Page:The reign of William Rufus and the accession of Henry the First.djvu/160

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point is that Lanfranc seems to avoid giving any direct answer to Bishop William's claim to appeal to a court beyond the sea. Instead of stoutly denying the right of any English subject to appeal to any foreign power from the judgement of the highest court in England, he falls back into Bishop William's own subtleties about "fief" and "bishopric;" and he appeals to the case of Odo, where it was only the Earl and not the Bishop who was dealt with. The verbal question goes on, till the Bishop declares that he has no skill to dispute against the wisdom of Lanfranc; he has been driven to appeal to the apostolic see, and he wishes to have the leave of the King and the Archbishop to go to the see to which he has appealed. A third time does he, at Lanfranc's bidding, leave the hall while this question is debated by the King and his council. On his return the final sentence is pronounced by the mouth of Hugh of Beaumont. As the Bishop has refused to answer the charges brought against him by the King, as he invites the King to a tribunal at Rome, the Bishop's fief is declared forfeited by the judgement of the King's court and the barons. It really says a good deal for the long-suffering of the prelates and barons, and of the Red King himself, that Bishop William again ventured to make his appeal in more offensive terms than before. He is ready, in any place where justice reigns and not violence, to purge himself of all charges of crime and perjury. He will prove in the Roman Church that the