To Hold the Crown: The Story of King Henry VII and Elizabeth of York

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Book: Read To Hold the Crown: The Story of King Henry VII and Elizabeth of York for Free Online
Authors: Jean Plaidy
life of a humble priest what king is on the throne?”
    “I like to see justice done,” said Richard piously.
    “We all do as long as it doesn’t do us any harm. We know it could have worked so differently. As you say, Richard might not have died at Bosworth. He might have lived to have sons. Or there might have been others to come to the throne. There’s young Edward of Warwick and his sister Margaret. They are children, I know. But there is John de la Pole, the Earl of Lincoln. They say that Richard made him the heir to the throne . . . in case he didn’t get children of his own . . . on account of the Earl of Warwick’s being but a boy.”
    “The King has young Warwick under lock and key in the Tower, which shows he’s afraid of him. What has this young boy done . . . a boy of ten years or so, to deserve imprisonment? Why he’s as innocent as . . . as . . .”
    A vision of the young Lambert Simnel came into his mind. He must be about the same age as the imprisoned Earl of Warwick.
    “I wonder,” he went on, “why some of them don’t rise up and, er . . . do something about it.”
    “Oh, Henry Tudor is safe on the throne, particularly now he’s married Elizabeth of York . . . uniting the houses . . . and as they’ve got a son . . . young Arthur . . . well, he’s safe enough now.”
    “But I reckon some people feel angry about it. I reckon there’s the Earl of Lincoln for one. . . .”
    He was excited. He wanted to get away to think. He had to be practical. What hope had a poor unknown priest of bringing about a rebellion? Why hadn’t he seen before that he needed help? He was reluctant to share the glory but on the other hand shared glory was better than no glory at all.
    Suppose he went to the Earl of Lincoln. Would the mighty Earl receive a humble priest? But perhaps he would want to see a priest who believed he had made a great discovery.
    And then it seemed to him that he had a sign from Heaven.
    It was his friend who imparted the news to him. He had been wondering how he could find the Earl of Lincoln when his fellow priest said: “Have you heard the latest news? They say that the young Earl of Warwick has escaped from the Tower.”
    Richard’s heart began to hammer against his side. Escaped from the Tower! When? It could have been some time ago because such news took a long time to get around.
    The young Earl of Warwick was aged about ten. He must look rather like the boy in the baker’s shop.
    Now he must act. This had decided him.

    It was not easy to get an audience with the great Earl of Lincoln but when Richard Simon eventually succeeded in doing so what he had to say received the Earl’s full attention.
    John de la Pole was about twenty-three years old. He deeply resented what he called the usurpation of the Tudor. In his view Richard the Third had been the undoubted King and he believed that the children of Edward the Fourth were illegitimate, which made the Earl of Warwick the heir to the throne. Nobody wanted a child king; nothing was worse for the stability of the country; therefore the Earl of Lincoln himself was the one who should be wearing the crown. His mother had been Elizabeth, sister to Edward the Fourth, and therefore he considered his claim indisputable. Richard the Third had thought so too for he had named him his heir.
    “I was struck by the looks of this boy called Lambert Simnel as soon as I perceived him,” said Richard. “He quite clearly did not begin his life in a baker’s shop.”
    “But you do not know what the Earl of Warwick looks like.”
    “That is true, my lord, and my first thoughts were that here was one of the Princes . . . son of Edward the Fourth.”
    “They are illegitimate. They haven’t the same claim to the throne as the Earl of Warwick.”
    “And now that we hear he has escaped from the Tower . . .”
    The Earl nodded.
    “Has he the looks of an earl? Has he the manner?”
    “He has indeed, my lord.”
    “And have you spoken with

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