On the early morning of the 17th of May 1536, several men, among them
the queen’s own brother, were escorted out of the western entrance of
the Tower, under heavy guard.
They were George Boleyn, as well as Sir Henry Norris, Sir Francis Weston, Sir William Brereton, and Mark Smeaton.
Large crowds had assembled on Tower Green to watch the bloody
spectacle – the execution of those men who had once been favored by His
Majesty and held power at the royal court.
The crowd were virtually silent, with little booing and jeering, as was common with normal state executions.
As the highest-ranked man among the condemned prisoners, George
Boleyn was the first one to climb the scaffold and meet his maker.
George’s
scaffold speech was both conventional, and dramatic ~ he acknowledged
that he had been condemned by the law and hence, merited death, because
he was a sinner.
He begged forgiveness of anyone he may have offended, and begged for God's forgiveness.
He came close to denying his guilt by declaring,
"beware, trust not in the vanity of the world or the flatteries of the court, or the favour and treacheries of fortune"
After the speech, George bravely knelt at the block.
He was beheaded with one clean strike of the executioner’s axe.
The
young, talented man – a Tudor courtier, poet, and diplomat famous for
his attractive appearance, intelligence, and his reformed religious
views – was murdered.
Norris, Weston, Brereton, and Smeaton soon followed George.
As
George had been killed before them, the scaffold was bloodied, and the
fear of the other men, would have been obvious to see.
They
knew that they were innocent, and were never Anne’s lovers, so must have
held on to their faith, that they would all see each other again, in
Heaven.
Mark Smeaton was the final man to be killed.
Standing
on the scaffold, littered with the headless corpses of those whom he
had once known and been friends with, he must have surely been
terrified.
Yet, he was also fortunate.
As a man of
lower class than the others, he could have been hanged, drawn, and
quartered, so to leave this world by beheading with the axe, was a
kinder fate.
Unfortunately, Smeaton never retracted the confession of his false adultery with Anne.
In
memory of George Boleyn, Sir Henry Norris, Sir Francis Weston, Sir
William Brereton, and Mark Smeaton, may you continue to Rest in Peace
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