he interments
of many others in the next thirty years who were not of royal blood, and
were bitterly opposed to kings and all that pertained to them, save
power.
Two years after Francis Villiers was killed at Kingston, Ireton,
Cromwell's son-in-law, was buried in a vault at the extreme east of
Henry the Seventh's Chapel. Then came Blake, the first of England's
naval heroes--Colonel Mackworth, one of Cromwell's Council--Sir William
Constable, one of the regicides--Worsley, Oliver's "great and rising
favorite." And Bradshaw, Lord President of the High Court of Justice,
was laid "in a superb tomb among the kings."
Ten years after Francis Villiers' death, Cromwell's favorite
daughter--the sweet Elizabeth Claypole--was buried in a vault close to
the entrance of the Villiers Chapel. She was the "Betty" of Cromwell's
earlier letters, "who belongs to the sect of the seekers rather than the
finders. Happy are they who find--most happy are they who seek."[92]
The great Protector never held up his head after the death of this
lovable woman; and within a month of his daughter's funeral "his most
serene and renowned highness, Oliver, Lord Protector, was taken to his
rest"[93] in the same Chapel in which we have spent so much time of
late.
If we needed any fresh proof that the great Abbey of Westminster is a
sign and symbol of reconciliation, here is one. Within its walls Kings
and Covenanters, Puritan women, and gallant young Cavalier nobles who
fought against those women's husbands and fathers, lie side by side. The
feuds, the hatreds, the heart-burnings, the differences, political and
religious, are all forgotten; and nothing is left but the common
brotherhood of man with man, in the still peaceful atmosphere of the
Abbey Church of St. Peter.
FOOTNOTES:
[80] Stanley. "Memorials of Westminster." p. 237.
[81] Clarendon. Vol. I. p. 16.
[82] "Short History of English People." Green, p. 488.
[83] "Life of George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham." Bryan Fairfax.
[84] Fairfax.
[85] Clarendon. Vol. XI. p. 102.
[86] Ibid. Vol. XI. p. 102.
[87] When he left London he ordered his steward, Mr. John May, to bring
him a list of his debts, and he so charged his estate with them, that
the Parliament, who seized on the estate, payed the debt.--FAIRFAX.
[88] Clarendon. Vol. XI. p. 104.
[89] Fairfax.
[90] Clarendon. Vol. XI. p. 105.
[91] "Court and Times of Charles the First." Vol. I. p. 391.
[92] Carlyle's Cro
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