The Portal Archive September 2011 | Page 6

THE P RTAL September 2011 Saint John Kemble Page 6 A Recusant Martyr by Joanna Bogle In Monmouthshire, a tradition lingered for a long time that the last pipe of the day was known as a “Kemble pipe”. This was in honour of St John Kemble, hero priest and martyr, who died for the Catholic faith in his 80s, as a result of the Titus Oates Plot. We marked his feast-day on August 22 nd . worked quietly and humbly John Kemble was ordained a priest in 1625 after studying at Douai in France. It was illegal at that time to be a Catholic priest, and savage penal laws were in force. But in the part of Wales where he ministered, Catholicism was quietly flourishing and the Faith was practised openly, under the protection of the local landowners at Raglan Castle. John Kemble, whose family were well known as recusants, worked quietly and humbly and was much-loved, by Catholics and Protestants alike. He travelled around Monmouthshire bringing the Mass and the Sacraments to people for over fifty years. Only with the rabble-rousing campaigning of Titus Oates did things change. He was a liar and a perjurer who started a rumour that Catholics were plotting to murder the king, Charles II. There was no truth in Oates’ stories, but his campaign gave thugs an opportunity to earn cash and popularity. A local bully began to name Catholics in Monmouthshire who he said were part of the “plot”. Father Kemble was among those arrested. The situation was all the more ridiculous because he and his whole family were known to be patriots – a nephew had been instrumental in saving the king’s life some years previously. arrested in 1679 The elderly Father Kemble was arrested in 1679 and sentenced under the law which had been established in the reign of Elizabeth I, which established the death penalty for any man who went abroad to train as a Catholic priest. He could have saved his life if he had pretended there was indeed a plot against the King and provided plausible details about it. But he was not prepared to lie. He said that he was perfectly prepared to die for the Catholic Church – the Church which had brought Christianity to his country. By now the truth had begun to emerge about Titus Oates and it was clear that there was not, and never had been any plot by Catholics against the king. But it had become clear that John Kemble was a Catholic priest, and had been living and working as one for several decades – and this was theoretically against the law, so unless he was prepared to deny his priesthood the court had to do something. sentence of death The sentence of death was pronounced on August 22 nd , and Kemble made just one request – that he be allowed to smoke a last pipe and say his prayers. The magistrate – who had not wanted to sentence him and had tried every possible way to avoid doing so – asked that a bowl of wine be brought for the old priest too. And so John Kemble spent his last hours calmly, and then went to his death. It was a cruel death because the executioner was distressed and confused and did not want to carry out his task, and so bungled it, inflicting suffering as the rope was mishandled and death took almost half an hour. John Kemble’s courage and faith established him as a saint locally and the story of his life and death was passed on from one generation to the next. Today he is honoured as one of the Martyrs of England and Wales, canonised by Pope Paul VI in 1970. St John Kemble, priest, patriot, man of valour, man of prayer, dedicated to truth, pray for us.