On the cover of the new Ignatius Press edition of Belloc's Characters of the Reformation, Henry VIII is in the center. The portrait chosen is from 1537. By that year, Henry VIII's first two wives were dead and his third wife was pregnant with his long desired son who would be born on October 12--and she would be dead by October 24. He was half-way through his six wives: Katherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn, and Jane Seymour, and he took a three year break from matrimony. He had been Supreme Head and Governor, the Caesar-Pope of England since the Act of Supremacy in 1534. Henry VIII had survived the Pilgrimage of Grace, but Sir Thomas More, Bishop John Fisher, the Carthusians, the Observant Franciscans, and a few others had not survived the proclamation of his Supremacy and the Dissolution of the Lesser Monasteries--the beginning of the end for the monks, nuns, and friars and the religious vocations of England was about to begin.
Belloc, however, starts his discussion of Henry VIII's character with the young man, succeeding to his father's throne and marrying his brother's widow, Catherine of Aragon, in 1509:
Young Henry being thus left sole heir to the throne, his father died in the spring of 1509 some months before the boy would reach his eighteenth birthday. He duly succeeded under the title of Henry VIII, was crowned, and proceeded to marry at once this sister-in-law of his, Catherine, older than himself by nearly six years. They were at first very happy together, the young King was popular, his wife had an excellent influence over him, and everything went well.[His grandmother, Margaret Beaufort, was briefly his regent, and that provided stability in the transition.]
Now let me describe the character of this young fellow, upon whom so much was to depend. His leading characteristic was an inability to withstand impulse; he was passionate for having his own way — which is almost the opposite of having strength of will. He was easily dominated, always being managed by one person or another in succession, from this beginning of his life to the end of it, but being managed — not bullied or directly controlled.
It is exceedingly important to understand this chief point
about him because a misjudgment of it has warped much
the greater part of historical appreciation upon him. Because he was a big man who blustered and had fits of rage
and was exaggeratedly eager to follow appetite and whim
he had been given the false appearance of a powerful
figure. Power he had, but it was only the political power
which the mood of the time gave to whoever might be
monarch. He had no personal power of character. He did
not control others by their respect for his tenacity, still less
by any feeling that he was wise and just and still less by
any feeling that he was of strong fibre.
On the contrary, all those who managed him, one after
the other — except his wife — despised him, and soon came
to carry on as though they could do what they liked on
condition that they flattered him. They managed public
affairs while he followed his appetites or private interests.
That was true of the whole series of those who "ran" him:
Wolsey, Anne Boleyn, Thomas Cromwell, and, at the end,
his brother-in-law Seymour. The only exception was that
admirable wife of his who, through the simplicity of her
character and her strong affection as well as from her sense
of duty, treated him with respect. But her influence over
him was, perhaps on that very account, soon lost.
As might be expected with a nature of this kind, he
revolted against each manager one after the other. He
felt he was being "run" by each in turn, grew peevish
about it, had explosions of anger and would in a fit of
passion get rid of them. Getting rid of them often meant,
under the despotic conditions of that day, putting them
to death. That is how he suddenly broke with Wolsey,
that is how he broke with Anne Boleyn, that is how he
broke with Thomas Cromwell — who had all three done
what they willed with him, acting independently of him,
showing their contempt for him in private and ultimately
rousing his fury. . . .
Annie Mitchell and I will discuss this and more--including that famous comment by Thomas More about working with Henry VIII--tomorrow on the Son Rise Morning Show.
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