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John Ball preaches

"Ah, ye good people," he would say, "matters will not go well in England until everything is owned in common, and there are no longer villains nor gentlemen, but all are united together. Now, the revolution. lords are clothed in velvets and furs, while we are clothed with poor cloth. They have wines, spices, and good bread, while we live upon chaff and drink water. They dwell in fine houses, while we have pain and labor, wind and rain, in the fields. And when the produce is raised by our labors, they take it, and consume it; and we are called their bondmen, and, unless we serve them readily, we are beaten."

He summed up his teaching in this verse, which was everywhere repeated:

The peas

"When Adam delved and Eve span,

Who was then the gentleman ?"

But John Ball was not the chief leader of the movement when the peasants actually broke out into revolt. That position was held by a peasant named ants rebel Wat (or Walter) Tyler, who had great Tyler (1381). courage, was a good speaker, and knew how to get and to keep the support of his followers.

under Wat

First, the peasants attacked their own landlords, burned the records which showed the services they owed, destroyed the deer-parks, and emptied the fish ponds. Lawyers were put to death wherever met with, for it was by their aid that the peasants were oppressed. Then the peasants made their way to London-perhaps 100,000 of them-and were secretly aided and encouraged by the apprentices and poor citizens of the capital. London bridge fell into their hands, and they entered the city, burning the houses of those great lords whom they held responsible for misgovernment, freeing prisoners,

and rioting and plundering everywhere. It was no wonder that the chief officers of the government, in their refuge in the Tower, with their fifteen year old King, trembled for their lives.

The next day, Richard II. met the rebels in a large open place called Mile End. He heard their grievances, and granted them a charter by which they The young were no longer to be serfs, and were to have King grants their lands at a low rent. Many of the rebels demands. then returned home. The day after this, Richard met

their

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those who remained, under Wat Tyler, at a place called Smithfield, where they demanded further reformsfree hunting and fishing, and the right to take fuel and timber for building from the woods, and the division of

the church property. The King pretended to accept these demands, also.

Tyler slain and the revolt

This meeting took place at some little distance from the peasant forces, and the peasants could not see what was going on between their leader and the King. One of the courtiers took this opporcrushed. tunity to pick a quarrel with Tyler, and slew him. His followers were told that their leader would meet them elsewhere. When they discovered how they had been tricked, they were panic-stricken, and soon scattered to their homes.

According to one account, young Richard showed great courage when the peasants discovered how they had been deprived of their leader. As the story goes, they began to place arrows on their bow-strings to avenge his death; but Richard rode boldly forward, and said: What need you, my masters ? Would you shoot your King? I will be your captain."

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When the revolt was over, the government declared that the promises which had been made to the peasants were not binding, and that everything should be as it had been before. The leaders of the rebellion, including John Ball, were brought to trial and put to death.

In spite of the withdrawal of the promises made to the peasants, villainage gradually came to an end. Landlords found that unwilling service was unprofitable, and within a hundred years after the great Peasants' Revolt, villains had practically ceased to exist in England.

Besides the religious troubles connected with Wyclif's teachings, and the social troubles connected with the

Political

under Richard.

Peasant Revolt, the reign of Richard II. was struggles filled with political troubles, which ended in his being deposed and another King chosen in his place.

It would take too long to tell the story of all these troubles-how Parliament appointed a commission to guide the King's rule; how the King's judges declared

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Notice the houses built on the bridge, also the heads over the bridge gate

that the leaders of Parliament had committed treason; how those leaders collected an army and defeated the King's forces; how the King's friends were hanged or exiled by order of "the Merciless Parliament"; how the

King declared himself of age, and ruled wisely for eight years; how he suddenly changed, and put to death or banished his worst enemies; how he surrounded Parliament with his archers, and compelled it to give him a tax for life, and to grant him greater powers than any other English King had ever had. His triumph helped him little, for he did not know how to use power when once it was in his hands.

Henry of Bolingbroke exiled.

One of the most powerful men of the kingdom was Henry of Bolingbroke, son of the Duke of Lancaster. His father, who was called John of Gaunt, was the third son of Edward III., and Henry himself was Duke of Hereford. He had shown himself a good knight, by fighting for a time in eastern Germany against the heathen Slavs, and by going on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. He first sided

against Richard II., and then for him; but Richard took the opportunity, offered by Henry's quarrel with another nobleman, to banish both from the kingdom. Then, while Henry of Bolingbroke was absent, his father died (in 1399), and Richard seized the lands of the Duke of Lancaster for himself.

He returns

throws

To recover this inheritance, Henry of Bolingbroke landed in England with sixty followers. The sixty soon became sixty thousand, for all classes of and over- people were offended by Richard's rule. At this time, Richard was in Ireland, carrying on war; so his enemies were free to gather their forces. When Richard hastily returned, he found himself deserted by everyone, and soon fell into Henry's hands.

Richard.

"Your people, my lord," said Henry, “complain that for twenty years you have ruled them harshly. However, if it please God, I will help you to rule them better." Soon this pretense was thrown off, and Richard was

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