Yes, often the most entertaining movies do gloss over things. That’s Hollywood. We must dive into our history books for the truth.
**Definitions: **Actually, the term trolling, long before it was borrowed as an internet term, was much more descriptive in its original, ancient use. I was using the etymology of the original meaning, of course, as it perfectly describes him as a man willing to murder (and/or at least assure several lady’s deaths or tower imprisonments for questionable reasons) or to nullify/cast off and/or /abuse wives and mistresses as blithely as he did, and I allow no excuses for the politics of his time, as St. Thomas More lived in the same times and was sublimely heroic.
(Forgive a lady’s perspective.)
For my definition: Here is the wiki link:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troll_(Internet
“creatures bent on mischief and wickedness” (See Etymology under old Norse meaning).
“Great customs” may “curtsy to great kings,” but I could not bow to such a person who flings off wives and mistresses like fleas. You may quote me. The man did undue harm to wives and Holy Church.
He hanged saints.
We cannot think of Henry VIII as a patient nobleman merely waiting for due process of law. Even for a man of his time, his appetites and ruthlessness were legendary, whereas compared to our dear St. Thomas More, Old Henry was most certainly bent on the mischief and wickedness of defying Church at what became a critical juncture of history.
That is why the advantage of time’s passage helps us in measuring a man. Long after he is gone, we may forgive him for all his evils, admire his gifts, understand what he faced, yet see, act by act, how his true nature worked to create either maelstrom or model of Heaven.
What he left in his wake chills the spine. What St. Thomas More left was to us was the hero’s legacy, martyrdom, humility and brilliance under pain of death that inspires every generation following. Same times, same circumstances, yet two men a universe apart.
I do admire your fine scholarship and it helps to sharpen my own.
I pray you will understand a lady’s :nun1:feelings on such a terror as King Henry VIII.
All best wishes to you
Kathryn Ann