Henry Fitz-Empress is counted as the first king of the
Plantagenet family, also called the House of Anjou. He was a very
clever, brisk, spirited man, who hardly ever sat down, but was
always going from place to place, and who would let no one disobey
him. He kept everybody in order, pulled down almost all the Castles
that had been built in Stephen's time, and would not let the barons
ill-treat the people. Indeed, everyone had been so mixed up
together during the wars in Stephen's reign, that the grandchildren
of the Normans who had come over with William the Conqueror were
now quite English in their feelings. French was, however, chiefly
spoken at court. The king was really a Frenchman, and he married a
French wife Eleanor, the lady of Aquitaine, a great dukedom in the
South of France; and, as Henry had already Normandy and Anjou, he
really was lord of nearly half France. He ruled England well; but
he was not a good man, for he cared for power and pleasure more
than for what was right; and sometimes he fell into such rages that
he would roll on the floor, and bite the rushes and sticks it was
strewn with. He made many laws. One was that, if a priest or monk
was thought to have committed any crime, he should be tried by the
king's judge, instead of the bishop. The Archbishop of Canterbury,
Thomas a Becket, did not think it right to consent to this law;
and, though he and the king had once been great friends, Henry was
so angry with him that he was forced to leave England, and take
shelter with the King of France. Six years passed by, and the king
pretended to be reconciled to him, but still, when they met, would
not give him the kiss of peace. The archbishop knew that this
showed that the king still hated him; but his flock had been so
long without a shepherd that he thought it his duty to go back to
them. Just after his return, he laid under censure some persons who
had given offence. They went and complained to the king, and Henry
exclaimed in passion, "Will no one rid me of this turbulent
priest?" Four of his knights who heard these words set forth to
Canterbury. The archbishop guessed why they were come; but he would
not flee again, and waited for them by the altar in the cathedral,
not even letting the doors be shut. There they slew him; and
thither, in great grief at the effect of his own words, the king
came—three years later—to show his penitence by
entering barefoot, kneeling before Thomas's tomb, and causing every
priest or monk in turn to strike him with a rod. We should not
exactly call Thomas a martyr now, but he was thought so then,
because he died for upholding the privileges of the Church, and he
was held to be a very great saint.
While this dispute was going on, the Earl of Pembroke, called
Strongbow, one of Henry's nobles, had gone over to Ireland and
obtained a little kingdom there, which he professed to hold of
Henry; and thus the Kings of England became Lords of Ireland,
though for a long time they only had the Province of Leinster, and
were always at war with the Irish around.
Henry was a most powerful king; but his latter years were very
unhappy. His wife was not a good woman, and her sons were all
disobedient and rebellious. Once all the three eldest, Henry,
Richard, and Geoffrey, and their mother, ran away together from his
court, and began to make war upon him. He was much stronger and
wiser than they so he soon forced them to submit; and he sent Queen
Eleanor away, and shut her up in a strong castle in England as long
as he lived. Here sons were much more fond of her than of their
father, and they thought this usage so hard, that they were all the
more ready to break out against him. The eldest son, Henry, was
leading an army against his father, when he was taken ill, and felt
himself dying. He sent an entreaty that his father would forgive
him, and come to see him; but the young man had so often been false
and treacherous, that Henry feared it was only a trick to get him
as a prisoner, and only sent his ring and a message of pardon; and
young Henry died, pressing the ring to his lips, and longing to
hear his father's voice.
Geoffrey, the third son, was killed by a fall from his horse,
and there were only two left alive, Richard and John. Just at this
time, news came that the Mahommedans in the Holy Land had won
Jerusalem back again; and the Pope called on all Christian princes
to leave off quarreling, and go on a crusade to recover the Holy
Sepulchre.
The kings of England and France, young Richard, and many more,
were roused to take the cross; but while arrangements for going
were being made, a fresh dispute about them arose, and Richard went
away in a rage, got his friends together, and, with King Philip of
France to help him, began to make war. His father was feeble, and
worn out, and could not resist as in former times. He fell ill, and
gave up the struggle, saying he would grant all they asked. The
list of Richard's friends whom he was to pardon was brought to him,
and the first name he saw in it was that of John, his youngest son,
and his darling, the one who had never before rebelled. That quite
broke his heart, his illness grew worse, and he talked about an old
eagle being torn to pieces by his eaglets. And so, in the year
1189, Henry II. died the saddest death, perhaps, that an old man
can die, for his sons had brought down his gray hairs with sorrow
to the grave.
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