James II. had, at least, been honest in openly joining the
Church in which he believed; but the people disliked and distrusted
him, and he had not the graces of his brother to gain their hearts
with, but was grave, sad, and stern.
The Duke of Monmouth came across from Holland, and was
proclaimed king in his uncle's stead at Exeter. Many people in the
West of England joined him, and at Taunton, in Somersetshire, he
was received by rows of little girls standing by the gate in white
frocks, strewing flowers before him. But at Sedgemoor he was met by
the army, and his friends were routed; he himself fled away, and at
last was caught hiding in a ditch, dressed in a laborer's smock
frock, and with his pockets full of peas from the fields. He was
taken to London, tried, and executed. He did not deserve much pity,
but James ought not to have let the people who favored him be
cruelly treated. Sir George Jeffreys, the chief justice, was sent
to try all who had been concerned, from Winchester to Exeter; and
he hung so many, and treated all so savagely, that his progress was
called the Bloody Assize. Even the poor little maids at Taunton
were thrown into a horrible, dirty jail, and only released on their
parents paying a heavy sum of money for them.
This was a bad beginning for James's reign; and the English grew
more angry and suspicious when they saw that he favored Roman
Catholics more than anyone else, and even put them into places that
only clergymen of the Church of England could fill. Then he put
forth a decree, declaring that a person might be chosen to any
office in the State, whether he were a member of the English Church
or no; and he commanded that every clergyman should read it from
his pulpit on Sunday mornings. Archbishop Sancroft did not think it
a right thing for clergymen to read, and he and six more bishops
presented a petition to the king against being obliged to read it.
One of these was Thomas Ken, Bishop of Bath and Wells, who wrote
the morning hymn, "Awake, my soul, and with the sun," and the
evening hymn, "All praise to Thee, my God, this night." Instead of
listening to their petition, the king had all the seven bishops
sent to the Tower, and tried for libel—that is, for malicious
writing. All England was full of anxiety, and when at last the jury
gave the verdict of "not guilty," the whole of London rang with
shouts of joy, and the soldiers in their camp shouted still
louder.
This might have been a warning to the king; for he thought that,
as he paid the army, they were all on his side, and would make the
people bear whatever he pleased. The chief comfort people had was
in thinking their troubles would only last during his reign: for
his first wife, an Englishwoman, had only left him two daughters,
Mary and Anne, and Mary was married to her cousin William, Prince
of Orange, who was a great enemy of the King of France and of the
pope; and Anne's husband, Prince George, brother to the King of
Denmark, was a Protestant. He was a dull man, and people laughed at
him—because, whenever he heard any news, he never said
anything but "Est il possible?" is it possible? But he had a
little son, of whom there was much hope.
But James had married again, Mary Beatrice d'Este, an Italian
princess; and, though none of her babies had lived before, at last
she had a little son who was healthy and likely to live, and who
was christened James. Poor little boy! Everyone was so angry and
disappointed that he should have come into the world at all, that a
story was put about that he was not the son of the king and queen,
but a strange baby who had been carried into the queen's room in a
warming-pan, because James was resolved to prevent Mary and William
from reigning.
Only silly people could believe such a story as this; but all
the Whigs, and most of the Tories, thought in earnest that it was a
sad thing for the country to have an heir to the throne brought up
by a Roman Catholic, and to think it right to treat his subjects as
James was treating them. Some would have been patient, and have
believed that God would bring it right, but others were resolved to
put a stop to the evils they expected; and, knowing what was the
state of people's minds, William of Orange set forth from Holland,
and landed at Torbay. Crowds of people came to meet him, and to
call on him. It was only three years since the Bloody Assize, and
they had not forgotten it in those parts. King James heard that one
person after another had gone to the Prince of Orange, and he
thought it not safe for his wife and child to be any longer in
England. So, quietly, one night he put them in charge of a French
nobleman who had been visiting him, and who took them to the
Thames, where, after waiting in the dark under a church wall, he
brought them a boat, and they reached a ship which took them safely
to France.
King James staid a little longer. He did not mind when he heard
that Prince George of Denmark had gone to the Prince of Orange, but
only laughed, and said "Est il possible?" but when he heard
his daughter Anne, to whom he had always been kind, was gone too,
the tears came into his eyes, and he said, "God help me, my own
children are deserting me." He would have put himself at the head
of the army, but he found that if he did so he was likely to be
made prisoner and carried to William. So he disguised himself and
set off for France; but at Faversham, some people who took him for
a Roman Catholic priest seized him, and he was sent back to London.
However, as there was nothing the Prince of Orange wished so little
as to keep him in captivity, he was allowed to escape again, and
this time he safely reached France, where he was very kindly
welcomed, and had the palace of St. Germain given him for a
dwelling-place.
It was on the 4th of November, 1688, that William landed, and
the change that now took place is commonly called the English
Revolution.
We must think of the gentlemen, during these reigns, as going
about in very fine laced and ruffled coats, and the most enormous
wigs. You know the Roundheads had short hair and the Cavaliers
long: so people were ashamed to have short hair, and wore wigs to
hide it if it would not grow, till everybody came to have shaven
heads, and monstrous wigs in great curls on their shoulders: and
even little boys' hair was made to look as like a wig as possible.
The barber had the wig every morning to fresh curl, and make it
white with hair powder, so that everyone might look like an old
man, with a huge quantity of white hair.
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