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CHAP.

Sir Thomas

I am, indeed, reluctant to take leave of Sir Thomas More, XXXIII. not only from his agreeable qualities and extraordinary merit, but from my abhorrence of the mean, sordid, unprincipled Chancellors who succeeded him, and made the latter half of the reign of Henry VIII. the most disgraceful period in our annals.

More com

pared to his imme

diate successors.

and requested that she would immediately send his watch to him by a constable he had ordered to fetch it.-But I can hardly conceive such a jest as above recorded being now played off at the Central Criminal Court, even on an alderman of London.

CHAPTER XXXIV.

LIFE OF LORD CHANCELLOR AUDley.

CHAP. XXXIV.

1532.

Jan. 26.

Sir THO

MAS AUD

His charac

ter and

WHEN Sir Thomas More resigned the Great Seal, it was delivered to Sir THOMAS AUDLEY, afterwards Lord Audley, with the title, first of Lord Keeper, and then of Lord Chan- May 20. cellor. There was a striking contrast, in almost all respects, between these two individuals, the successor of the man so 1523. distinguished for genius, learning, patriotism, and integrity, having only common-place abilities, sufficient, with cunning LEY, Lord Keeper. and shrewdness, to raise their possessor in the world, — having no acquired knowledge beyond what was professional and official, having first recommended himself to promotion by conduct. defending, in the House of Commons, the abuses of prerogative, — and, for the sake of remaining in office, being ever willing to submit to any degradation, and to participate in the commission of any crime. He held the Great Seal for a period of above twelve years, during which, to please the humours of his capricious and tyrannical master, he sanctioned the divorce of three Queens, the execution of two of them on a scaffold, — the judicial murder of Sir Thomas More, Bishop Fisher, and many others, who, animated by their example, preferred death to infamy, the spoliation of the Church and a division of the plunder among those who planned the robbery,- and reckless changes of the established religion, which left untouched all the errors of Popery, with the absurdity of the King being constituted Pope, and which involved in a common massacre those who denied transubstantiation and those who denied the King's spiritual supremacy. Luckily for Audley, he has not much attracted the notice of historians; but there can be no doubt that he had a considerable influence upon the events which disgraced the latter half of this reign; and we must now inquire into his

*Rot. Cl. 24. Hen. VIII. m. 24.

CHAP. origin, and try to trace the steps by which he reached, and the means by which he retained, his "bad eminence."

XXXIV.

His birth.

Education.

A. D. 1.520.

Thomas Audley is said to have been of a distinguished family, which had long flourished in the county of Essex*, but he had a very slender patrimony, and he rose from his own industry and selfish arts. He was born in the latter end of the reign of Henry VII.

Having had an indifferent school education, he was sent to study at Magdalen College, Cambridge, of which he afterwards became a benefactor. He was from thence transferred to the Inner Temple, where he devoted himself very steadily to the common law, and is said to have discharged the duties of "Autumn Reader" to the society with some reputation. Being called to the degree of outer barrister, he early rose into considerable practice from his skill in the technicalities of his profession, and his eager desire to please his clients. He was of a comely and majestic presence; and by his smooth manners and systematic anxiety to give offence to no one, he acquired general popularity, although known to those who had studied his character to be unprincipled, false, and deceitful.

In the 12th year of the reign of Henry VIII. he was Member of called to the degree of Serjeant-at-Law, and, flourishing in Commons. Westminster Hall, he became eager for political advance

House of

ment. Parliament so seldom met during this reign, that aspiring lawyers had but rare opportunities of gaining distinction either as patriots or courtiers. But a parliament being at last called in 1523, Audley contrived to get himself returned a burgess to the House of Commons, in the hope of now making his fortune. This was the parliament at which Sir Thomas More was Speaker of the House of Commons, and gained such distinction by preserving the privileges of the House, and resisting the exorbitant subsidy demanded by Wolsey. Audley strongly took the side of the Court, defended all the Cardinal's proceedings, and bitterly inveighed against all his opponents as disloyal subjects and favourers of

Dugdale doubts his being of this family, as his arms were not the same. -Baronage, tit. "Audley."

XXXIV.

heresy. When the lamentation was uttered by Wolsey that CHAP. More was not at Rome instead of being made Speaker*, regret was no doubt felt that Audley had not been placed in the chair; and a resolution was formed, that he should have the Court influence in his favour on a future occasion. In the meanwhile he was made Attorney to the Duchy of Lancaster, and a King's Serjeant.†

In the succeeding interval of six years, during which no parliament sat, he distinguished himself by abetting all the illegal expedients resorted to for raising money on the people. No Hampden arose to contest, in a Court of Justice, the legality of the commissions issued under the Great Seal, for levying the sixth of every man's goods; but they excited such deep discontents, that a rebellion was apprehended, and they were recalled. Against such an arbitrary Sovereign as Henry, with such tools as Audley, the only remedy for public wrongs was resistance.

On the question of the divorce, Audley was equally subservient to the King's wishes; and he was so high in his favour, as not to be without hopes of the Great Seal on Wolsey's disgrace. But though no doubt was entertained of his pliancy, his character for integrity was now very low; and fears being entertained that he would bring discredit upon the government, the more prudent course was adopted of preferring Sir Thomas More.

Gains the favour of King Henry VIII.

Is made

of the Duchy of

Lancaster.

Speaker of the House

However, More being appointed to the Great Seal, Oct. 1529. Audley was named his successor as Chancellor of the Duchy Chancellor of Lancaster; and, at the meeting of parliament, in the beginning of November, 1529, on the recommendation of the Court, he was elected Speaker of the House of Commons. Being presented at the bar of the House of Lords, he made an eloquent oration, consisting of two points; first, "that he much praised the King for his equity and justice, mixed with mercy and pity;" secondly, "he endeavoured to disable himself, for want of sense, learning, and discretion, for the taking of so high an office, beseeching the King to cause his Com

* See ante, p. 469.

† Orig. Jur. 83.

of Commons.

CHAP. XXXIV.

Proceedings of Commons

on speech in Lords

by Bishop

ter.

mons to resort again to their House, and there to choose. another Speaker." To this the Chancellor, by the King's command, replied with the usual courtesy, "that whereas he sought to disable himself in sense and learning, his own elaborate discourse there delivered testified to the contrary; and, touching his discredit and other qualities, the King himself had well known him and his doings, since he was in his service, to be both wise and discreet; and so as an able man he accepted him, and admitted him Speaker."*

The King's designs to break with Rome were strongly supported by Audley, and were well received by the Commons; but Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, made a strong specch against them in the Lords, in which he said, that "our Holy of Roches- Mother, the Church, was about to be brought, like a bondmaid, into thraldom; and that want of faith was the true cause of the mischiefs impending over the State." When the Commons heard of this speech, they conceived great indignation against the Bishop; and not suspecting that there was any irregularity in noticing what was said in debate by a member of the other House, they sent Audley, the Speaker, attended by a deputation of their body, to complain of it to the King, and to let his Majesty know "how grievously they thought themselves injured thereby, for charging them with lack of faith as if they had been infidels or heretics."

The King was well pleased with this interference, which he had most likely prompted, and sent for the Bishop of Rochester to rebuke him for the licence he had used to the displeasure of the Commons. The courageous Prelate answered, "that having seat and voice in parliament, he spake his mind freely in defence of the Church, which he saw daily injured and oppressed by the common people, whose office it was not to judge of her manners, much less to reform them." The King advised him "to use his words more temperately." †

Audley had more difficulty, as Speaker, to restrain the impetuosity of a party in the Commons, who, having imbibed the new doctrines, wished in earnest for a religious reform

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