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СНАР.
XVI.

His first wife.

her household well, and her daughter had taken a place in the family circle as one of More's children. A.D. 1519 There was a marked absence of jarring or quarrelling,1 which in such a household bore witness to the goodnature of the mistress. She could not, indeed, fill altogether the void left in More's heart by the loss of his first wife-the gentle girl brought up in country retirement with her parents and sisters, whom he had delighted to educate to his own tastes, in letters and in music, in the fond hope that she would be to him a lifelong companion,2 and respecting whom, soon after his second marriage, in composing the epitaph for the family tomb, in which she was already laid, he had written this simple line :

His second wife.

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'Cara Thomæ jacet hic Joanna uxorcula Mori !' 3

The dame Alice,' though somewhat older than her husband and matronly in her habits, nec bella nec 'puella,' as he was fond of jokingly telling her, out of deference to More's musical tastes, had learned to sing and to play on the harp; but, after all, she was more

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of the housekeeper than of the wife. It was not to her but to his daughter Margaret that his heart now clung with fondest affection.

СНАР.

XVI.

A.D. 1519.

More himself, Erasmus described to Hutten, as humorous without being foolish, simple in his dress and habits, and, with all his popularity and success, neither proud nor boastful, but accessible, obliging, and kind to his neighbours.1 Fond of liberty and ease he might be, but no one could be more active or more patient than he when occasion required it.2 No one was less influenced by current opinion, and yet no man had more common sense.3 Averse as he was to all superstition, and having shown in his 'Utopia' what were regarded in some quarters as freethinking tendencies, he had to share with Colet the sneers of the orthodox,' yet a tone of unaffected piety pervaded his life. He More's true piety. had stated times for devotion, and when he prayed, it was not as a matter of form, but from his heart. When, too, as he often did, he talked to his intimate friends of the life to come, Erasmus tells Hutten that he evidently spoke from his heart, and not without the brightest hope.1

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children's

He was careful to cultivate in his children not only The a filial regard to himself, but also feelings of mutual animals. interest and intimacy. He made himself one of them, and took evidently as much pleasure as they did in their birds and animals-the monkey, the rabbits, the fox, the ferret, and the weasel.5 Thus when Erasmus was a guest at his house, More would take him into the garden to see the children's rabbit hutches, or to watch the sly

'Eras. Op. iii. p. 476, D, &c.

2 Ibid. p. 474, B.

3 Ibid. p. 474, E.

4 Ibid. p. 477, B.

5 Ibid. p. 474, E and F.

CHAP.
XVI.

Their celebrated

ways of the monkey; which on one occasion so amused Erasmus by the clever way in which it prevented the A.D. 1519. weasel from making an assault upon the rabbits through an aperture between the boards at the back of the monkey. hutch, that he rewarded the animal by making it famous all over Europe, telling the story in one of his 'Colloquies.'1 Whereupon so important a member of the household did this monkey become, that when Hans Holbein some years afterwards painted his famous picture of the household of Sir Thomas More, its portrait was taken along with the rest, and there to this day it may be seen nestling in the folds of dame Alice's robes.

Their interest in his

If More thus took an interest in the children's animals, so they were trained to take an interest in his pursuits. pictures, his cabinet of coins and curiosities, and his literary pursuits. He did everything he could to allure his children on in acquiring knowledge. If an astronomer came in his way he would get him to stay awhile in his house, to teach them all about the stars and planets.2 And it surely must have been More's children whom Erasmus speaks of as learning the Greek alphabet by shooting with their bows and arrows at the letters.3

Letter to his chil

dren in verse.

Unhappily of late More had been long and frequently absent from home. Still, even when away upon an embassy, trudging on horseback dreary stages along the muddy roads, we find him on the saddle composing a metrical letter in Latin to his 'sweetest children, Margaret, Elizabeth, Cicely, and John,' which, when a second edition of his Epigrams' was called for, was added at the end of the volume and printed with the

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1 Colloquy entitled Amicitia.

2 Stapleton's Tres Thomæ, p. 257.

3 Eras. Op. i. p. 511, E.

CHAP.

XVI.

rest by the great printer of Basle1a letter in which
he expresses his delight in their companionship, and
reminds them how gentle and tender a father he has A.D. 1519.
been to them, in these loving words :-

Kisses enough I have given you forsooth, but stripes hardly ever,
If I have flogged you at all it has been with the tail of a peacock!

Manners matured in youth, minds cultured in arts and in knowledge,

Tongues that can speak your thoughts in graceful and elegant language :

These bind my heart to yours with so many ties of affection

That now I love you far more than if you were merely my children.

Go on (for you can!) my children in winning your father's affection,
So that as now your goodness has made me to feel as though

never

I really had loved you before, you may on some future occasion,

Make me to love you so much that my present love may seem nothing!

What a picture lies here, even in these roughly translated lines, of the gentle relation which during years of early sorrow had grown up between the widowed father and the motherless children!

It is a companion-picture to that which Erasmus drew in colours so glowing, of More's home at Chelsea many years after this, when his children were older and he himself Lord Chancellor. What a gleam of light too does it throw into the future, upon that last farewell embrace between Sir Thomas More and

1 Mori Epigrammata: Basle, 1520, | 1518, and does not contain these p. 110. The first edition was printed verses.

at Basle along with the Utopia in

CHAP.
XVI.

A.D. 1519.

More's character.

Margaret Roper upon the Tower-wharf, when even stern soldiers wept to behold their fatherly and daughterly affection!'

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This was the man whom Henry VIII. had at last succeeded in drawing into his court; who reluctantly, this summer of 1519,1 in order that he might fulfil his duties to the King, had laid aside his post of undersheriff in the city and his private practice at the bar; 'who now,' to quote the words of Roper, was often 'sent for by the King into his traverse, where sometimes ' in matters of astronomy, geometry, divinity, and such ' other faculties, and sometimes of his worldly affairs, 'he would sit and confer with him. And otherwhiles in the night would he have him up into the leads, there to consider with him the diversities, courses, 'motions, and operations of the stars and planets.

And because he was of a pleasant disposition, it 'pleased the King and Queen after the Council had supped for their pleasure commonly to call for him to 'be merry with them. Till he,' continues Roper, perceiving them so much in his talk to delight that he 'could not once in a month get leave to go home to his wife and his children (whose company he most

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desired), and to be absent from court two days together but that he should be thither sent for again; 'much misliking this restraint of his liberty, began thereupon somewhat to dissemble his nature, and so 'by little and little from his former mirth to disuse ' himself.'2

This was the man who, after trying as hard to keep

1 Mackintosh's Life of Sir Thomas 2 Roper, p. 12.

More, p. 73, quoting City Records.'

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