Henry Tudor married the Lady Bessee as soon as he came to
London, and by this marriage the causes of the Red and white Roses
were united; so that he took for his badge a great rose—half
red and half white. You may see it carved all over the beautiful
chapel that he built on to Westminster Abbey to be buried in.
He was not a very pleasant person; he was stiff, and cold, and
dry, and very mean and covetous in some ways—though he liked
to make a grand show, and dress all his court in cloth of gold and
silver, and the very horses in velvet housings, whenever there was
any state occasion. Nobody greatly cared for him; but the whole
country was so worn out with the troubles of the Wars of the Roses,
that there was no desire to interfere with him; and people only
grumbled, and said he did not treat his gentle, beautiful wife
Elizabeth as he ought to do, but was jealous of her being a king's
daughter. There was one person who did hate him most bitterly, and
that was the Duchess of Burgundy, the sister of Edward IV. and
Richard III.: the same who, as I told you, encouraged printing so
much. She felt as if a mean upstart had got into the place of her
brothers, and his having married her niece did not make it seem a
bit the better to her. There was one nephew left—the poor
young orphan son of George, Duke of Clarence—but he had
always been quite silly, and Henry VII. had him watched carefully,
for fear some one should set him up to claim the crown. He was
called Earl of Warwick, as heir to his grandfather, the
king-maker.
Suddenly, a young man came to Ireland and pretended to be this
Earl of Warwick. He deceived a good many of the Irish, and the
Mayor of Dublin actually took him to St. Patrick's Cathedral, where
he was crowned as King Edward the Sixth: and then he was carried to
the banquet upon an Irish chieftain's back. He came to England with
some Irish followers, and some German soldiers hired by the
duchess; and a few, but not many, English joined him. Henry met him
at a village called Stoke, near Newark, and all his Germans and
Irish were killed, and he himself made prisoner. Then he confessed
that he was really a baker's son named Lambert Simnel; and, as he
turned out to be a poor weak lad, whom designing people had made to
do just what they pleased, the king took him into his kitchen as a
scullion; and, as he behaved well there, afterwards set him to look
after the falcons, that people used to keep to go out with to catch
partridges and herons.
But after this, a young man appeared under the protection of the
Duchess of Burgundy, who said he was no other than the poor little
Duke of York, Richard, who had escaped from the Tower when his
brother was murdered. Englishmen, who came from Flanders, said that
he was a clever, cowardly lad of the name of Peter (or Perkin)
Warbeck, the son of a townsman of Tournay; but the duchess
persuaded King James IV. of Scotland to believe him a real royal
Plantagenet. He went to Edinburgh, married a beautiful lady, cousin
to the king, and James led him into England at the head of an army
to put forward his claim. But nobody would join him, and the Scots
did not care about him; so James sent him away to Ireland, whence
he went to Cornwall. However, he soon found fighting was of no use,
and fled away to the New Forest, where he was taken prisoner. He
was set in the stocks, and there made to confess that he was really
Perkin Warbeck and no duke, and then he was shut up in the Tower.
But there he made friends with the real Earl of Warwick, and
persuaded him into a plan for escape; but this was found out, and
Henry, thinking that he should never have any peace or safety
whilst either of them was alive, caused Perkin to be hanged, and
poor innocent Edward of Warwick to be beheaded.
It was thought that this cruel deed was done because Henry found
that foreign kings did not think him safe upon the throne while one
Plantagenet was left alive, and would not give their children in
marriage to his sons and daughters. He was very anxious to make
grand marriages for his children, and make peace with Scotland by a
wedding between King James and his eldest daughter, Margaret. For
his eldest son, Arthur, Prince of Wales, he obtained Katharine, the
daughter of the King of Aragon and Queen of Castille, and she was
brought to England while both were mere children. Prince Arthur
died when only eighteen years old; and King Henry then said that
they had been both such children that they could not be considered
really married, and so that Katharine had better marry his next
son, Henry, although everyone knew that no marriage between a man
and his brother's widow could be lawful. The truth was that he did
not like to give up all the money and jewels she had brought; and
the matter remained in dispute for some years—nor was it
settled when King Henry himself died, after an illness that no one
expected would cause his death. Nobody was very sorry for him, for
he had been hard upon everyone, and had encouraged two wicked
judges, named Dudley and Empson, who made people pay most unjust
demands, and did everything to fill the king's treasury and make
themselves rich at the same time.
It was a time when many changes were going on peacefully. The
great nobles had grown much poorer and less powerful; and the
country squires and chief people in the towns reckoned for much
more in the State. Moreover, there was much learning and study
going on everywhere. Greek began to be taught as well as Latin, and
the New Testament was thus read in the language in which the
apostles themselves wrote; and that led people to think over some
of the evil ways that had grown up in their churches and abbeys,
during those long, grievous years, when no one thought of much but
fighting, or of getting out of the way of the enemy.
The king himself, and all his family, loved learning, and nobody
more than his son Henry, who—if his elder brother had
lived—was to have been archbishop of Canterbury.
It was in this reign, too, that America was
discovered—though not by the English, but by Christopher
Columbus, an Italian, who came out in ships that were lent to him
by Isabel, the Queen of Spain, mother to Katharine, Princess of
Wales. Henry had been very near sending Columbus, only he did not
like spending so much money. How ever, he afterwards did send out
some ships, which discovered Newfoundland. Henry died in the year
1509.
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