a prisoner in the Tower.
His first The first occasion of trouble he met with was for disobe-
dience to the King's royal visitation, in the year 1547, re-
fusing then to receive injunctions and orders ; and for ob-
serving all the popish superstitions in his church. For
which he was sent for to the Council, and laid in the Fleet.
Letters During his being here, which was not long, there passed
tween the some letters between the Archbishop of Canterbury and
Archbishop jjjjjj . ] ie ] iac } ur o- e( J to the Archbishop the state of religion
and Win- .. & r &
Chester. in King Henry's days ; from which he, and the clergy, and
the Council did begin so much to vary. Winchester re-
minded him of the King's book, as he called it, established
by Parliament. But the Archbishop in his answer told him,
that he indeed called it so ; and that the King was seduced ;
and that he, the Archbishop, knew by whom he was compass-
ed in that book. But Winchester sharply replied to him:
Concern- " That the book was acknowledged by the Parliament as
King's " the King's book ; and that the Archbishop himself corn-
book.
UNDER QUEEN MARY I. 459
" manded it to be published in his diocese as the King's CHAP.
" book. And that if he thought it not true, he ought to J " '
" think his Grace would not for all the princes christened Anno 1555.
" in the world have yielded unto. And he threatened the
" Archbishop, that if he made this matter more public, and
" charged the late King with being seduced, he would vin-
" dicate his master, as one of his old servants." And whereas
the Archbishop had advised him to bethink himself of his
present condition, lying now in prison ; Winchester replied
to this with seemingly much satisfaction, " how himself was
" arrived to that haven of quietness without loss of any no-
" table tackle, as the mariners say, which, he said, was a
" great matter as the winds had blown ; and with a little
** flea-biting conveyed to an easy state. He advised, that
" seeing King Henry died so honourably, and so much la-
" mented, and was concluded to be received to God's mercy,
" the realm should not be troubled during the King's mi-
" nority with matters of novelty, there being so many other
" things for the King's counsellors to regard."
The Archbishop had persuaded Winchester to spend Concern-
some of his leisure thoughts in composing some good homi- m ^- ms f
lies for the use of the people ; which the Archbishop sig- homilies,
nified he was intent upon. But Winchester knew he should
stop the Archbishop in his demand, by giving him a speci-
men after what manner he should write homilies, drawing
into them such doctrine as the other would not approve of:
and he gave him an instance how he would proceed, if he
Avere to write de vita perfecta : suggesting thereby it would
be better for the Archbishop's purpose, that Winchester
should be let alone writing homilies. In fine, Winchester
wrote his judgment to the Archbishop, " that it were better
" to let the people alone without them altogether. For
" people went to heaven before without them, and he trusted
" they should follow after them, though they had no homi-
" lies." And so after this scoffing manner he disapproved of
the pious endeavours of Archbishop Cranmer for the bringing 2^8
the people out of ignorance, and the instructing and edify-
ing them in true religion.
460 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
CHAP. And as he conferred with this Bishop by letter, so he did
XXXV. a ] so D y S p eec h ; who, being at the Dean of St. Paul's house,
Anno 1555. together with the Bishops of Rochester and Lincoln, Dr. Cox,
Conference a nd some other divines, (in commission, I suppose,) con-
Archbishop suiting together for the composing some homilies for the
and Win- uge f t ] le Church, sent for the said Bishop of Winchester.
clicstcr
concern- There the Archbishop shewed him the homily was then in
ing the h an d concerning Salvation, wherein was handled the matter
liomny oi o
Salvation, of justification ; endeavouring to persuade him to allow of
it, by reasoning with him concerning it. But Winchester
pretended, whatsoever they said could not salve his con-
science, and challenged them to shew any old writer that
taught as that homily did.
Winches- Upon the return of the Duke of Somerset, lord protector
to'the^ro- °^ tne King's person, from his victorious expedition into
tector. Scotland, Winchester, being still in the Fleet, wrote letters
unto him. In one of them he vindicated himself as to his
behaviour in the royal visitation : shewing that he could not
in conscience obey several injunctions : as the receiving of
Erasmus's Paraphrase, Englished; which was so falsely trans-
lated, and such errors also being in the author himself. He
objected also against the book of Homilies, which was then
finished, and enjoined to be received and used in all
churches. He signified to the Protector, that he, under-
standing such a visitation to be in hand, wrote to the Council
to stay it, till the said Protector's return. Which he pre-
tended was intended by him out of the favour and care he
had of his Grace, who had hastily allowed of this visitation
before his departure to Scotland ; whereby, as the Bishop
suggested to him, he might incur the danger of breaking
an act of Parliament ; against which, as Winchester would
insinuate, this visitation went. He pretended also these pro-
ceedings were against the late King Henry's honour, and
the safety of the present Sovereign. He acquainted also the
Acts and Protector, that in his said letters to the Council he touched
Mon. a- lively, but truly, some Acts of Parliament, which, as he
mong Gar- Ji J ' . '
diner's let- would pretend, these proceedings ran counter to. Whereof
ters# he gave some instances in a part of the letter which is pub-
UNDER QUEEN MARY I. 461
lished elsewhere. These were some transactions relating to CHAP.
XXXV.
him while he lay in the Fleet.
But he was discharged out of the Fleet, and had his li-^ nno 1555 -
berty to repair to his diocese upon his promise of conformity. shop . s do .
When he was now come to Winchester, he was very busy in s s at
.- . * . Winchester.
in setting forth matters that bred greater strife in that city
and county, than almost in all the nation beside. It was
reported also to the Protector, that he caused his servants
to be harnessed. And when certain preachers were sent
down from the Council to preach in the cathedral and dio-
cese, he would keep the pulpit, and preach himself ; warning
the people to fly from such new preachers, and to embrace
only the doctrine he preached to them.
Upon this he was sent for again, and upon a second pro- Sent for and
mise the Council set him at liberty ; but to remain at Lon- from his
don, sequestering him from his diocese for a time. Now diocese «
again he fell to meddling in matters wherein he had no com-
mission nor authority ; part whereof touched the King's 279
Majesty : whereupon he was again admonished by the
King and the Lords. Then he offered before them to de-
clare to the world his conformity, and promised to open his
mind in sundry articles agreed upon. And then, he said,
that as his own conscience was well satisfied with the King's
proceedings, so would he utter his conscience abroad to the
satisfaction of others. But when he came to preach, (which Winchester
he did on St. Peter's day before the King,) he spake things prea °
contrary to express commandment. And when he came to
speak of the articles which were enjoined him to declare, he
used such a manner of utterance, that had like to have
caused a great tumult. And speaking of certain great mat-
ters, presently touching the policy of the realm, shewed him-
self a very seditious man : as particularly, advising that no-
thing should be altered during the King's minority.
The reason the Council enjoined him to preach upon such The people
particular subjects, and to forbear to speak of others, was, wlnches-
bccause before the said sermon was preached, and at the ter's ser-
• i li o \ i nion.
time thereof, (and, as it happened, long after,) there was
such controversy and variance in London and many other
462 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
CHAP, places in the realm, about those matters of religion : and the
' xxv - Council was many times troubled with complaints of that
Anno 1555. nature. But Winchester, when he came to preach, instead
of managing his discourse for the quelling and appeasing
these popular jarrings and contests, the contention at the
very time of his speaking grew so great, that if the King's
Majesty and the Lords of the Council had not been present,
the people had plucked the Bishop out of the pulpit, they
were so offended with him : as the Earl of Warwick, then
present, testified.
Sent to the Upon this sermon he was committed to the Tower, and
Sir Ralph Sadleir, and Hunnings, clerk of the Council,
sealed up certain doors of his house which they thought
convenient.
Sir William The Council sent several messages to him, and the most
wIstTrepiy honourable personages thereof often came themselves in
to Winches- person to persuade him to subscribe, and to comply with the
King's proceedings. Once among the rest, when the Bishop
had said, thinking to enervate the King's doings in his mi-
nority, that if the King should pass away things now,
which he should see prejudicial afterwards, he might re-
verse what he had done, and use therein the benefit of his
young years : and added, that Mr. Secretary Peters would
say as he did, being a learned civilian : Peters wisely re-
plied, the Master of the Horse, the Earl of Warwick, and
others then present, " My Lord, I must say, that your say-
" ing in a common person is true ; but in the person of a
" king, I never read any such law ; and my opinion is, said
" he, that except a king in his tender and young years be
" bound to his doings as well as at full man's estate, it
" would be impossible to have that realm and state well go-
" verned." Whereunto the Bishop said little.
Deprived. These troubles lasted with Winchester till the year 1551,
when he was solemnly deprived by a sentence of the Arch-
bishop of Canterbury, together with the consent and assent
of the Bishops of London, Ely, Lincoln, Sir William Pe-
tre, Sir James Hale, Leyson and Oliver, doctors of the civil
280 law, Goodrickand Gosnald, esquires, delegates and judges,
UNDER QUEEN MARY I. 463
by a commission from the King. And so he continued a CHAP,
prisoner in the tower (and so a stirring busy man laid aside) -
till the beginning of Queen Mary's reign: when his sun Anno 1555.
arose again, and appeared brighter than ever it did before.
And now he had his opportunities of taking sufficient re-
venges upon the men and the cause which occasioned his
sufferings. And indeed he spared them not.
Now this Bishop was in his meridian, and all matters of The Bishop
the Church and the State too passed through his hands, obsequies
The Pope dying the beginning of this year 1555, to declare f° rthe Po P e
the devotion of this kingdom now to that chair of Rome ;
on the 10th of April, our Bishop, now lord chancellor,
signified the same by letter to Bonner, bishop of London,
and required that there should be solemn obsequies said for
him throughout the realm ; and also certain prayers, three
in number, enclosed in the said letter, to be used at mass
times, in all places, during the vacation of the apostolical
see : and that he should see it done in his diocese ; and to
send word to the rest of the bishops to have it done in
theirs ; and this by the King and Queen's command. This
letter and the prayers are extant in the register of the church
of Canterbury, but they are also printed in Fox ; and
therefore I shall not here set them down : only Bishop Bon-
ner's letters missive to the dean and chapter of Canterbury,
in pursuance of the Chancellor's letter, I shall, as it is in the
foresaid register, being not yet made any where public, as I
know.
LittercB Missiva Episcopi Londinensis.
" After my right hartie commendations : I have received The Bishop
"of late from my Lord Chancellor letters of the tenor jUj'jJj?
" here inclosed : and desirous that you should have know- upon.
" ledge of the contents of the same, as I was earnestly and
" effectually required, I have sent these with the copy there-
" of unto you, to th'intent the matter therein expressed
" may take that good effect in the diocese of Canterbury,
" and the peculiars of the same, the archiepiscopal see being
" vacant, which is required and looked for. And thus I
464 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
CHAP. « commit you to God most well to fare. At my house in
" London, this xi. of April, 1555.
Auno 1556 - " Your loving frende, Edmond London."
To my loveing f rends, the Dean and Chapter of Canter-
bury : and in their absence to their Vicare General, and
Deputies in this behalf, yeve this with spede.
Bishop Gar- But the greatest point of all, wherein the Bishop of Win-
b'loody ton shewed his zeal to the Pope and Popery, appeared in
his furious prosecution to blood, of all such as would not
or could not truckle to it : the book of Acts and Monu-
ments is an eternal monument of his cruelties towards abun-
dance of poor innocent men. Nor is all his severities there
recorded. A certain bishop, unnamed, was made mention
of by Robert Smith the martyr, in one of his examinations
281 before Bonner. "¦ This bishop, he said, had at that time an
" innocent man, a professor of the gospel, in his prison,
" who, when he overcame the bishop by Scripture, made
" him privily to be tied, and his flesh to be torn and pluck-
" ed away with a pair of pincers : and after bringing him
" out before the people, said, whether in jest or earnest I
" cannot tell, that the rats had eaten him.' 1 '' What bishop
this was is not mentioned, but I know none more likely to
be this tyrant than Winchester.
Reported Indeed it is strange to observe the brazen foreheads of the
to blnilld Popish writers concerning this man : that notwithstanding
and merci- ] ie was so notoriously known to be the great instrument of
burning and destroying so many professors, yet they repre-
sent him as a mild and merciful man, and greatly averse to
shedding of blood, and an earnest intercessor with the su-
preme power, for saving the lives of such as the law con-
Watch- demned. These are Robert Parson's words : " If a man
'" should ask any good natured Protestant [and very good
" natured indeed he must bc~\ that lived in Queen Mary's
" time, and had both wit to judge, and indifference to speak
" the truth without passion, he will confess, that no one
" great man in that government was further off from blood
" and bloodiness, or from cruelty and revenge, than Bishop
UNDER QUEEN MARY I. 465
" Gardiner: who was known to be a most tender-hearted and CHAP.
" mild man in that behalf: insomuch that it was sometimes, '
" and by some great personages, objected to him for no small Anno 1555.
" fault, to be ever full of compassion in the office and charge
" that he then bore. Yea, to him it was imputed, that none
" of the greatest and most known Protestants in Queen
" Mary's reign were ever called to account, or put to trou-
" ble for religion. 1 ' Mark the marvellous confidence of the
man, in endeavouring to face out a thing, the contrary to
which was most notoriously known, and severely felt. This
indeed was one thing that rendered these popish bishops so
abominably hated by all ; that they not only brought so
many to the most cruel death of burning ; but besides that,
exercised so many tortures and inventions of accurate pains
upon them. Some were whipped unmercifully, stretched
upon the rack, their hands burnt with candles put under ;
some set in the stocks, hands and feet, for many days and
nights together ; some thrown into dark and stinking dun-
geons ; some had their bodies tortured by strange inven-
tions ; some pined away and starved in prison : and those
that died in prison were denied Christian burial, and thrown
out into the fields. And all these cruelties exercised upon
them with mirth and sport.
The Bishop, of whom we have said so much, was cut offHis disease
by death in the midst of all his worldly pomp and splendour, an
being taken first ill at dinner, the Duke of Norfolk then his
guest. The disease, and the manner of his death, take from
a letter wrote out of England to Mr. Bale, then an exile
abroad. " That his disease was hydrops acidus, et prodi-
" giosa scabies, (I leave it to physicians to English it,) taken,
" as was commonly reported, by drinking or whoredom.
" For he had indulged much to both those vices in his life-
" time. In his sickness he stunk like a jakes ; his breath
" not to be endured ; his body distended, his eyes distorted His eyes
" and turned inwards: during his illness he spake little but thsto '" ted
° r and turned
" blasphemy and filthiness, and gave up the ghost with inwards.
" curses in his mouth, in terrible and uncxpressible torments. 282
" He died very rich, worth 90,000 crowns. 11 God gave
VOL. III. H h
466 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
CHAP, him not his desire to outlive Cranmer, archbishop of Can-
terbury, his great antagonist, whose death, no question, he
He encou
raged learn
Anno 1555. would have been glad to have seen.
Yet let me subjoin one or two things to his commenda-
n his tion : he affected learned domestics, and countenanced
learning in his family : he would take in young University
men, such as were of good parts and great hopes ; several
of these so entertained by him were afterwards bishops, as
White and Brokes, and two were secretaries of state, and
advanced to the honour of barons, and employed by the
Sir. w. Pa- State in great embassies. One of these was Sir William
get.
Eucomia. Paget, to whom Leland thus writ ;
Tu Gardineri petiisti tecta diserti,
Eloquii sedem, pieriique chori.
That is, that being young, " he went into learned Gardi-
" tier's family, which was the very seat of eloquence and of
" the muses. 1 '' From his family, as he had been of his col-
lege of Trinity hall in Cambridge, so he went to study in
the University of Paris. And after some stay, returned
again into the Bishop's house ; and soon after became se-
cretary of state. About this time he married a gentlewo-
man, named Preston, by whom he had several children. Then
he was sent ambassador to France, then to the Emperor; and
grew very rich by being Chancellor of the duchy, and en-
Sir Thomas joying other advantages under King Edward. The other
was Sir Thomas Wriothesly : having his grammar learning
in London, where he was born, he was removed to Cam-
bridge. I can tell little of his person or features, only by
Encomia. Leland I learn he was red-haired ; for he speaks of his au~
ricomus vertex. At first he was taken into some office be-
longing to the Treasury ; and now Sir Edmund Peckham, a
privy counsellor, took notice of him. And when Gardiner
went ambassador, he took him along with him. Afterwards
he fell under the observation of Crumwel, who was delighted
with his wit and dexterity. Then he went ambassador to
Holland and Flanders, to the Emperor's sister, the Queen of
Hungary; and after the Lord Audley's death, was advanced
UNDER QUEEN MARY I. 46?
to be Lord Chancellor, and was the root of the noble family CHAP.
XXXV
of the Earls of Southampton, lately extinct.
And thus did this Bishop shew his favour to learning, by Anno 1555,
encouraging it in his own house. And long before, while
he was a member of the University of Cambridge, he did a
good piece of service to it. For being of some considerable
influence there, (perhaps reader of the civil law,) he endea-
voured to purge that study ; and turned the minds of the
students thereof from some of the glossematarians : where-
by he ran into the great offence of some, and had great con-
tention about it ; as Cheke, in one of his letters to that Bi-
shop in the contest about pronouncing Greek, remembered
him ; and Leland praised him for, in these words : Encomia.
Tu certe, innumeris locis ad ilium 283
Leges, vel veterem labor e grato,
Splendorem revocas : docens vieta
Tot glossemata, (opus recentiorum
Scriptorum,) ingeniis bonis obesse.
To this bloody Bishop, I cannot but add here the mention of Bonner
his brother in cruelty, Bonner, bishop of London; who there-
fore was ordinarily called, the bloody butcher, and the common
slaughterman : and bringing so many very innocent holy
men and women in London, Colchester, and elsewhere in
his diocese unto their ends, by burning, starving, and impri-
sonment, was most mortally hated by all honest men, as well
as the friends and relations of the slain. These would some-
times sharpen their pens, and pelt at him with letters,
wherein they freely expressed their minds towards him, and
laid him open to himself and to the world. One of these
letters, wherein he is not spared, is preserved in Fox's book,
being writ by a woman upon his burning of Philpot.
Another I have seen in MS. wrote this year, in as sharp a Pag. 16-72.
style, between the condemnation and burning of that holy
man.
h h 2
468 MEMORIALS ECCLESIASTICAL
CHAP. XXXVI.
Memorable notes of things occurring in the Churcli and
State, in the months of December, January, February,
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