In consequence of the King's resolution and order as to the respective treatment of the Princess and of his bastard daughter, about which I wrote last to Your Majesty, the latter was three days since taken to a house distant 17 miles from this city; and although there was a better and a shorter route thither, yet, for the sake of pompous solemnity, and the better to impress upon the people the idea of her being the true Princess of Wales, the King's bastard daughter, and her suite, composed of the noblemen specified in my last, were made to traverse this city. On the ensuing morning the Duke of Norfolk went
himself to the Princess, and signified her father's pleasure that she
should attend Court, and enter the service of his other bastard daughter, whom
the Duke deliberately, and in her presence, called Princess of Wales. Upon which
Princess Mary replied : "That is a title which belongs to me by right, and
to no one else;" after which she addressed to him many gracious, honest, and
very wise remonstrances, all tending to show that the proposals the Duke had
brought from the King were both strange and unfitting. Which argument on the
part of the Princess the Duke was unable to combat, so much so that he said to
her that he had not gone thither to dispute, but to see the King's wishes accomplished,
and his commands executed, namely, that she should be removed to the house
taken for the bastard. Upon which the Princess, seeing that all her arguments
and excuses would be of no avail, asked for half an hour's time to retire to
her private chamber; where she remained, as I am given to understand, all the
while, or nearly so, occupied in drawing out the protest whereof I once gave
her the words. Thus, should she in any way be compelled by force or persuaded
by deceit to renounce her rights, marry against her will, or enter a cloister,
no prejudice should result to her hereafter.
When she came out of her room the Princess said to the Duke
: " Since such is my father's wish, it is not for me to disobey his
injunctions; but I beg you to intercede with him that the services of many well
deserving and trusty officers of my household may be rewarded, and one year's
wages at least given to them." After this she asked the Duke how many of her
own servants she would be allowed to retain and take with her. The answer was
that as she would find plenty of servants to attend on her where she was going,
no great train of followers was needed. Accordingly the Princess set out on her
journey, accompanied only by very few of her household. Her governess, daughter
of the late Duke of Clarence, and the King's near relative—a very honourable
and virtuous lady, if there be one in England—offered, I hear, to serve the
Princess at her own cost, with a good and honourable train of servants, but her
offers were not accepted; nor will they ever be, for were the said lady to
remain by the Princess they would no longer be able to execute their bad
designs, which are evidently either to cause her to die of grief or in some other way, or else to compel her to renounce
her rights, marry some low fellow, or let her fall a prey to lust, so that they
may have a pretext and excuse for disinheriting her, and submitting her to all
manner of bad treatment.
London, December 16, 1533.
Letters, Dispatches and State Papers… relating to Spain,
Volume 4, Pt. 2. (1882). 881.
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