Page:The reign of William Rufus and the accession of Henry the First.djvu/60

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coronation of Rufus; he simply prayed Lanfranc to crown him, if the Primate deemed such an act a rightful one.[1] As far as the will of the dying king went, one alone of the Witan of England, the first certainly among them alike in rank and in renown, was bidden to make the choice of the next sovereign on behalf of the whole kingdom.

The special agency of Lanfranc in the promotion of William Rufus is noticed by all the writers who give any detailed account of his accession.[2] Nor was it likely that, when the Archbishop was to be the one elector, the claims of the candidate should be refused. It would seem indeed as if Lanfranc doubted for a moment whether he ought to take upon himself the responsibility of the choice.[3] But everything must have helped to make him ready to carry out the wishes of his late master. That they were the Conqueror's last wishes was no small matter, and Lanfranc had every personal reason to incline him the same way. To make William Rufus king was to promote the man who stood in a special relation to himself, who had been in some sort his pupil, and whom he had himself girded with the belt of knighthood.[4] And it really seems as if there was no other elector besides Lanfranc himself. For once in our history we read of a king succeeding without any formal election, without any meeting of the Witan before the coronation. Within three weeks of the death of the first William, the second William was full king over the land. As soon as he had heard the last wishes of his father, as soon as the dying king had dictated the all-important letter which was to ex-*

  1. See N. C. vol. iv. p. 706, note 3.
  2. See Appendix A.
  3. See Appendix A.
  4. Will. Malms, iv. 305. "Eum nutrierat et militem fecerat." So Matthew Paris, Hist. Ang. i. 35.