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TRIAL OF SIR THOMAS
MORE: Letter to Margaret Roper
(May 2 or 3, 1535) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OUR
LORD BLESS YOU. MY
DEARLY BELOVED DAUGHTER. Whereupon Master Secretary shewed unto me, that he
doubted not, but that I had by such friends as hither had resorted to
me seen
the new statutes made at the last sitting of the Parliament. Whereunto
I answered:
"Yes, verily. Howbeit for as much as being there, I have no
conversation
with any people, I thought it little need for me to bestow much time
upon them,
and therefore I redelivered the book shortly and the effect of the
statutes I
never marked nor studied
to put in remembrance." Then he
asked me whether I had not read the first statute of them, of the King
being
Head of the Church. Whereunto I answered, "Yes." Then his Mastership
declared unto me, that sith it was now by act of Parliament ordained
that his
Highness and his heirs be, and ever of right have been, and perpetually
should
be, Supreme Head in earth of the Church of England under Christ, the
King's
pleasure was that those of his Council there assembled should demand
mine
opinion, and what my mind was therein. Whereunto I answered that in
good faith
I had well trusted that the King's Highness would never have commanded
any such
question to be demanded of me, considering that I ever from the
beginning well
and truly from time to time declared my mind unto his Highness, and
since that
time I had, I said, unto your Mastership Master Secretary also, both by
mouth
and by writing. And now I have in good faith discharged my mind of all
such
matters, and neither will dispute King's titles nor Pope's, but the
King's true
faithful subject I am and will be, and daily I pray for him and for all
his,
and for you all that are of his honorable Council, and for all the
realm, and
otherwise than thus I never intend to meddle. Whereunto Master Secretary answered that he thought
this manner answer should not satisfy nor content the King's Highness,
but that
his Grace would exact a more full answer. And his Mastership added
thereunto,
that the King's Highness was a prince not of rigour but of mercy and
pity, and
though that he had found obstinacy at some time in any of his subjects,
yet
when he should find them at another time conformable and submit them
self, his
Grace would shew mercy. And that concerning myself, his Highness would
be glad
to see me take such confirmable ways, as I might be abroad in the
world again
among other men as I have been before. Whereto I answered, that I give no man occasion to
hold any point one or other, nor never gave any man advice or counsel
therein
one way or other. And for conclusion I could no further go, whatsoever
pain
should come thereof. "I am," quoth I, "the King's true
faithful subject and daily beads man and pray for his Highness and all
his and
all the realm. I do nobody harm, I say none harm, I think none
harm, bur wish
everybody good. And if this be not enough to keep a man alive, in good
faith, I
long not to live. And I am dying already, and have since I came here,
been
divers times in the case that I thought to die within one hour, and
I thank our Lord I was never sorry for it, but rather sorry when I saw
the pang
past. And therefore my poor body is at the King's pleasure, would God
my death
might do him good." After this Master Secretary said: "Well, ye
find no fault in that stature, find you any in any of the other
statures
after?" Whereto I answered, "Sir, whatsoever thing should seem to me
other than good, in any of the other statures or in that statute
either, I
would not declare what fault I found, nor speak thereof." Whereunto
finally
his mastership said full gently that of any thing that I had spoken,
there
should none advantage be taken, and whether he said further that there
be none
to be taken, I am not
well remembered. But he said that report
should be made unto the King's Highness, and his gracious pleasure
known. Whereupon I was delivered again to Master
Lieutenant, which was then called in, and so was I by Master Lieutenant
brought
again into my chamber, and here am I yet in such case as I was, neither
better
nor worse. That that shall follow lieth in the hand of God, whom I
beseech to
put in the King's Grace's mind that thing that may be to his high
pleasure, and
in mine, to mind only the weal of my soul, with little regard of my
body. And you with all yours, and my wife and all my
children and all our other friends both bodily and ghostly heartily
well to
fare. And I pray you and all them, pray for me, and take no thought
whatsoever
shall happen me. For I verily trust in the goodness of God, seem it
never so
evil to this world, it shall indeed in another world be for the best. Your
loving father, Thomas More,
Knight. |