<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VI"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI<br/> <span class="subhead">1547</span> <span class="subhead">Triumph of the new men—Somerset made Protector—Coronation of Edward VI.—Measures of ecclesiastical reform—The Seymour brothers—Lady Jane Grey entrusted to the Admiral—The Admiral and Elizabeth—His marriage to Katherine.</span></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">With</span> the death of the King a change, complete
and sudden, passed over the face of
affairs. So long as Henry drew breath all was
uncertain; security there was none. The men who
were in favour to-day might be disgraced to-morrow,
and with regard to the government of the country
and the guardianship of the new sovereign all
depended upon the state of mind in which death
might find him. Happening when it actually did,
it left the “new men,” the objects of Surrey’s
contempt, triumphant. Norfolk was in prison on
a capital charge; his son was dead. Gardiner had
fallen into disgrace at the same time as the Howards,
and, though averting a worse fate by a timely show
of submission, had never regained his power, his
name being omitted by Henry from the list of his
executors, all, with the exception of Wriothesley
the Chancellor, adherents of the Seymours and for the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61">61</SPAN></span>
most part pledged to the support of the Protestant
interest. Henry had acted deliberately.</p>
<p>“My Lord of Winchester—I think by negligence—is
left out of Your Majesty’s will,” said Sir
Anthony Browne, kneeling by the King’s side, and
recalling to the dying man the Bishop’s long service
and great abilities. But Henry refused to reconsider
the question.</p>
<p>“Hold your peace,” he returned. “I remembered
him well enough, and of good purpose have left him
out; for surely, if he were in my testament, and one
of you, he would cumber you all, and you should
never rule him, he is of so troublesome a nature.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">50</SPAN></p>
<p>Gardiner removed, there was no one left of
sufficient influence to combat the Seymours. Their
day was come.</p>
<p>The King’s death had taken place on Friday,
January 28. The Council, for reasons of their own,
kept the news secret until the following Monday,
when, amidst a scene of strong emotion, real or
simulated, the fact was made known to Lords and
Commons, Parliament was dissolved, and the Commons
dismissed, the peers staying in London to
welcome their new sovereign. On February 1 a fresh
and crowning success was scored by the dominant
party, and Hertford—Wriothesley’s being the sole
dissentient voice in the governing body—was made
Protector and guardian of the King. That afternoon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62">62</SPAN></span>
Edward received the homage of the Lords spiritual
and temporal, and the new reign was inaugurated.</p>
<p>On the 20th of the same month the coronation
took place with all magnificence. On the previous
day the nine-year-old King had been brought
“through his city of London in most royal and
goodly wise” to Westminster, the crafts standing
on one side of the streets to see him pass, priests
and clerks on the other, with crosses and censers,
waiting to cense the new sovereign as he went by.
The sword of state was borne by Dorset, as
Constable of England, and his daughter, the same
age as the King, was probably a witness of the
splendid pageant and watched her cousin as, in his
gown of cloth of silver embroidered in gold and with
his white velvet jerkin and cape, he rode through the
city.<SPAN name="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">51</SPAN></p>
<p>At the coronation on the following day Dorset
again occupied a prominent place, standing by the
King and carrying the sceptre, Somerset bearing the
crown. Cranmer, with no longer anything to fear
from his enemies, performed the ceremony and delivered
an address that can have left no doubt in the
minds of any of his hearers, if such there were, who
had clung to the hope that a moderate policy would
be pursued in ecclesiastical matters, of what was to
be expected from the men who had in their hands
the little head of Church and State. As God’s<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63">63</SPAN></span>
Vice-regent and Christ’s Vicar, Edward Tudor was
exhorted to see that God was worshipped, idolatry
destroyed, the tyranny of the Bishop of Rome
banished, and images removed, the hybrid ceremony
being concluded by a solemn high mass, Cranmer
acting as celebrant.</p>
<p>Signal success had attended the inauguration of
the new régime. Dissentients were almost nonexistent.
Wriothesley, now Earl of Southampton,
remained the solitary genuine adherent of the old
faith belonging to the Council. His lack of caution
in putting the great seal into commission without the
authority of his colleagues afforded them an excuse
for ousting him from his post of Chancellor; he was
compelled to resign his office, and received orders to
confine himself to his house, whilst Hertford, become
Duke of Somerset, took advantage of his absence
to obtain letters patent by which he became virtually
omnipotent in the State.</p>
<p>The earlier months of his government were
chiefly devoted to carrying through drastic measures
of ecclesiastical reform, in which he was aided by
conviction in some, and cupidity in others, of his
colleagues, eager to benefit by the spoliation of the
Church. With the education of the King in the
hands of the Protector, they could count upon
immunity when he should come to an age to execute
justice on his own account, and the work went
swiftly forward. Gardiner, it was true, offered a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64">64</SPAN></span>
determined opposition. If he had pandered to his
old master, he vindicated his character for courage
by braving the resentment of the men now in power,
and paid for his boldness by imprisonment.</p>
<p>By September the internal affairs of the kingdom
were on a sufficiently settled footing to allow the
Protector to turn his attention to Scotland. Crossing
the border with an army of twenty thousand men, he
conducted in person a short campaign ending with
the victory of Pinkie, after which, to the surprise of
those who expected to see him follow up his success,
he hurried home.</p>
<p>His hasty retreat was ascribed to different causes.
Some supposed him eager to be again at his post,
with the prestige of his victory still fresh. By
others it was imagined that he feared the intrigues
of his enemies, and in especial of his brother the
Admiral. Nor would such uneasiness have been without
justification. So long as their combined strength
was necessary to enable them to stand against
their enemies, the two had made common cause.
Somerset was popular in the country; the nobles
preferred the Admiral. For both a certain distrust
was entertained by those who felt that “their new
lustre did dim the light of men honoured with ancient
nobility.<SPAN name="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">52</SPAN>” The consciousness of insecurity kept
them at one with each other. Become all-powerful
in the State, jealousy and passion sundered them.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65">65</SPAN></span>
Ambitious, proud, and resentful of the Duke’s
assumption of undivided authority, Seymour had
quickly shown an intention of undermining his
brother’s position in the country, with his hold
upon the King, and the Protector may reasonably
have felt that it was neither safe nor politic, so far
as his personal interest was concerned, to remain too
long at a distance from the centre of government.</p>
<p>To the jealousies natural to ambitious men
other causes of dissension had been added. These
were due to the position achieved by Seymour some
months previous to the Scotch campaign by his
marriage with the King’s widow.</p>
<p>The conduct of Katherine at this juncture is
allowed by her warmest partisans to furnish matter
for regret. Little information is forthcoming concerning
her movements at the time of the King’s
death; nor does any blame attach to her if she
regarded that event in the light of a timely release,
an emancipation from a condition of perpetual unrest
and anxiety. In any case the age was not one
when overmuch time was squandered in mourning,
real or conventional, for the dead; and, judging
by the sequel, it is possible that, even before the
final close was put to her married life, she may
have been contemplating the recovery of her lost
lover. It is said that when the Lord Admiral paid
her his formal visit of condolence she not only
received him in private, but candidly confessed how<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66">66</SPAN></span>
slight was her reason to regret a man who had
done her the wrong of appropriating her youth.<SPAN name="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">53</SPAN></p>
<p>If the conversation is correctly reported, Seymour
would augur well of the Queen’s willingness, so far as
was possible, to make up for lost time. But he was
not himself inclined to be hurried. Intent upon
securing every means within his power to assist him
in the coming struggle for pre-eminence, he did
not at once convince himself that it was his best
policy to become the husband of the King’s step-mother,
and that a more advantageous alliance was
not within his grasp.</p>
<p>Other matters were also occupying his attention;
and it was now that Lady Jane Grey, unfortunately
a factor of importance in the political world, was
brought prominently forward and that her small
figure comes first into view in connection with the
competition for power and influence.</p>
<p>Although allied with the royal house, and in a
position to share in some sort Surrey’s contempt
for the parvenu nobility of whom the Seymours were
representative, Dorset and the King’s uncles, agreed
upon the crucial matter of religion, were on good
terms; and Henry was no sooner dead than it
occurred to the Admiral that he might steal a march
upon his brother and secure to himself a point of
vantage in the contest between them, by obtaining
the custody for the present, and the disposal in the
future, of the marquis’s eldest daughter.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67">67</SPAN></span>
He lost no time in attempting to compass his
purpose. Immediately after the late King’s death—according
to statements made when, at a later
date, Seymour had fallen upon evil times—Lord
Dorset received a visit from a dependant of the
Admiral’s, named Harrington, and the negotiations
ending in the transference of the practical guardianship
of the child to Seymour were set on foot.</p>
<p>Harrington was, it would seem, the bearer of a
letter from his master, containing the proposal that
Lady Jane should be committed to his care; and
found the Marquis, on this first occasion, “somewhat
cold” in the matter. The messenger, however,
proceeded to urge the wishes of his principal,
supporting them by arguments well calculated to
appeal to an ambitious man. He reported that he
had heard Seymour say “that Lady Jane was as
handsome as any lady in England, and that, if
the King’s Majesty, when he came of age, would
marry within the realm, it was as likely he would
be there as in any other place, and that he [the
Admiral] would wish it.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">54</SPAN></p>
<p>Such was Harrington’s deposition. Dorset’s
account of the interview is to much the same
effect. Visiting him at his house at Westminster
“immediately after the King’s death,” he stated
that Seymour’s envoy had advised him to be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68">68</SPAN></span>
content that his daughter should be with the
Admiral, assuring him that he would find means
to place her in marriage much to his comfort.</p>
<p>“With whom?” demanded Dorset, plainly anxious
to obtain an explicit pledge.</p>
<p>“Marry,” answered Harrington, “I doubt not
you shall see him marry her to the King.”</p>
<p>As a consequence of this conversation Dorset
called upon the Admiral at Seymour House a week
later, and as the two walked in the garden an
agreement was arrived at, and her father was won
over to send for the child, who thereafter remained
in the Admiral’s house “continually” until the
death of the Queen.<SPAN name="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">55</SPAN></p>
<p>It was a strange arrangement; the more so that
it was evidently concluded before the marriage of
the late King’s widow to Seymour, a man one would
imagine to have been in no wise fit to be entrusted
with the sole guardianship of the little girl. But
Dorset was ambitious; the favour of the King’s
uncle, with the possibility of securing the King
himself as a son-in-law, was not lightly to be forgone;
and the sacrifice of Jane was made, not for the last
time, to her father’s interest.</p>
<p>To the child herself the change from the Bradgate
fields and parks to the London home of her new
guardian must have been abrupt. Yet, though she
may have felt bewildered and desolate in her new<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69">69</SPAN></span>
surroundings and separated from her two little
sisters, her training at home had not been of a
description to cause her overmuch regret at a parting
from those responsible for it. It has been said that
every child should dwell for a time within an Eden
of its own, and with many men and women the
recollection of the unclouded irrational joy belonging
to a childhood surrounded by love and tenderness
may have constituted in after years a pledge and
a guarantee that happiness is possible, and that, in
spite of sin and sorrow and suffering, the world is
still, as God saw it at creation, very good. The
garden in which little Jane’s childhood was passed
was one of a different nature. “No lady,” says
Fuller pitifully, “which led so many pious, lived so
few pleasant days, whose soul was never out of the
nonage of affliction till Death made her of full years
to inherit happiness, so severe her education.” Her
father’s house was to her a house of correction.<SPAN name="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">56</SPAN></p>
<p>Such being the case, the less regret can have
mingled with the natural excitement of a child
brought into wholly new conditions of life, and
treated perhaps for the first time as a person of
importance. Nor was it long before circumstances
provided her with a home to which no exception
could be taken. By June Seymour’s marriage
with the Queen-Dowager had been made public.</p>
<p>In the interval, short though it was, that elapsed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70">70</SPAN></span>
between the King’s death and the union of his
widow and the Admiral, Seymour had had time,
before committing himself to a renewal of his suit to
Katherine, to attempt a more brilliant match. Henry
had been scarcely a month dead before he addressed
a letter, couched in the correct terms of conventional
love-making, to the Princess Elizabeth, now fourteen.
He wished, he wrote, that it were possible to
communicate to the missive the virtue of rousing in
her heart as much favour towards him as his was full
of love for her, proceeding to pay the customary
tribute to the beauty and charm, together with
“a certain fascination I cannot resist,” by which he
had been subjugated.</p>
<p>Elizabeth, at fourteen, was keen-witted enough
to estimate aright the advantages offered by a
marriage with the uncle of the reigning sovereign.
Nor was she, perhaps, judging by what followed,
indifferent to the personal attractions of this, her
first suitor. Though a certain impression of
vulgarity is conveyed, in spite of his magnificent
voice and splendid appearance, by the Lord Admiral,
a child twenty years younger than himself was not
likely to detect, in the recognised Adonis of the
Court, the presence of this somewhat indefinable
attribute. In her eyes he was doubtless a dazzling
figure; and though she replied by a polite refusal to
entertain his addresses, it is said that she afterwards
owed her step-mother a grudge for having discouraged<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71">71</SPAN></span>
her from accepting them. Her answer was, however,
a model of maidenly modesty. She had, she
stated, neither age nor inclination to think of
marriage, and would never have believed that the
subject would have been broached so soon after her
father’s death. Two years at least must be passed
in mourning, nor could she decide to become a wife
before she had reached years of discretion.<SPAN name="FNanchor_57" href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">57</SPAN></p>
<p>That problematical date would not be patiently
awaited by a man intent upon building up without
delay the fabric of his fortunes; and, denied
the late King’s daughter, Seymour promptly fell
back upon his wife. A graphic account of the
beginning of his courtship is supplied by the Spanish
chronicle, and, if not reliable for accuracy, the
narrative no doubt represents what was believed in
London, where the writer was resident. The
question of the marriage had been, according to
him, first mooted to the Council by the Protector,
and though other authorities assert that the Duke
was opposed to the match, both facts may be true.
It is not inconceivable that, whilst he would have
preferred that his brother should have looked less
high for a wife, the possibility that Seymour might
have obtained the hand of the King’s sister may
have caused the Protector to regard with favour an
arrangement putting a marriage with the Princess
out of the question.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72">72</SPAN></span>
At the Council Board it is said that the proposal
received the approbation of the Chancellor. Cranmer,
though characterising it as an act of disrespect to the
memory of the late King, promised to interpose no
obstacle. Paget, the Secretary, went further, engaging
that his wife, in attendance on the Queen, should
push the matter to the best of her ability.</p>
<p>After dinner one day, accordingly—to continue
the narrative of the Spaniard—when the Queen, with
all her ladies, was in the great hall of the palace, and
the Lord Admiral entered, “looking so handsome
that every one had something to say about him,”
Lady Paget, taking her opportunity, made a whispered
inquiry to the Queen as to her opinion
of Seymour’s appearance. To which the Queen
answered that she liked it very much—“oh, how
changeable,” sighs the chronicler, “are women in that
country!” Encouraged by Katherine’s reply, Lady
Paget ventured to go further, and to hint at a
marriage; answering, when the Queen replied by
demurring on the score of her superior rank as
Queen-Dowager, that to win so pretty a man you
might well stoop. Katherine would, she added,
continue to retain her royal title.<SPAN name="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">58</SPAN></p>
<p>The Queen did not prove difficult to persuade.
If it is true that she had been cognisant of Seymour’s
attempt to obtain the hand of her step-daughter, the
fact might have warned her of the nature of the love<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73">73</SPAN></span>
he was offering to herself. But a woman in her
state of mind is not accessible to reason. A little
more than a month after Henry’s death the betrothal
took place, the marriage following upon it in May,
and the haste displayed giving singular proof of how
far the Queen’s old passion had mastered prudence
and discretion. The world was scandalised, and the
King’s daughters in particular were strong in their
disapproval; Mary, the more energetic of the two
on this occasion, summoning her sister to visit her,
that together they might devise means of preventing
the impending insult to their father’s memory,
or concert a method of making their attitude
clear.</p>
<p>Elizabeth, though her objections to the match
were probably, on personal grounds, stronger than
those of her sister, was more cautious than Mary.
The girl, or her advisers, may have been aware of
the fact that opposition to the King’s uncle would
be a dangerous course to be pursued by any one
whose future was as ill assured as her own; and,
in answer to her sister, she pointed out, though
expressing her grief at the affair, that their sole consolation
would lie in submission to the will of
Providence, since neither was able to offer practical
resistance to the project. Dissimulation, under these
circumstances, would be their best policy. Mary
might decline to visit the Queen, but in Elizabeth’s
subordinate position she would herself be compelled<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74">74</SPAN></span>
to do so, her step-mother having shown her so
much kindness.<SPAN name="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">59</SPAN></p>
<p>Despite public censure, despite the blame and
disapproval of critics whose disapproval would carry
more weight, Katherine may not at this time have
regretted her defiance of conventional propriety;
and those spring weeks, passed at her jointure palace
in Chelsea, were probably the happiest of her
life. The nightmare sense of insecurity, which can
never have been wholly laid to rest so long as Henry
lived, was removed; the price exacted for her royal
dignity had been paid, to the uttermost farthing;
and she was a free woman. Her old love for
Seymour had re-awakened in full force, and she
believed it was returned. Pious and prudent,
Katherine had forgotten to be wise. Disillusionment
might come later, but at present the future smiled
upon her; and she may fairly have counted upon
it to pay, at long last, the debts of the past.</p>
<p>Her letters, light and tender, grave and gay,
indicate her mood as she awaited the day when she
would take her place before the world as Seymour’s
wife. Whether a marriage had already taken place,
though kept private as a concession to public opinion,
or whether it was still to come, there were secret
meetings in the early spring mornings by the river,
when the town was scarcely awake, the more welcome,
it may be, because of the sense that they were stolen.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75">75</SPAN></span>
“When it shall be your pleasure to repair hither,”
wrote Kateryn the Quene—her invariable signature—to
her lover, “ye must take some pains to come
early in the morning, that ye may be gone again
by seven o’clock; and so I suppose ye may come
hither without suspect. I pray you let me have
knowledge over-night at what hour ye will come,
that your portress [herself] may wait at the gate of
the fields for you.... By her that is, and shall
be, your humble, true, and loving wife during her
life.”</p>
<p>Poor, learned Katherine had fallen an unresisting
victim, like any other common woman, to the gifts
and attractions of the man who was to prove so
unsatisfactory a husband!</p>
<p>By May 17, if not before, it is clear that the
marriage had taken place, though the secret had
been so closely kept that it was a surprise to the
bridegroom to discover that it was known to the
Queen’s own sister, Lady Herbert. On visiting
the latter, he told Katherine in a letter of this date,
she had charged him “touching my lodging with
your Highness at Chelsea,” the Admiral stoutly
maintaining that he had done no more than pass by
the garden on his way to the house of the Bishop
of London; “till at last she told me further tokens,
which made me change colour,” and he had arrived
at the conclusion that Lady Herbert had been taken
into her sister’s confidence.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76">76</SPAN></span>
Meantime the inconvenience of the present condition
of things was evident; and to Mary—curiously
enough, since her disapproval of the projected marriage
had been so pronounced—Seymour applied
for help which should enable him to put an end
to it. Although he preserved the attitude of a
mere suitor for the Queen’s hand, it may be that
the Princess suspected that she was being consulted
after the event. Her answer was not encouraging.
Had the matter concerned her nearest kinsman and
dearest friend it would, she told the Admiral, stand
least with her poor honour than with any other
creature to meddle in the affair, considering whose
wife the Queen had lately been.</p>
<p>“If the remembrance of the King’s Majesty my
father ... will not suffer her to grant your suit,
I am nothing able to persuade her to forget the
loss of him who is, as yet, very rife in mine own
remembrance.” If, however, the Princess refused
the assistance he begged, she assured him that,
“wooing matters apart, wherein, being a maid, I
am nothing cunning,” she would be ready in other
things to serve him.</p>
<p>The young King, to whom recourse was next
had, was found more accommodating; and indeed
appears to have been skilfully convinced that it
was by his persuasions that his step-mother had
been induced to bestow her hand upon his uncle,
writing to thank the Queen for her gentle acceptation<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77">77</SPAN></span>
of his suit. The boy, after Katherine’s death
and her husband’s disgrace, gave an account of the
methods used to obtain his intervention:</p>
<p>“The Lord Admiral came to me ... and desired
me to write a thing for him. I asked him what.
He said it was none ill thing; it is for the Queen’s
Majesty. I said if it were good the Lords would
allow it; if it were ill I would not write on it.
Then he said they would take it in better part if
I would write. I desired him to let me alone in
that matter. Cheke said afterwards to me, ‘Ye
were best not to write.’”<SPAN name="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">60</SPAN></p>
<p>The boy’s letter to the Queen proves that he had
subsequently yielded to his uncle’s request; and in
June the fact of the marriage became public property.</p>
<p>The progress of the love-affair will have been
watched with interest by the curious and jealous
eyes of Elizabeth, the half-grown girl, who, placed
by the Council under her step-mother’s care at
Chelsea, had ample opportunities of forming her
conclusions. Lady Jane Grey may, not improbably,
have been likewise a spectator of what was going
forward. There is no evidence to show whether it
was before or after the public avowal of the marriage
that she took up her residence under the Queen’s
roof. But, having obtained his point and gained
her custody, it is not unreasonable to imagine that
the Admiral may have found a child of ten an encumbrance<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78">78</SPAN></span>
in his household, and have taken the
earliest opportunity of consigning her to Katherine’s
care.</p>
<p>A passive asset as she was in the political reckoning,
the debates concerning her guardianship must
have done something to bring home to her mind
the consciousness of her importance; and she
had doubtless been made well aware of her title
to consideration by the time that she became an
honoured inmate of the Lord Admiral’s house.
But concerning the details of her existence at this
date history is dumb, and we can but guess at
her attitude as, fresh from her country home, she
watched, under the roof of her new guardian in
Seymour Place, the life of the great city around;
or within the more tranquil precincts of Chelsea
Palace, with the broad river flowing past, shared
in the studies and pursuits of her cousin Elizabeth,
ready-witted, full of vitality, and already displaying
some of the traits marking the Queen of future
years.</p>
<p>Did the shadow of predestined and early death
single little Jane out from her companions? Like
the comrades of whom Maeterlinck tells, “children
of precocious death,” possessing no friends amongst
the playmates who were not about to die, did she
stand in some sort apart and separate, regarding
those around her with a grave smile? We build
up the unrecorded days of childhood from the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79">79</SPAN></span>
few short years that followed; and reading backwards,
and fitting the fragments of a life into its
place, we find it difficult to believe that Jane
Grey’s laughter rang like that of other undoomed
children through the pleasant Chelsea gardens,
that she shared with a whole heart in the games
of her playfellows, or that the strange seriousness
of her youth did not envelope the small,
sedate figure of the child.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80">80</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />