So many of the great nobles had been killed in the Wars of the
Roses, that the barons had lost all that great strength and power
they had gained when they made King John sign Magna Carta. The
kings got the power instead; and all through the reigns of the five
Tudors, the sovereign had very little to hinder him from doing
exactly as he pleased. But, in the meantime, the country squires
and the great merchants who sat in the House of Commons had been
getting richer and stronger, and read and thought more. As long as
Queen Elizabeth lived they were contented, for they loved her and
were proud of her, and she knew how to manage them. She scolded
them sometimes, but when she saw that she was really vexing them
she always changed, and she had smiles and good words for them, so
that she could really do what she pleased with them.
But James I. was a disagreeable man to have to do with; and,
instead of trying to please them, he talked a great deal about his
own power as king, and how they ought to obey him; so that they
were angered, and began to read the laws, and wonder how much power
properly belonged to him. Now, when he died, his son Charles was a
much pleasanter person; he was a gentleman in all his looks and
ways, and had none of his father's awkward, ungainly tricks and
habits. He was good and earnest, too, and there was nothing to take
offence at in himself; so for some years all went on quietly, and
there seemed to be a great improvement. But several things were
against him. His friend, the Duke of Buckingham, was a proud,
selfish man, who affronted almost everyone, and made a bad use of
the king's favor; and the people were also vexed that the king
should marry a Roman Catholic princess, Henrietta Maria, who would
not go to church with him, nor even let herself be crowned by an
English archbishop.
You heard that, in Queen Elizabeth's time, there were Puritans
who would have liked to have the Prayer-book much more altered, and
who fancied that every pious rule of old times must be wrong. They
did not like the cross in baptism, nor the ring in marriage; and
they could not bear to see a clergyman in a surplice. In many
churches they took their own way, and did just as they pleased. But
under James and Charles matters changed. Dr. Laud, whom Charles had
made archbishop of Canterbury, had all the churches visited, and
insisted on the parishioners setting them in order; and if a
clergyman would not wear a surplice, not make a cross on the
baptized child's forehead, nor obey the other laws of the
Prayer-book, he was punished.
The Puritans were greatly displeased. They fancied the king and
Dr. Laud wanted to make them all Roman Catholics again; and a great
many so hated these Church rules, that they took ship and went off
to North America to found a colony, where they might set up their
own religion as they liked it. Those who staid continued to murmur
and struggle against Laud.
There was another great matter of displeasure, and that was the
way in which the king raised money. The right way is that he should
call his Parliament together, and the House of Commons should grant
him what he wanted. But there were other means. One was that every
place in England should be called on to pay so much for ship money.
This had begun when King Alfred raised his fleet to keep off the
Danes; but it had come not to be spent on ships at all, but only be
money for the king to use. Another way that the kings had of
getting money was from fines. People who committed some small
offence, that did not come under the regular laws, were brought
before the Council in a room at Westminster, that had a ceiling
painted with stars—and so was called the Star
Chamber—and there were sentenced, sometimes to pay heavy sums
of money, sometimes to have their ears cut off. This Court of the
Star Chamber had been begun in the days of Henry VII., and it is
only a wonder that the English had borne it so long.
One thing Charles I. did that pleased his people, and that was
sending help to the French Protestants, who were having their town
of Rochelle besieged. But the English were not pleased that the
command of the army was given to the duke of Buckingham, his proud,
insolent favorite. but Buckingham never went. As he was going to
embark at Portsmouth, he was stabbed to the heart by a man named
Felton; nobody clearly knows why.
Charles did not get on much better even when Buckingham was
dead. Whenever he called a Parliament, fault was always found with
him and with the laws. Then he tried to do without a Parliament;
and, as he, of course, needed money, the calls for ship money came
oftener, and the fines in the Star Chamber became heavier, and more
cases for them were hunted out. Then murmurs arose. Just then, too,
he and Archbishop Laud were trying to make the Scots return to the
Church, by giving them bishops and a Prayer-book. But the first
time the Service was read in a church at Edinburgh, a fishwoman,
named Jenny Geddes, jumped up in a rage and threw a three-legged
stool at the clergyman's head. Some Scots fancied they were being
brought back to Rome; others hated whatever was commanded in
England. All these leagued together, and raised an army to resist
the king; and he was obliged to call a Parliament once more, to get
money enough to resist them.
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