" tales of the King or the Queen, should be set upon the
" pillory, if it fortuned to be said without any city or
** town corporate ; but if within any city or town corporate,
" then to have both his ears cut off, unless he paid 100/. to
" the King within a month.
" If any spake any seditious news, rumours, or tales, to
" the slander of the King or Queen, of the speaking or re-
" porting of others, he was to be set upon the pillory, if it
" fortuned to be without any city or town corporate ; if it
" happened to be within, then to have one of his ears cut
" off, unless he pay 100 mark to the King and Queen
" within a month after the judgment given. But if any
*' should set forth a book or ballad, rhyme, letter, &c. to
" the slander and reproach of the King or Queen, or to the
" enraging and stirring of any insurrection, or should pro-
" cure any such book or ballad, &c. to be set forth, his
" right hand was to be stricken off. And if they offended
" again, to be imprisoned during their lives." As these
severe laws shewed the severity of the government, so like-
wise how discontented the people were at this Spanish
match, by the multitude of abusive writings against it, that
they were fain to have them restrained by such kind of
laws.
The city was to contribute a great part towards this so_
o 4
200 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
i HAP. lemnity, the new married Prince being to pass through it.
Therefore, in the month of June, earnest preparations were
Anno i554. ma ki n g f or j,j s rece p t i on . As first of all, June the 4th, all
tions in the gibbets were taken down in all places in London and
* he c ' ty the suburbs, having stood there ever since February, to the
Prince's re- terrifying and disgracing of the city ; and might have stood
ce P 10n - longer still, had it not been very convenient to have them
out of sight upon the triumphal entrance of Philip. On
the same day the mayor and aldermen ordered a scaffold to
be made about the fair cross in Cheap, for the repairing
and gilding of it against the Prince's coming. At the same
time a fifteenth and an half was granted by the mayor, al-
dermen, and common council, to be laid upon the commons,
forthwith to be raised towards the charges in preparing the
city for the said Prince. Ordered also by the same, that
two aldermen should watch every night, and one or two
constables till three or four in the morning, for fear, as it
seems, of some disturbances among the citizens, in detesta-
tion of this Spanish affair. On the 9th day, the said cross
in Cheap was covered with canvass from the foot to the top,
in order to the repairing of it, as was aforesaid, and for the
preserving it from soil after it was done, that its first splen-
did appearance might be preserved for the joyful day.
July 19, Philip, Prince of Spain, arrived at Southamp-
ton, being Thursday.
Proclama- J u ]y oj^ by ten f tne d^k was proclaimed through
tion for the T , . 1 t-» • i> o iii o
nobility to London, that the Prince of Spam was landed at Southamp-
meet the ton? ana « fa^ every peer, lord, and lady of quality, should
2 28 resort un to her Grace's city of Winchester with all speed,
to her Grace's wedding. The same afternoon a command
was issued from the Lord Mayor, that every one should
make bonfires in every street where they dwelt. This night,
in many places, tables were set, and plenty of good liquor
for all comers, till ten o'clock at night, together with ring-
ing of bells and pastimes. On the 23d of July, it was com-
manded, that every parish in London should go in proces-
sion, and to sing Te Deum also in every parish, and that
UNDER QUEEN MARY I. 201
there should be ringing of bells, being the day the Prince CHAP,
departed from Southampton to Winchester, where he was XIV-
to meet the Queen. Anno 1554.
Harpsfield, the Bishop of London's chaplain, was put The King's
up to preach at Paul's Cross, July 29, being the next Sun- JJJJJb?^
day after the wedding day. And he prayed in his beads pronounced
for the King and the Queen, Philip and Mary, by the cross.
grace of God King and Queen of England, France, Naples,
Jerusalem, and Ireland, Defenders of the Faith ; Princes of
Spain and Sicily ; Archdukes of Austrich ; Dukes of Mi-
lain, Burgundy, and Brabant ; Counts of Haspurge, Flan-
ders, and Tyrole. And Aug. 1, the King and Queen were
proclaimed in London, with all these their titles: which
were greatly augmented when the Emperor, his father, re-
signed and laid aside his empire : for then thus ran his swell-
ing style; Philip, by the grace of God, King of Castile,
Aragon, the two Sicilies, Jerusalem, Navar, Granado, To-
ledo, Valentia, Gallicia, Malerca, Sivil, Serdova, Cordova,
Mursia, Corsiga, Jaen, Algarve, Algasica, Giberaltarre, the
islands of the Canaries, the islands of the Indies and of the
ocean seas ; Archduke of Austria ; Marquess of Oreston,
Errel, Barsillonia, Biscay, Molina; Duke of Burgoign,
Brabant, Milain ; Lord of Flaunders and Tirole. And
his revenues were prodigiously great within his own realms,
in lands, rents, and customs, and other profits, besides the
West Indies, and other dominions, as Italy, and the like :
being accounted nine millions yearly, accounting a million
at 100,000 dollars; which, at 5s. the dollar, is sterling
2,475,000/. The truth is, I think, he was the greatest
Prince in Europe ; and yet neither the Queen nor the realm
was the better for him, but much the worse, as appeared in
the sequel : and would have proved still much worse had
the Queen lived.
For it was well enough known afterwards, that the great Philip de-
drift of this Prince by this match was, to let himself this m °^ h ° im
way into the possession of the kingdom : which the Lord sclf master
Burghley, in a letter of his to a nobleman of Scotland, de-
202 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
CHAP, clared in these words : " It is well known how he [the King
XIV- " of Spain] had figured himself an empire over all this part
Anno 1554. " of the world; what plots he laid for the compassing
" thereof. A foundation was laid for the subduing of this
" land in Queen Mary's time, he being then our King in
" right of his wife. The conquest was fully concluded after-
" ward under colour of religion ; as by the Prince of Orange,
" then of the Privy Council, it was since revealed. But his
" designs were broke by the seasonable death of Queen
" Mary his wife." Thus that great statesman,
charge But when the match was by Parliament consented to,
civUenter- (which had cost a rebellion, and many men's lives already,)
tainment of anc { several articles were adjusted about it, (one whereof
niards. Bishop Ridley, when in prison, could not but take notice
of in a letter to Bradford, viz. that the King was to be pro-
tector of the Prince to be born,) great preparations were
making every where, as well as in London, for an honour-
129 able entertainment of him. And the Queen perceiving well
how illy affected the people generally were to the Spaniards,
and fearing quarrels between them and the English, that
could not abide their haughty and scornful behaviour, is-
sued out her proclamation, " that all the strangers that ac-
" companied the Prince into England, should be used with
" all courtesy and friendly entertainment by her subjects,
" giving them no cause of strife or contention, either by
" their deeds, words, or countenance. She commanded also
" all noblemen and gentlemen to take order with their ser-
" vants herein, upon pain to be committed to prison with-
" out bail or mainprise, and to abide further punishment
" by fine or otherwise." This proclamation may be found
Numb. xv. in the Catalogue.
The Queen Her Majesty also took care to get as great a court and
the noble- shew of nobility about her as could be, against her meeting
men to be f the Prince. To the Lord Clinton, lord admiral, she
writ to be ready to repair unto her upon the arrival of the
Prince of Spain, having heard that he was embarked at the
Groyne, July 17. To the Lord Darcy of Chich, June 21,
UNDER QUEEN MARY I. 203
she also directed letters to wait upon her person upon the CHAP,
said Prince's arrival ; as she did to many other of the peers, '__
being absent. Anno 1554 -
And to adorn this royal wedding the more, and to recon- His genea-
cile the English nation the better to it, books and epithala- j° g h y a ™ m
miums were written in the praise of the Spanish Prince : Gaunt,
among the rest, was a book made of his genealogy, shewing
how he was sprung from English royal blood, even from
John a Gaunt, a son of the victorious Edward III. From
whom also it was shewn, that she, his royal consort, was
derived also ; that so,
Inque suumjbntem regia stirps redeat,
as it ran in one of the verses. For John of Gaunt had a
son, who was Earl of Somerset. That Earl of Somerset
had John Duke of Somerset. That Duke had a daughter,
who was Margaret Duchess of Richmond : from whence
sprung Henry VII. her son, and from him Henry VIII.
the father of Queen Mary : all which, Whyte, bishop of
Lincoln, had handsomely comprised in a copy of verses,
which are preserved in Fox. This Whyte had been Bi-Acts, p.
shop Gardiner's chaplain, who set him on work. But Mr. lo37.
Bale somewhere taking notice of this, threw in something
that was enough to spoil all this flattery. It was a passage His dccia-
taken out of Tho. Walsino-ham, a monk of St. Alban's, ™ t[on , of
^ ' ' Boner's
concerning a friar, named Walter Dyss, who was employed Artici.
to bring in a false issue of John a Gaunt ; Potestas concre- ° ' 9 '
ditur, writes he, inaudita Waltero de Dyss, ut ad Ducis
Lancastrice prqfectioncm conducerct,kc. Whereupon, saith
Bale, " If that were well known, how it first came to pass
" by the crafty conveyance of a friar, they might seem to
" have small honour of that clerkly conveyed genealogy,
" [which the Bishop of Winchester and his friends had
" now published.} 1 ' The narration of this cheat, Bale adds,
is plain in Walsingham's book De Schismate Ecclesice.
But at last the Queen got an husband, after she had been Nine mo-
proffered in marriage by her father no less than eight times tl0ns . of
° J _ ¦» marriage
before, and as often put off": (besides once in her brother's for this
time, viz. 1549, to the Infant of Portugal :) namely, first, to J. a e ^, nsuc "
204 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
CHAP, the Daulphin, son to Francis, anno 1518, when she was but
• two years old. After that, to the Emperor Charles, anno
Anno 1554.1522. Then to the King of Scotland. A fourth time, to
King Francis : and a fifth, to the Duke of Orleans, in the
year 1527. This motion also went off, or was delayed at
that time ; and the matter moved again about the year
1535, or 1536, as I conjecture. At this time, as I find by
130 a Council-paper, the King demanded, that the Duke should
be brought into England, and live here, to be instructed in
the English language and manners of the people ; the King
then intending to advance her to the crown imperial of this
realm. The French ambassadors, Mons. de Tarbe and
Pomeray, would by no means yield to this, nor that he
should stay but a month or two at a time. And they de-
manded, that the King should make and declare the Lady
Mary legitimate, that she might be preferred in the succes-
sion before any of his daughters. But this the Council, in
the King's name, would by no means condescend unto : so
that in fine this also came to nothing. The sixth proffer
of her was to Don Louis of Portugal, in the year 1538, in
the terms she then was, excluded by act of Parliament from
all claim of succession. The seventh time, to Charles, the
youngest son of Francis, the French King, in the 33d of
King Henry's reign, annoque Dom. 1541. When, Feb. 27,
the King granted a commission to the Duke of Norfolk,
William Earl of Southampton, the Bishops of Winchester
and Durham, and to the Lord Winchelsey, to treat with
the French King about it. Once more (but the date uncer-
tain) she was upon the point of marriage to one of the Ger-
Viteiiius, man Princes, viz. the Count Palatine. The treaty whereof
c - ie - is extant in a volume of the Cotton library.
This Spa- But now being thirty-eight years old, and having the
miha ma y. Ch sole cus P ose of herself, she matched herself to Philip the
Spaniard, she being half a Spaniard, viz. by her mother.
A great personage indeed he was, being an Emperor's son,
and the greatest prince of birth and possessions in all Chris-
tendom. But yet a most unhappy match, both because it
was the cause of the losing of Calais, and so exceedingly
UNDER QUEEN MARY I. 205
disliked by her subjects, who could not endure the Spa- CHAP,
niards, as the Spaniards could not endure them : who yet
were forced to serve the Spaniards 1 turn to their irreparable Anno ,554 -
detriment.
But meeting at Winchester, in the cathedral they were The wed-
married, on Wednesday, July 25, being St. James's day, ^"fedl*"
the Spanish saint, by the Bishop of that church : of whom Winchester,
we have said so much, and shall say more, making such a
figure in these times. The royal wedding dinner was kept
there, the King and Queen dining in the hall of the Bi-
shop's palace, sitting under the cloth of state, and none else
at the table. The nobility sat at the side-tables. The gen-
tlemen pensioners were the chief servitors, to carry the meat.
And the Earl of Sussex, their captain, was the sewer. The
second course at the marriage of a King is given unto the
bearers. So was the meat now, but not the dishes; for
they were of gold. The Spaniards were greatly out of
countenance for their dancing, especially King Philip danc-
ing with the Queen, when they saw the Lord Bray, Mr.
Carow, and others, so far exceed them.
The triumph being ended, after they had been first at They pass
Windsor, and then at Richmond, they came in their barges tr ™ m P h "
to Southwark, that they might enter London triumphantly through
the next day. So having laid one night at Suffolk-place,
called also Southwark-house, on Saturday the 19th of Au-
gust, they both rode over the bridge through London to
Whitehall. In the city they were received with pageants
and all manner of splendour. But something in the fine
painting upon the conduit in Gracechurch-street was taken
such notice of, that it had like to have cost the painter
dear. The picture represented the nine worthies ; whereof
King Henry VIII. was one, who, according to former
draughts of him, was pictured with a book in his hand, and
Verbum Dei wrote upon it: which the Lord Chancellor
esteemed as a reflection upon the good Catholic religion
that was now restored again; which, it seems, was very 131
jealous of the Bible. Hereupon the painter was sent for,
and chidden; and commandment immediately given, that
206 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
CHAP, the book should be wiped out, and a pair of gloves put in
the place. But London had little joy of these guests. For
Anno 1554. shortly after began a cruel persecution here against the
preachers and earnest professors and followers of the Gospel,
and a searching of men's houses for their books. For now
many were written and printed privately, when sermons
were forbidden, for the confirmation of men in the re-
formed doctrine and profession. But that we shall hear
more of in the seqviel of our story.
Latymer's And now that happened which old Latymer feared or
foreigner's foretold in one of his sermons before King Edward, in the
becoming vear 1549. He spake of that terrible sense that was upon
England, the nation in general, if either she or her sister should marry
a foreigner : whereby a foreigner might come to wield the
English sceptre, a thing the nation could not endure. And
if it so should happen that any of them should marry a
stranger, he wished that, though they were both to succeed
First ser- to the crown, they never should. " O, what a plague
mon before ti were \t S3L [^ he, (bv occasion of that passage of Moses,
the King. x J » x 1
" Thou must not set a stranger over thee,) that a strange
" king, of a strange land, and of a strange religion, should
" reign over us ! Where now we be governed in the true
" religion, he would extirp and pluck away all together,
" and then plant again all abomination and Popery. God
" keep such a king from us. Well, the King's Grace hath
" sisters, my Lady Mary and my Lady Elizabeth, which
" by succession and course are inheritors to the crown ; who
" if they should marry with strangers, what should ensue
" God knoweth. But God grant, if they so do, whereby
" strange religion may come in, that they never come to
" coursing nor succeeding.
" Therefore, to avoid this plague, let us amend our lives,
" and put away all pride, which doth drown men in this
" realm at these days ; all covetousness, wherein the ma-
" gistrates and rich men of this realm are overwhelmed ; all
" lechery, and all other excessive vices, provoking God's
" wrath (were he not merciful) even to take from us our
" natural King and liege Lord ; yea, and to plague us with
UNDER QUEEN MARY I. 207
" strange kings for our unrepentant hearts.'" And a little CHAP.
after: " Make haste, make haste, and let us learn to con- XIV "
" vert, to repent, and amend our lives. If we do not, I Anno 1554.
" fear, I fear, lest, for our sins and unthankfulness, a hy-
" pocrite shall reign over us. Long we have been servants,
" and in bondage, serving the Pope in Egypt: God hath
" given us a deliverer, a natural King : let us seek no
" stranger of another nation : no hypocrite, which shall
" bring in again all papistry, hypocrisy, and idolatry. 11 This
looks like a prophetic spirit in that man.
But now, lastly, to shew upon what foot this marriage The articles
stood, and what were the terms whereon it was concluded, between*^
I shall here set down the articles of the treaty. And the Philip and
rather, because Hollingshed, who pretends to give an ac- r ary ' ]h
count of them, hath scarcely given half of them : briefly, Julius, F.6.
I. They shall be married in England, &c.
II. The Queen shall have the whole disposition of all
benefices, offices, lands, revenues, and fruits of her realms
and dominions.
III. They shall be bestowed only upon Englishmen : and
that all matters shall be treated in the tongues accustomed.
And the laws and customs to be preserved and maintained.
IV. If Queen Mary overlive Prince Philip, she shall
have, out of the Emperor's courts, 40,000/. Flemish for her
dowry.
V. That their children shall succeed in this realm. 132
VI. That the realm of Spain, both the Sicils, the duke-
dom of Milain, and other dominions in Italy, shall remain
to the Lord Charles, eldest son of the said Prince, and to
his heirs. And for lack of such issue, the eldest of this
matrimony to succeed.
VII. The eldest son of this marriage shall succeed in the
dukedoms of Brabant, Luxemburgh, Gelders, Zutphen,
Burgundy, Friseland, in the counties of Flanders, Artois,
Zealand, Namur, and the land beyond the isles.
VIII. If no male issue happen, then the eldest female
shall inherit the lands of Lower Germany.
IX. If the Lord Charles die without issue, and none
Anno 1554.
208 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
CHAP, other children come of this marriage but women, then the
XIV. .
.eldest daughter of this marriage shall succeed not only in
the Lower Germany and Burgundy, but also in the realms
of Spain and England.
X. In all the said causes, the privileges and customs of
every country shall be observed. And the same to be ad-
ministered by the natural-born of the same.
XI. That the said Prince shall not promote to any office,
administration, or benefit in the same realm of England any
stranger.
XII. The said Prince shall receive into the service of his
household and court, gentlemen and yeomen of the said
realm of England, in convenient manner, and shall esteem,
nourish, and use them lovingly ; and shall bring up none
nto the realm that will do wrong to the subjects of the
same. And if they do, he shall put them out of the court.
XIII. The said Prince shall alter none estate of the laws
and customs of England.
XIV. He shall not lead away the Queen's Highness out
of this realm, unless she herself desire it ; nor the children
of them, unless it be thought good by the council and no-
bility.
XV. In case, no children being left, the Queen shall die
before him, he shall not change any right in the said king-
dom, but shall suffer it to succeed to the right heirs.
XVI. The said Prince shall not carry out of the realm
the jewels, nor any whit of the principalities of the same
realm ; nor suffer any part thereof to be usurped by his
subjects or others : but shall see all the places of the realm,
and especially the forts and frontiers of the same, faithfully
kept, to the profit of the said realm ; and that by the na-
tural-born of the same.
XVII. That the same Prince shall not suffer any ships,
guns, and other ordnances of war, to be removed and con-
veyed out of the realm, but shall contrariwise cause them
diligently to be kept and renewed, when need requireth :
and provided, that they may be always ready in their
strength and force, for the defence of the realm.
UNDER QUEEN MARY I. 209
XVIII. That the realm of England, by occasion of this CHAP,
marriage, shall not directly nor indirectly be intangled '__
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