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The
Trial and Execution of Sir THOMAS MORE:
Account in a Paris Newsletter
(August 4, 1535) ![]() Location of the execution site of Sir Thomas More, as it appears now in London
"As to the first article,
charging me with having always maliciously opposed the King's
second marriage,
I will only answer that what I have said has been according to my
conscience. I
never wished to conceal the truth, and if I had, I should have been a traitor. For this
error, if error it should be called, I have been condemned to perpetual
imprisonment, which I have already
suffered for fifteen months, and my goods confiscated. For this
reason I will
only reply to the principal charge against me, that I have
incurred the
penalty of the Statute made in the last Parliament since I was in
prison, by
refusing to the King his title of Supreme Head of the Church, in proof
of which
you allege my reply to the Secretary and Council, that as I was dead to
the
world, I did not care to think of such things, but only of the passion
of
Christ. I reply that your Statute cannot condemn me to death for such
silence,
for neither your Statute nor any laws in the world punish people except
for
words or deed, surely not for keeping silence." To this the King's
proctor
replied that such silence was a certain proof of malice intended
against the
Statute, especially as every faithful subject, on being questioned
about the
Statute, was obliged to answer categorically that the Statute was good
and
wholesome. "Surely," replied More, "if what the common law says
is true, that he who is silent seems to consent, my silence should
rather be
taken as approval than contempt of your Statute. You say that all good
subjects
are obliged to reply; but I say that the faithful subject is more
bound to his
conscience and his soul than to anything else in the world, provided
his
conscience, like mine, does not raise scandal or sedition, and I assure
you
that I have never discovered what is in my conscience to any person
living. "As to the
second article, that I have conspired against the Statute by writing
eight
letters to the bishop of "Touching
the third article, that when I was examined by the Council, I answered
that
your Statute was like a two-edged sword, for he who approved it
would ruin his
soul, and he who contradicted it, his body; and that the bishop of
Rochester
answered similarly, showing that we were confederates, I reply that I
only
answered thus conditionally, that if the Statute cut both ways like a
two-edged
sword, how could a man behave so as not to incur either danger? I do
not know
how the Bishop replied, but if he answered like me, it must have been
from the
agreement between us in opinion, but not because we had ever arranged
it
between us. Be assured I never did or said anything maliciously against
the
Statute, but it may be that this has been maliciously reported to the
King." Then they ordered an usher to summon 12 men according to the custom of the country, and these articles were given to them that they might judge whether More had maliciously contravened the Statute. After a quarter of an hour's absence they declared him guilty of death, and sentence was pronounced by the Chancellor "selon la lettre de la nouvelle loy." More then spoke
as follows: "Since I am condemned, and God knows how, I wish to speak
freely of your Statute, for the discharge of my conscience. For
the seven
years that I have studied the matter, I have not read in any approved
doctor of
the Church that a temporal lord could or ought to be head of the
spirituality." The Chancellor interrupting him, said, "What, More,
you wish to be considered wiser and of better conscience than all the
bishops
and nobles of the realm?" To this More replied, "My lord, for one
bishop of your opinion I have a hundred saints of mine; and for one
parliament
of yours, and God knows of what kind, I have all the General Councils
for 1,000 years,
and for one kingdom I have On his way to
the Tower one of his daughters, named Margaret, pushed through the
archers and
guards, and held him in her embrace some time without being able to
speak.
Afterwards More, asking leave of the archers, bade her have patience,
for it
was God's will, and she had long known the secret of his heart. After
going 10 or 12 steps
she returned and embraced him again, to which he said nothing, except
to bid
her pray to God for his soul; and this
without tears or change of color. On the Tuesday following he was
beheaded in
the open space in front of the Tower. A little before his death he
asked those
present to pray to God for him and he would do the same for them [in
the other
world.] He then besought them earnestly to pray to God to give the King
good
counsel, protesting that he died his good servant, and God's first. |