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HENRY VIII
VI.
FROM CALAIS TO ROME.
The wonderful success
that had attended Wolsey's policy during his seven years' tenure of power, and
the influential position to which he had raised England in the councils of
Christendom, might well have disturbed the mental balance of a more modest and
diffident man than the Cardinal; and it is scarcely surprising that he fancied
himself, and sought to become, arbiter of the destinies of Europe. The
condition of continental politics made his ambition seem less than extravagant.
Power was almost monopolised by two young princes whose rivalry was keen, whose
resources were not altogether unevenly matched, and whose disputes were so many
and serious that war could only be averted by a pacific determination on both
sides which neither possessed. Francis had claims on Naples, and his dependant,
D'Albret, on Navarre. Charles had suzerain rights over Milan and a title to
Burgundy, of which his great-grandfather Charles the Bold had been despoiled by
Louis XI. Yet the Emperor had not the slightest intention of compromising his
possession of Naples or Navarre, and Francis was quite as resolute to surrender
neither Burgundy nor Milan. They both became eager competitors for the
friendship of England, which, if its resources were inadequate to support the
position of arbiter, was at least a most useful
makeweight. England's choice of policy was, however, strictly limited. She
could not make war upon Charles. It was not merely that Charles had a staunch
ally in his aunt Catherine of Aragon, who is said to have "made such
representations and shown such reasons against" the alliance with Francis
"as one would not have supposed she would have dared to do, or even to
imagine". It
was not merely that in this matter Catherine was backed by the whole council
except Wolsey, and by the real inclinations of the King. It was that the
English people were firmly imperialist in sympathy. The reason was obvious.
Charles controlled the wool-market of the Netherlands, and among English
exports wool was all-important. War with Charles meant the ruin of England's
export trade, the starvation or impoverishment of thousands of Englishmen; and
when war was declared against Charles eight years later, it more nearly cost Henry
his throne than all the fulminations of the Pope or religious discontents, and
after three months it was brought to a summary end. England remained at peace
with Spain so long as Spain controlled its market for wool; when that market
passed into the hands of the revolted Netherlands, the same motive dictated an
alliance with the Dutch against Philip II. War with Charles in 1520 was out of
the question; and for the next two years Wolsey and Henry were endeavouring to
make Francis and the Emperor bid against each other, in order that England
might obtain the maximum of concession from Charles when it should declare in his favour, as all along was intended.
By the Treaty of London
Henry was bound to assist the aggrieved against the aggressor. But that treaty
had been concluded between England and France in the first instance; Henry's
only daughter was betrothed to the Dauphin; and Francis was anxious to cement
his alliance with Henry by a personal interview. It was Henry's policy to play the friend for the
time; and, as a proof of his desire for the meeting with Francis, he announced,
in August, 1519, his resolve to wear his beard until the meeting took place. He reckoned without
his wife. On 8th November Louise of Savoy, the queen-mother of France, taxed
Boleyn, the English ambassador, with a report that Henry had put off his beard.
"I said," writes Boleyn, "that, as I suppose, it hath been by
the Queen's desire; for I told my lady that I have hereafore time known when
the King's grace hath worn long his beard, that the Queen hath daily made him
great instance, and desired him to put it off for her sake." Henry's inconstancy in
the matter of his beard not only caused diplomatic inconvenience, but, it may
be parenthetically remarked, adds to the difficulty of dating his portraits.
Francis, however, considered the Queen's interference a sufficient excuse, or
was not inclined to stick at such trifles; and on 10th January, 1520, he
nominated Wolsey his proctor to make arrangements for the interview. As Wolsey was also
agent for Henry, the French King saw no further cause for delay.
The delay came from England; the meeting with Francis would be a one-sided
pronouncement without some corresponding favour to Charles. Some time before
Henry had sent Charles a pressing invitation to visit England on his way from
Spain to Germany; and the Emperor, suspicious of the meeting between Henry and
Francis, was only too anxious to come and forestall it. The experienced
Margaret of Savoy admitted that Henry's friendship was essential to Charles; but Spaniards were not
to be hurried, and it would be May before the Emperor's convoy was ready. So
Henry endeavoured to postpone his engagement with Francis. The French King
replied that by the end of May his Queen would be in the eighth month of her
pregnancy, and that if the meeting were further prorogued she must perforce be
absent. Henry was
nothing if not gallant, at least on the surface. Francis's argument clinched
the matter. The interview, ungraced by the presence of France's Queen, would,
said Henry, be robbed of most of its charm; and he gave Charles to understand that, unless he
reached England by the middle of May, his visit would have to be cancelled.
This intimation produced an unwonted despatch in the Emperor's movements; but
fate was against him, and contrary winds rendered his arrival in time a matter
of doubt till the last possible moment. Henry must cross to Calais on the 31st
of May, whether Charles came or not; and it was the 26th before the Emperor's
ships appeared off the cliffs of Dover. Wolsey put out in a small boat to meet
him, and conducted Charles to the castle where he lodged. During the night Henry arrived. Early next day, which was
Whitsunday, the two sovereigns proceeded to Canterbury, where the Queen and
Court had come on the way to France to spend their Pentecost. Five days the
Emperor remained with his aunt, whom he now saw for the first time; but the
days were devoted to business rather than to elaborate ceremonial and show, for
which there had been little time to prepare.
On the last day of May
Charles took ship at Sandwich for Flanders. Henry embarked at Dover for France.
The painting at Hampton Court depicting the scene has, like almost every other
picture of Henry's reign, been ascribed to Holbein; but six years were to pass
before the great artist visited England. The King himself is represented as
being on board the four-masted Henry Grace à Dieu, commonly called the Great
Harry, the finest ship afloat; though the vessel originally fitted out for his
passage was the Katherine Pleasaunce. At eleven o'clock he landed at Calais. On Monday,
the 4th of June, Henry and all his Court proceeded to Guisnes. There a
temporary palace of art had been erected, the splendour of which is
inadequately set forth in pages upon pages of contemporary descriptions. One
Italian likened it to the palaces described in Boiardo's Orlando Innamorato and
Ariosto's Orlando Furioso; another declared that it could not have been better
designed by Leonardo da Vinci himself. Everything was in
harmony with this architectural pomp. Wolsey was accompanied, it was said in
Paris, by two hundred gentlemen clad in crimson velvet, and had a body-guard of
two hundred archers. He was himself clothed in crimson satin from head to foot,
his mule was covered with crimson velvet, and her trappings were all of gold.
Henry, "the most goodliest prince that ever reigned over the realm of
England," appeared even to Frenchmen as a very handsome prince,
"honnête, hault et droit," in manner gentle and gracious, rather fat, and—in
spite of his Queen—with a red beard, large enough and very becoming. Another
eye-witness adds the curious remark that, while Francis was the taller of the
two, Henry had the handsomer and more feminine face! On the 7th of June the two Kings started
simultaneously from Guisnes and Ardres for their personal meeting in the valley
mid-way between the two towns, already known as the Val Doré. The obscure but
familiar phrase, Field of Cloth of Gold, is a mistranslation of the French Camp du Drap
d'Or. As they came in sight a temporary suspicion of French designs seized the
English, but it was overcome. Henry and Francis rode forward alone, embraced
each other first on horseback and then again on foot, and made show of being
the closest friends in Christendom. On Sunday the 10th Henry dined with the
French Queen, and Francis with Catherine of Aragon. The following week was
devoted to tourneys, which the two Kings opened by holding the field against
all comers. The official accounts are naturally silent on the royal wrestling match, recorded in French memoirs and histories. On the 17th Francis,
as a final effort to win Henry's alliance, paid a surprise visit to him at
breakfast with only four attendants. The jousts were concluded with a solemn
mass said by Wolsey in a chapel built on the field. The Cardinal of Bourbon
presented the Gospel to Francis to kiss; he refused, offering it to Henry who
was too polite to accept the honour. The same respect for each other's dignity
was observed with the Pax, and the two Queens behaved with a similarly
courteous punctilio. After a friendly dispute as to who should kiss the Pax
first, they kissed each other instead. On the 24th Henry and Francis met to interchange
gifts, to make their final professions of friendship, and to bid each other
adieu. Francis set out for Abbeville, and Henry returned to Calais.
The Field of Cloth of
Gold was the last and most gorgeous display of the departing spirit of
chivalry; it was also perhaps the most portentous deception on record.
"These sovereigns," wrote a Venetian, "are not at peace. They
adapt themselves to circumstances, but they hate each other very
cordially." Beneath the profusion of friendly pretences lay rooted suspicions and even
deliberate hostile intentions. Before Henry left England the rumour of ships
fitting out in French ports had stopped preparations for the interview; and
they were not resumed till a promise under the broad seal of France was given
that no French ship should sail before Henry's return. On the eve of the meeting Henry is said to have
discovered that three or four thousand French troops were concealed in the neighbouring country; he insisted on their removal, and Francis's
unguarded visit to Henry was probably designed to disarm the English distrust. No sooner was Henry's
back turned than the French began the fortification of Ardres, while Henry on his
part went to Calais to negotiate a less showy but genuine friendship with
Charles. No such magnificence adorned their meeting as had been displayed at
the Field of Cloth of Gold, but its solid results were far more lasting. On
10th July Henry rode to Gravelines where the Emperor was waiting. On the 11th
they returned together to Calais, where during a three days' visit the
negotiations begun at Canterbury were completed. The ostensible purport of the
treaty signed on the 14th was to bind Henry to proceed no further in the marriage
between the Princess Mary and the Dauphin, and Charles no further in that
between himself and Francis's daughter, Charlotte. But more topics were discussed than appeared on
the surface; and among them was a proposal to marry Mary to the Emperor
himself. The design
proves that Henry and Wolsey had already made up their minds to side with
Charles, whenever his disputes with Francis should develop into open
hostilities.
That consummation could
not be far off. Charles had scarcely turned his back upon Spain when murmurs of
disaffection were heard through the length and breadth of the land; and while
he was discussing with Henry at Calais the prospects of a war with France, his commons
in Spain broke out into open revolt. The rising had attained such dimensions by February, 1521, that Henry thought Charles was likely
to lose his Spanish dominions. The temptation was too great for France to
resist; and in the early spring of 1521 French forces overran Navarre, and
restored to his kingdom the exile D'Albret. Francis had many plausible excuses,
and sought to prove that he was not really the aggressor. There had been
confused fighting between the imperialist Nassau and Francis's allies, the Duke
of Guelders and Robert de la Marck, which the imperialists may have begun. But
Francis revealed his true motive, when he told Fitzwilliam that he had many
grievances against Charles and could not afford to neglect this opportunity for
taking his revenge.
War between Emperor and
King soon spread from Navarre to the borders of Flanders and to the plains of
Northern Italy. Both sovereigns claimed the assistance of England in virtue of
the Treaty of London. But Henry would not be prepared for war till the
following year at least; and he proposed that Wolsey should go to Calais to
mediate between the two parties and decide which had been the aggressor.
Charles, either because he was unprepared or was sure of Wolsey's support,
readily agreed; but Francis was more reluctant, and only the knowledge that, if
he refused, Henry would at once side with Charles, induced him to consent to
the conference. So on 2nd August, 1521, the Cardinal again crossed the Channel. His first interview
was with the imperial envoys. They announced that Charles had given them no power to treat for a truce.
Wolsey refused to proceed without this authority;
and he obtained the consent of the French chancellor, Du Prat, to his proposal
to visit the Emperor at Bruges, and secure the requisite powers. He was absent
more than a fortnight, and not long after his return fell ill. This served to
pass time in September, and the extravagant demands of both parties still
further prolonged the proceedings. Wolsey was constrained to tell them the
story of a courtier who asked his King for the grant of a forest; when his relatives
denounced his presumption, he replied that he only wanted in reality eight or
nine trees. The
French and imperial chancellors not merely demanded their respective forests,
but made the reduction of each single tree a matter of lengthy dispute; and as
soon as a fresh success in the varying fortune of war was reported, they
returned to their early pretensions. Wolsey was playing his game with
consummate skill; delay was his only desire; his illness had been diplomatic;
his objects were to postpone for a few months the breach and to secure the
pensions from France due at the end of October.
The conference at Calais
was in fact a monument of perfidy worthy of Ferdinand the Catholic. The plan
was Wolsey's, but Henry had expressed full approval. As early as July the King
was full of his secret design for destroying the navy of France, though he did
not propose to proceed with the enterprise till Wolsey had completed the
arrangements with Charles. The subterfuge about Charles refusing his powers
and the Cardinal's journey to Bruges had been arranged between Henry, Wolsey
and Charles before Wolsey left England. The object of that visit, so far from
being to facilitate an agreement, was to conclude an offensive and defensive
alliance against one of the two parties between whom Wolsey was pretending to
mediate. "Henry agrees," wrote Charles's ambassador on 6th July,
"with Wolsey's plan that he should be sent to Calais under colour of
hearing the grievances of both parties: and when he cannot arrange them, he
should withdraw to the Emperor to treat of the matters aforesaid". The treaty was
concluded at Bruges on 25th August before he returned to Calais; the Emperor
promised Wolsey the Papacy; the details of a joint invasion were settled. Charles was to marry Mary; and
the Pope was to dispense the two from the disability of their kinship, and from
engagements with others which both had contracted. The Cardinal might be
profuse in his protestations of friendship for France, of devotion to peace,
and of his determination to do justice to the parties before him. But all his
painted words could not long conceal the fact that behind the mask of the judge
were hidden the features of a conspirator. It was an unpleasant time for
Fitzwilliam, the English ambassador at the French Court. The King's sister,
Marguerite de Valois, taxed Fitzwilliam with Wolsey's proceedings, hinting that
deceit was being practised on Francis. The
ambassador grew hot, vowed Henry was not a dissembler, and that he would prove
it on any gentleman who dared to maintain that he was. But he knew nothing of Wolsey's intrigues; nor
was the Cardinal, to whom Fitzwilliam denounced the insinuation, likely to
blush, though he knew that the charge was true.
Wolsey returned from Calais
at the end of November, having failed to establish the truce to which the
negotiations had latterly been in appearance directed. But the French
half-yearly pensions were paid, and England had the winter in which to prepare
for war. No attempt had been made to examine impartially the mutual charges of
aggression urged by the litigants, though a determination of that point could
alone justify England's intervention. The dispute was complicated enough. If,
as Charles contended, the Treaty of London guaranteed the status quo, Francis,
by invading Navarre, was undoubtedly the offender. But the French King pleaded
the Treaty of Noyon, by which Charles had bound himself to do justice to the
exiled King of Navarre, to marry the French King's daughter, and to pay tribute
for Naples. That treaty was not abrogated by the one concluded in London, yet
Charles had fulfilled none of his promises. Moreover, the Emperor himself had,
long before the invasion of Navarre, been planning a war with France, and
negotiating with Leo to expel the French from Milan, and to destroy the
predominant French faction in Genoa. His ministers were
making little secret of Charles's warlike intentions, when the Spanish revolt
placed irresistible temptation in Francis's way, and provoked that attack on
Navarre, which enabled Charles to plead, with some colour, that he was not the
aggressor. This was the ground alleged by Henry for siding with Charles, but it
was not his real reason for going to war. Nearly a year before Navarre was
invaded, he had discussed the rupture of Mary's engagement with the Dauphin and
the transference of her hand to the Emperor.
The real motives of
England's policy do not appear on the surface. "The aim of the King of
England," said Clement VII. in 1524, "is as incomprehensible as the causes by
which he is moved are futile. He may, perhaps, wish to revenge himself for the
slights he has received from the King of France and from the Scots, or to
punish the King of France for his disparaging language; or, seduced by the
flattery of the Emperor, he may have nothing else in view than to help the
Emperor; or he may, perhaps, really wish to preserve peace in Italy, and
therefore declares himself an enemy of any one who disturbs it. It is even not
impossible that the King of England expects to be rewarded by the Emperor after
the victory, and hopes, perhaps, to get Normandy." Clement three years before,
when Cardinal de Medici, had admitted that he knew little of English politics; and his ignorance may
explain his inability to give a more satisfactory reason for Henry's conduct
than these tentative and far-fetched suggestions. But after the publication of
Henry's State papers, it is not easy to arrive at any more definite conclusion.
The only motive Wolsey alleges, besides the ex
post facto excuses of Francis's conduct, is the recovery of Henry's rights to
the crown of France; and if this were the real object, it reduces both King and
Cardinal to the level of political charlatans. To conquer France was a madcap
scheme, when Henry himself was admitting the impossibility of raising 30,000
foot or 10,000 horse, without hired contingents from Charles's domains; when, according to
Giustinian, it would have been hard to levy 100 men-at-arms or 1000 light
cavalry in the whole island; when the only respectable military force was the archers, already an obsolete
arm. Invading hosts could never be victualled for more than three months, or
stand a winter campaign; English troops were ploughmen by profession and
soldiers only by chance; Henry VII.'s treasure was exhausted, and efforts to
raise money for fitful and futile inroads nearly produced a revolt. Henry VIII.
himself was writing that to provide for these inroads would prevent him keeping
an army in Ireland; and Wolsey was declaring that for the same reason English
interests in Scotland must take care of themselves, that border warfare must be
confined to the strictest defensive, and that a "cheap" deputy must
be found for Ireland, who would rule it, like Kildare, without English aid. It is usual to lay the
folly of the pretence to the crown of France at Henry's door. But it is a
curious fact that when Wolsey was gone, and Henry was his own prime minister,
this spirited foreign policy took a very subordinate place, and Henry turned
his attention to the cultivation of his own garden instead of seeking to annex his neighbour's. It is possible that he was better
employed in wasting his people's blood and treasure in the futile devastation
of France, than in placing his heel on the Church and sending Fisher and More
to the scaffold; but his attempts to reduce Ireland to order, and to unite
England and Scotland, violent though his methods may have been, were at least
more sane than the quest for the crown of France, or even for the possession of
Normandy.
Yet if these were not
Wolsey's aims, what were his motives? The essential thing for England was the
maintenance of a fairly even balance between Francis and Charles; and if Wolsey
thought that would best be secured by throwing the whole of England's weight
into the Emperor's scale, he must have strangely misread the political
situation. He could not foresee, it may be said, the French debacle. If so, it
was from no lack of omens. Even supposing he was ignorant, or unable to
estimate the effects, of the moral corruption of Francis, the peculations of
his mother Louise of Savoy, the hatred of the war, universal among the French
lower classes, there were definite warnings from more careful observers. As early as 1517 there
were bitter complaints in France of the gabelle and other taxes, and a
Cordelier denounced the French King as worse than
Nero. In 1519 an
anonymous Frenchman wrote that Francis had destroyed his own people, emptied
his kingdom of money, and that the Emperor or some other would soon have a
cheap bargain of the kingdom, for he was more unsteady on his throne than people
thought. Even the
treason of Bourbon, which contributed so much to the French King's fall, was
rumoured three years before it occurred, and in 1520 he was known to be
"playing the malcontent". At the Field of Cloth of Gold Henry is said to
have told Francis that, had he a subject like Bourbon, he would not long leave
his head on his shoulders. All these details were reported to the English Government and placed among
English archives; and, indeed, at the English Court the general anticipation,
justified by the event, was that Charles would carry the day.
No possible advantage
could accrue to England from such a destruction of the balance of power; her
position as mediator was only tenable so long as neither Francis nor Charles
had the complete mastery. War on the Emperor was, no doubt, out of the
question, but that was no reason for war on France. Prudence counselled England
to make herself strong, to develop her resources, and to hold her strength in
reserve, while the two rivals weakened each other by war. She would then be in
a far better position to make her voice heard in the settlement, and would
probably have been able to extract from it all the benefits she could with
reason or justice demand. So obvious was the advantage of this policy that for
some time acute French statesmen refused to credit Wolsey with any other. They said, reported an English envoy to the Cardinal,
"that your grace would make your profit with them and the Emperor both,
and proceed between them so that they might continue in war, and that the one
destroy the other, and the King's highness may remain and be their arbiter and
superior".If
it is urged that Henry was bent on the war, and that Wolsey must satisfy the
King or forfeit his power, even the latter would have been the better
alternative. His fall would have been less complete and more honourable than it
actually was. Wolsey's failure to follow this course suggests that, by
involving Henry in dazzling schemes of a foreign conquest, he was seeking to
divert his attention from urgent matters at home; that he had seen a vision of
impending ruin; and that his actions were the frantic efforts of a man to turn
a steed, over which he has imperfect control, from the gulf he sees yawning
ahead. The only other explanation is that Wolsey sacrificed England's interests
in the hope of securing from Charles the gift of the papal tiara.
However that may be, it
was not for Clement VII. to deride England's conduct. The keen-sighted Pace had
remarked in 1521 that, in the event of Charles's victory, the Pope would have
to look to his affairs in time. The Emperor's triumph was, indeed, as fatal to the Papacy as it was to Wolsey.
Yet Clement VII., on whom the full force of the blow was to fall, had, as
Cardinal de Medici, been one of the chief promoters of the war. In August,
1521, the Venetian, Contarini, reports Charles as
saying that Leo rejected both the peace and the truce speciously urged by
Wolsey, and adds, on his own account, that he believes it the truth. In 1522 Francis
asserted that Cardinal de Medici "was the cause of all this war"; and in 1527 Clement
VII. sought to curry favour with Charles by declaring that as Cardinal de
Medici he had in 1521 caused Leo X. to side against France. In 1525 Charles
declared that he had been mainly induced to enter on the war by the persuasions
of Leo, over whom
his cousin, the Cardinal, then wielded supreme influence. So complete was his
sway over Leo, that, on Leo's death, a cardinal in the conclave remarked that
they wanted a new Pope, not one who had already been Pope for years; and the
gibe turned the scale against the future Clement VII. Medici both, Leo and the
Cardinal regarded the Papacy mainly as a means for family aggrandisement. In
1518 Leo had fulminated against Francis Maria della Rovere, Duke of Urbino, as
"the son of iniquity and child of perdition," because he desired to bestow the duchy on his
nephew Lorenzo. In the family interest he was withholding Modena and Reggio
from Alfonso d'Este, and casting envious eyes on Ferrara. In March, 1521, the
French marched to seize some Milanese exiles, who were harboured at Reggio. Leo took the
opportunity to form an alliance with Charles for the expulsion of Francis from
Italy. It was signed at Worms on the 8th of May, the day on which Luther was
outlawed; and a war
broke out in Italy, the effects of which were
little foreseen by its principal authors. A veritable Nemesis attended this
policy conceived in perfidy and greed. The battle of Pavia made Charles more
nearly dictator of Europe than any ruler has since been, except Napoleon
Bonaparte. It led to the sack of Rome and the imprisonment of Clement VII. by
Charles's troops. The dependence of the Pope on the Emperor made it impossible
for Clement to grant Henry's petition for divorce, and his failure to obtain
the divorce precipitated Wolsey's fall.
Leo, meanwhile, had gone
to his account on the night of 1st-2nd December, 1521, singing "Nunc
dimittis" for the expulsion of the French from Milan; and amid the clangour
of war the cardinals met to choose his successor. Their spirit belied their
holy profession. "All here," wrote Manuel, Charles's representative,
"is founded on avarice and lies;" and again "there cannot be so much hatred
and so many devils in hell as among these cardinals". "The Papacy is
in great decay" echoed the English envoy Clerk, "the cardinals brawl
and scold; their malicious, unfaithful and uncharitable demeanour against each
other increases every day." Feeling between the French and imperial factions
ran high, and the only question was whether an adherent of Francis or Charles
would secure election. Francis had promised Wolsey fourteen French votes; but
after the conference of Calais he would have been forgiving indeed had he
wielded his influence on behalf of the English candidate. Wolsey built more upon the promise of Charles at Bruges; but, if he really
hoped for Charles's assistance, his sagacity was greatly to seek. The Emperor
at no time made any effort on Wolsey's behalf; he did him the justice to think
that, were Wolsey elected, he would be devoted more to English than to imperial
interests; and he preferred a Pope who would be undividedly imperialist at
heart. Pace was sent to join Clerk at Rome in urging Wolsey's suit, and they
did their best; but English influence at the Court of Rome was infinitesimal.
In spite of Campeggio's flattering assurance that Wolsey's name appeared in
every scrutiny, and that sometimes he had eight or nine votes, and Clerk's
statement that he had nine at one time, twelve at another, and nineteen at a
third, Wolsey's name
only appears in one of the eleven scrutinies, and then he received but seven
out of eighty-one votes. The election was long and keenly contested. The conclave commenced on the 28th
of December, and it was not till the 9th of January, 1522, that the cardinals,
conscious of each other's defects, agreed to elect an absentee, about whom they
knew little. Their choice fell on Adrian, Cardinal of Tortosa; and it is
significant of the extent of Charles's influence, that the new Pope had been
his tutor, and was proposed as a candidate by the imperial ambassador on the
day that the conclave opened.
Neither the expulsion of
the French from Milan, nor the election of Charles's tutor as Pope, opened
Wolsey's eyes to the danger of further increasing
the Emperor's power. He seems rather to have thrown himself into the not very chivalrous design of
completing the ruin of the weaker side, and picking up what he could from the
spoils. During the winter of 1521-22 he was busily preparing for war, while
endeavouring to delay the actual breach till his plans were complete. Francis,
convinced of England's hostile intentions, let Albany loose upon Scotland and refused
to pay the pensions to Henry and Wolsey. They made these grievances the excuse
for a war on which they had long been determined. In March Henry announced that
he had taken upon himself the protection of the Netherlands during Charles's
impending visit to Spain. Francis asserted that this was a plain declaration of
war, and seized the English wine-ships at Bordeaux. But he was determined not
to take the formal offensive, and, in May, Clarencieux herald proceeded to
France to bid him defiance. In the following month Charles passed through England on his way to the south,
and fresh treaties were signed for the invasion of France, for the marriage of
Mary and for the extirpation of heresy. At Windsor Wolsey constituted his legatine court to bind the
contracting parties by oaths enforced by ecclesiastical censures. He arrogated
to himself a function usually reserved for the Pope, and undertook to arbitrate
between Charles and Henry if disputes arose about the observance of their engagements. But he obviously found
difficulty in raising either money or men; and one of the suggestions at
Windsor was that a "dissembled peace" or a two years' truce should be
made with France, to give England time for more preparations for war.
Nothing came of this
last nefarious suggestion. In July Surrey captured and burnt Morlaix; but, as he wrote from
on board the Mary Rose, Fitzwilliam's ships were without flesh or fish, and
Surrey himself had only beer for twelve days. Want of victuals prevented
further naval successes, and, in September, Surrey was sent into Artois, where
the same lack of organisation was equally fatal. It did not, however, prevent
him from burning farms and towns wherever he went; and his conduct evoked from
the French commander a just rebuke of his "foul warfare". Henry himself was
responsible; for Wolsey wrote on his behalf urging the destruction of Dourlens
and the adjacent towns. If Henry really sought to make these territories his own, it was an odd method
of winning the affections and developing the wealth of the subjects he hoped to
acquire. Nothing was really accomplished except devastation in France. Even
this useless warfare exhausted English energies, and left the Borders
defenceless against one of the largest armies ever collected in Scotland.
Wolsey and Henry were only saved, from what might have been a most serious
invasion, by Dacre's dexterity and Albany's cowardice. Dacre, the warden of the
marches, signed a truce without waiting for instructions, and before it expired
the Scots army disbanded. Henry and Wolsey might reprimand Dacre for acting on
his own responsibility, but they knew well enough
that Dacre had done them magnificent service.
The results of the war
from the English point of view had as yet been contemptible, but great things
were hoped for the following year. Bourbon, Constable of France, and the most
powerful peer in the kingdom, intent on the betrayal of Francis, was
negotiating with Henry and Charles the price of his treason. The commons in France,
worn to misery by the taxes of Francis and the ravages of his enemies, were
eager for anything that might promise some alleviation of their lot. They would
even, it appears, welcome a change of dynasty; everywhere, Henry was told, they
cried "Vive le roi d'Angleterre!" Never, said Wolsey, would there be a better
opportunity for recovering the King's right to the French crown; and Henry
exclaimed that he trusted to treat Francis as his father did Richard III.
"I pray God," wrote Sir Thomas More to Wolsey, "if it be good
for his grace and for this realm, that then it may prove so, and else in the
stead thereof, I pray God send his grace an honourable and profitable peace." He could scarcely go
further in hinting his preference for peace to the fantastic design which now
occupied the minds of his masters. Probably his opinion of the war was not far
from that of old Bishop Fox, who declared: "I have determined, and,
betwixt God and me, utterly renounced the meddling with worldly matters,
specially concerning war or anything to it appertaining (whereof, for the many
intolerable enormities that I have seen ensue by
the said war in time past, I have no little remorse in my conscience), thinking
that if I did continual penance for it all the days of my life, though I should
live twenty years longer than I may do, I could not yet make sufficient
recompense therefor. And now, my good lord, to be called to fortifications of
towns and places of war, or to any matter concerning the war, being of the age
of seventy years and above, and looking daily to die, the which if I did, being
in any such meddling of the war, I think I should die in despair." Protests like this and
hints like More's were little likely to move the militant Cardinal, who hoped
to see the final ruin of France in 1523. Bourbon was to raise the standard of
revolt, Charles was to invade from Spain and Suffolk from Calais. In Italy
French influence seemed irretrievably ruined. The Genoese revolution, planned
before the war, was effected; and the persuasions of Pace and the threats of
Charles at last detached Venice and Ferrara from the alliance of France.
The usual delays
postponed Suffolk's invasion till late in the year. They were increased by the
emptiness of Henry's treasury. His father's hoard had melted away, and it was
absolutely necessary to obtain lavish supplies from Parliament. But Parliament
proved ominously intractable. Thomas Cromwell, now rising to notice, in a
temperate speech urged the folly of indulging in impracticable schemes of
foreign conquest, while Scotland remained a thorn in England's side. It was three months
from the meeting of Parliament before the subsidies were granted, and nearly the end of August before Suffolk crossed to Calais
with an army, "the largest which has passed out of this realm for a
hundred years". Henry and Suffolk wanted it to besiege Boulogne, which might have been some
tangible result in English hands. But the King was persuaded by Wolsey and his
imperial allies to forgo this scheme, and to order Suffolk to march into the
heart of France. Suffolk was not a great general, but he conducted the invasion
with no little skill, and desired to conduct it with unwonted humanity. He
wished to win the French by abstaining from pillage and proclaiming liberty,
but Henry thought only the hope of plunder would keep the army together. Waiting for the
imperial contingent under De Buren, Suffolk did not leave Calais till 19th
September. He advanced by Bray, Roye and Montdidier, capturing all the towns
that offered resistance. Early in November, he reached the Oise at a point less
than forty miles from the French capital. But Bourbon's treason had been discovered;
instead of joining Suffolk with a large force, he was a fugitive from his
country. Charles contented himself with taking Fuentarabia, and made no effort at
invasion. The imperial contingent with Suffolk's army went home; winter set in
with unexampled severity, and Vendôme advanced. The English were compelled to retire; their
retreat was effected without loss, and by the middle of December the army was
back at Calais. Suffolk is represented as being in disgrace for this retreat,
and Wolsey as saving him from the effects of his
failure. But even
Wolsey can hardly have thought that an army of twenty-five thousand men could
maintain itself in the heart of France, throughout the winter, without support
and with unguarded communications. The Duke's had been the most successful
invasion of France since the days of Henry V. from a military point of view.
That its results were negative is due to the policy by which it was directed.
Meanwhile there was
another papal election. Adrian, one of the most honest and unpopular of Popes,
died on 14th September, 1523, and by order of the cardinals there was inscribed
on his tomb: Hic jacet Adrianus Sextus cui nihil in vita infelicius contigit
quam quod imperaret. With equal malice and keener wit the Romans erected to his
physician, Macerata, a statue with the title Liberatori Patriæ. Wolsey was again a
candidate. He told Henry he would rather continue in his service than be ten
Popes. That did not
prevent him instructing Pace and Clerk to further his claims. They were to
represent to the cardinals Wolsey's "great experience in the causes of
Christendom, his favour with the Emperor, the King, and other princes, his
anxiety for Christendom, his liberality, the great promotions to be vacated by
his election, his frank, pleasant and courteous inclinations, his freedom from
all ties of family or party, and the hopes of a great expedition against the
infidel". Charles was, as usual, profuse in his promise of aid. He actually wrote a
letter in Wolsey's favour; but he took the precaution to detain the bearer in Spain till the election was over. He had already
instructed his minister at Rome to procure the election of Cardinal de Medici.
That ambassador mocked at Wolsey's hopes; "as if God," he wrote,
"would perform a miracle every day". The Holy Spirit, by which the cardinals always
professed to be moved, was not likely to inspire the election of another
absentee after their experience of Adrian. Wolsey had not the remotest chance,
and his name does not occur in a single scrutiny. After the longest conclave on
record, the imperial influence prevailed; on 18th November De Medici was
proclaimed Pope, and he chose as his title Clement VII.
Suffolk's invasion was
the last of England's active participation in the war. Exhausted by her
efforts, discontented with the Emperor's failure to render assistance in the
joint enterprise, or perceiving at last that she had little to gain, and much
to lose, from the overgrown power of Charles, England, in 1524, abstained from
action, and even began to make overtures to Francis. Wolsey repaid Charles's
inactivity of the previous year by standing idly by, while the imperial forces
with Bourbon's contingent invaded Provence and laid siege to Marseilles. But
Francis still held command of the sea; the spirit of his people rose with the
danger; Marseilles made a stubborn and successful defence; and, by October, the
invading army was in headlong retreat towards Italy. Had Francis been content with defending his
kingdom, all might have been well; but ambition
lured him on to destruction. He thought he had passed the worst of the trouble,
and that the prize of Milan might yet be his. So, before the imperialists were
well out of France, he crossed the Alps and sat down to besiege Pavia. It was
brilliantly defended by Antonio de Leyva. In November Francis's ruin was
thought to be certain; astrologers predicted his death or imprisonment. Slowly and surely
Pescara, the most consummate general of his age, was pressing north with
imperial troops to succour Pavia. Francis would not raise the siege. On 24th
February, 1525, he was attacked in front by Pescara and in the rear by De
Leyva. "The victory is complete," wrote the Abbot of Najera to
Charles from the field of battle, "the King of France is made prisoner....
The whole French army is annihilated.... To-day is feast of the Apostle St.
Mathias, on which, five and twenty years ago, your Majesty is said to have been
born. Five and twenty thousand times thanks and praise to God for His mercy!
Your Majesty is, from this day, in a position to prescribe laws to Christians
and Turks, according to your pleasure."
Such was the result of
Wolsey's policy since 1521, Francis a prisoner, Charles a dictator, and Henry
vainly hoping that he might be allowed some share in the victor's spoils. But
what claim had he? By the most extraordinary misfortune or fatuity, England had
not merely helped Charles to a threatening supremacy, but had retired from the struggle just in time to deprive herself of all claim to
benefit by her mistaken policy. She had looked on while Bourbon invaded France,
fearing to aid lest Charles would reap all the fruits of success. She had sent
no force across the channel to threaten Francis's rear. Not a single French
soldier had been diverted from attacking Charles in Italy through England's
interference. One hundred thousand crowns had been promised the imperial
troops, but the money was not paid; and secret negotiations had been going on
with France. In spite of all, Charles had won, and he was naturally not
disposed to divide the spoils. England's policy since 1521 had been disastrous
to herself, to Wolsey, to the Papacy, and even to Christendom. For the falling
out of Christian princes seemed to the Turk to afford an excellent opportunity
for the faithful to come by his own. After an heroic defence by the knights of
St. John, Rhodes, the bulwark of Christendom, had surrendered to Selim.
Belgrade, the strongest citadel in Eastern Europe, followed. In August, 1526,
the King and the flower of Hungarian nobility perished at the battle of Mohacz;
and the internecine strife of Christians seemed doomed to be sated only by
their common subjugation to the Turk.
Henry and Wolsey began
to pay the price of their policy at home as well as abroad. War was no less costly
for being ineffective, and it necessitated demands on the purses of Englishmen,
to which they had long been unused. In the autumn of 1522 Wolsey was compelled
to have recourse to a loan from both spiritualty and temporalty. It seems to have met
with a response which, compared with later
receptions, may be described as almost cheerful. But the loan did not go far,
and before another six months had elapsed it was found necessary to summon
Parliament to make further provision. The Speaker was Sir Thomas More, who did all he
could to secure a favourable reception of Wolsey's demands. An unwonted spirit
of independence animated the members; the debates were long and stormy; and the
Cardinal felt called upon to go down to the House of Commons, and hector it in
such fashion that even More was compelled to plead its privileges. Eventually,
some money was reluctantly granted; but it too was soon swallowed up, and in
1525 Wolsey devised fresh expedients. He was afraid to summon Parliament again,
so he proposed what he called an Amicable Grant. It was necessary, he said, for
Henry to invade France in person; if he went, he must go as a prince; and he
could not go as a prince without lavish supplies. So he required what was
practically a graduated income-tax. The Londoners resisted till they were told
that resistance might cost them their heads. In Suffolk and elsewhere open
insurrection broke out. It was then proposed to withdraw the fixed ratio, and
allow each individual to pay what he chose as a benevolence. A common
councillor of London promptly retorted that benevolences were illegal by
statute of Richard III. Wolsey cared little for the constitution, and was
astonished that any one should quote the laws of a wicked usurper; but the
common councillor was a sound constitutionalist, if Wolsey was not. "An it
please your grace," he replied, "although King Richard did evil, yet
in his time were many good acts made, not by him
only, but by the consent of the body of the whole realm, which is
Parliament." There was no answer; the demand was withdrawn. Never had Henry suffered such a
rebuff, and he never suffered the like again. Nor was this all; the whole of
London, Wolsey is reported to have said, were traitors to Henry. Informations of
"treasonable words"—that ominous phrase—became frequent. Here, indeed, was a
contrast to the exuberant loyalty of the early years of Henry's reign. The
change may not have been entirely due to Wolsey, but he had been minister, with
a power which few have equalled, during the whole period in which it was
effected, and Henry may well have begun to think that it was time for his
removal.
Whether Wolsey was now
anxious to repair his blunder by siding with Francis against Charles, or to
snatch some profit from the Emperor's victory by completing the ruin of France,
the refusal of Englishmen to find more money for the war left him no option but
peace. In April, 1525, Tunstall and Sir Richard Wingfield were sent to Spain
with proposals for the exclusion of Francis and his children from the French
throne and the dismemberment of his kingdom. It is doubtful if Wolsey himself desired the
fulfilment of so preposterous and iniquitous a scheme. It is certain that
Charles was in no mood to abet it. He had no wish to extract profit for England
out of the abasement of Francis, to see Henry King of France, or lord of any
French provinces. He had no intention of even
performing his part of the Treaty of Windsor. He had pledged himself to marry
the Princess Mary, and the splendour of that match may have contributed to
Henry's desire for an alliance with Charles. But another matrimonial project
offered the Emperor more substantial advantages. Ever since 1517 his Spanish
subjects had been pressing him to marry the daughter of Emmanuel, King of
Portugal. The Portuguese royal family had claims to the throne of Castile which
would be quieted by Charles's marriage with a Portuguese princess. Her dowry of
a million crowns was, also, an argument not to be lightly disregarded in
Charles's financial embarrassments; and in March, 1526, the Emperor's wedding
with Isabella of Portugal was solemnised.
Wolsey, on his part, was
secretly negotiating with Louise of Savoy during her son's imprisonment in
Spain. In August, 1525, a treaty of amity was signed, by which England gave up
all its claims to French territory in return for the promise of large sums of
money to Henry and his minister. The impracticability of enforcing Henry's
pretensions to the French crown or to French provinces, which had been urged as
excuses for squandering English blood and treasure, was admitted, even when the
French King was in prison and his kingdom defenceless. But what good could the
treaty do Henry or Francis? Charles had complete control over his captive, and
could dictate his own terms. Neither the English nor the French King was in a
position to continue the war; and the English alliance with France could abate
no iota of the concessions which Charles extorted
from Francis in January, 1526, by the Treaty of Madrid. Francis surrendered Burgundy; gave up his claims
to Milan, Genoa and Naples; abandoned his allies, the King of Navarre, the Duke
of Guelders and Robert de la Marck; engaged to marry Charles's sister Eleanor,
the widowed Queen of Portugal; and handed over his two sons to the Emperor as
hostages for the fulfilment of the treaty. But he had no intention of keeping
his promises. No sooner was he free than he protested that the treaty had been
extracted by force, and that his oath to keep it was not binding. The Estates
of France readily refused their assent, and the Pope was, as usual, willing,
for political reasons, to absolve Francis from his oath. For the time being,
consideration for the safety of his sons and the hope of obtaining their
release prevented him from openly breaking with Charles, or listening to the
proposals for a marriage with the Princess Mary, held out as a bait by Wolsey. The Cardinal's object
was merely to injure the Emperor as much as he could without involving England
in war; and by negotiations for Mary's marriage, first with Francis, and then
with his second son, the Duke of Orléans, he was endeavouring to draw England
and France into a closer alliance. For similar reasons he was extending his
patronage to the Holy League, formed by Clement VII. between the princes of
Italy to liberate that distressful country from the grip of the Spanish forces.
The policy of Clement,
of Venice, and of other Italian States had been characterised by as much
blindness as that of England. Almost without exception they had united, in
1523, to expel the French from Italy. The result
was to destroy the balance of power south of the Alps, and to deliver
themselves over to a bondage more galling than that from which they sought to
escape. Clement himself had been elected Pope by imperial influence, and the
Duke of Sessa, Charles's representative in Rome, described him as entirely the
Emperor's creature. He was, wrote Sessa, "very reserved, irresolute, and decides few things
himself. He loves money and prefers persons who know where to find it to any
other kind of men. He likes to give himself the appearance of being
independent, but the result shows that he is generally governed by
others." Clement, however, after his election, tried to assume an attitude more becoming
the head of Christendom than slavish dependence on Charles. His love for the
Emperor, he told Charles, had not diminished, but his hatred for others had
disappeared; and
throughout 1524 he was seeking to promote concord between Christian princes.
His methods were unfortunate; the failure of the imperial invasion of Provence
and Francis's passage of the Alps, convinced the Pope that Charles's star was
waning, and that of France was in the ascendant. "The Pope," wrote
Sessa to Charles V., "is at the disposal of the conqueror." So, on 19th January,
1525, a Holy League between Clement and Francis was publicly proclaimed at
Rome, and joined by most of the Italian States. It was almost the eve of Pavia.
Charles received the
news of that victory with astonishing humility. But he was not likely to forget
that at the critical moment he had been deserted by most of his Italian allies;
and it was with fear and trembling that the
Venetian ambassador besought him to use his victory with moderation. Their conduct could
hardly lead them to expect much from the Emperor's clemency. Distrust of his
intentions induced the Holy League to carry on desultory war with the imperial
troops; but mutual jealousies, the absence of effective aid from England or
France, and vacillation caused by the feeling that after all it might be safer
to accept the best terms they could obtain, prevented the war from being waged
with any effect. In September, 1526, Hugo de Moncada, the imperial commander,
concerted with Clement's bitter foes, the Colonnas, a means of overawing the
Pope. A truce was concluded, wrote Moncada, "that the Pope, having laid down
his arms, may be taken unawares". On the 19th he marched on Rome. Clement, taken
unawares, fled to the castle of St. Angelo; his palace was sacked, St. Peter's
rifled, and the host profaned. "Never," says Casale, "was so
much cruelty and sacrilege."
It was soon thrown into
the shade by an outrage at which the whole world stood aghast. Charles's object
was merely to render the Pope his obedient slave; neither God nor man, said Moncada,
could resist with impunity the Emperor's victorious arms. But he had little
control over his own irresistible forces. With no enemy to check them, with no
pay to content them, the imperial troops were ravaging, pillaging, sacking
cities and churches throughout Northern Italy without let or hindrance. At length a sudden frenzy seized them to march upon
Rome. Moncada had shown them the way, and on 6th May, 1527, the Holy City was
taken by storm. Bourbon was killed at the first assault; and the richest city
in Christendom was given over to a motley, leaderless horde of German, Spanish
and Italian soldiery. The Pope again fled to the castle of St. Angelo; and for
weeks Rome endured an orgy of sacrilege, blasphemy, robbery, murder and lust,
the horrors of which no brush could depict nor tongue recite. "All the
churches and the monasteries," says a cardinal who was present, "both
of friars and nuns, were sacked. Many friars were beheaded, even priests at the
altar; many old nuns beaten with sticks; many young ones violated, robbed and
made prisoners; all the vestments, chalices, silver, were taken from the
churches.... Cardinals, bishops, friars, priests, old nuns, infants, pages and
servants—the very poorest—were tormented with unheard-of cruelties—the son in
the presence of his father, the babe in the sight of its mother. All the
registers and documents of the Camera Apostolica were sacked, torn in pieces,
and partly burnt." "Having entered," writes an imperialist to Charles, "our men
sacked the whole Borgo and killed almost every one they found.... All the
monasteries were rifled, and the ladies who had taken refuge in them carried
off. Every person was compelled by torture to pay a ransom.... The ornaments of
all the churches were pillaged and the relics and other things thrown into the
sinks and cesspools. Even the holy places were sacked. The Church of St. Peter
and the papal palace, from the basement to the top, were turned into stables
for horses.... Every one considers that it has
taken place by the just judgment of God, because the Court of Rome was so
ill-ruled.... We are expecting to hear from your Majesty how the city is to be
governed and whether the Holy See is to be retained or not. Some are of opinion
it should not continue in Rome, lest the French King should make a patriarch in
his kingdom, and deny obedience to the said See, and the King of England find
all other Christian princes do the same."
So low was brought the
proud city of the Seven Hills, the holy place, watered with the blood of the
martyrs and hallowed by the steps of the saints, the goal of the earthly
pilgrim, the seat of the throne of the Vicar of God. No Jew saw the abomination
of desolation standing where it ought not with keener anguish than the devout
sons of the Church heard of the desecration of Rome. If a Roman Catholic and an
imperialist could term it the just judgment of God, heretics and schismatics,
preparing to burst the bonds of Rome and "deny obedience to the said
See," saw in it the fulfilment of the woes pronounced by St. John the
Divine on the Rome of Nero, and by Daniel the Prophet on Belshazzar's Babylon.
Babylon the great was fallen, and become the habitation of devils, and the hold
of every foul spirit; her ruler was weighed in the balances and found wanting;
his kingdom was divided and given to kings and peoples who came, like the Medes
and the Persians, from the hardier realms of the North.
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