It would be an affront to my Readers
were I to suppose that they were not as well acquainted
with the particulars of this King’s reign as
I am myself. It will therefore be saving them
the task of reading again what they have read before,
and myself the trouble of writing what I do not
perfectly recollect, by giving only a slight sketch
of the principal Events which marked his reign.
Among these may be ranked Cardinal Wolsey’s
telling the father Abbott of Leicester Abbey that
“he was come to lay his bones among them,”
the reformation in Religion and the King’s riding
through the streets of London with Anna Bullen.
It is however but Justice, and my Duty to declare
that this amiable Woman was entirely innocent of the
Crimes with which she was accused, and of which her
Beauty, her Elegance, and her Sprightliness were sufficient
proofs, not to mention her solemn Protestations of
Innocence, the weakness of the Charges against her,
and the King’s Character; all of which add some
confirmation, tho’ perhaps but slight ones when
in comparison with those before alledged in her favour.
Tho’ I do not profess giving many dates, yet
as I think it proper to give some and shall of course
make choice of those which it is most necessary for
the Reader to know, I think it right to inform him
that her letter to the King was dated on the 6th of
May. The Crimes and Cruelties of this Prince,
were too numerous to be mentioned, (as this history
I trust has fully shown;) and nothing can be said in
his vindication, but that his abolishing Religious
Houses and leaving them to the ruinous depredations
of time has been of infinite use to the landscape
of England in general, which probably was a principal
motive for his doing it, since otherwise why should
a Man who was of no Religion himself be at so much
trouble to abolish one which had for ages been established
in the Kingdom. His Majesty’s 5th Wife
was the Duke of Norfolk’s Neice who, tho’
universally acquitted of the crimes for which she was
beheaded, has been by many people supposed to have
led an abandoned life before her Marriage—of
this however I have many doubts, since she was a relation
of that noble Duke of Norfolk who was so warm in the
Queen of Scotland’s cause, and who at last fell
a victim to it. The Kings last wife contrived
to survive him, but with difficulty effected it.
He was succeeded by his only son Edward.
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