As a kind of joke, John, King Henry's youngest son, had been
called Lackland, because he had nothing when his brothers each had
some great dukedom. The name suited him only too well before the
end of his life. The English made him king at once. They always did
take a grown-up man for their king, if the last king's son was but
a child. Richard had never had any children, but his brother
Geoffrey, who was older than John, had left a son named Arthur, who
was about twelve years old, and who was rightly the Duke of
Normandy and Count of Anjou. King Philip, who was always glad to
vex whoever was king of England, took Arthur under his protection,
and promised to get Normandy out of John's hands. However, John had
a meeting with him and persuaded him to desert Arthur, and marry
his son Louis to John's own niece, Blanche, who had a chance of
being queen of part of Spain. Still Arthur lived at the French
King's court, and when he was sixteen years old, Philip helped him
to raise an army and go to try his fortune against his uncle. He
laid siege to Mirabeau, a town where his grandmother, Queen
Eleanor, was living. John, who was then in Normandy, hurried to her
rescue, beat Arthur's army, made him prisoner and carried him off,
first to Rouen, and then to the strong castle of Falaise. Nobody
quite knows what was done to him there. The governor, Hubert de
Burgh, once found him fighting hard, though with no weapon but a
stool, to defend himself from some ruffians who had been sent to
put out his eyes. Hubert saved him from these men, but shortly
after this good man was sent elsewhere by the king, and John came
himself to Falaise. Arthur was never seen alive again, and it is
believed that John took him out in a boat in the river at night,
stabbed him with his own hand, and threw his body into the river.
There was, any way, no doubt that John was guilty of his nephew's
death, and he was fully known to be one of the most selfish and
cruel men who ever lived; and so lazy, that he let Philip take
Normandy from him, without stirring a finger to save the grand old
dukedom of his forefathers; so that nothing is left of it to us now
but the four little islands, Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, and
Sark.
Matters became much worse in England, when he quarreled with the
Pope, whose name was Innocent, about who should be archbishop of
Canterbury. The Pope wanted a man named Stephen Langton to be
archbishop, but the king swore he should never come into the
kingdom. Then the Pope punished the kingdom, by forbidding all
church services in all parish churches. The was termed putting the
kingdom under an interdict. John was not much distressed by this,
though his people were; but when he found that Innocent was
stirring up the King of France to come to attack him, he thought it
time to make his peace with the Pope. So he not only consented to
receive Stephen Langton, but he even knelt down before the Pope's
legate, or messenger, and took off his crown, giving it up to the
legate, in token that he only held the kingdom from the Pope. It
was two or three days before it was given back to him; and the Pope
held himself to be lord of England, and made the king and people
pay him money whenever he demanded it.
All this time John's cruelty and savageness were making the
whole kingdom miserable; and at last the great barons could bear it
no longer. They met together and agreed that they would make John
swear to govern by the good old English laws that had prevailed
before the Normans came. The difficulty was to be sure of what
these laws were, for most of the copies of them had been lost.
However, Archbishop Langton and some of the wisest of the barons
put together a set of laws—some copied, some recollected,
some old, some new—but all such as to give the barons some
control of the king, and hinder him from getting savage soldiers
together to frighten people into doing whatever he chose to make
them. These laws they called Magna Carta, or the great charter; and
they all came in armor, and took John by surprise at Windsor. He
came to meet them in a meadow named Runnymede, on the bank of the
Thames, and there they forced him to sign the charter, for which
all Englishmen are grateful to them.
But he did not mean to keep it! No, not he! He had one of his
father's fits of rage when he got back to Windsor Castle—he
gnawed the sticks for rage and swore he was no king. Then he sent
for more of the fierce soldiers, who went about in bands, ready to
be hired, and prepared to take vengeance on the barons. They found
themselves not strong enough to make head against him; so they
invited Louis, the son of Philip of France and husband of John's
niece, to come and be their king. He came, and was received in
London, while John and his bands of soldiers were roaming about the
eastern counties, wasting and burning everywhere till they came to
the Wash—that curious bay between Lincolnshire and Norfolk,
where so many rivers run into the sea. There is a safe way across
the sands in this bay when the tide is low, but when it is coming
in and meets the rivers, the waters rise suddenly into a flood. So
it happened to King John; he did get out himself, but all carts
with his goods and treasures were lost, and many of his men. He was
full of rage and grief, but he went on to the abbey where he meant
to sleep. He supped on peaches and new ale, and soon after became
very ill. He died in a few days, a miserable, disgraced man, with
half his people fighting against him and London in the hands of his
worst enemy.
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