<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXII<br/> <span class="subhead">1553-1554</span> <span class="subhead">Discontent at the Spanish match—Insurrections in the country—Courtenay and Elizabeth—Suffolk a rebel—General failure of the insurgents—Wyatt’s success—Marches to London—Mary’s conduct—Apprehensions in London, and at the palace—The fight—Wyatt a prisoner—Taken to the Tower.</span></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">When</span> the year 1553 drew towards its close
there was nothing to indicate that any
catastrophe was at hand. The crisis appeared to
be past and no further danger to be apprehended.
Northumberland and his principal accomplices had
paid the penalty of their treason. Suffolk, with
lesser criminals, had been allowed to escape it; the
rest of the confederates had been practically pardoned.
If some were still in confinement it was
understood to be without danger to life or limb.
In the Tower Lady Jane and her husband lay
formally under sentence of death, but the conditions
of their captivity had been lightened; on
December 18 Lady Jane was accorded “the liberty
of the Tower,” and was permitted to walk in the
Queen’s garden and on the hill; Guilford and
his brother—Elizabeth’s Leicester—were allowed
the liberty of the leads in the Bell Tower. Both<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290">290</SPAN></span>
Northampton and young Warwick—who did not
long survive his enfranchisement—had been released.
No further chastisement seemed likely to be inflicted
in expiation of the late attempt to keep Mary
out of her rights.</p>
<p>Yet discontent was on the increase. As early as
November steps had been taken to induce Courtenay
to head a new conspiracy. He was timid and
faint-hearted, and urged delay, and nothing had,
so far, come of it. It would be well, he said, advocating
a policy of procrastination, to wait to be
certain that the Queen was determined upon the
Spanish match before taking hazardous measures to
oppose it.<SPAN name="FNanchor_208" href="#Footnote_208" class="fnanchor">208</SPAN></p>
<p>Thus Christmas had found the country ostensibly
at peace, and the prisoners in the Tower with no
reason to fear any change for the worse in their
condition. On the following day the thunder
of the cannon discharged as a welcome to the
Emperor’s ambassadors sounded in their ears, and
was, though they were ignorant of it, the prelude
of their destruction. The arrival of envoys expressly
charged with the marriage negotiations put
the matter beyond doubt; nor was England in a mood
to submit passively to a union it hated and feared.</p>
<p>By January 2 the Counts of Egmont and Laing
and the Sieur de Corriers had reached the capital;
landing at the Tower, where they were greeted<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291">291</SPAN></span>
with a salute from the guns, and met by the Earl
of Devonshire, who escorted them through the
City. “The people, nothing rejoicing, held down
their heads sorrowfully.” When on the previous
day the retinue of the Spanish envoys had ridden
through the town, more forcible expression had been
given to public opinion, and they had been pelted
with snowballs.<SPAN name="FNanchor_209" href="#Footnote_209" class="fnanchor">209</SPAN></p>
<p>Matters were pressed quickly on. By January 13
the formal announcement of the unpopular arrangement,
with its provisions, was made by Gardiner in
the Presence-chamber at Westminster to the lords
and nobles there assembled; hope could no longer
be entertained that the Queen would be otherwise
persuaded. “These news,” adds the Tower diarist,
“although they were not unknown to many and
very much disliked, yet being now in this wise
pronounced, was not only credited, but also heavily
taken of sundry men; yea, and almost each man
was abashed, looking daily for worse matters to
grow shortly after.”</p>
<p>They did not look in vain. The unpopularity of
the Spanish match was the direct cause of the
insurrections which soon broke out. Indirectly it
was the cause of the death of Lady Jane Grey.</p>
<p>Wild tales were afloat, rousing the passions of the
angry people to fever-heat. Some reports stated
that Edward was still alive; others asserted that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292">292</SPAN></span>
the tower and the forts were to be seized and held
by an imperialist army; abuse of every kind was
directed against the Prince of Spain and his nation.
Mary was said to have given her pledge that she
would marry no foreigner, and by the breach of
this promise she was declared to have forfeited the
crown. Fresh schemes were set on foot for a
rising in the spring. It does not appear that the
substitution of Lady Jane for her cousin was again
generally contemplated. That plan had resulted
in so complete a failure that it had probably been
tacitly admitted that the arrangement would not
work. But the eyes of many were turning towards
Elizabeth. She was to wed Courtenay, and they
were jointly to occupy the throne. The two
principally concerned were not likely to have refused
to fall in with the project had it seemed to offer a fair
chance of success, and France was in favour of it.</p>
<p>“By what I hear,” wrote Noailles, “it will be
by my Lord Courtenay’s own fault if he does not
marry her, and she does not follow him to Devonshire,”—the
selected centre of operations—“but the
misfortune is that the said Courtenay is in such
fear that he dares undertake nothing. I see no
reason that prevents him save lack of heart.”</p>
<p>Courtenay was in truth not the stuff of which
conductors of revolutions are made. Gratitude
and loyalty would not have availed to keep
him true to Mary, and in able hands he might<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293">293</SPAN></span>
have become the instrument of a rebellion. But
Gardiner found no difficulty in so playing on his
apprehensions as to lead him to divulge the plots
that were on foot; and his revelations, or betrayals,
whichever they are to be called, precipitated the
action of the conspirators. If their enterprise was
to be attempted, no time must be lost.<SPAN name="FNanchor_210" href="#Footnote_210" class="fnanchor">210</SPAN></p>
<p>On January 20 it became known that Devonshire
was in arms, “resisting the King of Spain’s coming,”
and that Exeter was in the hands of the insurgents.
By the 25th the Duke of Suffolk, with his two
brothers, Lord John and Lord Leonard Grey, had
fled from his house at Sheen, and gone northwards
to rouse his Warwickshire tenants to insurrection.
It was currently reported that he had narrowly
escaped being detained, a messenger from the Queen
having arrived as he was on the point of starting,
with orders that he should repair to Court.</p>
<p>“Marry,” said the Duke, “I was coming to
her Grace. Ye may see I am booted and spurred
ready to ride, and I will but break my fast and go.”</p>
<p>Bestowing a present upon the messenger, he gave
him drink, and himself departed, no one then knew
whither.</p>
<p>That same day tidings had reached the Council
that Kent had risen, Sir Thomas Wyatt at its head,
with Culpepper, Cobham, and others, alleging, as
their sole motives, resistance to the Prince of Spain,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294">294</SPAN></span>
and the removal of certain lords from the Council
Board. Sir John Crofts had proceeded to Wales
to call upon it to join the insurrectionary movement.</p>
<p>The country being thus in a turmoil the two
persons who should have taken the lead and
upon whom much of the success of the insurgents
depended were playing a cautious game. Courtenay
was at Court, and Elizabeth remained at Ashridge
to watch the event, no doubt prepared to shape
her course accordingly. A letter addressed to
her by her partisans, counselling her withdrawal
to Dunnington, as to a place of greater safety, had
been intercepted by the authorities; and she had
received an invitation, or command, to join her sister
at St. James’s, where, it was significantly added, she
would be more secure than either at Ashridge or
Dunnington. On the score of ill-health she
disobeyed the summons, fortifying the house, and
assembling around it some numbers of armed
retainers.</p>
<div id="ip_294" class="figcenter" style="width: 423px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_294.jpg" width-obs="423" height-obs="600" alt="" />
<p class="p0 in0 smaller">From a photo by Emery Walker after a painting by Joannes Corvus in the National Portrait Gallery.</p>
<div class="caption"><p>HENRY GREY, DUKE OF SUFFOLK, K.G.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>The hopes built by the insurgents upon the general
discontent throughout the country were doomed to
disappointment. It was one thing to disapprove of
the Queen’s choice; it was quite another to take
up arms against her. Devonshire proved cold;
most of the leaders there were seized, or compelled
to make their escape to France; Crofts had been
pursued to Wales, and was arrested before he had
time to rally any support in the principality.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295">295</SPAN></span>
Suffolk had done no better in the Midlands.
Authorities are divided as to his intentions. By
Dr. Lingard it is considered uncertain whether
he meant to press Elizabeth’s claims or to revive
those of his daughter. With either upon the
throne the dominance of the Protestant religion
would have been ensured, and, unlike Northumberland,
Suffolk was sincere and honest in his attachment
to the principles of the Reformation. Other writers,
however, assert categorically that he caused Lady
Jane to be proclaimed at his halting-places as he
went north; and the sequel seems to make it
probable that she had been once more forced into
a position of dangerous prominence.</p>
<p>Whatever may have been the exact nature of
the scheme he propounded, the country made no
response to his appeal; after a skirmish near Coventry
he gave up hopes of any immediate success, disbanded
his followers, and, betrayed by a tenant
upon whose fidelity he had believed he could count,
fell into the hands of those in pursuit of him. By
February 10 he had gone to swell the numbers
of the prisoners in the Tower.</p>
<p>The rising in Kent had alone answered in any
degree to the expectations of its promoters.
Drawn into the conspiracy, if his own assertions
are to be credited, by Courtenay, Wyatt had
become the most conspicuous leader of the insurrection
known by his name. He was well<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296">296</SPAN></span>
fitted for the post. Brave, skilful, and secret, he
was, says Noailles, “un gentilhomme le plus vaillant
et assuré que j’ai jamais ouï parler”; and whether
or not he had been deserted by the man to whom
it was due that he had taken up arms, he was
not disposed to submit to defeat without a struggle.</p>
<p>Fixing his headquarters at Rochester, he had
gathered together a body of some fifteen thousand
men, and was there found by the Duke of Norfolk,
sent at the head of the Queen’s forces against him.
The utmost enthusiasm prevailed amongst the
insurgents, and when a herald arrived in Rochester
commissioned by the Duke to proclaim a pardon
for all who would consent to lay down arms, “each
man cried that they had done nothing wherefore
they should need any pardon, and that quarrel
which they took they would die and live in it.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_211" href="#Footnote_211" class="fnanchor">211</SPAN>
Sir George Harper was in fact the sole rebel who
accepted the proffered boon.</p>
<p>Worse was to follow. At the first encounter
of the royal troops with the Kentish men Captain
Bret, leading five hundred Londoners, went over
to the rebels, explaining in a spirited speech
the grounds for his desertion, the miseries which
might be expected to befall the nation should the
Spaniards bear rule over it, and expressing his
determination to spend his blood “in the quarrel
of this worthy captain, Master Wyatt.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_212" href="#Footnote_212" class="fnanchor">212</SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297">297</SPAN></span>
It was an ominous beginning to the struggle,
and at the applause greeting Bret’s announcement,
the Duke of Norfolk, the Earl of Ormond, and
Jerningham, Captain of the Guard, fled. Wyatt,
taking instant advantage of the situation, rode
in amongst the Queen’s troops, crying out that
any who desired to join him should be welcome
and that those who wished might depart.</p>
<p>Most of the men accepted the alternative of
throwing in their lot with Wyatt and his company,
leaving their leaders to return without them to
London. “Ye should have seen,” adds the diarist,
from whom these details and many others of this
episode are taken, “some of the Guard come home,
their coats turned, all ruined, without arrows or
string in their bow, or sword, in very strange wise;
which discomfiture, like as it was very heart-sore
and displeasing to the Queen and Council, even so
it was almost no less joyous to the Londoners and
most part of others.”</p>
<p>With the capital in this temper, the juncture
was a critical one. Wyatt was marching on London,
and who could say what reception he would meet
with at the hands of the discontented populace?
The fact that he was encountered at Deptford by a
deputation from the Council, sent to inquire into his
demands, is proof of the apprehensions entertained.
The interview did not end amicably. Flushed
with victory, Wyatt was not disposed to be moderate.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298">298</SPAN></span>
To Sir Edward Hastings, who asked the reason why,
calling himself a true subject, he played the part of
a traitor, he answered boldly that he had assembled
the people to defend the realm from the danger of
being overrun by strangers, a result which must
follow from the proposed marriage of the Queen.</p>
<p>Hastings temporised. No stranger was yet come
who need be suspected. Therefore, if this was
their only quarrel, the Queen would be content
they should be heard.</p>
<p>“To that I yield,” returned Wyatt warily, “but
for my further surety I would rather be trusted
than trust.”</p>
<p>In carrying out this principle of caution it was
reported that he had pressed his demand for confidence
so far as to require that the custody of
the Tower, and the Queen’s person within it,
should be conceded to him. If this was the case,
he can scarcely have felt much surprise that the
negotiations were brought to an abrupt conclusion,
Hastings replying hotly that before his traitorous
conditions should be granted, Wyatt and twenty
thousand with him should die. And thus the
conference ended.<SPAN name="FNanchor_213" href="#Footnote_213" class="fnanchor">213</SPAN></p>
<p>London was in a ferment. Mayor, aldermen,
and many of the citizens went about in armour,
“the lawyers pleaded their causes in harness,” and
when Dr. Weston said Mass before the Queen on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299">299</SPAN></span>
Ash Wednesday he wore a coat of mail beneath
his vestments. There had been no need to bid
the Spanish ambassadors to depart, those gentlemen
having prudently decamped as speedily as possible.
Upon February 2 Mary in person proceeded to
the Guildhall, and, there meeting the chief amongst
the citizens, made them a speech which was an
admirable combination of appeal and independence,
and showed that if outwardly she bore no resemblance
to father or sister the Tudor spirit was alive in her.
She had come, she said, to tell them what they
already knew—of the treason of the Kentish rebels,
who demanded the possession of her person, the
keeping of the Tower, and the placing and displacing
of her counsellors.</p>
<p>That day marked the crisis in the progress of
the insurrection. Mary’s visit to the Guildhall had
taken place on February 2. When on the following
day Wyatt, leaving Deptford, marched to Southwark
the tide had turned. His followers were falling
away; no other part of the country was in arms
to support him; and his position was becoming
desperate. His daring, nevertheless, did not fail.
A price had been put upon his head, and, aware
of the proclamation, he caused his name to be
“fair written,” and set it on his cap. The act of
bravado was characteristic of the spirit of the
popular leader.</p>
<p>Meantime the measures to be taken against him<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300">300</SPAN></span>
were anxiously discussed. On the 4th Sir Nicholas
Poynings, on duty at the Tower, waited upon the
Queen to receive her orders, and to learn whether
the ordnance was to be directed upon Southwark,
and the houses knocked down upon the heads of
Wyatt and his men, quartered in that district.</p>
<p>Mary, to her honour, refused to authorise the
drastic mode of attack.</p>
<p>“Nay,” she replied, “that were pity; for many
poor men and householders are like to be undone
there and killed. For, God willing, they shall be
fought with to-morrow.”</p>
<p>The innocent were not to be involved in the
destruction of the guilty. Her decision was unwelcome
at the Tower. The night before Sir John
Bridges had expressed his surprise to the sentinel
on duty that the rebels had not yet been fought.</p>
<p>“By God’s mother,” he added, “I fear there is
some traitor abroad, that they be suffered all this
while. For surely if it had been about my sentry
[or beat] I would have fought with them myself,
by God’s grace.”</p>
<p>Wyatt, strangely enough, was no less pitiful than
the Queen. Although she had refused permission
for the discharge of the guns, they had been directed
by those responsible for them upon the spot where
the rebel body was stationed; and, in terror of
a cannonade, the inhabitants, men and women,
approached the insurgent leader “in most lamentable<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301">301</SPAN></span>
wise,” setting forth the danger his presence was
bringing upon them, and praying him for the love of
God to have pity. The appeal was not made in vain.</p>
<p>“At which words he, being partly abashed, stayed
awhile, and then said these, or much like words,
‘I pray you, my friends, content yourselves a
little, and I will soon ease you of this mischief.
For God forbid that you, or the least child here,
should be hurt or killed on my behalf,’ and so in
most speedy manner marched away.”</p>
<p>A meeting was to have taken place before sunrise
with some of the disaffected in the City. By
this means it had been hoped that a surprise
might be contrived. But a portion of Kingston
Bridge, where the river was to be crossed, had
been destroyed; time was lost in repairing it,
and the assignation at Ludgate was missed. The
scheme had supplied Wyatt’s last chance and
failure was staring him in the face. Rats were
leaving the sinking vessel. The Protestant
Bishop of Winchester, who had hitherto lent the
countenance of his presence in the camp to the
insurgents, fled beyond seas; Sir George Harper,
having rejoined Wyatt’s forces, deserted for the
second time, and made his way to St. James’s to
give warning to the Court of the approach of the
rebel leader.</p>
<p>Such being the condition of things, it is singular
to find that at the palace something like a panic<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302">302</SPAN></span>
was prevailing. Mary was entreated by her ministers
to seek safety at the Tower; and, though deciding
in the end to remain at her post, she appears at first
to have been inclined to act upon the suggestion.
A plan of action was determined upon in a hurried
consultation. Wyatt, it was agreed, was to be permitted
to reach the City, with a certain number of
his followers, and having been thus detached from
the main body of his troops it was hoped that he
would be trapped and seized.</p>
<p>In the meantime arrangements were made for
the defence of the Queen and the palace. Edward
Underhyll, the Hot-Gospeller for whose child Lady
Jane had stood godmother six months earlier, and
who was on duty as a gentleman-pensioner at St.
James’s, has left a graphic account of the scene
there that night, and of the terror of the Queen’s
ladies when the pensioners, armed with pole-axes,
were placed on guard in their mistress’s apartments.
The breach of etiquette appears to have struck them
as an earnest of the peril to which it was owing.
Was such a sight ever seen, they cried, wringing
their hands, that the Queen’s chamber should be
full of armed men?</p>
<p>Underhyll, for his part, soon received his
dismissal. As the usher charged with the duty
looked at the list of the pensioners before calling
them over, his eye was caught by the well-known
name of the Hot-Gospeller.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303">303</SPAN></span>
“By God’s Body,” he said, “that heretic shall
not watch here!” and Underhyll, taking his men
with him, and professing satisfaction at his exemption
from duty, went his way.</p>
<p>By the morning he had reconsidered the matter,
and thought it well to ignore his rebuff and return
to his post. For the present, he joined company
with one of the Throckmortons, who had just left
the palace after reporting there the welcome tidings
of the capture of the Duke of Suffolk at Coventry,
the two proceeding together to Ludgate, intending
to pass the remainder of the night in the City.
The gate, however, was found to be fast locked, and
those on guard within explained, with much ill-timed
laughter, to the tired wayfarers outside, that they
were not entrusted with the keys, and could give
admittance to none.</p>
<p>It was disconcerting intelligence to men in search
of a lodging and repose; and Throckmorton, in
especial, fresh from his hurried journey, felt that
he was hardly treated.</p>
<p>“I am weary and faint,” he complained, “and I
wax now cold.” No man would open his door in
this dangerous time, and he would perish that night.
Such was his piteous lament.</p>
<p>Underhyll, a man of resource, had a plan to
propose.</p>
<p>“Let us go to Newgate,” he suggested. He
thought himself secure of an entrance there into<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_304">304</SPAN></span>
the city. At the worst, he had acquaintances within
the prison—like most men at that day—having
recently been in confinement there. The door of
the keeper of the gaol was without the gate, and
Underhyll entertained no doubts of finding a
hospitable reception in his old quarters. Throckmorton,
it was true, declared at first that he would
almost as soon die in the street as seek so ill-omened
a refuge; but in the end the two proceeded thither,
and, a friend of Underhyll’s being fortunately in
command of the guard placed outside the gate, the
wanderers were permitted to enter the City.</p>
<p>Whilst consternation and alarm were felt at
the palace at the tidings of Wyatt’s approach,
the rebel leader himself must have been aware that
the game had been played and lost. Yet he
kept up a bold front, and refused to acknowledge
that he was beaten.</p>
<p>“Twice have I knocked, and not been suffered
to enter,” he was reported to have said. “If I
knock the third time I will come in, by God’s
grace.”</p>
<p>They were brave words. An incident of his march
to Kingston nevertheless sounds the note of a consciousness
of impending defeat. Meeting, as he went,
a merchant of London who was known to him, he
charged him with a greeting to his fellow-citizens.
“And say unto them from me that when liberty
and freedom was offered them they would not accept<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_305">305</SPAN></span>
it, neither would they admit me within their gates,
who for their freedom and the disburthening of
their griefs and oppression by strangers would have
frankly spent my blood in that their cause and
quarrel; ... therefore they are the less to be
bemoaned hereafter when the miserable tyranny of
strangers shall oppress them.”</p>
<p>It may be that by some amongst the men to
whom the message was sent his words were remembered
thereafter.</p>
<p>Still the insurgents pushed on. By nine in
the morning Knightsbridge was reached. Disheartened,
weary, and faint for lack of food, they
were in no condition to stand against the Queen’s
troops. But the mere fact of their vicinity was
disquieting to those in no position to form a
correct estimate of their strength or weakness, and
when Underhyll returned to the palace he found
confusion and turmoil there.</p>
<p>His men were stationed in the hall, which was
to be their special charge. Sir John Gage, with
part of the guard, was placed outside the gate, the
rest of the guard were within the great courtyard;
the Queen occupying the gallery by the gatehouse,
whence she could watch what should befall.</p>
<p>This was the disposition of the defenders, when
suddenly a body of the rebels made their way to
the very gates of the palace. A struggle took place;
Gage and three of the judges who had been with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_306">306</SPAN></span>
him retreated hurriedly within the gates, Sir John,
who was old, stumbling in his haste and falling in the
mire. Within all was in disorder. The gates had
clanged to behind Gage, his soldiers, and the men
of law, as they gained the shelter of the courtyard.
Without the rebels were using their bows and
arrows. The guard stationed in the outer court,
attempting to make good their entrance to the hall,
were forcibly ejected by the gentlemen pensioners
in charge of it. Poor Gage—“so frighted that he
could not speak to us”—and the three judges, also
in such terror that force would have been necessary
to keep them out, were alone admitted to the
comparative safety it afforded.</p>
<p>There was in truth little reason for alarm. The
manœuvre decided upon during the night had
been executed. The Queen’s troops, Pembroke at
their head, had deliberately permitted Wyatt to
break through their lines, and, with some hundreds
of his men, to proceed eastward. Behind him the
enemy had closed up, and he was separated from
the main body of the rebels, thus left leaderless to
be engaged by the royal forces. The Queen’s
orders had been successfully carried out. But to
the anxious watchers in the palace the affair may
have worn the aspect of a defeat, if not of a treason,
and there were not wanting those who suspected
Pembroke of a betrayal of his trust. A shout was
raised that all was lost.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_307">307</SPAN></span>
“Away, away! a barge, a barge!—let the Queen
be placed in safety!” was the cry.</p>
<p>Again Mary was to show that she was a Tudor.
She would not beat a retreat before rebels. Where,
she inquired, was the Earl of Pembroke? and
receiving the answer that he was in the field,
“Well then,” she said, “fall to prayer, and I
warrant you that we shall have better news anon,
for my lord will not deceive me, I know well. If
he would, God will not, in Whom my chief trust
is, Who will not deceive me.”</p>
<p>Though it was well to have confidence in God,
men with arms in their hands would have liked to
use them, and the pensioners entreated Sir Richard
Southwell, in authority within the palace, to have
the gates opened that they might try a fall with
the enemy; else, they threatened, they would break
them down. It was too much shame that the
doors should be shut upon a few rebels.</p>
<p>Southwell was quite of the same mind; and,
interceding with Mary, obtained her leave for the
pensioners to have their way, provided they would
not go out of her sight, since her trust was in
them—a command she reiterated as, the gates being
thrown open, the band marched under the gallery,
where she still kept her place. It was not long
before her confidence in the commander of the royal
troops was justified, and news was brought that
put an end to all fear. Wyatt was taken.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_308">308</SPAN></span>
At the head of that body of his men who
had been allowed to clear the enemy’s lines, he had
ridden on towards the City, had passed Temple
Bar and Fleet Street, till Ludgate was reached.
There he halted. He had kept his tryst, fulfilled
the pledge he had given, and knocked, as he had
promised, at the gate. Let them open to him;
Wyatt was there—successful so long, he may have
thought there was magic in the name—Wyatt was
there; the Queen had granted their requests.</p>
<p>The City remained unmoved; and, in terms of
insult, Sir William Howard refused him entrance.</p>
<p>“Avaunt, traitor,” he said, barring the way,
“thou shalt not come in here.”</p>
<p>It was the last blow. The poor chance that
the City might have lent its aid had constituted the
single remaining possibility of a retrieval of the
fortunes of the insurrection. That vanished, the
end was inevitable. London had blustered, had
expressed its detestation for the Spanish match,
had paraded its Protestantism; it was now plain
that it had not meant business, and the man who
had taken it at its word was doomed.</p>
<p>A strange little scene followed—a scene forming
an interlude, as it were, in the tumult and excitement
of the hour. It may be that the effects of the
strain and fatigue of the last weeks, of the hopes
and fears that had filled them, of the march of
the night before, unlightened by any genuine<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_309">309</SPAN></span>
anticipation of victory, were suddenly felt by the
man who had borne the burden and heat of the day.
At any rate, turning without further parley, he
made his way back to the Bel Savage Inn, and there
“awhile stayed, and, as some say, rested him upon
a seat.” Sitting there, trapped by his enemies, in
“the shirt of mail, with sleeves very fair, velvet
cassock, and the fair hat of velvet with broad
bone-work lace” he had worn that day, he may
have looked on and seen the future bounded by
a scaffold. Then, rousing himself, he rose, and
returned by the way he had come, until Temple Bar
was reached.</p>
<p>Though the combat was there renewed, all must
have known that further resistance was vain, and at
length, yielding to a remonstrance at the shedding
of useless blood, Wyatt consented to acknowledge
his defeat and to yield himself a prisoner to Sir
Maurice Berkeley. He had fought the battle of
many men who had taken no weapon in hand to
support him. When false hopes had at one time
been entertained of his success “many hollow hearts
rejoiced in London at the same.” But scant
sympathy will have been shown to the vanquished.</p>
<p>It remained to consign the captives to the
universal house of detention. By five o’clock in
the afternoon, as the spring day was closing in,
Wyatt and five of his comrades had been conducted
to the Tower by Jerningham. They arrived by<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_310">310</SPAN></span>
water, and were met at the bulwark by Sir Philip
Denny, who greeted the prisoners with words of
fierce upbraiding.</p>
<p>“Go, traitor,” he said, as Wyatt passed by, “there
was never such a traitor in England.”</p>
<p>Wyatt turned upon him.</p>
<p>“I am no traitor,” he answered. “I would thou
should well know thou art more traitor than I; and
it is not the part of an honest man to call me so.”</p>
<p>He was right; but courtesy to the defeated was
no article of the code of the day. At the Tower
Gate Sir John Bridges, the Lieutenant, stood, likewise
ready to receive and to revile his prisoners.
To each in turn he addressed some varied form of
abuse, taking Wyatt, who came last, by the collar
“in very rigorous manner,” and shaking him.</p>
<p>“‘Thou villain and unhappy traitor,’ he cried, ...
‘if it were not that the law must justly pass upon
thee, I would strike thee through with my dagger.’</p>
<p>“To whom Wyatt made no answer, but, holding
his arms under his side, and looking grievously
with a grim look upon the said Lieutenant, said,
‘It is no mastery now,’ and so they passed on.”</p>
<p>Thus ended Wyatt’s rebellion. Together with
her father’s treason, it had sealed Lady Jane’s fate,
and that of the boy-husband who shared her
captivity.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_311">311</SPAN></span></p>
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