Queen Mary; and, Harold - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel Queen Mary; and, Harold Part 24 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
[_Exeunt_.
ACT IV.
SCENE I.--A ROOM IN THE PALACE.
MARY, CARDINAL POLE.
MARY. What have you there?
POLE. So please your Majesty, A long pet.i.tion from the foreign exiles To spare the life of Cranmer. Bishop Thirlby, And my Lord Paget and Lord William Howard, Crave, in the same cause, hearing of your Grace.
Hath he not written himself--infatuated-- To sue you for his life?
MARY. His life? Oh, no; Not sued for that--he knows it were in vain.
But so much of the anti-papal leaven Works in him yet, he hath pray'd me not to sully Mine own prerogative, and degrade the realm By seeking justice at a stranger's hand Against my natural subject. King and Queen, To whom he owes his loyalty after G.o.d, Shall these accuse him to a foreign prince?
Death would not grieve him more. I cannot be True to this realm of England and the Pope Together, says the heretic.
POLE. And there errs; As he hath ever err'd thro' vanity.
A secular kingdom is but as the body Lacking a soul; and in itself a beast.
The Holy Father in a secular kingdom Is as the soul descending out of heaven Into a body generate.
MARY. Write to him, then.
POLE. I will.
MARY. And sharply, Pole.
POLE. Here come the Cranmerites!
_Enter_ THIRLBY, LORD PAGET, LORD WILLIAM HOWARD.
HOWARD. Health to your Grace! Good morrow, my Lord Cardinal; We make our humble prayer unto your Grace That Cranmer may withdraw to foreign parts, Or into private life within the realm.
In several bills and declarations, Madam, He hath recanted all his heresies.
PAGET. Ay, ay; if Bonner have not forged the bills. [_Aside_.
MARY. Did not More die, and Fisher? he must burn.
HOWARD. He hath recanted, Madam.
MARY. The better for him.
He burns in Purgatory, not in h.e.l.l.
HOWARD. Ay, ay, your Grace; but it was never seen That any one recanting thus at full, As Cranmer hath, came to the fire on earth.
MARY. It will be seen now, then.
THIRLBY. O Madam, Madam!
I thus implore you, low upon my knees, To reach the hand of mercy to my friend.
I have err'd with him; with him I have recanted.
What human reason is there why my friend Should meet with lesser mercy than myself?
MARY. My Lord of Ely, this. After a riot We hang the leaders, let their following go.
Cranmer is head and father of these heresies, New learning as they call it; yea, may G.o.d Forget me at most need when I forget Her foul divorce--my sainted mother--No!--
HOWARD. Ay, ay, but mighty doctors doubted there.
The Pope himself waver'd; and more than one Row'd in that galley--Gardiner to wit, Whom truly I deny not to have been Your faithful friend and trusty councillor.
Hath not your Highness ever read his book.
His tractate upon True Obedience, Writ by himself and Bonner?
MARY. I will take Such order with all bad, heretical books That none shall hold them in his house and live, Henceforward. No, my Lord.
HOWARD. Then never read it.
The truth is here. Your father was a man Of such colossal kinghood, yet so courteous, Except when wroth, you scarce could meet his eye And hold your own; and were he wroth indeed, You held it less, or not at all. I say, Your father had a will that beat men down; Your father had a brain that beat men down--
POLE. Not me, my Lord.
HOWARD. No, for you were not here; You sit upon this fallen Cranmer's throne; And it would more become you, my Lord Legate, To join a voice, so potent with her Highness, To ours in plea for Cranmer than to stand On naked self-a.s.sertion.
MARY. All your voices Are waves on flint. The heretic must burn.
HOWARD. Yet once he saved your Majesty's own life; Stood out against the King in your behalf.
At his own peril.
MARY. I know not if he did; And if he did I care not, my Lord Howard.
My life is not so happy, no such boon, That I should spare to take a heretic priest's, Who saved it or not saved. Why do you vex me?
PAGET. Yet to save Cranmer were to serve the Church, Your Majesty's I mean; he is effaced, Self-blotted out; so wounded in his honour, He can but creep down into some dark hole Like a hurt beast, and hide himself and die; But if you burn him,--well, your Highness knows The saying, 'Martyr's blood--seed of the Church.'
MARY. Of the true Church; but his is none, nor will be.
You are too politic for me, my Lord Paget.
And if he have to live so loath'd a life, It were more merciful to burn him now.
THIRLBY. O yet relent. O, Madam, if you knew him As I do, ever gentle, and so gracious, With all his learning--
MARY. Yet a heretic still.
His learning makes his burning the more just.
THIRLBY. So worshipt of all those that came across him; The stranger at his hearth, and all his house--
MARY. His children and his concubine, belike.
THIRLBY. To do him any wrong was to beget A kindness from him, for his heart was rich, Of such fine mould, that if you sow'd therein The seed of Hate, it blossom'd Charity.