chapter 16 THE ANGLICAN SETTLEMENT AND
THE SCOTTISH REFORMATION.
WHEN at the beginning
of 1560 there was a new Pope, pledged to convoke the Council for a third time
and to stem and repel the tide of heresy, the latest disaster that met his eye
was no mere relapse of England followed by a lapse of Scotland; for what was
shaping itself in the northern seas already looked ominously like a Protestant
Great Britain. Two small Catholic Powers traditionally at war with each other,
the one a satellite of the Habsburg luminary, the other a satellite of France,
seemed to be fusing themselves in one Power that might be very great: great
perhaps for good, but more probably for evil. “Earnest embracing of religion”,
wrote a Scottish to an English statesman, “will join us straitly together”. The
religion that William Maitland meant when he sent these words to Sir William
Cecil was not the religion of Pius IV and the General Council.
Suddenly all
farsighted eyes had turned to a backward country. Eyes at Rome and eyes at
Geneva were fixed on Scotland, and, the further they could peer into the
future, the more eager must have been their gaze. And still we look intently at
that wonderful scene, the Scotland of Mary Stewart and John Knox: not merely
because it is such glorious tragedy, but also because it is such modern
history. The fate of the Protestant Reformation was being decided, and the
creed of unborn millions in undiscovered lands was being determined. This we
see, all too plainly perhaps, if we read the books that year by year men still
are writing of Queen Mary and her surroundings. The patient analysis of those
love letters in the casket may yet be perturbed by thoughts about religion. Nor
is the religious the only interest. A new nation, a British nation, was in the
making.
We offer no excuse
for having as yet said little of Scotland. Called upon to play for some years a
foremost part in the great drama, her entry upon the stage of modern history is
late and sudden. In such phrases there must indeed be some untruth, for history
is not drama. The annals of Scotland may be so written that the story will be
continuous enough. We may see the explosion of 1559 as the effect of causes
that had long been at work. We might chronicle the remote beginnings of heresy
and the first glimmers of the New Learning. All those signs of the times that
we have seen elsewhere in capital letters we might see here in minuscule. Also,
it would not escape us that, though in the days of Luther and Calvin resistance
to the English and their obstinately impolitic claim of suzerainty still seemed
the vital thread of Scottish national existence, inherited enmity was being
enfeebled, partly by the multiplying perfidies of venal nobles and the
increasing wealth of their paymasters, and partly also by the accumulating
proofs that in the new age a Scotland which lived only to help France and
hamper England would herself be a poor little Power among the nations: doomed,
not only to occasional Floddens and Pinkies, but to
continuous misery, anarchy, and obscurity.
All this deserves,
and finds, full treatment at the hands of the historians of Scotland. They will
also sufficiently warn us that the events of 1560 leave a great deal unchanged.
Faith may be changed; works are much what they were, especially the works of
the magnates. The blood-feud is no less a blood-feud because one family calls
itself Catholic and another calls itself Protestant. The ‘band’ is no less a
‘band’ because it is styled a ‘Covenant’ and makes free with holy names. A King
shall be kidnapped, and a King shall be murdered, as of old: it is the custom
of the country. What is new is that farsighted men all Europe over, not only at
London and at Paris, but at Rome and at Geneva, should take interest in these
barbarous deeds, this customary turmoil.
Continuity there
had been and to spare. In that mournful procession of the five Jameses there is no break (1406-1542). The last of them is
engaged in the old task, and failing as his forbears failed. It is picturesque;
sometimes it is heroic; often it is pathetic; but it is never modern. Modern
history sees it as a funeral procession burying a dead time, and we are silent
while it passes. In a few sentences we make our way towards the momentous
years.
Scotland had been
slow to emerge from the Middle Age. A country which of all others demanded
strong and steady government had been plagued by a series of infant Kings and
contested Regencies. In the sixteenth century its barons still belonged to the
twelfth, despite a thin veneer of French manners. Its institutions were
rudimentary; its Parliaments were feudal assemblies. Since the close of the War
of Independence there had been hardly anything that could properly be called
constitutional growth. Sometimes there was a little imitation of England and
sometimes a little imitation of France, the King appearing as a more or less
radical reformer. But the King died young, leaving an infant son, and his
feudatories had no desire for reformation. The Scottish monarchy, if monarchy
it may be called, was indeed strictly limited; but the limits were set much
rather by the power of certain noble families and their numerous retainers than
by an assembly of Estates expressing the constant will of an organized
community. The prelates, lords, and represented boroughs formed but one
Chamber. Attempts to induce the lesser tenants-in-chief to choose representatives
who would resemble the English knights of the shire had been abortive, and a
bad habit prevailed of delegating the work of a Parliament to a committee known
as “the Lords of the Articles” Normally the assembly of Estates was but the
registrar of foregone conclusions. In troublous times (and the times were often
troublous) the faction that was in power would hold a Parliament, and the other
faction would prudently abstain from attendance. When in 1560 an unusually
full, free and important Parliament was held for the reformation of religion,
an elementary question concerning the right of the minor barons to sit and vote
was still debatable, and for many years afterwards those who desire to see the
true contribution of Scotland to the history of representative institutions
will look, not to the blighted and stunted conclave of the three Estates with
its titular Bishops and Abbots commendatory, but to the fresh and vigorous
Assembly of the Presbyterian Church.
Steady taxation
and all that it implies had been out of the question. The Scots were ready to
fight for their King, unless they happened to be fighting against him; but they
would not provide him with a revenue adequate for the maintenance of public
order. He was expected “to live of his own” in medieval fashion, and his own
was not enough to raise him high above his barons. Moreover, Douglases and Hamiltons and
others, hereditary sheriffs and possessors of “regalities”, were slow to forget
that these crowned stewards of Scotland were no better than themselves. What
had ‘come with a lass’ might ‘go with a lass’, and was in no wise mysterious.
We shall see Queen Mary, widow of a King of France, giving her hand first to a
Lennox-Stewart whose mother is a Douglas and then to a Hepburn, while the heir
presumptive to the throne is the head of the Hamiltons.
We shall see Queen Elizabeth having trouble with northern earls, with Percies and Nevilles, who set up
an altar which she had cast down, and belike would have cast down an altar
which she had set up; but their power to disturb England was as nothing to the
power of disturbing Scotland which was exercised by those near neighbors and
like-minded fellows of theirs who joined the bellicose Congregation of Jesus
Christ. And even in the briefest sketch we must not omit to notice that, as
beyond England lay Scotland, so beyond the historic Scotland lay the unhistoric land of ‘the savages’. The very means that had
been taken by Scottish Kings to make Scotsmen of these ‘red-shanks’ and to
bring these savages within the pale of history had raised up new feudatories of
almost royal rank and of more than baronial turbulence. Thenceforward, the King
would have to reckon, not only with an Albany, an Angus, and an Arran, but also with an Argyll and with a Huntly. When we
see these things we think of the dark age: of Charles the Simple and Rolf the
Pirate.
Neither valorous
feats of arms which overtaxed a people’s strength nor a superabundance of earls
and barons should conceal from us the nakedness of the land. It is more than
probable that in the middle of the sixteenth century the whole of the Scottish
nation, including untamable Highlanders, was not too large to be commodiously
housed in the Glasgow of today. Life was short, and death was violent. It is
true that many hopeful signs of increasing prosperity and enlightenment are
visible in the days of James IV (1488-1513). But those days ended at Flodden.
The flowers of the forest were once more mown down. The hand went back upon the
dial towards poverty and barbarity. An aptitude for letters we may see. Of a
brief springtime of song Scotland may fairly boast, for as yet no icy wind was
blowing from Geneva. Universities we may see : more universities indeed than
the country could well support. By a memorable, if futile, Act of Parliament
James IV attempted to drive the sons of the gentry into the grammar-schools.
But an all-pervading lack of wealth and of the habits that make for wealth was
an impediment to every good endeavour. The printing
press had been in no hurry to reach England (1477); but thirty years more
elapsed before it entered Scotland. An aptitude for jurisprudence we might
infer from subsequent history ; but it is matter of inference. Of lawyers who
were not ecclesiastics, of temporal lawyers comparable to the professionally
learned justices and serjeants of England, we can hardly read a word. When at
length James V founded the College of Justice (1532), half the seats in it, and
indeed one more, were allotted to the clergy, and in later days foreign science
was imported from the continental universities to supply the deficiencies of an
undeveloped system. Scotland had been no place for lawyers, and the temporal
law that might be had there, though it came of an excellent stock, had for the
more part been of the bookless kind. And as with jurisprudence, so with
statesmanship. The Scottish statesman who was not a Bishop was a man of a new
kind when Lethington began his correspondence with
Cecil; for, even if we employ a medieval standard, we can hardly attribute
statecraft or policy to the Albanys and Anguses and
Arrans.
In this poor and
sparsely peopled country the Church was wealthy; the clergy were numerous,
laic, and lazy. The names of ‘dumb dogs’ and ‘idle bellies’ which the new
preachers fixed upon them had not been unearned. Nowhere else was there a
seed-plot better prepared for revolutionary ideas of a religious sort. Nowhere
else would an intelligible Bible be a newer book, or a sermon kindle stranger
fires. Nowhere else would the pious champions of the Catholic faith be
compelled to say so much that was evil of those who should have been their
pastors. Abuses which had been superficial and sporadic in England were widely
spread and deeply rooted in the northern kingdom. In particular, the
commendation of ecclesiastical benefices to laymen, to babies, had become a
matter of course. The Lord James Stewart, the King’s base-born son, who at the
critical moment is Prior of St Andrews and sits in Parliament as a member of
the spiritual Estate, is a typical figure. The corslet had ‘clattered’ beneath
the Archbishop’s cassock, and when Bishops and Abbots lie among the dead on
Flodden field they have done no less but no more than their duty. We say that
the Scottish Church was rich, and so it nominally was, for the kirk-lands were
broad; but when the Protestant ministers, much to their own disappointment, had
to be content with a very small fraction of the old ecclesiastical revenues,
they had probably secured a larger share than had for a long time past been
devoted to any purpose more spiritual than the sustentation of royal,
episcopal, and baronial families. We exclaim against the greedy nobles whose
lust for the kirk-lands is one of the operative forces in the history of the
Scottish Reformation. They might have said that they were only rearranging on a
reasonable and modern basis what had long been for practical purposes the
property of their class. Their doings send back our thoughts to far-off
Carolingian days, when the ‘benefice’ became the hereditary fief. To the King
it was, no doubt, convenient that the power of those nobles who would leave
heirs should be balanced by the power of other nobles, called prelates, whose
children would not be legitimate. But such a system could not be stable, and
might at any time provoke an overwhelming outcry for its destruction, if ever
one bold man raised his voice against it. Men who are not themselves very moral
can feel genuine indignation when they detect immorality among those who,
though no worse than themselves, pretend to superior holiness. Prelates, and
even primates of Scotland, who were bastards and the begetters of bastards,
were the principal fore-runners and coadjutors of John Knox; and unfortunately
they were debarred by professional rules from pleading that they, or the best
among them, were in truth the respectable husbands of virtuous wives.
Lollardy too there
had been, and in some corners of the land it had never been thoroughly
extirpated. Also there had been a little burning, but far from enough to
accustom the Scots to the sight of a heretic tortured by the flames. Then the
German leaven began to work, and from 1528 onwards a few Lutherans were burnt.
The protomartyr was Patrick Hamilton, the young and well born Abbot of Ferne.
Like many another Scottish youth he had been at the University of Paris.
Afterwards he had made a pilgrimage, if not to Wittenberg, at all events to
Marburg. It is characteristic of time and place that historians have to
consider whether a feud between Douglases and Hamiltons counts for nothing in his martyrdom. “The reek of
Patrick Hamilton”, we are told, “infected many; and we can well believe it”.
The College of St Leonard was tainted with humanism and new theology. Young men
fled from Scotland and made fame elsewhere. Such were Alexander Aless, who as Alesius became the
friend of Melanchthon, and John Macalpine, who as Machabaeus professed divinity at Copenhagen. Such also was
George Buchanan, the humanist and the Calvinist, the tutor and the calumniator
of Queen Mary. And we see the Wedderburns who are
teaching Scotsmen to sing ballads of a novel kind, “good and godly ballads”,
but such as priests are loth to hear. And we see Sir
David Lindsay, the herald, the poet, the King's friend, scourging the lives and
sometimes the beliefs of the clergy with verses which rich and poor will know
by heart. In short, there was combustible material lying about in large
quantities, and sparks were flying.
But the day of
revolt was long delayed. What held in check the rebellious and even the Reforming
forces, was the best of Scottish traditions, the undying distrust of an England
which claimed an overlordship; and in the days of Henry VIII no wholesomer tradition could there be. His father had schemed
for amity by way of matrimonial alliance, and Margaret Tudor had become the
wife and mother of Scottish Kings. It was plain that in the age of great
monarchies England would be feeble so long as she had a hostile Scotland behind
her. But the Tudor would not see that he could not annex Scotland, or that a
merely annexed Scotland would still be the old enemy. Just as in the days of
the Great Schism England had acknowledged one, and Scotland the other, of the
rival Popes, so in the new days of a greater schism James V became the better
Catholic because his bullying uncle had broken with Rome. As was natural for a
King of Scots, he leant upon the support of the clergy, and thereby he offended
his barons. They failed him in his hour of need. After the shameful rout at
Solway Moss, he turned his face to the wall and died, a worn-out desperate man
at the age of thirty years (December 14, 1542).
His wife, Mary of
Lorraine, the sister of those Guises who were to be all-powerful in France, had
just borne him a daughter : she was the ill-fated Mary Stewart (December 8,
1542). Once more, a baby was to be crowned in Scotland. Next to her in
hereditary succession stood a remote cousin, the head of the House of Hamilton,
James Earl of Arran, the Châtelherault of after times. But his right depended on the validity of a divorce which some
might call in question; and Matthew Stewart, Earl of Lennox, had pretensions.
At the head of the Scottish clergy stood the able, though dissolute, Archbishop
of St Andrews, Cardinal David Beton. For a moment it
seemed as if a Reformed religion, or some northern version of Henricanism, was to have its chance. The nobles chose Arran for Regent; many of them envied the clergy; many were
in Henry’s pay. Arran for a while inclined towards
England; he kept heretical chaplains; a Parliament, in spite of clerical
protest, declared that the Bible might be read in the vulgar tongue. Beton had been imprisoned; a charge of falsifying the late
King’s will had been brought against him. Henry’s opportunity had come : the
little Queen was to be wedded to Edward Tudor. But Henry was the worst of
unionists. He bribed, but he also blustered, and let all men see that Scotland
must be his by foul means if not by fair. A treaty was signed (July 1, 1543);
but within six months (December 11) it was repudiated by the Scots. Meanwhile
the feeble Arran, under pressure of an interdict, had
reconciled himself with Beton and had abjured his
heresies. The old league with France was re-established. Henry then sent fleet
and army. Edinburgh was burnt (May, 1544). The Lowlands were ravaged with
pitiless ferocity. The Scottish resistance was feeble. There were many
traitors. The powerful Douglases played a double
part. Lennox was for the English, and was rewarded with the hand of Henry’s
niece, Margaret Douglas. But Scotland could not be annexed, the precious child
could not be captured, and Henry could not yet procure the murder of the
Cardinal.
Battle of Pinkie.
[1543-7
Patriotism and
Catholicism were now all one. Not but that there were Protestants. One George
Wishart, who had been in Switzerland and at Cambridge, was preaching the
Gospel, and some (but this is no better than a guess) would identify him with a
Wishart who was plotting Beton’s murder. He had
powerful protectors, and among his disciples was a man of middle age, born in
1505, who as yet had done nothing memorable; he was priest, notary, private
tutor; his name was John Knox. Wishart was arrested, tried and burnt for heresy
(March 2,1546). Thereupon a band of assassins burst into the castle of St
Andrews and slew Beton (May 29, 1546). The leaders
were well born men, Leslies, Kirkaldys, Melvilles. Their motives were various. Ancient feuds
and hopes of English gold were mingled with hatred for a “bloody butcher of the
saints of God”. They held the castle and the town. The ruffianly and the godly
flocked in. There was a strange mixture of debauchery and gospel in the St
Andrews of those days. John Knox appeared there and was called to preach to the
congregation; reluctantly (so he says) he accepted the call. The Regent had
laid siege, but had failed. At length came French ships with requisite
artillery. The besieged capitulated (July, 1547); they were to be taken to
France and there liberated. John Knox was shipped off with the rest, and was
kept in the galleys for nineteen months, to meditate on faith that justifies.
Meanwhile Henry of
England had died (January 28, 1547); but the Protector Somerset was bent on
marrying his boy King to the girl Queen. He had excellent projects in his head.
He could speak of a time when England and Scotland would be absorbed and
forgotten in Great Britain; but the French also were busy around Mary Stewart.
So he led an army northwards, and fought the battle of Pinkie (September 10,
1547). No more decisive defeat could have been inflicted on the Scottish host
and the Britannic idea. Other events called Somerset home. The Scots could
always be crushed in the field, but Scotland could not be annexed. Then came
help from the good friend France, in the shape of French, German, and Italian
troops; the English employed Germans and Spaniards. A Parliament decided to
accept a French proposal (July, 1548) : the Queen of Scots should marry, not the
English King, but young Francis the Dauphin, and meantime should be placed out
of harm’s way. She was shipped off at Dumbarton, and landed in Britanny (August 13, 1548) to pass a happy girlhood in a
lettered and luxurious Court. The war was prosecuted with a bloodthirst new in
the savage annals of the borders; it was a war fought by mercenary Almains.
When peace was signed in 1550, England had gained nothing, and upon the surface
(though only upon the surface) Scotland was as Catholic as ever it had been,
grateful to France, bitterly resentful against heretical England.
During the
struggle Mary of Lorraine had borne herself bravely; she appeared as the
guiding spirit of a national resistance. She or her advising kinsfolk were soon
to make, though in less brutal sort, the mistake that Henry VIII had made, and
this time it was to be irretrievable. During a visit to France (September,
1550-October, 1551) she schemed with her brothers and the French King. She was
to take Arran’s place as Regent; he had been compensated
with the duchy (no empty title) of Châtelherault, and
his eldest son (who now becomes the Arran of our
story) was to command the French King’s Scots guard. The arrangement was not
perfected until 1554, for “the second person in the kingdom” was loth to relax
his hold on a land of which he might soon be King; but the French influence was
strong, and he yielded. Mary of Lorraine was no bad ruler for Scotland; but
still the Scots could not help seeing that she was ruling in the interest of a
foreign Power. Moreover, there had been a change in the religious environment:
Mary Tudor had become Queen of England (July 6, 1558). John Knox, who after his
sojourn in the French galleys had been one of King Edward’s select preachers
and had narrowly escaped the bishopric of Rochester, was fleeing to Geneva; and
thence he went to Frankfort, there to quarrel with his fellow exile Dr Cox over
the Book of Common Prayer. In Scotland Catholicism had been closely allied with
patriotism; but when England became Catholic, Protestant preachers found refuge
in Scotland. The King of France was cherishing the intrigues of English
heretics against the Spanish Queen; Mary of Lorraine was no fanatic, and her
policy was incompatible with stern repression. She was trying to make Scotland
more securely French; the task was delicate; and she needed the support of
nobles who had little love for the clergy. A few high offices were given to
Frenchmen; a few French soldiers were kept in the fortresses; they were few,
but enough to scatter whole hosts of undrilled Scots. An attempt to impose a
tax for the support of troops was resisted, and the barons showed a strange
reluctance to fight the English. At length the time came for the Queen’s
marriage (April 24, 1558). The Scottish statesmen had laboriously drawn a
treaty which should guard the independence of their realm and the rights of the
House of Hamilton. This was signed; but a few days earlier Mary Stewart had set
her hand to other documents which purported to convey Scotland for good and all
to the King of France. We may find excuses for the girl; but, if treason can be
committed by a sovereign, she was a traitor. She had treated Scotland as a
chattel. The act was secret; but the Scots guessed much and were uneasy.
John Knox and the
Congregation. [1555-8
In the meantime
Calvinism, for it was Calvinism now, was spreading. After the quarrels at
Frankfort, Knox had gone back to Geneva and had sat at the master’s feet. In
1555 he returned to Scotland, no mere preacher, but an organizer also. He went
through the country, and Churches of the new order sprang into being where he
went. Powerful nobles began to listen, such as Lord Lorne, who was soon to be
Earl of Argyll, and the Queen’s bastard brother, the Lord James Stewart, who
was to be Earl of Moray and Regent. And politicians listened also, such as
William Maitland, the young laird of Lethington. Knox
was summoned before an ecclesiastical Court (May 15,1556); but apparently at
the last moment the hearts of the clergy failed them, and the prosecution was
abandoned. It was evident that he had powerful supporters, especially the Earl
of Glencairn. Moreover the natural leader of the clergy, John Hamilton, the
Primate of Scotland, was a bastard brother of Châtelherault and, as a Hamilton, looked with suspicion on the French policy of Mary of
Lorraine, so that the chiefs of Church and State were not united. However, Knox
had no mind for martyrdom; and so, after sending to the Regent an admonitory
letter, which she cast aside with scornful words, he again departed for Geneva
(July, 1556). Then the Bishops summoned him once more; but only his effigy
could be burnt.
The preaching went
on. In the last days of 1557 the first Covenant was signed. “The Congregation
of Jesus Christ”, of which Argyll, Glencairn, and other great men were members,
stood out in undisguised hostility to that “congregation of Satan” which styled
itself the Catholic Church. They demanded that King Edward’s Prayer Book (which
was good enough for them if not for their absent inspirer) should be read in
all the churches. The Regent was perplexed; the French marriage had not yet
been secured; but she did not prevent the prelates from burning one Walter
Milne, who was over eighty years of age (April, 1558). He was the last of the
Protestant martyrs; they had not been numerous, even when judged by the modest
English standard; fanaticism was not among the many faults of the Scottish
prelates; but for this reason his cruel death made the deeper mark. On St
Giles' day (September 1) in 1558 that Saint's statue was being carried through
the town of Edinburgh, of which he was the patron. Under the eyes of the Regent
the priests were rabbled and the idol was smashed in pieces. It was plain that
the next year would be stormy; and at this crisis the face of England was once
more changed.
A few weeks later
Henry Percy, brother of the Earl of Northumberland, was talking with the Duke
of Châtelherault. God, said the Englishman, has sent
you a true and Christian religion. We are on the point of receiving the same
boon. Why should you and we be enemies - we who are hardly out of our
servitude to Spain; you who are being brought into servitude by France? The
liberties in Scotland are in jeopardy and the rights of the Hamiltons.
Might we not unite in the maintenance of God’s Word and national independence?
This is the ideal which springs to light in the last months of 1558 :
deliverance from the toils of foreign potentates; amity between two sister
nations; union in a pure religion. The Duke himself was a waverer; his duchy lay
in France; he is the Antoine de Bourbon of Scottish history; but his son the
Earl of Arran had lately installed a Protestant
preacher at Châtelherault and was in correspondence
with Calvin. Percy reported this interview to an English lady who had once been
offered to the Duke as a bride for Arran and had just
become Queen Elizabeth.
Mary, Queen of
England and Spain, died on the 17th of November, 1558. The young woman at
Hatfield, who knew that her sister’s days were numbered, had made the great
choice. Ever since May it had been clear that she would soon be Queen. The
Catholics doubted and feared, but had no other candidate; King Philip was
hopeful. So Elizabeth was prepared. William Cecil was to be her secretary, and
England was to be Protestant. Her choice may surprise us. When a few months
later she is told by the Bishop of Aquila that she has been imprudent, he seems
for once to be telling the truth.
Had there been no
religious dissension, her title to the throne would hardly have been contested
among Englishmen. To say nothing of her father’s will, she had an unrepealed
statute in her favor. Divines and lawyers might indeed have found it difficult
to maintain her legitimate birth. Parliament had lately declared that her
father was lawfully married to Catharine of Aragon, and with this good
Catholics would agree. But there was another scandal, of which good Protestants
might take account. Elizabeth’s godfather, the Henrican Archbishop and Protestant martyr, had adjudged that Henry was never married to
Anne Boleyn. His reasons died with him; but something bad, something nameless,
might be guessed. It is sometimes said that Elizabeth's birth condemned her to
be Protestant or bastard. But it would be truer to say that, had she cared much
about legitimacy, she would have made her peace with Rome. Hints came to her
thence, that the plenitude of power can set these little matters straight for
the benefit of well-disposed princes; and in papal eyes Cranmer’s sentence
would have been a prejudice in her favor. But pure legitimism, the legitimism
of the divine entail, was yet in its infancy, and neither Protestant nor
Catholic was bound to deny that a statute of the realm may set a bastard on the
throne of William the Conqueror. For the people at large it would be enough
that the Lady Elizabeth was the only living descendant of old King Henry, and
that beyond her lay civil war. The thin stream of Tudor blood was running dry.
Henry’s will (but its validity might be questioned) had postponed the issue of
his elder to that of his younger sister : in other words, the House of Scotland
to the House of Suffolk. Mary Stewart was born in Scotland; she could not have
inherited an acre of English land, and it was highly doubtful whether English
law would give the crown to an alien who was the child of two aliens. Neither
her grandmother’s second marriage, namely that with Archibald Douglas (whence
sprang Lady Lennox and her son Lord Darnley), nor the marriage of Mary Tudor
with Charles Brandon (whence sprang Greys and Stanleys) was beyond reproach;
few marriages were beyond reproach in those days of loose morals and conniving
law. John Knox at Geneva had, to Calvin’s regret, just blown a first blast of
the trumpet against the monstrous regiment of women, and unfortunately, though the
tone was new, the tune was not. The Scottish gospeller could only repeat the biblical and other arguments that had been used a century
ago by that Lancastrian sage, Chief Justice Fortescue. No woman had sat upon
the English throne, save Mary, and she (it might be said) was a statutory
Queen. Many people thought that next in right to Elizabeth stood Henry
Hastings, who was no Tudor but a Yorkist; and already in 1565 Philip of Spain
was thinking of his own descent from Edward III. Thus Elizabeth’s statutory
title stood between England and wars of the roses which would also be wars of
religion.
At this moment,
however, she put a difference of creed between herself and the Dauphiness. It
may be that in any case Henry II of France, who was in want of arguments for
the retention of Calais, would have disputed Elizabeth’s legitimacy; it was
said that he had been prepared to dispute the legitimacy of her Catholic
sister. But had Elizabeth been Catholic, the French and Scottish claim to her
throne would have merely been an enemy's insult : an insult to England, a
challenge to Spain. As it was, Henry might lay a strong case before the Pope
and the Catholic world: Elizabeth was bastard and heretic to boot, and at this
moment Paul IV was questioning Ferdinand's election to the Empire because some
of his Electors were Lutherans. That heretics are not to rule was no new
principle ; the Counts of Toulouse had felt its edge in the old Albigensian
days.
1558] Elizabeth
and foreign Powers.
After the fall of
Calais in January (1558) England was panic-stricken. The French were coming;
the Scots were coming; Danes and Hanseats were
coming. German troops were being hastily hired to protect Northumberland.
Philip’s envoy, the Count of Feria, saw incompetence everywhere. The nobles
held aloof, while some aged clergymen tried to conduct a war. He hardly dared
to think what would happen if a few French ships touched the shore. Since then,
there had been some improvement. No invader had landed, and Guise’s capture of Thionville had been balanced by Egmont’s victory at Gravelines. Shortly before Mary’s death negotiations for a
peace were begun at Cercamp; the outline of the
scheme was a restoration of conquests. But Calais stopped the way. The French
could not surrender that prize, and they were the more constant in their
determination because the King of Spain would not much longer be King of
England, and an isolated England would have no conquest to restore. When
Elizabeth became Queen, Calais was not yet lost; that was the worst of it. Both
Kings were weary of the war; behind both yawned gulfs of debt and heresy. But
the ruler of the Netherlands was deeply concerned in the recovery of Calais,
perhaps more materially, though less sentimentally, than were the English.
Feria has reported the profound remark that when Calais was captured many
Englishmen ceased to go to church. A Protestant Elizabeth might have to sign
away the last memorial of old glories; and that would not fill the churches.
Philip, it might be plain, would not suffer the French to invade England
through Scotland; but the tie between Spain and an heretical England would be
the coolest selfishness, the King's mind would he distracted between his faith
and his policy, and if he were compelled to save England from the French, he
certainly would not save England for the English.
True that for
Protestant eyes there was light on the horizon. Anyone could see that there
would be religious troubles in France and Scotland. Geneva was active, and Rome
seemed to be doting. That summer the psalms had gone up loudly from the Pré-aux-Clercs, and a Châtillon had been arrested. That autumn St Giles of
Edinburgh had lain prostrate in the mud. Expectant heirs and royal cadets,
Bourbons and Hamiltons, were wavering; Maximilian was
listening to an enlightened pastor; France, Scotland, the Empire, might someday
fall to evangelical lords. Good news came from Poland, Bohemia, and Hungary; it
was even rumored that the Pope would at last succeed in shaking Philip’s faith.
Still, the black fact of the moment was that Philip and Henry were making peace
in order that they might crush their respective heretics. And England’s
military weakness was patent to all. Her soldiers and captains were
disgracefully old-fashioned, and what gunpowder she had was imported from the
Netherlands. “To make a lewd comparison”, said an Englishman, “England is as a
bone thrown between two dogs”. Was this bone to display an irritating activity
of its own, merely because the two dogs seemed for the moment to be equal and
opposite? To more than one mind came the same thought : “They will make a
Piedmont of England”.
Within the country
the prospect was dubious. The people were discontented : defeat and shame,
pestilence and famine had lately been their lot. A new experiment would be
welcome; but it would miserably fail were it not speedily successful. No doubt,
the fires in Smithfield had harmed the Catholic cause by confirming the faith
and exasperating the passions of the Protestants. No doubt, the Spanish
marriage was detested. But we may overestimate the dislike of persecution and
the dislike of Spain. No considerable body of Englishmen would deny that
obstinate heretics should be burnt. There was no need for Elizabeth to marry
Philip or bring Spaniards into the land; but the Spanish alliance, the old
Anglo-Burgundian alliance, was highly valued : it meant safety and trade and
occasional victories over the hereditary foe. Moreover, the English Reformers
were without a chief; beyond Elizabeth they had no pretender to the throne; they
had no apostle, no prophet; they were scattered over Europe and had been
quarrelling, Knoxians against Coxians,
in their foreign abodes. Edward’s reign had worn the gloss off the new
theology. We may indeed be sure that, had Elizabeth adhered to the old faith,
she must have quelled plots and rebellions or herself been quelled. We look at
Scotland, France, and the Netherlands, and, it may be, infer that the storm
would have overwhelmed her. Perhaps we forget how largely the tempests that we
see elsewhere were due to the momentous choice that she made for England. It
must probably be allowed that most of the young men of brains and energy who
grew to manhood under Mary were lapsing from Catholicism, and that the educated
women were falling faster and further. London too, Bonner's London, was
Protestant, and London might be worth an abolished Mass. But when, after some
years of fortunate and dexterous government, we see how strong is the old
creed, how dangerous is Mary Stewart as its champion, we cannot feel sure that
Elizabeth chose the path which was, or which seemed to be, the safest.
Of her own
opinions she told strange tales. Puzzled by her shifty discourse, a Spanish
envoy once suggested atheism. When a legal settlement had been made, it was her
pleasure, and perhaps her duty, to explain that her religion was that of all
sensible people. The difference between the various versions of Christianity “n’estait que bagatelle”. So she agreed with
the Pope, except about some details; she cherished the Augsburg confession, or
something very like it; she was at one, or nearly at one, with the Huguenots.
She may have promised her sister (but this is not proved) to make no change in
religion; at any rate she had gone to mass without much ado. Nevertheless it is
not unlikely that at the critical time her conduct was swayed rather by her
religious beliefs or disbeliefs than by any close calculation of loss and gain.
She had not her father’s taste for theology; she was neither prig like her
brother nor zealot like her sister; but she had been taught from the first to
condemn the Pope, and during Edward’s reign she had been highly educated in the
newest doctrines. John Hooper, the father of the Puritans, had admired her
displays of argumentative divinity. More than one Catholic who spoke with her
in later days was struck by her ignorance of Catholic verity. The Bishop of
Aquila traced her phrases to “the heretic Italian friars”. He seems to have
been thinking of Vermigli and Ochino,
and there may have been some little truth in his guess. Once she said that she
liked Italian ways and manners better than any other, and sometimes seemed to
herself half Italian. Her eyes filled with tears over Peter Martyr’s
congratulations. She had talked predestination with Fra Bernardino and had
translated one of his sermons; the Puritans were persuaded that if she would
listen to no one else, she would listen to him. All this might have meant
little; but then she had suffered in the good cause. She had been bullied into
going to mass; she had been imprisoned; she had nearly been excluded from the
throne; some ardent Catholics had sought her life; and her suspected heresies
had been at least a part of her offending. It would have been base to
disappoint all those who had prayed for her and plotted for her, and pleasant
it was when from many lands came letters which hailed her as the miraculously
preserved champion of the truth. She had a text ready for the bearer of the
good news: “This is the Lord’s doing and it is marvelous in our eyes”.
One point was
clear. The Henrican Anglo-Catholicism was dead and
buried. It died with Henry and was interred by Stephen Gardiner. In distant
days its spirit might arise from the tomb; but not yet. The Count of Feria and
Bishop Tunstall were at needless pains to explain to the young Queen that she
was favoring “Lutherans and Zwinglians”, whom her father would have burnt. But
in 1558 nothing was to be gained by mere schism. Her fellow sovereigns, more
especially her brother-in-law, could have taught her that a prince might enjoy
all the advantages of spotless orthodoxy and yet keep the Pope at arm’s length.
Many Englishmen hated popery; but by this time the core of the popery that they
hated was no longer the Papacy, but the idolatrous Mass. The choice lay between
Catholicism with its Pope and the creed for which Cranmer and Ridley died. It
could scarcely be hoped that the Bishops would yield an inch. Very shame, if no
worthier motive, would keep them true to the newly restored supremacy of Rome.
Happily for Elizabeth, they were few and feeble. Reginald Pole had hardly
outlived Mary, and for one reason or another had made no haste in filling
vacant sees; Feria thought that the “accursed Cardinal” had French designs. And
death had been and still was busy. Only sixteen instead of twenty-six Bishops
were entitled to attend the critical Parliament, and only eleven with the Abbot
of Westminster were present. Their constancy in the day of trial makes them
respectable; but not one of them was a leader of men. The ablest of them had
been Henry's ministers and therefore could be taunted as renegades.
Elizabeth and Paul
IV
A story which came
from a good quarter bade us see Elizabeth announcing to the Pope her accession
to the throne, and not rejecting Catholicism until Paul IV declared that
England was a papal fief and she an usurping bastard. Now, Caraffa was capable of any imprudence and just at this moment seemed bent on reviving
the claims of medieval Pontiffs, in order that he might drive a long-suffering
Emperor into the arms of the Lutherans. But it is certain now that in the
matter of courtesy Elizabeth, not Paul, was the offender. She ignored his
existence. Edward Carne was living at Rome as Mary’s ambassador. He received no
letters of credence from the new Queen, and on the 1st of February, 1559, she
told him to come home as she had nothing for him to do. Meanwhile the French
were thinking to obtain a Bull against her; they hoped that at all events Paul
would not allow her to marry her dead sister’s husband. At Christmastide
(1558), when she was making a scene in her chapel over the elevation of the
Host, the Pope was talking kindly of her to the French ambassador, would not
promise to refuse a dispensation, but could not believe that another
Englishwoman would want to marry a detestable Spaniard. A little later he knew
more about her and detained Carne (a not unwilling prisoner) at Rome (March
27), not because she was base-born, but because she had revolted from the Holy
See. He had just taken occasion to declare in a Bull that princes guilty of
heresy are deprived of all lawful power by the mere fact of their guilt
(February 15). This edict, though it may have been mainly aimed at Ferdinand’s
three Protestant Electors, was a salutary warning for Elizabeth and Anthony and
Maximilian; but no names were named. Philip had influence enough to balk the
French intrigue and protect his sister-in-law from a direct anathema. The
Spaniard may in Paul’s eyes have been somewhat worse than a heretic; but the
quarrel with the other Habsburg, and then the sudden attack upon his own
scandalous nephews, were enough to consume the few remaining days of the fierce
old man. He has much to answer for; but it was no insult from him that made
Elizabeth a Protestant.
No time was lost.
Mary’s death (November 17, 1558) dissolved a Parliament. Heath, Archbishop of
York and Chancellor of the realm, dismissed it, and with loyal words proclaimed
the new Queen. Within three weeks (December 5) writs went out for a new
Parliament. Elizabeth was going to exact conformity to a statutory religion.
For the moment the statutory religion was the Roman Catholic, and she would
have taken a false step if in the name of some higher law she had annulled or
ignored the Marian statutes. At once she forbade innovations and thus
disappointed the French who hoped for a turbulent revolution. A new and
happy et caetera was introduced into
the royal style and seemed to hint, without naming, a Headship of the Church.
Every change pointed one way. Some of the old Councillors were retained, but the new Councillors were
Protestants. William Cecil, then aged thirty-eight, had been Somerset’s and was
to be Elizabeth’s secretary. Like her he had gone to mass, but no Catholic
doubted that he was a sad heretic. The Great Seal, resigned by Heath, was given
to Nicholas Bacon. He and Cecil had married sisters who were godly ladies of
the new sort. The imprisoned heretics were bailed, and the refugees flocked
back from Frankfort, Zurich and Geneva. Hardly was Mary dead, before one Bishop
was arrested for an inopportune sermon (November 27). Another preached at her
funeral (December 13) and praised her for rejecting that title which Elizabeth
had not yet assumed; he too was put under restraint. Mary’s chief mourner was
not her sister, but, appropriately enough, the Lady Lennox who was to have
supplanted Elizabeth. No Bishop preached the funeral sermon for Charles V, and
what good could be said of that Catholic Caesar was said by the Protestant Dr
Bill (December 24). The new Queen was artist to the finger-tips. The English
Bible was rapturously kissed; the Tower could not be re-entered without
uplifted eyes and thankful words; her hand (it was a pretty hand) shrank, so
folk said, from Bonner's lips. Christmas-day was chosen for a more decisive
scene. The Bishop who was to say mass in her presence was told not to elevate
the Host. He would not obey; so after the Gospel out went Elizabeth; she could
no longer witness that idolatry. Three weeks later (January 15) she was crowned
while Calvin was dedicating to her his comments on Isaiah. What happened at the
coronation is obscure: The Bishops, it seems, swore fealty in the accustomed
manner; the Epistle and Gospel were read in English; it is said that the
celebrant was one of the Queen’s chaplains and that he did not elevate the
Host; it is said that she did not communicate; she was anointed by the Bishop
of Carlisle, whose rank would not have entitled him to this office, had not
others refused it. At length the day came for a Parliament (January 25). A mass
was said at Westminster early in the morning. At a later hour the Queen
approached the Abbey with her choir singing in English. The last of the Abbots
came to meet her with monks and candles. “Away with those torches” she
exclaimed: “we can see well enough!”. And then Edward’s tutor, Dr Cox, late of
Frankfort, preached; and he preached, it is said, for an hour and a half, the
peers all standing.
The negotiations
between Spain, England and France had been brought to a pause by Mary’s death,
but were to be resumed after a brief interval, during which Elizabeth was to
make up her mind. Some outwardly amicable letters passed between her and Henry
II. She tried to play the part of the pure-bred Englishwoman, who should not
suffer for the sins of the Spanish Mary. But the French were not to be coaxed
out of Calais, and she knew that they were seeking a papal Bull against her. It
became plain that she must not detach herself from Spain and that, even with
Philip’s help, Calais could only be obtained after another war, for which
England was shamefully unready. Then, in the middle of January, came through
Feria the expected offer of Philip’s hand, Elizabeth seemed to hesitate, had
doubts about the Pope’s dispensing power and so forth; but in the end said that
she did not mean to marry, and added that she was a heretic. Philip, it seems,
was relieved by the refusal; he had laboriously explained to his ambassador
that his proposal was a sacrifice laid upon the altar of the Catholic faith. He
had hopes, which were encouraged in England, that one of his Austrian cousins,
Ferdinand or Charles, would succeed where he had failed, secure England for
orthodoxy, and protect the Netherlands from the ill example that an heretical
England would set.
Meanwhile the
great Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis was in the making. Elizabeth tried to retain
Philip’s self-interested support; and she retained it. Without substantial aid
from England, he would not fight for Calais; she would have to sign it away;
but so earnest had he been in this matter that the French covenanted to restore
the treasured town after eight years and further to pay half-a-million of
crowns by way of penalty in case they broke their promise. No one supposed that
they would keep it; still they had consented to make the retention of Calais a
just cause for war, and Elizabeth could plausibly say that some remnants of
honor had been saved. But the clouds collected once more. New differences broke
out among the negotiators, who had half a world to regulate, and, before the
intricate settlement could be completed, a marriage had been arranged between
Philip and one of Henry’s daughters. Elizabeth of France, not Elizabeth of
England, was to be the bride. The conjunction was ominous for heretics.
From the first
days of February to the first days of April the negotiations had been pending.
Meanwhile in England little had been accomplished. It had become plain that the
clergy in possession (but there was another and expectant clergy out of
possession) would not yield. The Convocation of Canterbury met when Parliament
met, and the Lower House declared for transubstantiation, the sacrifice of the
Mass, and the Roman supremacy; also it idly protested that laymen were not to
meddle with faith, worship, or discipline (February 17, 1559). The Bishops were
staunch; the English Church by its constitutional organs refused to reform
itself; the Reformation would be an unprecedented state-stroke. Probably the
assembled Commons were willing to strike. The influence of the Crown had been
used on the Protestant side; but Cecil had hardly gathered the reins in his
hand and the government’s control over the electoral machinery must have been
unusually weak. Our statistics are imperfect, but the number of knights and
burgesses who, having served in 1558, were again returned in 1559 was not
abnormally small, and with the House of 1558 Mary had been well content. Also
we may see at Westminster not a few men who soon afterwards are “hinderers of
true religion” or at best only “faint professors”; but probably the nation at
large was riot unwilling that Elizabeth should make her experiment. A few
creations and restorations of peerages strengthened the Protestant element
among the lords. The Earl of Bedford and Lord Clinton appeared as proxies for
many absent peers, and, of all the lords, Bedford (Francis Russell) was the
most decisively committed to radical reform. The Howards were for the Queen,
their cousin; the young Duke of Norfolk, England’s one duke, was at this time
ardently Protestant, and in the next year was shocked at the sight of
undestroyed altars.
1559] The Act of
Supremacy.
Money was
cheerfully voted. The Queen was asked to choose a husband, and professed her
wish to die a maid. She may have meant what she said, but assuredly did not
mean that it should be believed. A prudently phrased statute announced that she
was “lawfully descended and come of the blood royal”; another declared her
capable of inheriting from her divorced and attainted mother; the painful past
was veiled in general words. There was little difficulty about a resumption of
those tenths and first-fruits which Mary had abandoned. Round the question of
ecclesiastical supremacy the battle raged, and it raged for two months and more
(February 9 to April 29). Seemingly the Queen’s ministers carried through the
Lower House a bill which went the full Henrican length in its Caesaropapism and its severity. Upon pain of a traitor’s death,
everyone was to swear that Elizabeth was the Supreme Head of the Church of
England. In the Upper House, to which the bill came on the 27th of February,
the Bishops had to oppose a measure which would leave the lives of all open
Romanists at the mercy of the government. Few though they were, the dozen
prelates could still do much in a House where there were rarely more than
thirty temporal lords, and probably Cecil had asked for more than he wanted. On
the 18th of March the project had taken a far milder form; forfeiture of office
and benefice was to be the punishment of those who would not swear. Against
this more lenient measure only two temporal lords protested; but a Catholic
says that other “good Christians” were feigning to be ill. The bill went back
to the Commons; then back with amendments to the Lords, who read it thrice on
the 22nd. Easter fell on the 26th, and it had been hoped that by that time
Parliament would have finished its work. Very little had been done; doctrine
and worship had hardly been touched. Apparently an attempt to change the
services of the Church had been made, had met with resistance, and had been
abandoned.
Elizabeth was in
advance of the law and beckoned the nation forward. During that Lent the Court
sermon had been the only sermon, the preacher Scory or Sandys, Grindal or Cox. A papist’s excited fancy
saw a congregation of five thousand and heard extravagant blasphemy. On Easter
day the Queen received the Communion in both kinds; the news ran over Europe;
Antoine de Bourbon on the same day had done the like at Pau; Mary of Lorraine
had marked that festival for the return of all Scots to the Catholic worship.
The colloquy of Westminster follows. There was to be a trial by battle in the
Abbey between chosen champions of the two faiths. Its outcome might make us
suspect that a trap was laid by the Protestants. But it is by no means certain
that the challenge came from their side, and the Spanish ambassador took some
credit for arranging the combat. The colloquy of Westminster stands midway
between that of Worms (1557) and that of Poissy (1561). The Catholics were wont to get the better in these feats of arms,
because, so soon as Christ’s presence in the Eucharist was mentioned, the
Protestants fell a-fighting among themselves. Apparently on this occasion the
rules of the debate were settled by Heath and Bacon. The Great Seal had passed
from an amiable to an abler keeper. The men of the Old Learning were to defend
the use of Latin in the services of the Church, to deny that a “particular
Church” can change rites and ceremonies and to maintain the propitiatory
sacrifice of the Mass. Their first two theses would bring them into conflict
with national feeling; and at the third point they would be exposed to the
united force of Lutherans and Helvetians, for the sacrifice, and not the
presence, was to be debated. It was a less advantage for the Reformers that
their adversaries were to speak first, for there was to be no extemporary
argument but only a reading of written dissertations. In the choir of the
abbey, before Council, Lords, Commons and multitude, the combatants took their
places on Friday, the 31st of March. At once the Catholics began to except
against the rules that they were required to observe. Dr Cole, however,
maintained their first proposition and Dr Horne read the Protestant essay. The
Reformers were well content with that day’s work and the applause that
followed. On Monday the second question was to be handled. Of what happened we
have no impartial account; we do not know what had passed between Heath and
Bacon, or whether the Catholic doctors were taken by surprise. Howbeit, they
chose the worst course; they wrangled about procedure and refused to continue the
debate. Apparently they were out of heart and leaderless. Two of the Bishops
were forthwith imprisoned by the Council for intemperate words, and thus the
Catholic party in the House of Lords was seriously weakened at a critical
moment. Moreover, the inference that men do not break off a debate with
preliminary objections when they are confident of success in the main issue,
though it is not always just, is always natural.
The next day
Parliament resumed its work. Meanwhile, Elizabeth had at length decided that
she would not assume the Henrican title, though
assuredly she had meant that it should be, as it had been, offered to her.
Women should keep silence in the churches; so there was difficulty about a
“dumb head”. She had managed to get a little credit from Philip’s envoy and a
little from zealous Calvinists by saying that she would not be Head of the
Church, and she could then tell appropriate persons that she scorned a style
which the Pope had polluted. So Cecil had to go to the Commons and explain that
there must be a new bill and new oath. He met with some opposition, for there
were who held that the Queen was Supreme Head iure divino. Ultimately a phrase was fashioned which
declared that she was the only Supreme Governor of the realm as well in all
spiritual or ecclesiastical things or causes as in temporal, and that no
foreign prince or prelate had any ecclesiastical or spiritual authority within
her dominions. However, among other statutes of Henry VIII, one was revived
which proclaims that the King is Head of the Church, and that by the word of
God all ecclesiastical jurisdiction flows from him. Catholics suspected that
Elizabeth’s husband would be head of the Church, if not head of his wife, and
saw the old title concealed behind the new et caetera.
Protestant lawyers said that she could take the title whenever she pleased.
Sensible men saw that, having the substance, she could afford to waive the
irritating name. On the 14th of April the bill was before the Lords. There were
renewed debates and more changes; and the famous Act of Supremacy was not
finally secured until the 29th.
1559] The Act of
Uniformity.
In the last days
of an unusually long session a bill for the Uniformity of Religion went rapidly
through both Houses (April 18-28). The services prescribed in a certain Book of
Common Prayer, and none other, were to be lawful. The embryonic history of this
measure is obscure. An informal committee of Protestant divines seems to have
been appointed by the Queen to prepare a book. It has been thought that as the
basis of their labors they took the Second Book of Edward VI, but desired a
further simplification of ceremonies. On the other hand, there are some signs
that Cecil and the Queen thought that the Second Book, which had hardly been
introduced before it was abrogated, had already gone far enough or too far in
the abolition of accustomed rites. All this, however, is very uncertain. Our
guess may be that, when men were weary of the prolonged debate over the
Supremacy and its continuance was becoming a national danger (for violent
speeches had been made), the Queen’s advisers took the short course of proposing
the Book of 1552 with very few changes. At such a moment relief might be found
in what could be called a mere act of restoration, and the Edwardian Book,
however unfamiliar, was already ennobled by the blood of martyrs. There are
signs of haste, or of divided counsels, for the new Book when it came from the
press differed in some little, but not trivial, matters from that which
Parliament had expressly sanctioned. The changes sanctioned by Parliament were
few. An offensive phrase about the Bishop of Rome’s “detestable enormities” was
expunged, apparently by the House of Lords. An addition from older sources was
made to the words that accompany the delivery of bread and wine to the
communicant, whereby a charge of the purest Zwinglianism might be obviated. At the moment it was of importance to Elizabeth that she
should assure the German Princes that her religion was Augustan; for they
feared, and not without cause, that it was Helvetian. A certain “black rubric”
which had never formed part of the statutory book fell away; it would have
offended Lutherans; we have reason to believe that it had been inserted in
order to meet the scruples of John Knox. Of what was done in the matter of
ornaments by the statute, by the rubrics of the Book and by “injunctions” that
the Queen promptly issued, it would be impossible to speak fairly without a
lengthy quotation of documents, the import of which became in the nineteenth
century a theme of prolonged and inconclusive disputation. It must here suffice
that there are few signs of any of the clergymen who accepted the Prayer Book
either having worn or having desired to wear in the ordinary churches - there
was at times a little more splendor in cathedrals - any ecclesiastical robe
except the surplice. But, to return to Elizabeth’s Parliament, we have it on
fairly good authority that nine temporal lords, including the Treasurer (the
Marquis of Winchester), and nine prelates (two Bishops were in gaol) voted against the bill, and that it was only carried
by three votes. Unfortunately at an exciting moment there is a gap, perhaps a
significant gap, in the official record, and we cease to know what lords were
present in the house. But about thirty temporal peers had lately been in
attendance, and so we may infer that some of them were inclined neither to
alter the religion of England nor yet to oppose the Queen. On the 5th of May,
the Bishops were fighting in vain for the renovated monasteries. On the 8th,
Parliament was dissolved.
At a moment of
strain and peril a wonderfully durable settlement had been made. There is cause
for thinking that the Queen’s advisers had been compelled to abandon
considerable parts of a lengthy programme; but the
great lines had been drawn and were permanent. For this reason they can hardly
be described in words that are both just and few; but perhaps we may make a
summary of those points which were the most important to the men of 1559. A
radical change in doctrine, worship and discipline has been made by Queen and
Parliament against the will of prelates and ecclesiastical Councils. The
legislative power of the Convocations is once more subjected to royal control.
The derivation of episcopal from royal jurisdiction has been once more asserted
in the words of Henry VIII. Appeal from the Courts of the Church lies to royal
delegates who may be laymen. What might fairly be called a plenitude of
ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the corrective sort can be, and at once is,
committed to delegates who constitute what is soon known as the Court of High
Commission and strongly resembles the consistory of a German Prince. Obstinate
heresy is still a capital crime; but practically the Bishops have little power
of forcing heretics to stand a trial, and, unless Parliament and Convocation
otherwise ordain, only the wilder sectaries will be in danger of burning. There
is no “liberty of cult”. The Prayer Book prescribes the only lawful form of
common worship. The clergyman who adopts any other, even in a private chapel,
commits a crime; so does he who procures this aberration from conformity.
Everyone must go to church on Sunday and bide prayer and preaching or forfeit
twelve pence to the use of the poor. Much also can be done to ensure conformity
by excommunication which has imprisonment behind it. The papal authority is
abolished. Clergy and office-holders can be required to swear that it is
naught; if they refuse the oath, they lose office and benefice. If anyone
advisedly maintains that authority, he forfeits his goods; on a third
conviction he is a traitor. The service book is not such as will satisfy all
ardent Reformers; but their foreign fathers in the faith think it not
intolerable, and the glad news goes out that the Mass is abolished. The word
“Protestant”, which is rapidly spreading from Germany, comes as a welcome name.
In the view of an officially inspired apologist of the Elizabethan settlement,
those who are not Papists are Protestants.
The requisite laws
had been made, but whether they would take effect was very uncertain. The new
oath was not tendered to the judges; and some of them were decided Romanists.
Nor was the validity of the statutes unquestioned, for it was by no means so
plain as it now is that an Act against which the spiritual Lords have voted in
a body may still be an Act of the three Estates. Gradually in the summer and
autumn the Bishops were called upon to swear; they refused and were deprived.
It is not certain that the one weak brother, Kitchin of Llandaff, actually swore the oath, though he promised to exact it from
others. Futile hopes seem to have been entertained that Tunstall and Heath
would at least take part in the consecration of their Protestant successors.
Such successors were nominated by the Queen; but to make Bishops of them was
not easy. Apparently a government bill dealing with this matter had come to
naught. Probably the Queen’s advisers had intended to abolish the canonical
election; they procured its abolition in Ireland on the ground that it was
inconsistent with the Royal Supremacy; but for some cause or another the
English Parliament had restored that grotesque Henrican device, the compulsory election of a royal nominee. By a personal interview
Elizabeth secured the conversion of the dean of the two metropolitan churches,
that pliant old diplomat Nicholas Wotton. When sees and benefices were rapidly
falling vacant, his adhesion was of great importance if all was to be done in
an orderly way.
But given the
election, there must still be confirmation and consecration; statute required
it. The cooperation of four “Bishops” would be necessary if Matthew Parker was
to sit where Reginald Pole had sat. Four men in episcopal Orders might be found
: for instance, William Barlow, of whose Protestant religion there could be no
doubt, since Albert of Prussia had lately attested it; but these men would not
be in possession of English sees. Moreover, it seems to have been doubted
whether the Edwardian Ordinal had been revived as part of the Edwardian Prayer
Book. Cecil was puzzled, but equal to the occasion. In a document redolent of
the papal chancery Elizabeth “supplied” all “defects”, and at length on the
17th of December, in the chapel at Lambeth. Parker was consecrated with
Edwardian rites by Barlow, Scory, Coverdale and
Hodgkin. The story of a simpler ceremony at the Nag’s Head tavern was not
concocted until long afterwards; it should have for pendants a Protestant fable
which told of a dramatic scene between Elizabeth and the Catholic prelates, and
an Anglican fable which strove to suggest that the Prayer Book was sanctioned
by a synod of Bishops and clergy. A large number of deans and canons followed
the example set by the Bishops. Of their inferiors hardly more than two
hundred, so it seems, were deprived for refusing the oath. The royal
commissioners treated the hesitating priests with patient forbearance; and the
meaning of the oath was minimized by an ably worded Proclamation. We may
conjecture that many of those who swore expected another turn of the always
turning wheel. However, Elizabeth succeeded in finding creditable occupants for
the vacant dignities; of Parker and some of his suffragans more than this might
be said. The new service was introduced without exciting disturbances; the
altars and roods were pulled down, tables were purchased, and a coat of
whitewash veiled the pictured saints from view. Among the laity there was much
despondent indifference. Within a dozen years there had been four great changes
in worship, and no good had come of it all. For some time afterwards there are
many country gentlemen whom the Bishops describe as “indifferent in religion”.
Would the Queen’s Church secure them and their children? That question could
not be answered by one who looked only at England. From the first, Elizabeth
and Cecil, who were entering into their long partnership, had looked abroad.
The Scottish
rebellion.
The month of May,
1559, which saw the ratification of the Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis, is a grand
month in the annals of the heresy which was to be destroyed. A hideous act of
faith at Valladolid may show us that Catholicism is safe in Spain; but the
English Parliament ends its work, a French Reformed Church shapes itself in the
synod of Paris, and Scotland bursts into flame. In 1558 we saw it glowing. Mary
of Guise was temporizing; she had not yet obtained the crown matrimonial for
the Dauphin. In the winter Parliament she had her way; the crown was to be (but
never was) carried to her son-in-law. His father had just ceased his intrigues
with English Protestants, and was making peace in order that he might be busy
among the Protestants of France. The Regent of Scotland was given to understand
that the time for tolerance was past. In March, 1559, the Scottish prelates
followed the example of their English brethren and uttered their Non possumus. They proposed to remedy many an indefensible
abuse, but to new beliefs there could be no concession. The Queen-mother fixed
Easter day for the return of all men to the Catholic worship. The order was
disregarded. On the 10th of May the more notorious of the preachers were to
answer at Stirling for their misdeeds. They collected at Perth, with Protestant
lords around them. At this moment Elizabeth’s best friend sprang into the
arena. John Knox had been fuming at Dieppe. Elizabeth, enraged at his ill-timed
“blast”, denied him a safe conduct. François Morel, too, the French Reformer,
implored Calvin to keep this fire-brand out of England lest all should be
spoilt. But if Knox chose to revisit his native land that was no affair of
Elizabeth’s, and he was predestinated to win for Calvinism the most durable of
its triumphs. He landed in Scotland on the 2nd of May and was at Perth by the
11th. Then there was a sermon; a stone was thrown; an image was broken, and the
churches of St Johnston were wrecked. Before the end of the month there were
two armed hosts in the field. There were more sermons, and where Knox preached
the idols fell and monks and nuns were turned adrift. There were futile
negotiations and disregarded truces. At the head of the belligerent
Congregation rode Glencairn, Argyll, and Lord James. Châtelherault was still with the Regent; and she had a small force of disciplined Frenchmen.
At the end of July a temporary truce was made at Leith. The Congregation could
bring a numerous host (of the medieval sort) into the field, but could not keep
it there. However, as the power of the French soldiers was displayed, the
revolutionary movement became more and more national. The strife, if it was
between Catholic and Calvinist, was also a strife for the delivery of Scotland
from a foreign army. None the less there was a revolt. Thenceforth, Calvinism
often appears as a rebellious religion. This, however, is its first appearance
in that character. Calvin had long been a power in the world of Reformed
theology, and his death (1564) was not far distant; but in 1559 the Count of
Feria was at pains to tell King Philip that “this Calvin is a Frenchman and a
great heretic” (March 19). Knox, when he preached “the rascal multitude” into
iconoclastic fury was setting an example to Gueux and
Huguenots.
What would
Elizabeth think of it? Throughout the winter and spring Englishmen and Scots,
who had been dragged into war by their foreign masters, had been meeting on the
border and talking first of armistice and then of peace. Already in January
Maitland of Lethington had a strong desire to speak
with Sir William Cecil and since then had been twice in London. He was the
Regent’s Secretary, conforming in religion as Cecil had conformed; but it is
likely that the core of such creed as he had was unionism. The news that came
from Scotland in May can hardly have surprised the English Secretary. “Some
great consequences must needs follow” : this was his quiet comment (May 26).
Diplomatic relations with France had just been resumed. Nicholas Throckmorton,
one of those able men who begin to collect around Elizabeth, had gone to reside
there as her ambassador, had gone to “practise” there
and exacerbate the “garboils” there. One of the first bits of news that he
sends home is that Arran has been summoned to Court
from Poitou, where he has been Calvinising, has
disobeyed the summons and cannot be found (May 30). The Guises connect Arran’s disappearance with Throckmorton’s advent; and who
shall say that they are wrong? In June Cecil heard from the border that the
Scottish lords were devising how this young man could be brought home and
married “you know where”. “You have a Queen”, said a Scot to Throckmorton, “and
we our Prince the Earl of Arran, marriable both, and
the chief upholders of God's religion”. Arran might
soon be King of Scotland. The Dauphiness, who at the French Court was being
called Queen of England, did not look as if she were long for this world :
Throckmorton noted her swoons. Arran had escaped to
Geneva. Early in July Elizabeth was busy, and so was Calvin, over the
transmission of this invaluable youth to the quarter where he could best serve
God and the English Queen. Petitions for aid had come from Scotland. Cecil
foresaw what would happen : the Protestants were to be helped “first with
promises, next with money, and last with arms” (July 8). But to go beyond the
first stage was hazardous. The late King of England was only a few miles off
with his fleet and veteran troops; he was being married by proxy to a French
Princess; he had thoughts of enticing Catharine Grey out of England, in order
that he might have another candidate for the throne, if it were necessary to
depose the disobedient Elizabeth. And could Elizabeth openly support these
rebels? In the answer to that question lay the rare importance of Arran. The Scottish uproar must become a constitutional
movement directed by a prince of the blood royal against a French attempt to
deprive a nation of its independence. Cecil explained to Calvin that if true
religion is to be supported it must first convert great noblemen (June 22).
Then the danger
from France seemed to increase. There was a mischance at a tournament and Henry
II was dead (July 10). The next news was that “the House of Guise ruleth” (July 13). In truth, this was good news.
Elizabeth’s adversary was no longer an united France. The Lorrainers were not
France; their enemies told them that they were not French. But the Duke and
Cardinal were ruling France; they came to power as the uncles of the young
King’s wife, and soon there might be a boy born who would be
Valois-Tudor-Stewart-Guise. A Guise was ruling Scotland also, and the rebellion
against her was hanging fire. So early in August Cecil’s second stage was
reached, and Ralph Sadler was carrying three thousand pounds to the border. He
knew his Scotland; Henry VIII had sent him there on a fool’s errand; there
would be better management this time. In the same month Philip turned his back
on the Netherlands, never to see them more. Thenceforth, he would be the
secluded King of a distant country. Also, Paul IV died, and for four months the
Roman Church had no supreme governor. The Supreme Governor of the English
Church could breathe more freely. She kept her St Bartholomew (August 24).
There was burning in Bartlemy Fair, burning in
Smithfield - but only of wooden roods and Maries and
Johns and such-like popish gear. “It is done of purpose to confirm the Scottish
revolt” : such was a guess made at Brussels (September 2); and it may have been
right, for there was little of the natural iconoclast in Elizabeth. A few days
later (August 29) Arran was safely and secretly in
her presence, and thence was smuggled into Scotland, Probably she took his
measure; he was not quite sane, but would be useful. Soon afterwards Philip’s
ambassador knew that she was fomenting tumults in Scotland through “a heretic
preacher called Knox”. That was unkindly said, but not substantially untrue.
Early in October “the Congregation” began once more to take an armed shape. Châtelherault, that unstable “second person”, had been brought
over by his impetuous son. The French troops in Scotland had been reinforced;
the struggle was between Scot and Frenchman. So, to the horror of Bishops-elect
(whose consecration had not yet been managed), the table in Elizabeth's chapel
began to look like an altar with cross and candles. “She will not favor the
Scots in their religion”, said Gilles de Noailles the French ambassador. “She
is afraid”, said the Cardinal of Lorraine. “She is going to marry the Archduke
Charles who is coming here in disguise”, said many people. Surely she wished
that just those comments should be made; and so Dr Cox, by this time elect of
Ely, had to stomach cross and candles as best he might.
The host of the
Congregation arrived at Edinburgh; a manifesto declared that the Regent was
deposed (October 21). She and the French were fortifying Leith; the castle was
held by the neutral Lord Erskine. But once more the extemporized army began to
melt away. Treasure sent by Elizabeth was captured by a border ruffian, James
Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell, who was to play a part in coming tragedies. The
insurgents fled from Edinburgh (November 6). In negotiation with Cecil, Knox
was showing the worldly wisdom that underlay his Hebraic frenzies; he knew the
weak side of his fellow-countrymen; without more aid from England, the movement
would fail. Knox, however, was not presentable at Court; Lethington was. The Regent’s Secretary had left her and had carried to the opposite camp
the statecraft that it sorely needed. He saw a bright prospect for his native
land and took the road to London. Cecil’s third stage was at hand. There were
long debates in the English Council; there were “Philipians”
in it, and all that passed there was soon known at the French embassy. The
Queen was irresolute; even Bacon was for delay; but, though some French ships
had been wrecked, others were ready, and the danger to Scotland, and through
Scotland to England, was very grave. At length Cecil and Lethington won their cause. An army under the Duke of Norfolk was to be raised and placed
on the border. Large supplies of arms had been imported from the dominions of
the Catholic King. Bargains for professed soldiers were struck with German
princes William Winter, Master of the Ordnance, was to take fourteen ships to
the Forth. He might “as of his own hand” pick a quarrel with the French; but
there was to be no avowed war (December 16). On the morrow Dr Parker was
consecrated. He had been properly shocked by Knox’s doings. “God keep us from
such visitation as Knox hath attempted in Scotland : the people to be orderers of things!” (November 6). If in that autumn the
people of Scotland had not ordered things in a summary way, Dr Parker’s tenure
of the archiepiscopate might have been precarious. A few days later and there
was once more a Pope (December 25) : this time a sane Pope, Pius IV, who would
have to deplore the loss, not only of England, but of Scotland also. God of His
mercy, said Lethington, had removed that difference
of religion.
Treaty of Berwick.
[1559-60
Once more the
waves were kind to Elizabeth. They repulsed the Marquis of Elbeuf (René of Lorraine), and suffered Winter to pass. All the news that came from
France was good. It told of unwillingness that national treasure should be
spent in the cause of the Guises, of a dearth of recruits for Scotland, of
heretics burnt and heretics rescued, of factions in religion fomented by the
great. Something was very wrong in France, for envoys came thence with soft
words. “Strike now”, was Throckmorton’s counsel; “they only seek to gain time”.
So a pact was signed at Berwick (February 27,1560) between Norfolk and the
Scottish lords who acted on behalf of “the second person of the realm of
Scotland”. Elizabeth took Scotland, its liberties, its nobility, its expectant
heir under her protection, and the French were to be expelled. On second
thoughts nothing was published about “the profession of Christ’s true
religion”. Every French envoy spoke softer than the last. Mary Stewart had
assumed the arms of England because she was proud of being Elizabeth’s cousin.
The title of Queen of England was taken to annoy, not Elizabeth, but Mary
Tudor. All this meant the Tumult of Amboise (March 14-20). Behind that strange
essay in rebellion, behind la Renaudie, men have seen
Condé, and behind Condé two dim figures, Jean Calvin and the English Queen.
Calvin’s acquittal seems deserved. The profession of Christ’s true religion was
not to be advanced by so ill laid a plot. But a very ill laid plot might
cripple France at this critical moment, and, before we absolve Elizabeth, we
wish to know why a certain Tremaine was sent to Britanny,
where the plotters were gathering, and whether Chantonnay, Granvelle’s brother, was right in saying that la Renaudie had been at the English Court. Certain it is that
Throckmorton had intrigued with Anthony of Navarre, with the Vidame of
Chartres, with every enemy of the Guises; he was an apt pupil in the school
that Renard and Noailles had founded in England. A little later (May 23)
messages from Condé to the Queen were going round by Strasbourg; and in June
Tremaine brought from France a scheme which would put Breton or Norman towns
into English hands : a scheme from which Cecil as yet recoiled as from “a
bottomless pit”.
1660] The siege of
Leith and Treaty of Edinburgh.
Be all this as it
may, the tumult of Amboise fell pat into Cecil’s scheme, and on the 29th of
March Lord Grey crossed the border with English troops. The Scottish affair
then takes this shape: A small but disciplined force of Frenchmen in the fortified
town of Leith; the Regent in Edinburgh Castle, which is held by the neutral
Erskine; English ships in the Forth; an English and Scottish army before Leith;
very few Scots openly siding with the Queen-mother; the French seeking to gain
time. We hasten to the end. An assault failed, but hunger was doing its work.
The Regent died on the 11th of June; even stern Protestants have a good word
for the gallant woman. Cecil went into Scotland to negotiate with French
plenipotentiaries. He wrung from them the Treaty of Edinburgh, which was signed
on the 6th of July. The French troops were to quit Scotland. The French King
and Queen were never thereafter to use the arms and style of England.
Compensation for the insult to her title was to be awarded to Elizabeth by
arbitrators or the King of Spain. A pact concluded between Francis and Mary on
the one hand and their Scottish subjects on the other was to be observed. That
pact itself was humiliating. There was to be pardon for the insurgents; there
were to be but six score French soldiers in the land; a Scottish Council was to
be appointed : in a word, Scotland was to be for the Scots. But the lowest
point was touched when the observance of this pact between sovereign and rebels
was made a term in the treaty between England and France. Cecil and famine were
inexorable. We had to sign, said the French commissioners, or four thousand
brave men would have perished before our eyes and Scotland would have been
utterly lost.
And so the French
troops were deported from Scotland and the English army came home from a
splendid exploit. The military display, it is true, had not been creditable;
there had been disunion, if no worse, among the captains; there had been peculation, desertion, sheer cowardice. All the martial
glory goes to the brave besieged. But for the first time an English army
marched out of Scotland leaving gratitude behind. Perhaps the truest victory
that England had won was won over herself. Not a word had been publicly said of
that old suzerainty; no spoil had been taken, not a town detained. Knox
included in his liturgy a prayer that there might nevermore be war between
Scotland and England, and that prayer has been fulfilled. There have been wars
between British factions, but never another truly national war between the two
nations. Elizabeth in her first two years had done what none of her ancestors
could do, for by the occasion of her religion she had obtained the amity of
Scotland, and thus had God blemished the fame of the great men of the world
through the doings of a weak woman: such was the judgment of a daughter of
France and a mother in the Protestant Israel, of Renée, the venerable Duchess
of Ferrara. Another observer, Hubert Languet, said that the English were so
proud of the conversion of Scotland that they were recovering their old
insolence and would be the very people to defy the imminent Council at Trent.
The tone of Catholic correspondence changes : the Elizabeth who was merely
rushing to her ruin, will now set all Europe alight in her downward course.
That young woman’s conduct, when we now examine it, will not seem heroic. As
was often to happen in coming years, she had been pursuing two policies at
once, and she was ready to fall back upon an Austrian marriage if the Scottish
revolt miscarried. But this was not what men saw at the time. What was seen was
that she and Cecil had played and won a masterly game; and Englishmen must have
felt that the change of religion coincided with a transfer of power from
incapable to capable hands.
Elizabeth, Philip
II and Pius IV. [1560
All this had been
done, not only without Spanish help, but (so a patriot might say) in defiance
of Spain. To discover Philip’s intentions had been difficult, and in truth he
had been of two minds. Elizabeth was setting the worst of examples. Say what
she would, she was encouraging a Protestant revolt against a Catholic King. She
was doing this in sight, and with the hardly concealed applause, of the
Netherlander; a friar who dared to preach against her at Antwerp went in fear
of his life; whole families of Flemings were already taking refuge in England.
Philip’s new French wife was coming home to him; his mother-in-law, Catharine
de' Medici, implored him to stop Elizabeth from “playing the fool”. He had in
some kind made himself responsible for the religious affairs of England, by
assuring the Pope that all would yet be well. But the intense dread of France,
the outcome of long wars, could not be eradicated, and was reasonable enough.
He dared not let the French subdue Scotland and threaten England on both sides.
Moreover he was for the moment miserably poor; Margaret of Parma, his Regent in
the Netherlands, had hardly a crown for current expenses, and the Estates would
grant nothing. So in public he scolded and lectured Elizabeth, while in private
he hinted that what she was doing should be done quickly. The French, too,
though they asked his aid, hardly wished him to fulfill his promise of sending
troops to Scotland. Then his navy was defeated by the opportune Turk (May 11); and
the Spaniards suspected that the French, if guiltless of, were not displeased
at the disaster.
This was not all.
The Pope also had been humiliated. The conciliatory Pius IV had not long been
on the throne before he sent to Elizabeth a courteous letter (May 5, 1560).
Vincent Parpaglia, the Abbot of San Solutore at Turin, once the secretary of Cardinal Pole, was
to carry it to her as Nuncio. She was to lend him her ear, and a strong hint
was given to her that she could be legitimated. When she heard that the Nuncio
was coming, she was perhaps a little frightened; the choice between recantation
and the anathema seemed to lie before her; so she talked catholically with the
Spanish ambassador. But Philip, when he heard the news, was seriously offended.
He saw a French intrigue, and the diplomatic machinery of the Spanish monarchy
was set in motion to procure the recall of the Nuncio. All manner of reasons
could be given to the Pope to induce a cancellation of his rash act. Pius was
convinced or overawed. Margaret of Parma stopped Parpaglia at Brussels. How to extricate the Pope from the adventure without loss of
dignity was then the difficult question. Happily it could be said that Pole’s
secretary was personally distasteful to Philip, who had once imprisoned Parpaglia as a French spy. So at Brussels he enjoyed
himself for some months, then announced to Elizabeth that after all he was not
coming to her, and in the friendliest way sent her some Italian gossip
(September 8). He said that he should go back by Germany, and, when he turned
aside to France, Margaret of Parma knew what to think : namely, that there had
been a French plot to precipitate a collision between Pius and Elizabeth. At
the French Court the disappointed Nuncio “made a very lewd discourse of the Queen,
her religion and proceedings”. As to Elizabeth, she had answered this first
papal approach by throwing the Catholic Bishops into prison. And then, it is to
be feared that she, or someone on her behalf, told how the Pope had offered to
confirm her Book of Common Prayer, if only she would fall down and worship him.
The Scottish
Reformation Parliament.
In August, 1560, a
Parliament met at Edinburgh, to do for Scotland what the English Parliament had
done in 1559. The Pope’s authority was rejected, and the Mass was abolished.
Upon a third conviction the sayer or hearer of mass
was to be put to death. A Confession of Faith had been rapidly compiled by Knox
and his fellow preachers; it is said that Lethington toned down asperities. “To see it pass in such sort as it did” surprised
Elizabeth’s envoy Randolph. The Scot was not yet a born theologian. Lethington hinted that further amendments could be made if
Elizabeth desired them (September 13), and she made bold to tell the Lutheran
princes that Scotland had received “the same religion that is used in Almaine” (December 30). The Reforming preachers were few, but
the few earnest Catholics were cowed. “This people of a later calling”, as an
English preacher called the Scots, had not known the disappointment of a young
Josiah’s reign, and heard the word with gladness. There were wide differences,
however, between the proceedings of the two Parliaments. The English problem
was comparatively simple. Long before 1559 the English Church had been relieved
of superfluous riches; there was only a modest aftermath for the Elizabethan
scythe. In Scotland the kirklands were broad, and
were held by prelates or quasi-prelates who were turning Protestant or were
closely related to Lords of the Congregation. Catholic or Calvinist, the
possessor meant to keep a tight grip on the land. The Bishops could be
forbidden to say mass; some of them had no desire to be troubled with that or
any other duty; but the decent Anglican process, which substitutes an Edmund Grindal for an Edmund Bonner, could not be imitated. The
Scottish lords, had they wished it, could not have thrust an ecclesiastical
supremacy upon their Catholic Queen; but to enrich the Crown was not their
mind. The new preachers naturally desired something like that proprietary
continuity which had been preserved in England : the patrimony of the Church
should sustain the new religion. They soon discovered that this was “a devout
imagination”. They had to construct an ecclesiastical polity on new lines, and
they set to work upon a Book of Discipline. Elementary questions touching the
relation between Church and State were left open. Even the proceedings of the
August Parliament were of doubtful validity. Contrary to wont, a hundred or
more of the “minor barons” had formed a part of the assembly. Also, it was by
no means clear that the compact signed by the French envoys authorized a
Parliament to assemble and do what it pleased in matters of
An excuse had been
given to the French for a refusal to ratify the treaty with England. That
treaty confirmed a convention which the Scots were already breaking. Another
part of the great project was not to be fulfilled. Elizabeth was not going to
marry Arran, though the Estates of Scotland begged
this of her and set an united kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland before her
eyes. Perhaps it was well that Arran was crazy;
otherwise there might have been a premature enterprise. A King of Scots who was
husband of the English Queen would have been hateful in England; Scotland was
not prepared for English methods of government; and Elizabeth had troubles
enough to face without barbaric blood feuds and a Book of Discipline. She had
gained a great advantage. Sudden as had been the conversion of Scotland, it was
permanent. Beneath all that was fortuitous and all that was despicable, there
was a moral revolt. “It is almost miraculous”, wrote Randolph in the June of
1560, “to see how the word of God takes place in Scotland. They are better
willing to receive discipline than in any country I ever was in. Upon Sunday
before noon and after there were at the sermons that confessed their offences
and repented their lives before the congregation. Cecil and Dr Wotton were
present... They think to see next Sunday Lady Stonehouse, by whom the
Archbishop of St Andrews has had, without shame, five or six children, openly
repent herself”. Elizabeth, the deliverer of Scotland, had built an external
buttress for her English Church. If now and then Knox “gave her cross and
candles a wipe”, he none the less prayed for her and everlasting friendship.
They did not love each other; but she had saved his Scottish Reformation, and
he had saved her Anglican Settlement.
Then, at the end
of this full year, there was a sudden change in France. Francis II died
(December 5,1560); Mary was a childless widow; the Guises were only the uncles
of a dowager. A mere boy, Charles IX, was King; power had passed to his mother,
Catharine de' Medici and the Bourbons. They had no interest in Mary’s claim on
England, and, to say the least, were not fanatical Catholics. After some
hesitation Mary resolved to return to Scotland. She had hoped for the hand of
Philip’s son, Don Carlos; but her mother-in-law had foiled her. The kingdom
that had been conveyed to the Valois was not to be transferred to the Habsburg,
and a niece of the Guises was not to seat herself upon the throne of Spain. The
Scottish nobles were not averse to Mary’s return, as Elizabeth would not marry Arran and there was thus no longer any fear that Scotland
would be merged in France. Mary was profuse of kind words; she won Lord James
to her side, and even Lethington was given to
understand that he could make his peace. The treaty with England she would not
confirm; she would wait until she could consult the Scottish Estates. Elizabeth
regarded this as a dangerous insult. Her title to the Crown had been
challenged, and the challenge was not withdrawn. Mary’s request for a
safe-conduct through England was rejected. Orders were given for stopping the
ship that bore her towards Scotland, but apparently were cancelled at the last
minute. She landed at Leith on the 19th of August, 1561. The long duel between
the two Queens began. The story of it must be told elsewhere; but here we may
notice that for some years the affairs of Scotland were favorable to the
Elizabethan religion. Mary issued a proclamation (August 25, 1561) strikingly
similar to that which came from Elizabeth on the first day of her reign. “The
state of religion which Mary found publicly and universally standing at
her home-coming was to be maintained until altered by her and the Estates of
the realm”. But she and the Estates were not at one, and her religious position
was that of a barely tolerated nonconformist. Lord James and Lethington were her chief advisers, and her first military
adventure was a successful contest with turbulent but Catholic Gordons. Also it
pleased her to hold out hopes that she might accept Elizabeth’s religion, if
her claim to be Elizabeth’s heir presumptive were conceded. The ratification of
the treaty she still refused, asserting (a late afterthought) that some words
in it might deprive her of her right to succeed Elizabeth if Elizabeth left no
issue. She desired to meet Elizabeth; Elizabeth desired to meet her; and the
Scottish Catholics said that Mary would not return as “a true Christian woman”
from the projected interview. Her uncles were out of power. It was the time of
the colloquy of Poissy (September, 1561); it was
rumored that Theodore Beza was converting the Duke of Guise, who talked
pleasantly with Throckmorton about the English law of inheritance. The Cardinal
of Lorraine publicly flirted with Lutheranism. Elizabeth learnt that her cross
and candles marked her off from mere Calvinian Huguenots, though she kept in close touch with Condé and the Admiral. Moreover,
the English Catholics were slow to look to Scotland for a deliverer; the
alien’s right to inherit was very dubious; they looked rather to young Darnley,
who was born in England and by English law was an Englishman and the son of an
English mother.
Elizabeth and
Robert Dudley. [1561
The invitation to
the General Council came, and was flatly refused (May 5, 1561). At this point
we must turn for one moment to an obscure and romantic episode. From the first
days of her reign the English Queen had shown marked favor to her master of the
horse, Lord Robert Dudley, a young man, handsome and accomplished, ambitious
and unprincipled; the son of that Duke of Northumberland who set Jane Grey on
the throne and died as a traitor. Dudley was a married man, but lived apart
from his wife, Amy, the daughter of Sir John Robsart.
Gossip said that he would kill her and marry the Queen. On the 8th of
September, 1560, when he was with the Queen at Windsor, his wife’s corpse was
found with broken neck at the foot of a staircase in Cumnor Hall. Some people
said at once that he had procured her death; and that story was soon being told
in all the Courts of Europe; but we have no proof that it was generally
believed in England after a coroner’s jury had given a verdict which, whatever
may have been its terms, exculpated the husband. Dudley (the Leicester of after
times) had throughout his life many bitter enemies; but none of them, so far as
we know, ever mentioned any evidence of his guilt that a modern English judge
would dream of leaving to a jury. We should see merely the unscrupulous
character of the husband and the violent, opportune and not easily explicable
death of the wife, were it not for a letter that the Spanish ambassador wrote
to Margaret of Parma. That letter was not sent until its writer knew of Amy’s
death (which he mentioned in a postscript), but it professed to tell of what
had passed between him, the Queen and Cecil at some earlier, but not precisely
defined moment of time. It suggests (as we read it) that Elizabeth knew that
Dudley was about to kill his wife. Cecil, it asserts, desired the ambassador to
intervene and reduce his mistress to the path of virtue. Those who are inclined
to place faith in this wonderful tale about a truly wonderful Cecil, will do
well to remember that a postscript is sometimes composed before any part of the
letter is written, and that Alvaro de la Quadra, Bishop of Aquila, was
suspected by the acute Throckmorton of taking the pay of the Guises. At that
moment the rulers of France were refusing ratification of the Edinburgh treaty,
and were much concerned that Philip should withdraw his support from Elizabeth.
The practical upshot of the letter is that Elizabeth has plunged into an abyss
of infamy, will probably be deposed in favor of the Protestant Earl of
Huntingdon (Henry Hastings), and will be imprisoned with her favorite. The
sagacity of the man who wrote this can hardly be saved, except at the expense
of his honesty. Howbeit, Elizabeth, whether she loved Dudley or no (and this
will never be known) behaved as if she had thoughts of marrying him, and showed
little regard for what was said of his crime. One reading of her character, and
perhaps the best, makes her heartless and nearly sexless, but for that reason
indecorously desirous of appearing to the world as both the subject and the
object of amorous passions. Also she was being pestered to marry the Archduke
Charles, who would not come to be looked at, or Arran who had been looked at and rejected. Then (January, 1561) there was an intrigue
between the Bishop of Aquila and the suspected murderer. Philip was to favor
the Queen’s marriage with the self-made widower, and the parties to this unholy
union were thenceforth to be good Catholics, or at any rate were to subject
themselves and the realm to the authority of the General Council.
There was
superabundant falsehood on all sides. Quadra, Dudley, Cecil and Elizabeth, were
all of them experts in mendacity, and the exact truth we are not likely to know
when they tell the story. But the outcome of it all was that a papal Nuncio,
the Abbot Martinengo, coming this time with Philip’s
full approval, arrived at Brussels with every reason to believe that Elizabeth
would favorably listen to the invitation that he was bringing, and then, at the
last moment, he learnt that he might not cross the Channel. There are signs
that Cecil had difficulty in bringing about this result. Something stood in his
way. He had to stimulate the English Bishops into protest, and to discover a
little popish plot (there was always one to be discovered) at the right moment.
It is conceivable that Dudley and Quadra had for a while ensnared the Queen
with hopes of a secure reign and an easy life. It is quite as likely that she
was employing them as unconscious agents to keep the Catholics quiet, while
important negotiations were pending in France and Germany. That she seriously
thought of sending envoys to the Council is by no means improbable; and some
stout Protestants held that this was the proper course. But while Quadra and
Dudley were concocting their plot, she kept in close alliance with foreign
Protestants. Arrangements for a reply to the Pope were discussed with the
German Protestant Princes at Naumburg (January,
1561); and strenuous endeavors were made through the puritanic Earl of Bedford
to dissuade the French from participation in the Tridentine assembly. The end
of it was that the English refusal was especially emphatic, and given in such a
manner as to be a rebuff not only to Home but to Spain. An irritating reference
to a recent precedent did not mend matters : King Philip and Queen Mary had
repulsed a Nuncio. Another reason could be given. In Ireland the Elizabethan
religion, which had been introduced there by Act of Parliament, was not making way.
In August, 1560, the Pope, who had already taken upon himself to dispose of two
Irish bishoprics, sent to Ireland David Wolfe, a Jesuit priest, and conferred
large powers upon him. He seems to have slipped over secretly from Britanny, where he had lain hid. Elizabeth could say, and
probably with truth, that his proceedings were hostile to her right and title.
As to a Council, of course she was all for a real and true, a “free and
general” Council; all Protestants were; but with the papistical affair at Trent
she would have nothing to do. Pius had thought better of her; her lover’s
crypto-Catholicism had been talked of in high places.
England and the
First French War of Religion, [1562
The papal Legate
at the French Court, the Cardinal of Ferrara, had some hope of succeeding where
others had failed: not as Legate of Rome or the Cardinal of Ferrara, but as Hippolito d'Este, an Italian
gentleman devoted to Her Grace’s service. There were pleasant letters; cross
and candles were commended; she was asked to retain them even as it were for
the Cardinal of Ferrara’s pleasure; but hardly had the Council been re-opened
at Trent (January 18, 1562) than Elizabeth was allying herself with the
Huguenots and endeavoring to form a Protestant league in Germany. The dream of
a France that would peacefully lapse from the Roman obedience was broken at Vassy (March 1, 1562), and the First War of Religion began.
In April Sechelles came to England as Condé’s envoy
and was accredited by Hotman to Cecil. The danger to
England was explained by the Queen’s Secretary : The crown of France would be
in the hands of the Guisians; the King of Spain would
help them; the Queen of Scots would marry Don Carlos, the Council would condemn
the Protestants and give their dominions to a Catholic invader (July 20). On
the other hand, Calais, Dieppe, or Havre, “perhaps all three”, might be
Elizabeth’s, so some thought; indeed “all Picardy, Normandy, and Gascony might
belong to England again”. The Queen had been thinking of such possibilities; already
in June, 1560, an offer of “certain towns in Britanny and Normandy” had been made to her. She hesitated long, but yielded, and on the
20th of September, 1562, concluded the Treaty of Hampton Court with the Prince
of Condé. She was to help with money and men and hold Havre, Dieppe, and Rouen
until Calais was restored. It was a questionable step; but Philip was
interfering on the Catholic side, and Calais was covetable. Of course she was
not at war with Charles IX; far from it; she was bent on delivering the poor
lad and his mother from his rebellious subjects, who were also “her inveterate
enemies”, the Guises. Of religion she said as little as possible; but the
Church of which she was the Supreme Governor affirmed in prayer that the
Gallican Catholics were enemies of God’s Eternal Word, and that the Calviniste were persecuted for the profession of God’s Holy
Name. The expedition to Havre failed disastrously. After the battle of Dreux (December 19, 1562) and the edict of Amboise (March
19,1563), all parties in France united to expel the invader. The Earl of
Warwick (Ambrose Dudley) and his plague-stricken army were compelled to
evacuate Havre after a stubborn resistance (July 28), and the recovery of
Calais was further off than ever. Elizabeth had played with the fire once too
often. She never after this thought well of Huguenots; and friendship with the
ruling powers of France became the central feature of, her resolutely pacific
policy. However, when at the beginning of 1563 she met her Second Parliament,
and the Reformed Church of England held its first Council, all was going well.
Since October an English army had once more been holding a French town; a
foolhardy plot devised by some young nephews of Cardinal Pole had been
opportunely discovered, and the French and Spanish ambassadors were supposed to
have had a hand in it. Some notes of Cecil's suggest effective parliamentary
rhetoric :
“…1559. The
religion of Christ restored. Foreign authority rejected... 1560. The French at
the request of the Scots, partly by force, partly by agreement, sent back to
France, and Scotland set free from the servitude of the pope. 1561. The debased
copper and brass coinage replaced by gold and silver. England, formerly
unarmed, supplied more abundantly than any other country with arms, munitions
and artillery. 1562. The tottering Church of Christ in France succoured...”
The Queen, it is
true, was tormenting her faithful subjects by playing fast and loose with all
her many wooers, and by disallowing all talk of what would happen at her death.
It was a policy that few women could have maintained, but was sagacious and
successful. It made men pray that her days might be long; for, when compared
with her sister’s, they were good days, and when they were over there would be
civil war. We hear the preacher : “How was this our realm then pestered with
strangers, strange gods, strange languages, strange religion, strange coin! And
now how peaceably rid of them all!”. So there was no difficulty about a supply
of money, and another turn might be given to the screw of conformity. Some new
classes of persons, members of the House of Commons, lawyers, schoolmasters,
were to take the oath of Supremacy; a first refusal was to bring imprisonment
and forfeiture, a second death. The temporal lords procured their own exemption
on the ground that the Queen was “otherwise sufficiently assured” of their
loyalty. That might be so, but she was also sufficiently assured of a majority
in the Upper House, for there sat in it four-and-twenty spiritual Lords of her
own nomination.
The Spanish
ambassador reported (January 14, 1563) that at the opening of this Parliament,
the preacher, Nowell, Dean of St Paul’s, urged the Queen “to kill the caged
wolves”, thereby being meant the Marian Bishops. Nowell’s sermon is extant, and
says too much about the duty of slaying the ungodly. Hitherto the Reformers,
the men to whom Cranmer and Ridley were dear friends and honored masters, had
shown an admirable self-restraint. A few savage words had been said, but they had
not all come from one side. Christopher Goodman desired that “the bloody
Bishops” should be slain; but he had been kept out of England as a dangerous
fanatic. Dr John Story, in open Parliament, had gloried in his own cruelty, and
had regretted that in Mary’s day the axe had not been laid to the root of the
tree. At a time when letters from the Netherlands, France or Spain were always
telling of burnt Protestants, nobody was burnt in England and very few people
lay in prison for conscience sake. The deprived Bishops seem to have been left
at large until Parpaglia’s mission; then they were
sent to gaol. Probably they could be lawfully
imprisoned as contumacious excommunicates. Martinengo’s advent induced Cecil to clap his hand on a few “mass-mongers”, and on some
laymen who had held office under Mary. But in these years of horror it is a
small matter if a score of Catholics are kept in that Tower where Elizabeth was
lately confined; and her preachers had some right to speak of an unexampled
clemency.
Rightly or
wrongly, but very naturally, there was one man especially odious to the
Protestants. When the statute of 1563 was passed, it was said among the
Catholics that Bonner would soon be done to death, and the oath that he had
already refused was tendered to him a second time by Home the occupant of the
see of Winchester. The tender was only valid if Horne was “Bishop of the
diocese”. Bonner, who, it is said, had the aid of Plowden, the most famous
pleader of the time, threatened to raise the fundamental question whether Horne
and his fellows were lawful Bishops. He was prepared to dispute the validity of
the statutes of 1559 : to dispute the validity of the quasi-papal power of
“supplying defects” which the Queen had assumed : to attack the very heart of
the new order of things. Elizabeth, however, was not to be hurried into
violence. The proceedings against him were stayed; her Bishops were compelled
to petition the Parliament of 1566 for a declaration that they were lawful
Bishops; their prayer was not granted except with the proviso that none of
their past acts touching life and property were to be thereby validated; and
eleven out of some thirty-five temporal Lords were for leaving Dr Parker and
his suffragans in their uncomfortably dubious position. Elizabeth allowed Lords
and Commons to discuss and confirm her letters patent; she was allowing all to
see that no Catholic who refrained from plots need fear anything worse than
twelve-penny fines; but she had not yet been excommunicated and deposed.
A project for
excommunication and deposition was sent to Trent from Louvain, where the
Catholic exiles from England congregated. Like Knox and Goodman in Mary’s
reign, those who had fled from persecution were already setting themselves to
exasperate the persecutor. The plan that found favor with them in 1563 involved
the action of the Emperor’s son, the Archduke Charles. He was to marry Mary
Stewart (who, however, had set her heart on a grander match), and then he was
to execute the papal ban. Englishmen, it was said, would never again accept as
King the heir to the throne of Spain; but his Austrian kinsman would be an
unexceptionable candidate or conqueror. The papal Legates at Trent consulted
the Emperor, who told his ambassadors that if the Council wished to make itself
ridiculous, it had better depose Elizabeth; he and his would have nothing to do
with this absurd and dangerous scheme (June 19). Soon afterwards he was
allowing his son’s marriage, not with the Catholic Mary, but with the heretical
Elizabeth, to be once more discussed, and the negotiations for this union were
being conducted by the eminently Lutheran Duke of Württemberg, who apparently
thought that pure religion would be the gainer if a Habsburg, Ferdinand's son
and Maximilian’s brother, became King of a Protestant England. Philip too,
though he had no wish to quarrel with his uncle, began seriously to think that,
in the interest of the Catholic faith and the Catholic King, Mary Stewart was
right in preferring the Spanish to the Austrian Charles; and at the same time
he was being assured from Rome that it was respect for him which had prevented
Pius from bringing Elizabeth’s case before the assembled Fathers. She was
protected from the anathema, which in 1563 might have been a serious matter, by
conflicting policies of the worldliest sort. The only member of the English
episcopate who was at Trent, the fugitive Marian Bishop of St Asaph, might do
his worst; but the safe course for ecclesiastical power was to make a beginning
with Jeanne d'Albret and wait to see whether any good
would come of the sentence. Ferdinand, however, begged Elizabeth to take pity
on the imprisoned prelates, and she quartered most of them upon their
Protestant successors. The English Catholics learnt from the Pope, whom they
consulted through the Spanish ambassadors at London and Rome, that they ought
not to attend the English churches (October, 1562). As a matter of expediency
this was a questionable decision. It is clear that the zealous Romanists
overestimated the number of those Englishmen whose preference for the old creed
could be blown into flame. The State religion was beginning to capture the
neutral nucleus of the nation, and the irreconcilable Catholics were compelled
to appear as a Spanish party secretly corresponding with the Pope through
Quadra and Vargas.
Elizabeth and the
Council of Trent.
Simultaneously
with the Parliament a Convocation of the province of Canterbury was held
(January 12, 1563), and its acts may be said to complete the great outlines of
the Anglican settlement. A delicate task lay before the theologians : no other
than that of producing a confession of faith. Happily in this case also a
restoration was possible. In the last months of Edward’s reign a set of
forty-two Articles had been published; in the main they were the work of
Cranmer. In 1563 Parker laid a revised version of them before the assembled
clergy, and, when a few more changes had been made, they took durable shape and
received the royal assent. A little more alteration at a later day made them
the famous “Thirty-nine Articles”. To all seeming the leaders of English
theological thought were remarkably unanimous.
A dangerous point
had been passed. Just at the moment when the Roman Church was demonstrating on
a grand scale its power of defining dogma, its adversaries were becoming always
less hopeful of Protestant unanimity. In particular, as Elizabeth was often
hearing from Germany, the dispute about the Lord’s Supper was not to be
composed, and a quarrel among divines was rapidly becoming a cause of quarrel
among Princes. Well intentioned attempts to construct elastic phrases had done
more harm than good, and it was questionable whether the Religious Peace would
comprehend the Calvinising Palsgrave. As causes of
political union and discord, all other questions of theology were at this
moment of comparatively small importance; the line which would divide the major
part of the Protestant world into two camps, to be known as Lutheran and
Calvinist, was being drawn by theories of the Holy Supper. It is usual and for
the great purposes of history it is right to class the Knoxian Church of
Scotland as Calvinian, though about Predestination
its Confession of Faith is as reticent as are the English Articles. Had it been
possible for the English Church to leave untouched the hotly controverted
question, the Queen would have been best pleased. She knew that at Hamburg,
Westphal, a champion of militant Lutheranism, “never ceased in open pulpit to
rail upon England and spared not the chiefest magistrates”; it was he who had denounced the Marian exiles as “the devil’s
martyrs”. Since the first moment of her reign Christopher of Württemberg and
Peter Paul Vergerio had been endeavoring to secure
her for the Lutheran faith. Jewel, who was to be the Anglican apologist, heard
with alarm of the advances made by the ex-Bishop of Capo d' Istria; and the
godly Duke had been pained at learning that no less than twenty-seven of the
Edwardian Articles swerved from the Augustan standard. Very lately he had urged
the Queen to stand fast for a Real Presence. Now, Lutheranism was by this time
politically respectable. When there was talk of a Bull against Elizabeth, the
Emperor asked how a distinction was to be made between her and the Lutheran
Princes, and could take for granted that no Pope with his wits about him would
fulminate a sentence against those pillars of the Empire, Augustus of Saxony
and Joachim of Brandenburg. When a few years later (1570) a Pope did depose
Elizabeth, he was careful to accuse her of participation in “the impious
mysteries of Calvin”, by which, no doubt, he meant the Cène.
But though the Augustan might be the safer creed, she would not wish to
separate herself from the Huguenots or the Scots, and could have little hope of
obtaining from her Bishops a declaration that would satisfy the critical mind
of the good Christopher. Concessions were made to him at points where little
was at stake; words were taken from his own Württemberg Confession. When the
perilous spot was reached, the English divines framed an Article which, as long
experience has shown, can be signed by men who hold different opinions; but a
charge of deliberate ambiguity could not fairly be brought against the Anglican
fathers. In the light of the then current controversy we may indeed see some
desire to give no needless offence to Lutherans, and apparently the Queen
suppressed until 1571 a phrase which would certainly have repelled them; but,
even when this phrase was omitted, Beza would have approved the formula, and it
would have given greater satisfaction at Geneva and Heidelberg than at Jena or
Tübingen. A papistical controversialist tried to insert a wedge which would
separate a Lutheran Parker from an Helvetic Grindal;
but we find Parker hoping that Calvin, or, if, not Calvin, then Vermigli will lead the Reformers at Poissy,
and the only English Bishop to whom Lutheran leanings can be safely attributed
held aloof from his colleagues and was for a while excommunicate. It was left
for Elizabeth herself to suggest by cross and candles that (as her German
correspondents put it) she was living “according to the divine light, that is,
the Confession of Augsburg”, while someone assured the Queen of Navarre that
these obnoxious symbols had been removed from the royal chapel. As to “the sacrifices
of masses”, there could be no doubt. The anathema of Trent was frankly
encountered by “blasphemous fable”. Elizabeth knew that her French ambassador
remained ostentatiously seated when the Host was elevated, for “reverencing the
sacrament was contrary to the usages
1563] The “Vestiarian controversy”
Another rock was
avoided. Ever since 1532 there had been in the air a project for an
authoritative statement of English Canon Law. In Edward’s day that project took
the shape of a book (Reformatio Legum Ecclesiasticarum) of
which Cranmer and Peter Martyr were the chief authors, but which had not
received the King’s sanction when death took him. During Elizabeth’s first
years we hear of it again; but nothing decisive was done. The draft code that
has come down to us has every fault that it could have. In particular, its list
of heresies is terribly severe, and apparently (but this has been doubted) the
obstinate heretic is to go the way that Cranmer went : not only the Romanists
but some at least of the Lutherans might have been relinquished to the secular
arm. Howbeit, the scheme fell through. Under a statute of Henry VIII so much of
the old Canon Law as was not contrariant nor repugnant to the Word of God or to
Acts of the English Parliament was to be administered by the Courts of the
English Church. Practically this meant, that the officials of the Bishops had a
fairly free hand in declaring law as they went along. They were civilians; the
academic study of the Canon Law had been prohibited; they were not in the least
likely to contest the right of the temporal legislature to regulate spiritual
affairs. And the hands of the Queen’s ecclesiastical commissioners were free
indeed. Large as were the powers with which she could entrust them by virtue of
the Act of Supremacy, she professedly gave them yet larger powers, for they
might punish offenders by fine and imprisonment, and this the old Courts of the
Church could not do. A constitutional question of the first magnitude was to
arise at this point. But during the early years of the reign the commissioners
seem to be chiefly employed in depriving papists of their benefices, and this
was lawful work.
But while there
was an agreeable harmony in dogma and little controversy over polity, the
quarrel about ceremonies had begun. In the Convocation of 1563, resolutions,
which would have left the posture of the communicants to the discretion of the
Bishops and would have abolished the observance of Saints’ days, the sign of
the cross in baptism and the use of organs, were rejected in the Lower House by
the smallest of majorities. It was notorious that some of the Bishops favored
only the simplest rites; five deans and a dozen archdeacons petitioned against
the modest surplice. But for its Supreme Governor, the English Church would in
all likelihood have carried its own purgation far beyond the degree that had
been fixed by the secular legislature. To the Queen, however, it was of the
first importance that there should be no more changes before the face of the
Tridentine enemy, and also that her occasional professions of Augustan
principles should have some visible support. The Bishops, though at first with
some reluctance, decided to enforce the existing law; and in course of time
conservative sentiment began to collect around the rubrics of the Prayer Book.
However, there were some men who were not to be pacified. The “Vestiarian controversy” broke out. Those who strove for a
worship purified from all taint of popery (and who therefore were known as
“Puritans”) “scrupled” the cap and gown that were to be worn by the clergy in
daily life, and “scrupled” the surplice that was to be worn in church. Already
in 1565 resistance and punishment had begun. At Oxford the Dean of Christ
Church was deprived, and young gentlemen at Cambridge discarded the rags of the
Roman Antichrist.
In the next year
the London clergy were recalcitrant. The Spanish ambassador improved the occasion.
In reply, Elizabeth told him that the disobedient ministers were “not natives
of the country, but Scotsmen, whom she had ordered to be punished”. Literal
truth she was not telling, and yet there was truth of a sort in her words. From
this time onwards, the historian of the English Church must be often thinking
of Scotland, and the historian of the Scottish Church must keep England ever in
view. Two kingdoms are drifting together, first towards a “personal” and then
towards a “real” Union; but two Churches are drifting apart into dissension and
antagonism. The attractions and repulsions that are involved in this process
fill a large page in the annals of Britain; they have become plain to all in
the age of the Bishops’ Wars and the Westminster Assembly; but they are visible
much earlier. The attempt to Scoticise the English
Church, which failed in 1660, and the attempt to Anglicize the Scottish Church,
which failed in 1688, each of these had its century.
For a while there
is uncertainty. At one moment Maitland is sure that the two kingdoms have one
religion; at another (March, 1563) he can tell the Bishop of Aquila that there
are great differences; but undoubtedly in 1560 the prevailing belief was that
the Protestants of England and Scotland were substantially at one; and, many as
were to be the disputes between them, they remained substantially at one for
the greatest of all purposes until there was no fear that either realm would
revert to Rome. From the first the Reforming movement in the northern kingdom
had been in many ways an English movement. Then in 1560 Reformation and
national deliverance had been effected simultaneously by the aid of English
gold and English arms. John Knox was a Scot of Scots, and none but a Scot could
have done what he did; but, had he died in 1558 at the age of fifty-three, his
name would have occurred rather in English than in Scottish books, and he might
have disputed with Hooper the honor of being the progenitor of the English
Puritans. The congregation at Geneva for which he compiled his Prayer Book was
not Scottish but English. His Catholic adversaries in Scotland said that he
could not write good Scots. Some of his principal lieutenants were Englishmen
or closely connected with England.John Willock, while
he was “Superintendent” (Knoxian Bishop) of Glasgow, was also parson of
Loughborough. “Mr Goodman of England” had professed
divinity at Oxford, and after his career in Scotland was an English archdeacon,
though a troublesome Puritan. John Craig had been tutor in an English family,
and, instead of talking honest Scots, would “knap suddrone”.
But further, Knox had signed the English Articles of 1553, and is plausibly
supposed to have modified their wording. A Catholic controversialist of Mary’s
day said that “a runagate Scot” had procured that the adoration of Christ in
the Sacrament should be put out of the English Prayer Book. To that book in
1559 Knox had strong objections; he detested ceremonies; the Coxian party at Frankfort had played him a sorry trick and
he had just cause of resentment; but there was nothing doctrinally wrong with
the Book. It was used in Scotland. In 1560 a Frenchman whom Randolph took to
church in Glasgow, and who had previously been in Elizabeth’s chapel, saw great
differences, but heard few, for the prayers of the English Book were said. Not
until some years later did “the Book of Geneva” (Knox’s liturgy) become the
fixed standard of worship for the Scottish Church. The objection to all
prescript prayers is of later date and some say that it passes from England
into Scotland. This Genevan Use had been adopted by the chaplain of Elizabeth’s
forces at Havre, and, though he was bidden to discontinue it, he was forthwith
appointed to the deanery of Durham. A Puritan movement in England there was
likely to be in any case. The arguments of both parties were already prepared.
The Leipzig Interim, the work of the Elector Maurice, had given
rise to a similar quarrel among the Lutherans, between Flacians on the one side and Philipians on the other, over
those rites and ornaments which were “indifferent” in themselves, but had, as
some thought, been soiled by superstition. The English exiles who returned from
Zurich and Geneva would dislike cap, gown, and surplice; but their foreign
mentors counseled submission; Bullinger was large-minded, and Calvin was
politic. Scotland, however, was very near, and in Scotland this first phase of
Puritanism was in its proper place. So long as Mary reigned there and plotted
there, the Protestant was hardly an established religion; and, had Knox been
the coolest of schemers, he would have endeavored to emphasize every difference
between the old worship and the new. It was not for him to make light of adiaphora;
it was for him to keep Protestant ardor at fever heat. Maitland, who was a cool
schemer, made apology to Cecil for Knox’s vehemence : “as things are fallen
out, it will serve to good purpose”. And yet it is fairly certain that Knox
dissuaded English Puritans from secession. In his eyes the Coxian Church of England might be an erring sister, but still was a twin sister, of
the Knoxian Church of Scotland.
Elizabeth’s
resistance to the Puritan demands was politic. The more Protestant a man was,
the more secure would be his loyalty if Rome were aggressive. It was for her to
appeal to the “neutral in religion” and those “faint professors” of whom her
Bishops saw too many. It is not perhaps very likely that surplices and square
caps won to her side many of those who cared much for the old creed. Not the
simplest and most ignorant papist, says Whitgift to the Puritans, could mistake
the Communion for the Mass: the Mass has been banished from England as from
Scotland : we are full as well Reformed as are the Scots. But Elizabeth feared
frequent changes, was glad to appear as a merely moderate Reformer, and meant
to keep the clergy well in hand. Moreover, in Catholic circles her cross and
candles produced a good impression. When she reproved Dean Nowell for
inveighing against such things, this was soon known to Cardinal Borromeo, and he
was not despondent (April 21, 1565). Even her dislike for a married clergy,
which seems to have been the outcome of an indiscriminating misogyny, was
favorably noticed. It encouraged the hope that she might repent, and for some
time Rome was unwilling to quench this plausibly smoking flax. But her part was
difficult. The Puritans could complain that they were worse treated than
Spanish, French and Dutch refugees, whose presence in England she liberally
encouraged. Casiodoro de Reyna, Nicolas des Gallars, and Utenhove, though the
Bishop of London was their legal “superintendent”, were allowed a liberty that
was denied to Humphry and Sampson; there was one welcome for Mrs Matthew Parker and another for Madame la Cardinale.
Presbyterianism
and Episcopalianism.
The controversy of
the sixties over rites and clothes led to the controversy of the seventies over
polity, until at length Presbyterianism and Episcopalianism stood arrayed against each other. But the process was gradual. We must not
think that Calvin had formulated a Presbyterian system, which could be imported
ready-made from Geneva to Britain. In what is popularly called Presbyterianism
there are various elements. One is the existence of certain presbyters or elders,
who are not pastors or ministers of the Word, but who take a larger or smaller
part in the government of the Church. This element may properly be called Calvinian, though the idea of some such eldership had
occurred to other Reformers. Speculations touching the earliest history of the
Christian Church were combined with a desire to interest the laity in a
rigorous ecclesiastical discipline. But Calvin worked with the materials that
were ready to his hand and was far too wary to raise polity to the rank of
dogma. The Genevan Church was essentially civic or municipal; its Consistory is
very much like a committee of a town council. This could not be the model for a
Church of France or of Scotland, which would contain many particular
congregations or churches. Granted that these particular Churches will be
governed by elders, very little has yet been decided : we may have the loosest
federation of autonomous units, or the strictest subordination of the parts to
some assembly which is or represents the whole. Slowly and empirically, the
problem was solved with somewhat different results in France, Scotland, and the
Low Countries. As we have said, the month which saw Knox land in Scotland saw a
French Church taking shape in a national Synod that was being secretly held at
Paris. Already Frenchmen are setting an example for constituent assemblies and
written constitutions. Knox, who had been edifying the Church of Dieppe-that
Dieppe which was soon to pass into Elizabeth's hands-stood in the full current
of the French movement; but, like his teacher, he had no iron system to impose.
Each particular congregation would have elders besides a pastor; there would be
some general assembly of the whole Church; but Knox was not an ecclesiastical
jurist. The First Book of Discipline (1560) decides
wonderfully little; even the structure of the General Assembly is nebulous;
and, as a matter of fact, all righteous noblemen seem to be welcome therein. It
gradually gives itself a constitution, and, while a similar process is at work
in France, other jurisdictional and governmental organs are developed, until
kirk-session, presbytery, synod and assembly form a concentric system of Courts
and councils of which Rome herself might be proud. But much of this belongs to
a later time; in Scotland it is not Knoxian but Melvillian.
A mere demand for
some ruling elders for the particular Churches was not likely to excite
enthusiasm or antagonism. England knew that plan. The curious Church of foreign
refugees, which was organized in the London of Edward VI’s days under the
presidency of John Laski, had elders. Cranmer took great interest in what he
probably regarded as a fruitful experiment, and the Knoxian Church has some
traits which, so good critics think, tell less of Geneva than of the Polish but
cosmopolitan nobleman. Dr Horne, Elizabeth’s Bishop of Winchester, had been the
pastor of a Presbyterian flock of English refugees at Frankfort. With a portion
of that flock he had quarreled, not for being Presbyterian, but because the
Presbyterianism of this precocious conventicle was already taking that acutely
democratic and distinctly uncalvinian form, in which
the elders are the annually elected officers of a congregation which keeps both
minister and elders well under control. Among Englishmen a
The enthusiasm and
antagonism were awakened by a different cry: it was not a call for presbyters,
but a call for “parity”, for an equality among all the ministers of God’s Word,
and consequently for an abolition of all “prelacy”. As a battle cry this is hardly Calvinian; nor is it Knoxian; it is first audible at
Cambridge. The premisses, it is true, lay ready to
the hand of anyone who chose to combine them. The major was that Protestant
principle which refers us to the primitive Church. The minor was a proposition
familiar to the Middle Age : originally there was no difference between
the presbyter and the episcopus.
Every student of the Canon Law knew the doctrine that the prelacy of Bishops is
founded, not on divine command, but on a “custom of the Church”. When the
Puritan said that the episcopal jurisdiction was of popish origin, he agreed
with Laynez and the Pope; at least, as had been amply
shown at Trent, the divine right of Bishops was a matter over which Catholic
doctors could quarrel bitterly.But the great
Reformers had been chary of their words about ecclesiastical polity; there were
many possibilities to be considered, and the decision would rest with Princes
or civic Councils. The defenders of Anglican episcopacy occasionally told the
Puritan that he was not a good Calvinist, and even Beza could hardly be brought
by British pressure to a sufficiently dogmatic denunciation of prelacy. As to
Knox, it is clear that, though he thought the English dioceses too large, he
had no radical objection to such prelacy as existed in England. Moreover, the
Church that he organized in Scotland was prelatic, and there is but little
proof that he regarded its prelatic constitution as a concession to merely
temporary needs. The word “bishop” was avoided (in Scotland there still were
lawful Bishops of another creed); but over the “dioceses” stand
“superintendents” (the title comes from Germany), who, though strictly
accountable to the general assembly, are distinctly the rulers of the diocesan
clergy. Between superintendent and minister there is no “parity”; the one may
command, the other must obey. The theory that valid orders can be conferred by
none but a Bishop, Knox would, no doubt, have denied; but some at all events of
the contemporary English Bishops would have joined him in the denial.
Apparently Thomas
Cartwright, a young professor of divinity at Cambridge, spoke the word (1570)
that had not yet been spoken in Scotland. Cambridge was seething with
Puritanism; the Bishops had been putting the vestiarian law in force; and the French Church had declared for parity. “There ought to be
an equality”: presbyter and Bishop were once all one. But if the demand for
parity was first heard south of the Tweed, it was soon echoed back by Scotland;
and thenceforth the English Puritan was often looking northward. In Scotland
much had been left unsettled. From August, 1561, to May, 1568, Mary Stewart is
there; Rizzio and Darnley, Bothwell and Moray, Lethington and Knox, are on the stage; and we hold our breath while the tragedy is played.
We forget the background of unsolved questions and uncertain law. Is the one
lawful religion the Catholic or the Protestant? Are there two established
Churches, or is one Church established and another endowed? There is an interim :
or rather, an armed truce. The Queen had not confirmed the statutes of 1560,
though mass-mongers were occasionally imprisoned. Nothing decisive had been
done in the matter of tithes and kirk-lands and advowsons. The Protestant
ministers and superintendents were receiving small stipends which were charged
upon the ecclesiastical revenues; but the Bishops and Abbots, some of whom were
Protestant ministers, had not been ousted from their temporalities or their
seats in Parliament, and, as vacancies occurred, the bishoprics were conferred
upon new occupants, some of whom were Catholics. The General Assembly might
meet twice a year; but John Hamilton still went to Parliament as a reverend
father in God and primate of Scotland. If Mary had succeeded in reestablishing
Catholicism, we should probably have said that it had never been
disestablished. And when she had been deposed and a Parliament held in her
son’s name had acknowledged the Knoxian Church to be “the immaculate spouse of
Christ”, much was still unsettled. What was to be done with the bishoprics and
abbacies and with the revenues and seats in Parliament that were involved
therewith? Grave questions of civil and ecclesiastical polity were open, and a
large mass of wealth went a-begging or illustrated the beatitude of possession.
Then in the seventies we on the one hand see an attempt to Anglicise the Church by giving it Bishops, who will sit in Parliament and be somewhat
more prelatic than were Knox’s superintendents, and on the other hand we hear a
swelling cry for parity.
Erastus and Erastianism. [1568-72
To many a Scot
prelacy will always suggest another word of evil sound: to wit, Erastianism. The link is Anglican. The name of the
professor of medicine at Heidelberg - it was Thomas Lüber,
or in Greek Erastus - won a fame or infamy in Britain that has been denied to
it elsewhere. And in some sort this is fair, for it was an English Puritan who
called him into the field; and after his death his manuscript book was brought
to England and there for the first time printed. His Prince, the Elector
Palatine Frederick III, was introducing into his dominions, in the place of the
Lutheranism which had prevailed there, the theology that flowed from Zurich and
Geneva; images were being destroyed and altars were giving place to tables.
This, as Elizabeth knew when the Thirty Nine Articles lay before her, was a
very serious change; it strained to breaking-point the professed unanimity of
the Protestant Princes. Theology, however, was one thing, Church-polity
another; and for all the Genevan rigors Frederick was not yet prepared. But to
Heidelberg for a doctor’s degree came an English Puritan, George Withers, and
he stirred up strife there by urging the necessity of a discipline exercised by
pastor and elders (June, 1568). Erastus answered him by declaring that
excommunication has no warrant in the Word of God; and further that, when the
Prince is a Christian, there is no need for a corrective jurisdiction which is
not that of the State, but that of the Church. This sowed dissension between
Zurich and Geneva : between Bullinger, the friend of the English Bishops, and
Beza, the oracle of the Puritans. Controversy in England began to nibble at the
Royal Supremacy; and in Scotland the relation between the State (which until
1567 had a papistical head) and the Knoxian Church, was of necessity highly
indeterminate. Knox had written sentences which, in our rough British use of
the term, were Erastian enough; and a great deal of history might have been
changed, had he found in Scotland a pious prince or even a pious princess, a
Josiah or even a Deborah. As it fell out, the Scottish Church aspired to, and
at times attained, a truly medieval independence.Andrew Melvill’s strain of language has been compared with
that of Gregory VII; so has Thomas Cartwright’s; but the Scottish Church had an
opportunity of resuming ancient claims which was denied to the English. In 1572
an oath was imposed in Scotland; the model was English; but important words
were changed. The King of Scots is “Supreme Governor of this realm as well in
things temporal as in the conservation and purgation of religion”. The Queen of
England is “Supreme Governor of this realm as well in all spiritual or
ecclesiastical things or causes as temporal”. The greater continuity of ecclesiastical
history is not wholly on one side of the border. The charge of popery was soon
retorted against the Puritans by the Elizabethan divines and their Helvetian
advisers : Your new presbyter in his lust for an usurped dominion is but too
like old priest.
In controversy
with the Puritans the Elizabethan religion gradually assumed an air of
moderation which had hardly belonged to it from the first; it looked like a
compromise between an old faith and a new. It is true that from the beginning
of her reign Elizabeth distrusted Calvin; and when she swore that she never
read his books she may have sworn the truth. That blast of the trumpet had
repelled her. Not only had “the regiment of women” been attacked, but Knox and
Goodman had advocated a divine right of rebellion against idolatrous Princes.
Calvin might protest his innocence; but still this dangerous stuff came from
his Geneva. Afterwards, however, he took an opportunity of being serviceable to
the Queen in the matter of a book which spoke ill of her father and mother.
Then a pretty message went to him and he was bidden to feel assured of her
favor (September 18, 1561). Moreover, in German history Elizabeth appears as
espousing the cause of oppressed Calvinists against the oppressing Lutherans.
Still as time went on, when the Huguenots, as she said, had broken faith with
her about Havre and Calais, and the attack on “her officers”, the Bishops, was
being made in the name of the Genevan discipline, her dislike of Geneva, its
works, and its ways, steadily grew. Though in the region of pure theology
Calvin's influence increased apace in England and Scotland after his death, and
Whitgift, the stern repressor of the Puritans, was a remorseless
predestinarian, still the Bishops saw, albeit with regret, that they had two
frontiers to defend, and that they could not devote all their energy to the
confutation of the Louvainists.
Then some severed,
or half-severed, bonds were spliced. Parker was a lover of history, and it was
pleasant to sit in the chair of Augustine, seeing to editions of Elfric’s Homilies and the Chronicles of Matthew Paris. But
the work was slowly done, and foreigners took a good share in it. Hadrian
Saravia, who defended English episcopacy against Beza, was a refugee, half
Spaniard, half Fleming. Pierre Baron of Cambridge, who headed a movement
against Calvin’s doctrine of the divine decrees, was another Frenchman, another
pupil of the law-school of Bourges. And it is to be remembered that at
Elizabeth’s accession the Genevan was not the only model for a radically
Reformed Church. The fame of Zwingli’s Zurich had hardly yet been eclipsed, and
for many years the relation between the Anglican and Tigurine Churches was close and cordial. A better example of a purely spiritual power
could hardly be found than the influence that was exercised in England by
Zwingli’s successor Henry Bullinger. Bishops and Puritans argue their causes
before him as if he were the judge. So late as 1586 English clergymen are
required to peruse his immortal Decades. There was some gratitude in the case.
A silver cup with verses on it had spoken Elizabeth’s thanks for the
hospitality that he had shown to Englishmen. But that was not all; he
sympathized with Elizabeth and her Bishops and her Erastianism.
He condemned “the English fool” who broke the peace of the Palatinate by a
demand for the Genevan discipline. When the cry was that the congregation
should elect its minister, the Puritan could be told how in an admirably
reformed republic Protestant pastors were still chosen by patrons who might be
papists, even by a Bishop of Constance who might be the Pope's own nephew and a
Cardinal to boot, for a Christian magistracy would see that this patronage was
not abused. And then when the bad day came and the Pope hurled his thunderbolt,
it was to Bullinger that the English Bishops looked for a learned defence of their Queen and their creed. Modestly, but
willingly, he undertook the task: none the less willingly perhaps, because Pius
V had seen fit to couple Elizabeth’s name with Calvin’s, and this was a
controversialist's trick which Zurich could expose. Bullinger knew all the
Puritan woes and did not like surplices; he knew and much disliked the
“semi-popery” of Lutheran Germany; but in his eyes the Church of England was no
half-way house. As to Elizabeth, he saw her as no luke-warm
friend of true religion, but as a virgin-queen beloved of God, whose wisdom and
clemency, whose felicity and dexterity were a marvel and a model for all
Christian Princes (March 12, 1572).
The felicity and
dexterity are not to be denied. The Elizabethan religion which satisfied
Bullinger was satisfying many other people also; for (to say nothing of
intrinsic merits or defects) it appeared as part and parcel of a general
amelioration. It was allied with honest money, cheap and capable government,
national independence, and a reviving national pride. The long Terror was overpast, at least for a while; the flow of noble blood was
stayed; the axe rusted at the Tower. The long Elizabethan peace was beginning
(1563), while France was ravaged by civil war, and while more than half the
Scots looked to the English Queen as the defender of their faith. One Spaniard
complains that these heretics have not their due share of troubles (November,
1562); another, that they are waxing fat upon the spoil of the Indies (August,
1565). The England into which Francis Bacon was born in 1561 and William
Shakespeare in 1564 was already unlike the England that was ruled by the Queen
of Spain.
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