I need not fear bonds. He came down armed against Queen
Mary; before a trator-now a great friend. I cannot with one mouth blow hot and
cold in this manner." A general plunder of Dr. Sands' property ensued, and
he was brought to London upon a wretched horse. Various insults he met on the
way from the bigoted Catholics, and as he passed through Bishopsgate-street, a
stone struck him to the ground. He was the first prisoner that entered the
Tower, in that day, on a religious account; his man was admitted with his Bible,
but his shirts and other articles were taken from him.
On Mary's coronation day the doors of the dungeon were so laxly guarded that it
was easy to escape. A Mr. Mitchell, like a true friend, came to him, afforded
him his own clothes as a disguise, and was willing to abide the consequence of
being found in his place. This was a rare friendship: but he refused the offer;
saying, "I know no cause why I should be in prison. To do thus were to
make myself guilty. I will expect God's good will, yet do I think myself much
obliged to you"; and so Mr. Mitchell departed.
With Doctor Sands was imprisoned Mr. Bradford; they were kept close in prison
twenty-nine weeks. John Fowler, their keeper, was a perverse papist, yet, by
often persuading him, at length he began to favor the Gospel, and was so
persuaded in the true religion, that on a Sunday, when they had Mass in the
chapel, Dr. Sands administered the Communion to Bradford and to Fowler. Thus
Fowler was their son begotten in bonds. To make room for Wyat and his
accomplices, Dr. Sands and nine other preachers were sent to the Marshalsea.
The keeper of the Marshalsea appointed to every preacher a man to lead him in
the street; he caused them to go on before, and he and Dr. Sands followed
conversing together. By this time popery began to be unsavory. After they had
passed the bridge, the keeper said to Dr. Sands: "I perceive the vain
people would set you forward to the fire. You are as vain as they, if you,
being a young man, will stand in your own conceit, and prefer your own judgment
before that of so many worthy prelates, ancient, learned, and grave men as be
in this realm. If you do so, you shall find me a severe keeper, and one that
utterly dislikes your religion." Dr. Sands answered, "I know my years
to be young, and my learning but small; it is enough to know Christ crucified,
and he hath learned nothing who seeth not the great blasphemy that is in
popery. I will yield unto God, and not unto man; I have read in the Scriptures
of many godly and couretous keepers: may God make you one! if not, I trust He
will give me strength and patience to bear your hard usage." Then said the
keeper, "Are you resolved to stand to your religion?"
"Yes," quoth the doctor, "by God's grace!" "Truly,"
said the keeper, "I love you the better for it; I did but tempt you: what
favor I can show you, you shall be assured of; and I shall think myself happy
if I might die at the stake with you."
He was as good as his word, for he trusted the doctor to walk in the fields
alone, where he met with Mr. Bradford, who was also a prisoner in the King's
Bench, and had found the same favor from his keeper. At his request, he put Mr.
Saunders in along with him, to be his bedfellow, and the Communion was
administered to a great number of communicants.
When Wyat with his army came to Southwark, he offered to liberate all the
imprisoned Protestants, but Dr. Sands and the rest of the preachers refused to
accept freedom on such terms.
After Dr. Sands had been nine weeks prisoner in the Marshalsea, by the mediation
of Sir Thomas Holcroft, knight marshal, he was set at liberty. Though Mr.
Holcroft had the queen's warrant, the bishop commanded him not to set Dr. Sands
at liberty, until he had taken sureties of two gentlemen with him, each one
bound in Å“500, that Dr. Sands should not depart out of the realm without
license. Mr. Holcroft immediately after met with two gentlemen of the north,
friends and cousins to Dr. Sands, who offered to be bound for him.
After dinner, the same day, Sir Thomas Holcroft sent for Dr.
Sands to his lodgings at Westminster, to communicate to him all he had done.
Dr. Sands answered: "I give God thanks, who hath moved your heart to mind
me so well, that I think myself most bound unto you. God shall requite you, nor
shall I ever be found unthankful. But as you have dealt friendly with me, I
will also deal plainly with you. I came a freeman into prison; I will not go
forth a bondman. As I cannot benefit my friends, so will I not hurt them. And
if I be set at liberty, I will not tarry six days in this realm, if I may get
out. If therefore I may not get free forth, send me to the Marshalsea again,
and there you shall be sure of me."
This answer Mr. Holcroft much disapproved of; but like a true friend he
replied: "Seeing you cannot be altered, I will change my purpose, and
yield unto you. Come of it what will, I will set you at liberty; and seeing you
have a mind to go over sea, get you gone as quick as you can. One thing I
require of you, that, while you are there, you write nothing to me hither, for
this may undo me."
Dr. Sands having taken an affectionate farewell of him and his other friends in
bonds, departed. He went by Winchester house, and there took boat, and came to
a friend's house in London, called William Banks, and tarried there one night.
The next night he went to another friend's house, and there he heard that
strict search was making for him, by Gardiner's express order.
Dr. Sands now conveyed himself by night to one Mr. Berty's house, a stranger
who was in the Marshalsea prison with him a while; he was a good Protestant and
dwelt in Mark-lane. There he was six days, and then removed to one of his
acquaintances in Cornhill; he caused his man Quinton to provide two geldings
for him, resolved on the morrow to ride into Essex, to Mr. Sands, his
father-in-law, where his wife was, which, after a narrow escape, he effected.
He had not been theretwo hours, before Mr. Sands was told that two of the
guards would that night apprehend Dr. Sands.
That night Dr. Sands was guided to an honest farmer's near the sea, where he
tarried two days and two nights in a chamber without company. After that he
removed to one James Mower's, a shipmaster, who dwelt at Milton-Shore, where he
waited for a wind to Flanders. While he was there, James Mower brought to him
forty or fifty mariners, to whom he gave an exhortation; they liked him so well
that they promised to die rather than he should be apprehended.
The sixth of May, Sunday, the wind served. In taking leave of his hostess, who
had been married eight years without having a child, he gave her a fine
handkerchief and an old royal of gold, and said, "Be of good comfort;
before that one whole year be past, God shall give you a child, a boy."
This came to pass, for, that day twelve-month, wanting one day, God gave her a
son.
Scarcely had he arrived at Antwerp, when he learned that King Philip had sent
to apprehend him. He next flew to Augsburg, in Cleveland, where Dr. Sands
tarried fourteen days, and then travelled towards Strassburg, where, after he
had lived one year, his wife came to him. He was sick of a flux nine months,
and had a child which died of the plague. His amiable wife at length fell into
a consumption, and died in his arms. When his wife was dead, he went to Zurich,
and there was in Peter Martyr's house for the space of five weeks.
As they sat at dinner one day, word was suddenly brought that Queen Mary was
dead, and Dr. Sands was sent for by his friends at Strassburg, where he
preached. Mr. Grindal and he came over to England, and arrived in London the
same day that Queen Elizabeth was crowned. This faithful servant of Christ,
under Queen Elizabeth, rose to the highest distinction in the Church, being
successively bishop of Worcester, bishop of London, and archbishop of York.
Queen Mary's Treatment of Her Sister, the Princess Elizabeth
The preservation of Princess Elizabeth may be reckoned a
remarkable instance of the watchful eye which Christ had over His Church. The
bigotry of Mary regarded not the ties of consanguinity, of natural affection,
of national succession. Her mind, physically morose, was under the dominion of
men who possessed not the milk of human kindness, and whose principles werre
sanctioned and enjoined by the idolatrous tenets of the Romish pontiff. Could
they have foreseen the short date of Mary's reign, they would have imbrued
their hands in the Protestant blood of Elizabeth, and, as a sine qua non of the
queen's salvation, have compelled her to bequeath the kingdom to some Catholic
prince. The contest might have been attended with the horrors incidental to a
religious civil war, and calamities might have been felt in England similar to
those under Henry the Great in France, whom Queen Elizabeth assisted in
opposing his priest-ridden Catholic subjects. As if Providence had the perpetual
establishment of the Protestant faith in view, the difference of the duration
of the two reigns is worthy of notice. Mary might have reigned many years in
the course of nature, but the course of grace willed it otherwise. Five years
and four months was the time of persecution alloted to this weak, disgraceful
reign, while that of Elizabeth reckoned a number of years among the highest of
those who have sat on the English throne, almost nine times that of her
merciless sister!
Before Mary attained the crown, she treated Elizabeth with a sisterly kindness,
but from that period her conduct was altered, and the most imperious distance
substituted. Though Elizabeth had no concern in the rebellion of Sir Thomas
Wyat, yet she was apprehended, and treated as a culprit in that commotion. The
manner too of her arrest was similar to the mind that dictated it: the three
cabinet members, whom she deputed to see the arrest executed, rudely entered
the chamber at ten o'clock at night, and, though she was extremely ill, they
could scarcely be induced to let her remain until the following morning. Her
enfeebled state permitted her to be moved only by short stages in a journey of
such length to London; but the princess, though afflicted in person, had a
consolation in mind which her sister never could purchase: the people, through
whom she passed on her way pitied her, and put up their prayers for her
preservation.
Arrived at court, she was made a close prisoner for a fortnight, without
knowing who was her accuser, or seeing anyone who could console or advise her.
The charge, however, was at length unmasked by Gardiner, who, with nineteen of
the Council, accused her of abetting Wyat's conspiracy, which she religiously
affirmed to be false. Failing in this, they placed against her the transactions
of Sir Peter Carew in the west, in which they were as unsuccessful as in the
former. The queen now signified that it was her pleasure she should be
committed to the Tower, a step which overwhelmed the princess with the greatest
alarm and uneasiness. In vain she hoped the queen's majesty would not commit
her to such a place; but there was no lenity to be expected; her attendants
were limited, and a hundred northern soldiers appointed to guard her day and
night.
On Palm Sunday she was conducted to the Tower. When she came to the palace
garden, she cast her eyes towards the windows, eagerly anxious to meet those of
the queen, but she was disappointed. A strict order was given in London that
every one should go to church, and carry palms, that she might be conveyed
without clamor or commiseration to her prison.
At the time of passing under London Bridge the fall of the tide made it very
dangerous, and the barge some time stuck fast against the starlings. To mortify
her the more, she was landed at Traitors' Stairs. As it rained fast, and she
was obliged to step in the water to land, she hesitated; but this excited no
complaisance in the lord in waiting. When she set her foot on the steps, she
exclaimed, "Here lands as true a subject, being prisoner, as ever landed
at these stairs; and before Thee, O God, I speak it, having no friend but Thee
alone!"
A large number of the wardens and servants of the Tower were arranged in order
between whom the princess had to pass. Upon inquiring the use of this parade,
she was informed it was customary to do so. "If," said she, "it
is on account of me, I beseech you that they may be dismissed." On this
the poor men knelt down, and prayed that God would preserve her grace, for
which they were the next day turned out of their employments. The tragic scene
must have been deeply interesting, to see an amiable and irreproachable
princess sent like a lamb to languish in expectation of cruelty and death;
against whom there was no other charge than her superiority in Christian
virtues and acquired endowments. Her attendants openly wept as she proceeded
with a dignified step to the frowning battlements of her destination.
"Alas!" said Elizabeth, "what do you mean? I took you to
comfort, not to dismay me; for my truth is such that no one shall have cause to
weep for me."
The next step of her enemies was to procure evidence by means which, in the
present day, are accounted detestable. Many poor prisoners were racked, to
extract, if possible, any matters of accusation which might affect her life,
and thereby gratify Gardiner's sanguinary disposition. He himself came to
examine her, respecting her removal from her house at Ashbridge to Dunnington
castle a long while before. The princess had quite forgotten this trivial circumstance,
and Lord Arundel, after the investigation, kneeling down, apologized for having
troubled her in such a frivolous matter. "You sift me narrowly,"
replied the princess, "but of this I am assured, that God has appointed a
limit to your proceedings; and so God forgive you all."
Her own gentlemen, who ought to have been her purveyors, and served her
provision, were compelled to give place to the common soldiers, at the command
of the constable of the Tower, who was in every respect a servile tool of Gardiner;
her grace's friends, however, procured an order of Council which regulated this
petty tyranny more to her satisfaction.
After having been a whole month in close confinement, she sent for the lord
chamberlain and Lord Chandois, to whom she represented the ill state of her
health from a want of proper air and exercise. Application being made to the
Council, Elizabeth was with some difficulty admitted to walk in the queen's
lodgings, and afterwards in the garden, at which time the prisoners on that side
were attended by their keepers, and not suffered to look down upon her. Their
jealousy was excited by a child of four years, who daily brought flowers to the
princess. The child was threatened with a whipping, and the father ordered to
keep him from the princess's chambers.
On the fifth of May the constable was discharged from his office, and Sir Henry
Benifield appointed in his room, accompanied by a hundred ruffian-looking
soldiers in blue. This measure created considerable alarm in the mind of the
princess, who imagined it was preparatory to her undergoing the same fate as
Lady Jane Grey, upon the same block. Assured that this project was not in
agitation, she entertained an idea that the new keeper of the Tower was
commissioned to make away with her privately, as his equivocal character was in
conformity with the ferocious inclination of those by whom he was appointed.
A report now obtained that her Grace was to be taken away by the new constable
and his soldiers, which in the sequel proved to be true. An order of Council
was made for her removal to the manor Woodstock, which took place on Trinity
Sunday, May 13, under the authority of Sir Henry Benifield and Lord Tame. The
ostensible cause of her removal was to make room for other prisoners. Richmond
was the first place they stopped at, and here the princess slept, not however
without much alarm at first, as her own servants were superseded by the
soldiers, who were placed as guards at her chamber door. Upon representation,
Lord Tame overruled this indecent stretch of power, and granted her perfect
safety while under his custody.
In passing through Windsor, she saw several of her poor dejected servants
waiting to see her. "Go to them," said she, to one of her attendants,
"and say these words from me, tanquim ovis, that is, like a sheep to the
slaughter."
The next night her Grace lodged at the house of a Mr. Dormer, in her way to
which the people manifested such tokens of loyal affection that Sir Henry was
indignant, and bestowed on them very liberally the names of rebels and
traitors. In some villages they rang the bells for joy, imagining the
princess's arrival among them was from a very different cause; but this
harmless demonstration of gladness was sufficient with the persecuting
Benifield to order his soldiers to seize and set these humble persons in the
stocks.
The day following, her Grace arrived at Lord Tame's house, where she stayed all
night, and was most nobly entertained. This excited Sir Henry's indignation,
and made him caution Lord Tame to look well to his proceedings; but the
humanity of Lord Tame was not to be frightened, and he returned a suitable
reply. At another time, this official prodigal, to show his consequence and
disregard of good manners, went up into a chamber, where was appointed for her
Grace a chair, two cushions, and a foot carpet, wherein he presumptuously sat
and called his man to pull off his boots. As soon as it was known to the ladies
and gentlemen they laughed him to scorn. When supper was done, he called to his
lordship, and directed that all gentlemen and ladies should withdraw home,
marvelling much that he would permit such a large company, considering the
great charge he had committed to him. "Sir Henry," said his lordship,
"content yourself; all shall be avoided, your men and all."
"Nay, but my soldiers," replied Sir Henry, "shall watch all
night." Lord Tame answered, "There is no need."
"Well," said he, "need or need not, they shall so do."
The next day her Grace took her journey from thence to Woodstock, where she was
enclosed, as before in the Tower of London, the soldiers keeping guard within
and without the walls, every day, to the number of sixty; and in the night,
without the walls were forty during all the time of her imprisonment.
At length she was permitted to walk in the gardens, but under the most severe
restrictions, Sir Henry keeping the keys himself, and placing her always under
many bolts and locks, whence she was induced to call him her jailer, at which
he felt offended, and begged her to substitute the word officer. After much
earnest entreaty to the Council, she obtained permission to write to the queen;
but the jailer who brought her pen, ink, and paper stood by her while she
wrote, and, when she left off, he carried the things away until they were wanted
again. He also insisted upon carrying it himself to the queen, but Elizabeth
would not suffer him to be the bearer, and it was presented by one of her
gentlemen.
After the letter, Doctors Owen and Wendy went to the princess, as the state of
her health rendered medical assistance necessary. They stayed with her five or
six days, in which time she grew much better; they then returned to the queen,
and spoke flatteringly of the princess' submission and humility, at which the
queen seemed moved; but the bishops wanted a concession that she had offended
her majesty. Elizabeth spurned this indirect mode of acknowledging herself
guilty. "If I have offended," said she, "and am guilty, I crave
no mercy but the law, which I am certain I should have had ere this, if
anything could have been proved against me. I wish I were as clear from the
peril of my enemies; then should I not be thus bolted and locked up within
walls and doors."
Much question arose at this time respecting the propriety of uniting the
princess to some foreigner, that she might quit the realm with a suitable
portion. One of the Council had the brutality to urge the necessity of
beheading her, if the king (Philip) meant to keep the realm in peace; but the
Spaniards, detesting such a base thought, replied, "God forbid that oiur
king and master should consent to such an infamous proceeding!" Stimulated
by a noble principle, the Spaniards from this time repeatedly urged to the king
that it would do him the highest honor to liberate the Lady Elizabeth, nor was
the king impervious to their solicitation. He took her out of prison, and
shortly after she was sent for to Hampton court. It may be remarked in this
place, that the fallacy of human reasoning is shown in every moment. The
barbarian who suggested the policy of beheading Elizabeth little contemplated
the change of condition which his speech would bring about. In her journey from
Woodstock, Benifield treated her with the same severity as before; removing her
on a stormy day, and not suffering her old servant, who had come to Colnbrook,
where she slept, to speak to her.
She remained a fortnight strictly guarded and watched, before anyone dared to
speak with her; at length the vile Gardiner with three more of the Council,
came with great submission. Elizabeth saluted them, remarked that she had been
for a long time kept in solitary confinement, and begged they would intercede
with the king and queen to deliver her from prison. Gardiner's visit was to
draw from the princess a confession of her guilt; but she was guarded against
his subtlety, adding, that, rather than admit she had done wrong, she would lie
in prison all the rest of her life. The next day Gardiner came again, and
kneeling down, declared that the queen was astonished she would persist in
affirming that she was blameless-whence it would be inferred that the queen had
unjustly imprisoned her grace. Gardiner further informed her that the queen had
declared that she must tell another tale, before she could be set at liberty.
"Then," replied the high-minded Elizabeth, "I had rather be in
prison with honesty and truth, than have my liberty, and be suspected by her
majesty. What I have said, I will stand to; nor will I ever speak
falsehood!" The bishop and his friends then departed, leaving her locked
up as before.
Seven days after the queen sent for Elizabeth at ten o'clock at night; two
years had elapsed since they had seen each other. It created terror in the mind
of the princess, who, at setting out, desired her gentlemen and ladies to pray
for her, as her return to them again was uncertain.
Being conducted to the queen's bedchamber, upon entering it the princess knelt
down, and having begged of God to preserve her majesty, she humbly assured her
that her majesty had not a more loyal subject in the realm, whatever reports
might be circulated to the contrary. With a haughty ungraciousness, the
imperious queen replied: "You will not confess your offence, but stand
stoutly to your truth. I pray God it may so fall out."
"If it do not," said Elizabeth, "I request neither favor nor
pardon at your majesty's hands." "Well," said the queen,
"you stiffly still persevere in your truth. Besides, you will not confess
that you have not been wrongfully punished."
"I must not say so, if it please your majesty, to you."
"Why, then," said the queen, "belike you will to others."
"No, if it please your majesty: I have borne the burden, and must bear it.
I humbly beseech your majesty to have a good opinion of me and to think me to
be your subject, not only from the beginning hitherto, but for ever, as long as
life lasteth." They departed without any heartfelt satisfaction on either
side; nor can we think the conduct of Elizabeth displayed that independence and
fortitude which accompanies perfect innocence. Elizabeth's admitting that she
would not say, neither to the queen nor to others, that she had been unjustly
punished, was in direct contradiction to what she had told Gardiner, and must
have arisen from some motive at this time inexplicable. King Philip is supposed
to have been secretly concealed during the interview, and to have been friendly
to the princess.
In seven days from the time of her return to imprisonment, her severe jailer
and his men were discharged, and she was set at liberty, under the constraint
of being always attended and watched by some of the queen's Council. Four of
her gentlemen were sent to the Tower without any other charge against them than
being zealous servants of their mistress. This event was soon after followed by
the happy news of Gardiner's death, for which all good and merciful men
glorified God, inasmuch as it had taken the chief tiger from the den, and
rendered the life of the Protestant successor of Mary more secure.
This miscreant, while the princess was in the Tower, sent a secret writ, signed
by a few of the Council, for her private execution, and, had Mr. Bridges,
lieutenant of the Tower, been as little scrupulous of dark assassination as
this pious prelate was, she must have perished. The warrant not having the
queen's signature, Mr. Bridges hastened to her majesty to give her information
of it, and to know her mind. This was a plot of Winchester's, who, to convict
her of treasonable practices, caused several prisoners to be racked;
particularly Mr. Edmund Tremaine and Smithwicke were offered considerable
bribes to accuse the guiltless princess.
Her life was several times in danger. While at Woodstock, fire was apparently
put between the boards and ceiling under which she lay. It was also reported
strongly that one Paul Penny, the keeper of Woodstock, a notorious ruffian, was
appointed to assassinate her, but, however this might be, God counteracted in
this point the nefarious designs of the enemies of the Reformation. James
Basset was another appointed to perform the same deed: he was a peculiar
favorite of Gardiner, and had come within a mile of Woodstock, intending to
speak with Benifield on the subject. The goodness of God however so ordered it
that while Basset was travelling to Woodstock, Benifield, by an order of
Council, was going to London: in consequence of which, he left a positive order
with his brother, that no man should be admitted to the princess during his
absence, not even with a note from the queen; his brother met the murderer, but
the latter's intention was frustrated, as no admission could be obtained.
When Elizabeth quitted Woodstock, she left the following lines written with her
diamond on the window:
Much suspected by me,
Nothing proved can be. Quoth Elizabeth, prisoner.
With the life of Winchester ceased the extreme danger of the princess, as many
of her other secret enemies soon after followed him, and, last of all, her
cruel sister, who outlived Gardiner but three years.
The death of Mary was ascribed to several causes. The Council endeavored to
console her in her last moments, imagining it was the absence of her husband
that lay heavy at her heart, but though his treatment had some weight, the loss
of Calais, the last fortress possessed by the English in France, was the true
source of her sorrow. "Open my heart," said Mary, "when I am
dead, and you shall find Calais written there." Religion caused her no
alarm; the priests had lulled to rest every misgiving of conscience, which
might have obtruded, on account of the accusing spirits of the murdered martyrs.
Not the blood she had spilled, but the loss of a town excited her emotions in
dying, and this last stroke seemed to be awarded, that her fanatical
persecution might be paralleled by her political imbecility.
We earnestly pray that the annals of no country, Catholic or pagan, may ever be
stained with such a repetition of human sacrifices to papal power, and that the
detestation in which the character of Mary is holden, may be a beacon to
succeeding monarchs to avoid the rocks of fanaticism!
God's Punishment upon Some of the Persecutors of His People in
Mary's Reign
After that arch-persecutor, Gardiner, was dead, others
followed, of whom Dr. Morgan, bishop of St. David's, who succeeded Bishop
Farrar, is to be noticed. Not long after he was installed in his bishoipric, he
was stricken by the visitation of God; his food passed through the throat, but
rose again with great violence. In this manner, almost literally starved to
death, he terminated his existence.
Bishop Thornton, suffragan of Dover, was an indefatigable persecutor of the
true Church. One day after he had exercised his cruel tyranny upon a number of
pious persons at Canterbury, he came from the chapter-house to Borne, where as
he stood on a Sunday looking at his men playing at bowls, he fell down in a fit
of the palsy, and did not long survive.
After the latter, succeeded another bishop or suffragen, ordained by Gardiner,
who not long after he had been raised to the see of Dover, fell down a pair of
stairs in the cardinal's chamber at Greenwich, and broke his neck. He had just
received the cardinal's blessing-he could receive nothing worse.
John Cooper, of Watsam, Suffolk, suffered by perjury; he was from private pique
persecuted by one Fenning, who suborned two others to swear that they heard
Cooper say, 'If God did not take away Queen Mary, the devil would.' Cooper
denied all such words, but Cooper was a Proestant and a heretic, and therefore
he was hung, drawn and quartered, his property confiscated, and his wife and
nine children reduced to beggary. The following harvest, however, Grimwood of
Hitcham, one of the witnesses before mentioned, was visited for his villainy:
while at work, stacking up corn, his bowels suddenly burst out, and before
relief could be obtained, her died. Thus was deliberate perjury rewarded by
sudden death!
In the case of the martyr Mr. Bradford, the severity of Mr.
Sheriff Woodroffe has been noticed-he rejoiced at the death of the saints, and
at Mr. Rogers' execution, he broke the carman's head, because he stopped the
cart to let the martyr's children take a last farewell of him. Scarcely had Mr.
Woodroffe's sheriffalty expired a week, when he was struck with a paralytic
affection, and languished a few days in the most pitable and helpless
condition, presenting a striking contrast to his former activity in the cause
of blood.
Ralph Lardyn, who betrayed the martyr George Eagles, is believed to have been
afterward arraigned and hanged in consequence of accusing himself. At the bar,
he denounced himself in these words: "This has most justly fallen upon me,
for betraying the innocent blood of that just and good man George Eagles, who
was here condemned in the time of Queen Mary by my procurement, when I sold his
blood for a little money."
As James Abbes was going to execution, and exhorting the pitying bystanders to
adhere steadfastly to the truth, and like him to seal the cause of Christ with
their blood, a servant of the sheriff's interrupted him, and blasphemously
called his religion heresy, and the good man a lunatic. Scarcely however had the
flames reached the martyr, before the fearful stroke of God fell upn the
hardened wretch, in the presence of him he had so cruelly ridiculed. The man
was suddenly seized with lunacy, cast off his clothes and shoes before the
people, (as Abbes had done just before, to distribute among some poor persons,)
at the same time exclaiming, "Thus did James Abbes, the true servant of
God, who is saved by I am damned." Repeating this often, the sheriff had
him secured, and made him put his clothes on, but no sooner was he alone, than
he tore them off, and exclaimed as before. Being tied in a cart, he was
conveyed to his master's house, and in about half a year he died; just before
which a priest came to attend him, with the crucifix, etc., but the wretched
man bade him take away such trumpery, and said that he and other priests had
been the cause of his damnation, but that Abbes was saved.
One Clark, an avowed enemy of the Protestants in King Edward's reign, hung
himself in the Tower of London.
Froling, a priest of much celebrity, fell down in the street and died on the
spot.
Dale, an indefatigable informer, was consumed by vermin, and died a miserable
spectacle.
Alexander, the severe keeper of Newgate, died miserably, swelling to a
prodigious size, and became so inwardly putrid, that none could come near him.
This cruel minister of the law would go to Bonner, Story, and others,
requesting them to rid his prison, he was so much pestered with heretics! The
son of this keeper, in three years after his father's death, dissipated his
great property, and died suddenly in Newgate market. "The sins of the
father," says the decalogue, "shall be visited on the children."
John Peter, son-in-law of Alexander, a horrid blasphemer and persecutor, died
wretchedly. When he affirmed anything, he would say, "If it be not true, I
pray I may rot ere I die." This awful state visited him in all its
loathsomeness.
Sir Ralph Ellerker was eagerly desirous to see the heart taken out of Adam
Damlip, who was wrongfully put to death. Shortly after Sir Ralph was slain by
the French, who mangled him dreadfully, cut off his limbs, and tore his heart
out.
When Gardiner heard of the miserable end of Judge Hales, he called the
profession of the Gospel a doctrine of desperation; but he forgot that the
judge's despondency arose after he had consented to the papistry. But with more
reason may this be said of the Catholic tenets, if we consider the miserable
end of Dr. Pendleton, Gardiner, and most of the leading persecutors. Gardiner,
upon his death bed, was reminded by a bishop of Peter denying his master,
"Ah," said Gardiner, "I have denied with Peter, but never
repented with Peter."
After the accession of Elizabeth, most of the Catholic prelates were imprisoned
in the Tower or the Fleet; Bonner was put into the Marshalsea.
Of the revilers of God's Word, we detail, among many others, the following
occurrence. One William Maldon, living at Greenwich in servitude, was
instructing himself profitably in reading an English primer one winter's
evening. A serving man, named John Powell, sat by, and ridiculed all that
Maldon said, who cautioned him not to make a jest of the Word of God. Powell
nevertheless continued, until Maldon came to certain English Prayers, and read
aloud, "Lord, have mercy upon us, Christ have mercy upon us," etc.
Suddenly the reviler started, and exclaimed, "Lord, have mercy upon
us!" He was struck with the utmost terror of mind, said the evil spirit
could not abide that Christ should have any mercy upon him, and sunk into
madness. He was remitted to Bedlam, and became an awful warning that God will
not always be insulted with impunity.
Henry Smith, a student in the law, had a pious Protesant father, of Camben, in
Gloucestershire, by whom he was virtuously educated. While studying law in the
middle temple, he was induced to profess Catholicism, and, going to Louvain, in
France, he returned with pardons, crucifixes, and a great freight of popish
toys. Not content with these things, he openly reviled the Gospel religion he
had been brought up in; but conscience one night reproached him so dreadfully,
that in a fit of despair he hung himself in his garters. He was buried in a
lane, without the Christian service being read over him.
Dr. Story, whose name has been so often mtnioned in the preceding pages, was
reserved to be cut off by public execution, a practice in which he had taken
great delight when in power. He is supposed to have had a hand in most of the
conflagrations in Mary's time, and was even ingenious in his invention of new
modes of inflicting torture. When Elizabeth came to the throne, he was
committed to prison, but unaccountably effected his escape to the continent, to
carry fire and sword there among the Protestant brethren. From the duke of
Alva, at Antwerp, he received a special commission to search all ships for
contraband goods, and particularly for English heretical books.
Dr. Story gloried in a commission that was ordered by Providence to be his
ruin, and to preserve the faithful from his sanguinary cruelty. It was
contrived that one Parker, a merchant, should sail to Antwerp and information
should be given to Dr. Story that he had a quantity of heretical books on
board. The latter no sooner heard this, than he hastened to the vessel, sought
everywhere above, and then went under the hatches, which were fastened down
upon him. A prosperous gale brought the ship to England, and this traitorous,
persecuting rebel was committed to prison, where he remained a considerable
time, obstinately objecting to recant his Anti-christian spirit, or admit of
Queen Elizabeth's supremacy. He alleged, though by birth and education an
Englishman, that he was a sworn subject of the king of Spain, in whose service
the famous duke of Alva was. The doctor being condemned, was laid upon a
hurdle, and drawn from the Tower to Tyburn, where after being suspended about
half an hour, he was cut down, stripped, and the executioner displayed the
heart of a traitor.
Thus ended the existence of this Nimrod of England.
No comments:
Post a Comment