The little son of Henry VIII. and Jane Seymour of course reigned
after him as Edward VI. He was a quiet, gentle boy exceedingly fond
of learning and study, and there were great expectations of him;
but, as he was only nine years old, the affairs of state were
managed by his council.
The chief of the council were his two uncles—his mother's
brothers, Edward and Thomas Seymour, the elder of whom had been
made Duke of Somerset—together with Archbishop Cranmer; but
it was not long before the duke quarreled with his brother Thomas,
put him into the Tower, and cut off his head, so that it seemed as
if the days of Henry VIII. were not yet over.
The Duke of Somerset and Archbishop Cranmer wanted to make many
more changes in the Church of England than Henry VIII. had ever
allowed. They had all the Prayer-book Services translated into
English, leaving out such parts as they did not approve; The
Lessons were read from the English Bible, and people were greatly
delighted at being able to worship and to listen to God's Word in
their own tongue. The first day on which the English Prayer-book
was used was the Whitsunday of 1548. The Bibles were chained to the
desks as being so precious and valuable; and crowds would stand, or
sit, and listen for hours together to any one who would read to
them, without caring if he were a clergyman or not; and men who
tried to explain, without being properly taught, often made great
mistakes.
Indeed, in Germany and France a great deal of the same kind had
been going on for some time past, though not with any sort of leave
from the kings or bishops, as there was in England, and thus the
reformers there broke quite off from the Church, and fancied they
could do without bishops. This great break was called the
Reformation, because it professed to set matters of religion to
rights; and in Germany the reformers called themselves Protestants,
because they protested some of the teachings of the Church of
Rome.
Cranmer had at one time been in Germany, and had made friends
with some of these German and Swiss Protestants, and he invited
them to England to consult and help him and his friends. Several of
them came, and they found fault with our old English
Prayer-book—though it had never been the same as the Roman
one—and it was altered again to please them and their
friends, and brought out as King Edward's second book. Indeed, they
tried to persuade the English to be like themselves—with very
few services, no ornaments in the churches, and no bishops; and
things seemed to be tending more and more to what they desired, for
the king was too young not to do what his tutors and governors
wished, and his uncle and Cranmer were all on their side.
However, there was another great nobleman, the Duke of
Northumberland, who wanted to be as powerful as the Duke of
Somerset. He was the son of Dudley, the wicked judge under Henry
VII., who had made himself so rich, and he managed to take
advantage of the people being discontented with Somerset to get the
king into his own hands, accuse Somerset of treason, send him to
the Tower, and cut off his head.
The king at this time was sixteen. He had never been strong, and
he had learnt and worked much more than was good for him. He wrote
a journal, and though he never says he grieved for his uncles, most
likely he did, for he had few near him who really loved or cared
for him, and he was fast falling into decline, so that it became
quite plain that he was not likely ever to be a grown-up king.
There was a great difficulty as to who was to reign after him. The
natural person would have been his eldest sister, Mary, but King
Henry had forbidden her and Elizabeth to be spoken of as princesses
or heiresses of the crown; and, besides, Mary held so firmly to the
Church, as she had learnt to believe in it in her youth, that the
reformers knew she would undo all their work.
There was a little Scottish girl, also named Mary—the
grand-daughter of Margaret, eldest daughter of Henry VII. Poor
child, she had been a queen from babyhood, for her father had died
of grief when she was but a week old; and there had been some
notion of marrying her to King Edward, and so ending the wars, but
the Scots did not like this, and sent her away to be married to the
Dauphin, Francois, eldest son of the king of France. If Edward's
sisters were not to reign, she came next; but the English would not
have borne to be joined on to the French; and there were the
grand-daughters of Mary, that other sister of Henry VIII., who were
thorough Englishwomen. Lady Jane Grey, the eldest of them, was a
good, sweet, pious, and diligent girl of fifteen, wonderfully
learned. But it was not for that reason, only for the sake of the
royal blood, that the Duke of Northumberland asked her in marriage
for his son, Guildford Dudley. When they were married, the duke and
Cranmer began to persuade the poor, sick, young king that it was
his duty to leave his crown away from his sister Mary to Lady Jane,
who would go on with the Reformation, while Mary would try to
overthrow it. In truth, young Edward had not right to will away the
crown; but he was only sixteen, and could only trust to what the
archbishop and his council told him. So he signed the parchment
they brought him, and after that he quickly grew worse.
The people grew afraid that Northumberland was shutting him up
and misusing him, and once he came to the window of his palace and
looked out at them, to show he was alive; but he died only a
fortnight later, and we cannot guess what he would have been when
he was grown up.
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