1550-1553
Lady Jane Grey. Her disposition
and character. Lady Jane’s parents. Restraints
put upon her. Lady Jane’s attainments. Character
of her teacher. Anecdote of Elizabeth and
Aylmer. Lady Jane’s attachment to
Aylmer. Elizabeth’s studies. Roger
Ascham. Lady Jane’s acquirements in
Greek. Her interview with Ascham. Lady
Jane’s intimacy with Edward. The Earl
of Northumberland. Harsh treatment of Mary. Decline
of Edward’s health. Uncertainty in
respect to the succession. Struggle for
power. Queen Elizabeth’s family connections. Explanation
of the table. King Henry’s will. Various
claimants for the throne. Perplexing questions. Power
of Northumberland. His schemes. Marriage
of Lady Jane. Feelings of the people. Efforts
to set Mary aside. Northumberland works
on the young king. Conduct of the judges. Pardon
by anticipation. Edward’s deed of
settlement. Plan to entrap the princesses. Death
of Edward. Escape of the princesses. Precautions
of Mary. Lady Jane proclaimed queen. Great
excitement. Public opinion in favor of
Mary. Northumberland taken prisoner. He
is beheaded. Mary’s triumphal procession. Shared
by Elizabeth.
Among Elizabeth’s companions
and playmates in her early years was a young lady,
her cousin, as she was often called, though she was
really the daughter of her cousin, named Jane Grey,
commonly called in history Lady Jane Grey. Her
mother was the Marchioness of Dorset, and was the
daughter of one of King Henry the Eighth’s sisters.
King Henry had named her as the next in the order
of succession after his own children, that is, after
Edward his son, and Mary and Elizabeth his two daughters;
and, consequently, though she was very young, yet,
as she might one day be Queen of England, she was
a personage of considerable importance. She was,
accordingly, kept near the court, and shared, in some
respects, the education and the studies of the two
princesses.
Lady Jane was about four years younger
than the Princess Elizabeth, and the sweetness of
her disposition, united with an extraordinary intellectual
superiority, which showed itself at a very early period,
made her a universal favorite. Her father and
mother, the Marquis and Marchioness of Dorset, lived
at an estate they possessed, called Broadgate, in
Leicestershire, which is in the central part of England,
although they took their title from the county of Dorset,
which is on the southwestern coast. They were
very proud of their daughter, and attached infinite
importance to her descent from Henry VII., and to the
possibility that she might one day succeed to the English
throne. They were very strict and severe in their
manners, and paid great attention to etiquette and
punctilio, as persons who are ambitious of rising in
the world are very apt to do. In all ages of the
world, and among all nations, those who have long
been accustomed to a high position are easy and unconstrained
in their manners and demeanor, while those who have
been newly advanced from a lower station, or who are
anticipating or aspiring to such an advance, make
themselves slaves to the rules of etiquette and ceremony.
It was thus that the father and mother of Lady Jane,
anticipating that she might one day become a queen,
watched and guarded her incessantly, subjected her
to a thousand unwelcome restraints, and repressed
all the spontaneous and natural gayety and sprightliness
which belongs properly to such a child.
She became, however, a very excellent
scholar in consequence of this state of things.
She had a private teacher, a man of great eminence
for his learning and abilities, and yet of a very
kind and gentle spirit, which enabled him to gain
a strong hold on his pupil’s affection and regard.
His name was John Aylmer. The Marquis of Dorset,
Lady Jane’s father, became acquainted with Mr.
Aylmer when he was quite young, and appointed him,
when he had finished his education, to come and reside
in his family as chaplain and tutor to his children.
Aylmer afterward became a distinguished man, was made
Bishop of London, and held many high offices of state
under Queen Elizabeth, when she came to reign.
He became very much attached to Queen Elizabeth in
the middle and latter part of his life, as he had
been to Lady Jane in the early part of it. A
curious incident occurred during the time that he was
in the service of Elizabeth, which illustrates the
character of the man. The queen was suffering
from the toothache, and it was necessary that the tooth
should be extracted. The surgeon was ready with
his instruments, and several ladies and gentlemen
of the royal household were in the queen’s room
commiserating her sufferings; but the queen dreaded
the operation so excessively that she could not summon
fortitude enough to submit to it. Aylmer, after
trying some time in vain to encourage her, took his
seat in the chair instead of her, and said to the
surgeon, “I am an old man, and have but few
teeth to lose; but come, draw this one, and let her
majesty see how light a matter it is.” One
would not have supposed that Elizabeth would have
allowed this to be done; but she did, and, finding
that Aylmer made so light of the operation, she submitted
to have it performed upon herself.
But to return to Lady Jane. She
was very strongly attached to her teacher, and made
great progress in the studies which he arranged for
her. Ladies of high rank, in those days, were
accustomed to devote great attention to the ancient
and modern languages. There was, in fact, a great
necessity then, as indeed there is now, for a European
princess to be acquainted with the principal languages
of Europe; for the various royal families were continually
intermarrying with each other, which led to a great
many visits, and other intercourse between the different
courts. There was also a great deal of intercourse
with the pope, in which the Latin language
was the medium of communication. Lady Jane devoted
a great deal of time to all these studies, and made
rapid proficiency in them all.
The Princess Elizabeth was also an
excellent scholar. Her teacher was a very learned
and celebrated man, named Roger Ascham. She spoke
French and Italian as fluently as she did English.
She also wrote and spoke Latin with correctness and
readiness. She made considerable progress in
Greek too. She could write the Greek character
very beautifully, and could express herself tolerably
well in conversation in that language. One of
her companions, a young lady of the name of Cecil,
is said to have spoken Greek as well as English.
Roger Ascham took great interest in advancing the
princess in these studies, and in the course of these
his instructions he became acquainted with Lady Jane,
and he praises very highly, in his letters, the industry
and assiduity of Lady Jane in similar pursuits.
One day Roger Ascham, being on a journey
from the north of England to London, stopped to make
a call at the mansion of the Marquis of Dorset.
He found that the family were all away; they had gone
off upon a hunting excursion in the park. Lady
Jane, however, had been left at home, and Ascham went
in to see her. He found her in the library reading
Greek. Ascham examined her a little, and was
very much surprised to find how well acquainted with
the language she had become, although she was then
only about fifteen years old. He told her that
he should like very much to have her write him a letter
in Greek, and this she readily promised to do.
He asked her, also, how it happened that, at her age,
she had made such advances in learning. “I
will tell you,” said she, “how it has
happened. One of the greatest benefits that God
ever conferred upon me was in giving me so sharp and
severe parents and so gentle a teacher; for, when
I am in the presence of either my father or mother,
whether I speak, keep silence, sit, stand, or go;
eat, drink, be merry or sad; be sewing, playing, dancing,
or doing any thing else, I must do it, as it were,
in just such weight, measure, and number, as perfectly
as possible, or else I am so sharply taunted, so cruelly
threatened, yea, presently, sometimes with pinches,
nips, and bobs, and other ways, which I will not name
for the honor I bear my parents, that I am continually
teased and tormented. And then, when the time
comes for me to go to Mr. Aylmer, he teaches me so
gently, so pleasantly, and with such fair allurements
to learning, that I think all the time nothing while
I am with him; and I am always sorry to go away from
him, because whatsoever else I do but learning is
full of grief, trouble, fear, and suffering.”
Lady Jane Grey was an intimate friend
and companion of the young King Edward as long as
he lived. Edward died when he was sixteen years
of age, so that he did not reach the period which
his father had assigned for his reigning in his own
name. One of King Edward’s most prominent
and powerful ministers during the latter part of his
life was the Earl of Northumberland. The original
name of the Earl of Northumberland was John Dudley.
He was one of the train who came in the procession
at the close of the baptism of Elizabeth, carrying
the presents. He was a Protestant, and was very
friendly to Edward and to Lady Jane Grey, for they
were Protestants too. But his feelings and policy
were hostile to Mary, for she was a Catholic.
Mary was sometimes treated very harshly by him, and
she was subjected to many privations and hardships
on account of her religious faith. The government
of Edward justified these measures, on account of
the necessity of promoting the Reformation, and discouraging
popery by every means in their power. Northumberland
supposed, too, that it was safe to do this, for Edward
being very young, it was probable that he would live
and reign a long time. It is true that Mary was
named, in her father’s will, as his successor,
if she outlived him, but then it was highly probable
that she would not outlive him, for she was several
years older than he.
All these calculations, however, were
spoiled by the sudden failure of Edward’s health
when he was sixteen years old. Northumberland
was much alarmed at this. He knew at once that
if Edward should die, and Mary succeed him, all his
power would be gone, and he determined to make desperate
efforts to prevent such a result.
It must not be understood, however,
that in coming to this resolution, Northumberland
considered himself as intending and planning a deliberate
usurpation of power. There was a real uncertainty
in respect to the question who was the true and rightful
heir to the crown. Northumberland was, undoubtedly,
strongly biased by his interest, but he may have been
unconscious of the bias, and in advocating the mode
of succession on which the continuance of his own
power depended, he may have really believed that he
was only maintaining what was in itself rightful and
just.
In fact, there is no mode which human
ingenuity has ever yet devised for determining the
hands in which the supreme executive of a nation shall
be lodged, which will always avoid doubt and contention.
If this power devolves by hereditary descent, no rules
can be made so minute and full as that cases will
not sometimes occur that will transcend them.
If, on the other hand, the plan of election be adopted,
there will often be technical doubts about a portion
of the votes, and cases will sometimes occur where
the result will depend upon this doubtful portion.
Thus there will be disputes under any system, and
ambitious men will seize such occasions to struggle
for power.
In order that our readers may clearly
understand the nature of the plan which Northumberland
adopted, we present, on the following page, a sort
of genealogical table of the royal family of England
in the days of Elizabeth.
= Margaret
James IV. of Scotland
= James V. of Scotland
=
Mary Queen of Scots
1. KING HENRY VII.
= 6. KING JAMES VI. OF
SCOTLAND
AND I.
OF
ENGLAND.
Earl Of Angus
= Margaret Douglas
=
Earl of Lenox
=
Lord Darnley
= Mary.
Charles Brandon, duke
= Frances, marchioness
of Suffolk
of Dorset
=
Lady Jane Grey.
=
Eleanor.
________________________________________________________________________
EXPLANATION.
This table gives the immediate descendants
of Henry VII., a descent being denoted by the
sign =. The names of the persons whom they
respectively married are in italics. Those who
became sovereigns of England are in small capitals,
and the order in which they reigned is denoted
by the figures prefixed to their names.
By examination of this table it will
be seen that King Henry VII. left a son and two daughters.
The son was King Henry VIII., and he had three
children. His third child was King Edward VI.,
who was now about to die. The other two were
the Princesses Mary and Elizabeth, who would naturally
be considered the next heirs after Edward; and besides,
King Henry had left a will, as has been already explained,
confirming their rights to the succession. This
will he had made near the time of his death; but it
will be recollected that, during his life-time, both
the marriages from which these princesses had sprung
had been formally annulled. His marriage with
Catharine of Aragon had been annulled on one plea,
and that of Anne Boleyn on another. Both these
decrees of annulment had afterward been revoked, and
the right of the princesses to succeed had been restored,
or attempted to be restored, by the will. Still,
it admitted of a question, after all, whether Mary
and Elizabeth were to be considered as the children
of true and lawful wives or not.
If they were not, then Lady Jane Grey
was the next heir, for she was placed next to the
princesses by King Henry the Eighth’s will.
This will, for some reason or other, set aside a the
descendants of Margaret, who went to Scotland as the
wife of James IV. of that country. What right
the king had thus to disinherit the children of his
sister Margaret was a great question. Among her
descendants was Mary Queen of Scots, as will be seen
by the table, and she was, at this time, the representative
of that branch of the family. The friends of Mary
Queen of Scots claimed that she was the lawful heir
to the English throne after Edward. They maintained
that the marriage of Catharine, the Princess Mary’s
mother, and also that of Anne Boleyn, Elizabeth’s
mother, had both been annulled, and that the will could
not restore them. They maintained, also, that
the will was equally powerless in setting aside the
claims of Margaret, her grandmother. Mary Queen
of Scots, though silent now, advanced her claim subsequently,
and made Elizabeth a great deal of trouble.
Then there was, besides these, a third
party, who maintained that King Henry the Eighth’s
will was not effectual in legalizing again the annulled
marriages, but that it was sufficient to set aside
the claims of Margaret. Of course, with them,
Lady Jane Grey, who, as will be seen by the table,
was the representative of the second sister
of Henry VIII., was the only heir. The Earl of
Northumberland embraced this view. His motive
was to raise Lady Jane Grey to the throne, in order
to exclude the Princess Mary, whose accession he knew
very well would bring all his greatness to a very
sudden end.
The Earl of Northumberland was at
this time the principal minister of the young king.
The protector Somerset had fallen long ago. Northumberland,
whose name was then John Dudley, had supplanted him,
and had acquired so great influence and power at court
that almost every thing seemed to be at his disposal.
He was, however, generally hated by the other courtiers
and by the nation. Men who gain the confidence
of a young or feeble-minded prince, so as to wield
a great power not properly their own, are almost always
odious. It was expected, however, that his career
would be soon brought to an end, as all knew that King
Edward must die, and it was generally understood that
Mary was to succeed him.
Northumberland, however, was very
anxious to devise some scheme to continue his power,
and in revolving the subject in his mind, he conceived
of plans which seemed to promise not only to continue,
but also greatly to increase it. His scheme was
to have the princesses’ claims set aside, and
Lady Jane Grey raised to the throne. He had several
sons. One of them was young, handsome, and accomplished.
He thought of proposing him to Lady Jane’s father
as the husband of Lady Jane, and, to induce the marquis
to consent to this plan, he promised to obtain a dukedom
for him by means of his influence with the king.
The marquis agreed to the proposal. Lady Jane
did not object to the husband they offered her.
The dukedom was obtained, and the marriage, together
with two others which Northumberland had arranged to
strengthen his influence, were celebrated, all on
the same day, with great festivities and rejoicings.
The people looked on moodily, jealous and displeased,
though they had no open ground of displeasure, except
that it was unsuitable to have such scenes of gayety
and rejoicing among the high officers of the court
while the young monarch himself was lying upon his
dying bed. They did not yet know that it was Northumberland’s
plan to raise his new daughter-in-law to the throne.
Northumberland thought it would greatly
increase his prospect of success if he could obtain
some act of acknowledgment of Lady Jane’s claims
to the crown before Edward died. An opportunity
soon occurred for effecting this purpose. One
day, as he was sitting by young Edward’s bedside,
he turned the conversation to the subject of the Reformation,
which had made great progress during Edward’s
reign, and he led Edward on in the conversation, until
he remarked that it was a great pity to have the work
all undone by Mary’s accession, for she was a
Catholic, and would, of course, endeavor to bring
the country back again under the spiritual dominion
of Rome. Northumberland then told him that there
was one way, and one way only, to avert such a calamity,
and that was to make Lady Jane his heir instead of
Mary.
King Edward was a very thoughtful,
considerate, and conscientious boy, and was very desirous
of doing what he considered his duty. He thought
it was his duty to do all in his power to sustain the
Reformation, and to prevent the Catholic power from
gaining ascendency in England again. He was,
therefore, easily persuaded to accede to Northumberland’s
plan, especially as he was himself strongly attached
to Lady Jane, who had often been his playmate and
companion.
The king accordingly sent for three
judges of the realm, and directed them to draw up
a deed of assignment, by which the crown was to be
conveyed to Lady Jane on the young king’s death,
Mary and Elizabeth being alike excluded. The
judges were afraid to do this; for, by King Henry
the Eighth’s settlement of the crown, all those
persons who should do any thing to disturb the succession
as he arranged it were declared to be guilty of high
treason. The judges knew very well, therefore,
that if they should do what the king required of them,
and then, if the friends of Lady Jane should fail
of establishing her upon the throne, the end of the
affair would be the cutting off of their own heads
in the Tower. They represented this to the king,
and begged to be excused from the duty that he required
of them. Northumberland was in a great rage at
this, and seemed almost ready to break out against
the judges in open violence. They, however, persisted
in their refusal to do what they well knew would subject
them to the pains and penalties of treason.
Northumberland, finding that threats
and violence would not succeed, contrived another
mode of obviating the difficulty. He proposed
to protect the judges from any possible evil consequences
of their act by a formal pardon for it, signed by
the king, and sealed with the great seal, so that,
in case they were ever charged with treason, the pardon
would save them from punishment. This plan succeeded.
The pardon was made out, being written with great
formality upon a parchment roll, and sealed with the
great seal. The judges then prepared and signed
the deed of settlement by which the crown was given
to Lady Jane, though, after all, they did it with
much reluctance and many forebodings.
Northumberland next wanted to contrive
some plan for getting the princesses into his power,
in order to prevent their heading any movement in
behalf of their own claims at the death of the king.
He was also desirous of making such arrangements as
to conceal the death of the king for a few days after
it should take place, in order that he might get Lady
Jane and her officers in complete possession of the
kingdom before the demise of the crown should be generally
known. For this purpose he dismissed the regular
physicians who had attended upon the king, and put
him under the charge of a woman, who pretended that
she had a medicine that would certainly cure him.
He sent, also, messengers to the princesses, who were
then in the country north of London, requesting that
they would come to Greenwich, to be near the sick
chamber where their brother was lying, that they might
cheer and comfort him in his sickness and pain.
The princesses obeyed the summons.
They each set out immediately on the journey, and
moved toward London on their way to Greenwich.
In the mean time, Edward was rapidly declining.
The change in the treatment which took place when
his physicians left him, made him worse instead of
better. His cough increased, his breathing became
more labored and difficult; in a word, his case presented
all the symptoms of approaching dissolution.
At length he died. Northumberland attempted to
keep the fact concealed until after the princesses
should arrive, that he might get them into his power.
Some faithful friend, however, made all haste to meet
them, in order to inform them what was going on.
In this way Mary received intelligence of her brother’s
death when she had almost reached London, and was
informed, also, of the plans of Northumberland for
raising Lady Jane to the throne. The two princesses
were extremely alarmed, and both turned back at once
toward the northward again. Mary stopped to write
a letter to the council, remonstrating against their
delay in proclaiming her queen, and then proceeded
rapidly to a strong castle at a place called Framlingham,
in the county of Suffolk, on the eastern coast of
England. She made this her head-quarters, because
she supposed that the people of that county were particularly
friendly to her; and then, besides, it was near the
sea, and, in case the course of events should turn
against her, she could make her escape to foreign
lands. It is true that the prospect of being fugitive
and an exile was very dark and gloomy, but it was
not so terrible as the idea of being shut up a prisoner
in the Tower, or being beheaded on a block for treason.
In the mean time, Northumberland went,
at the head of a troop of his adherents, to the residence
of Lady Jane Grey, informed her of the death of Edward,
and announced to her their determination to proclaim
her queen. Lady Jane was very much astonished
at this news. At first she absolutely refused
the offered honor; but the solicitations and urgency
of Northumberland, and of her father and her young
husband, at length prevailed. She was conducted
to London, and instated in at least the semblance
of power.
As the news of these transactions
spread throughout the land, a universal and strong
excitement was produced, every body at once taking
sides either for Mary or Lady Jane. Bands of armed
men began to assemble. It soon became apparent,
however, that, beyond the immediate precincts of London,
the country was almost unanimous for Mary. They
dreaded, it is true, the danger which they anticipated
from her Catholic faith, but still they had all considered
it a settled point, since the death of Henry the Eighth,
that Mary was to reign whenever Edward should die;
and this general expectation that she would be queen
had passed insensibly into an opinion that she ought
to be. Considered strictly as a legal question,
it was certainly doubtful which of the four claimants
to the throne had the strongest title; but the public
were not disposed so to regard it. They chose,
on the whole, that Mary should reign. Large military
masses consequently flocked to her standard. Elizabeth
took sides with her, and, as it was important to give
as much public effect to her adhesion as possible,
they furnished Elizabeth with a troop of a thousand
horsemen, at the head of which she rode to meet Mary
and tender her aid.
Northumberland went forth at the head
of such forces as he could collect, but he soon found
that the attempt was vain. His troops forsook
him. The castles which had at first been under
his command surrendered themselves to Mary. The
Tower of London went over to her side. Finally,
all being lost, Northumberland himself was taken prisoner,
and all his influential friends with him, and were
committed to the Tower. Lady Jane herself too,
together with her husband and father, were seized and
sent to prison.
Northumberland was immediately put
upon his trial for treason. He was condemned,
and brought at once to the block. In fact, the
whole affair moved very promptly and rapidly on, from
its commencement to its consummation. Edward
the Sixth died on the 5th of July, and it was only
the 22d of August when Northumberland was beheaded.
The period for which the unhappy Lady Jane enjoyed
the honor of being called a queen was nine days.
It was about a month after this that
Mary passed from the Tower through the city of London
in a grand triumphal procession to be crowned.
The royal chariot, covered with cloth of golden tissue,
was drawn by six horses most splendidly caparisoned.
Elizabeth, who had aided her sister, so far as she
could, in the struggle, was admitted to share the
triumph. She had a carriage drawn by six horses
too, with cloth and decorations of silver. They
proceeded in this manner, attended and followed by
a great cavalcade of nobles and soldiery, to Westminster
Abbey, where Mary took her seat with great formality
upon her father’s throne.