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CHAPTER 10
THE LAST YEARS OF ELIZABETH.
THE concluding scenes in the drama of Queen Elizabeth's reign abound in
exciting episodes. Complicated crises in the ecclesiastical and political
spheres succeed each other with rapidity. Apart from all questions of foreign
policy, each year produced domestic incidents which kept the mind of the nation
on the alert.
No such momentous events presented themselves as the trial and execution
of Mary Stewart or the dispersal of the Spanish Armada. But the causes which
produced those stirring incidents were still powerful. The jealousy of Spain
was stimulated rather than diminished by the campaign of 1588. The Catholic
conspiracy against Queen Elizabeth's government was not crushed by the death of
the Queen of Scots. "The dangers are not over yet", remarked the
Queen in her latest years to her godson Sir John Harington, who noticed that to
the end she always kept a sword beside her table.
By 1588 England had won two important victories which had inflicted
serious wounds on her foes. But her old enemies were still defiant, and the
need of vigilance was the same as before. Few new questions in foreign or home
affairs occupied the attention of English statesmen. Even the critical domestic
topic of the succession to the Crown had been present to them from the outset.
Time now merely rendered its settlement more urgent, and gave it greater
prominence. In other directions problems that had been surveyed from a distance
now called for solution at close quarters.
The main distinction between England before 1588 and after that eventful
year lay in no novelty of policy, in no change of national aspiration, but in a
reinforcement of the sentiments which dominated the earlier epoch. The nation's
confidence in its destiny, now that it was freed from imminent peril, gained in
intensity: intellectual and spiritual energy was quickened, and moved more
rapidly. Literature, while developing along the lines on which it had already
set forth, scaled unprecedented heights. Probably the most notable feature of
the era, the one which in the end contributed most to the increase of the
national reputation, was the literary activity, which found its highest
embodiment in the dramas of Shakespeare, but proved its rare fertility in many
other manifestations, notably in the achievements of Bacon, Hooker, and Ben
Jonson. Meanwhile political and ecclesiastical principles, which had already
won the allegiance of one or other section of the public, sought further
advantage; and their advocates endeavored more
strenuously than before to impress their own convictions on the national
conscience. Political and religious parties assumed a more aggressive tone in
their attitude towards one another; their aims became more distinct and their
tone more uncompromising.
Loyalty to the Crown was never more passionate.
Sovereign and people were repeatedly exchanging protestations of mutual love.
Yet sentiments of a type which conflicted with these assurances were gaining
force. The professional and mercantile classes were manifesting a growing
impatience of arbitrary government or constraints on personal liberty. City
merchants were not backward in complaints of the burden of taxation. Nearly
every parliament produced some champion of popular rights, who could only be
silenced by imprisonment. The authority of veteran statesmen, who had long
guided the national policy, was exposed in larger measure than in early years
to vexatious criticism within the bounds of the Queen's Council. A new
generation of courtiers had arisen, and they fought hard and not ineffectively
with the old ministers for control of the Crown's influence. The slow and
diplomatic caution which distinguished the old school of politicians was
scouted by men of reckless daring and restless activity who were unburdened by
official responsibility. Although the Queen's presence could restrain the
impatient and abusive remonstrance with which the new-comers were wont to meet
the proposals of their elders, not even her intervention in debate could always
preserve her old advisers from defeat.
The Queen, as her years grew, seemed more accessible to the lover-like
attentions with which youthful aspirants to political power flattered her
vanity, and she gave many of them specious encouragement. But she was loyal to
old servants of the State; she did not take the political pretensions of her
younger admirers seriously, and by her delusive patronage she contrived to keep
jealousy rife among them. The courtiers who stood outside the official
hierarchy ranged themselves about the throne in rival factions. Their efforts
to outwit each other limited their active influence, but kept the Court in
perpetual turmoil and at times gave an impression of uncertainty to the action
of the government. Another danger lay in the active adherence of government to
the principle of force in dealing with antagonistic opinions; for the efficacy
of coercion was an almost universal creed among practical politicians. It was
constantly put to the test of experiment, and raised up an army of victims
whose resentment and animosity were steadily increasing. There were powerful
critics of the accepted coercive principle in the last years of the reign, but
they carried little weight on the active stage of public affairs.
A spirit of
turbulence and unrest indeed brooded over the domestic affairs of the nation.
But the tendencies to internal disorder, formidable although they were, were
held in check by influences which were of old standing and showed no sign of
decay. There was genuine sincerity in the regard and affection which the mass
of the people felt for the Queen, although at the same time they groaned under
oppressive burdens of taxation. Her increasing age accentuated her resolute
bearing and gave her an added title to reverence. Zeal for the nation's
independence and for the final dissipation of the foreign peril was an
efficient bond of union among the Court factions, however sharply personal
ambitions and predilections divided them. The House of Commons, when burning to
discuss the nation's grievances, cheerfully postponed domestic questions, at a
reminder from the government of the urgent need of providing supplies wherewith
to resist some new threat of foreign invasion. Thinking men like Francis Bacon
might well cherish the hope that such solvents of discord as these might
ultimately assuage the heat of party, and that wise statesmanship might yet
discover a via media, a means of general reconcilement. The flames of intestine
strife were menacing; but with caution their progress might be stayed, and the
equilibrium of the State might be preserved from overthrow.
The despotic principle of the Queen's government, in spite of signs of
discontent, underwent little modification in her last years. The sovereign's
strength of will never faltered. Her conservative temper resisted innovation.
Although she gave proof in her latest years of anxiety to exercise the
prerogatives of autocracy in the material interests of the nation at large
rather than in the interests of any class or clique, her assertion of absolute
authority in affairs of State was never qualified by doubt or fear. Fortune
seemed to smile on her pretensions. Death wrought inevitable changes in the
circle of her ministers and friends, but its action was slow and deliberate.
Veteran supporters holding responsible offices passed from the scene, but it
was after their work was done; and, when they were withdrawn from the stage of
public affairs, the system to which they had ministered went on as before under
the Queen's vigorous direction.
1572-90] The Queen's chief minister
The Queen's chief councillor, Lord Burghley,
was a zealous guardian of traditional policy, and he was long-lived. For forty
years, from her accession till within five years of her death, he was at her side
to give all the assurance of homogeneity that was possible to her foreign and domestic
policy. Burghley's career belonged, in Horace Walpole's phrase, to "the
annals of his country". At the date of the Armada he was sixty-eight years
old. He had already enjoyed thirty-eight years' experience of high political
office, and was to pass through another ten years of service. In 1550, at the
age of thirty, he had become Secretary of State to the Queen's half-brother
Edward VI. Queen Elizabeth, on her accession, appointed him to the like post.
Fourteen years later he rose to be Lord Treasurer, and was thenceforth in
effect both the Queen's Prime Minister and her foreign minister. Lord Burghley
cherished through life a thoroughgoing and unfashionable contempt for the
foreigner. He was unmoved by the foreign culture which won wide sympathy among
his contemporaries. Yet it was his destiny in public life chiefly to
concentrate his energies on foreign affairs. All the other business of
government indeed passed under his survey. There was scarcely any personal or
public topic about which the Queen failed to ask his opinion, and he never
spared himself pains in elaborating in writing schemes of advice on every
subject that presented itself But it was in the capacity of foreign minister
that the Queen chiefly valued his assistance. Not that she accepted any of his
counsel unquestioningly; at times she brusquely rejected it. But he always
retained her confidence. He was, she declared, her "spirit" and her
"oracle"; and, in spite of occasional modifications which the Queen
or some other adviser imposed on his plans, it was Burghley's scheme of foreign
policy which governed Elizabethan England. Burghley was slow in speech and
movement, and was no believer in heroic measures in domestic or foreign
affairs. He regarded war as the last resort of statesmanship, and firmly
believed in the virtues of diplomatic intrigue as a bulwark against aggression.
In this faith he created and maintained an enormous secret service. An army of
spies throughout Europe were for some thirty years in constant correspondence
with him. Few Catholic agents in the pay of England's enemies at Paris, Rome,
or Madrid escaped his observation. The Elizabethan system of espial was brought
to the highest perfection by his astute colleague, Sir Francis Walsingham, the Queen's secretary. But Walsingham worked under Burghley's supervision and in subordination to him. The secret
dispatches were usually annotated by the Lord Treasurer, and he alone took
action upon them. When Walsingham died in 1590 he
left a wide gap in the administration, but it was filled by Burghley's personal
activity. He gave to the clandestine machinery a minuter attention than before, and its operations lost none of their efficiency.
Burghley outlived almost all the statesmen of his own generation. The
thinning of the ranks of his contemporaries at once increased his dignity and
intensified his isolation. His taciturnity, cynical temperament, and cautious
bearing exhausted the patience of the younger frequenters of the Court, but
they recognised his acumen by conferring on him the sobriquet of the "old
fox." Attempts made to displace him, ignominiously failed; but in the
later years of Elizabeth's reign he more than once had to accept warlike
solutions of foreign problems, which were out of harmony with his pacific and
cautious temperament.
The rise of Sir Robert Cecil [1588-98
In his own household he had prepared for himself a valuable ally. His
son Robert, who shared his cautious habits of mind, and combined them with
greater alertness of thought and speech, was brought up to be his coadjutor.
After 1590, when Burghley reached his seventieth year, his health declined by
slow degrees. Though his industry was long proof against physical weakness, he
grew more and more dependent on the assistance of his son. To the exaggerated
mode of adulation which Burghley had constantly practised in his addresses to his sovereign Robert Cecil easily adapted himself, and the
Queen was readily moved to extend to him, "her little Secretary", the
confidence which his father had long enjoyed. The partnership of father and son
proved formidable from the first; and, when in 1596 Sir Robert Cecil was
formally appointed Secretary of State, the Cecilian ascendancy, despite the jealousy it encountered, was in a position to scorn
assault. The younger Cecil contrived to gather into his hands all the preferments of the Crown, and none could hope for promotion
except by his favour. Burghley survived his son's elevation by two years. As
his bodily infirmities grew, the Queen lavished on him enhanced marks of her
gratitude and affection. She entreated him to spare himself the fatigues of
Court etiquette, by which in other instances she set exaggerated store; she
even helped to nurse him through his last illness. His death was a personal
loss which grieved her acutely. But his removal caused no change in the method
of her administration. Sir Robert Cecil carried it on, under her effective
supervision, in his father's spirit and with somewhat greater ardour.
Yet the most obvious embarrassments which Lord Burghley suffered in his endeavors to control the Queen's policy came from the
Queen herself. He was hampered not merely by her sudden displays at critical
moments of an obstinate insistence on her own authority, but also by the vain
hopes of exerting a rival political influence which her coquetries excited in
ambitious courtiers outside the official hierarchy. Burghley was subjected to
the hostility of the Queen's favorites throughout
his official association with her. Until the date of the Spanish Armada her
friend the Earl of Leicester had steadily endeavored to thwart or misrepresent Burghley's advice and action. The endeavors had proved of small avail, but they increased the harassing cares of Burghley's
official life. Although the Queen often quarrelled with Leicester and ridiculed his presumptuous pretensions to political power,
through thirty years of her reign she never for long excluded him from her
society. His sudden death after the defeat of the Spaniards in September, 1588,
seemed to relieve Lord Burghley of a primary source of anxiety. Three years
later Sir Christopher Hatton, another of the Queen's favorites,
whose frank intimacy with her had been a crying scandal, passed away. She had
rewarded Hatton's attentions with a liberality that with her was rare. She had,
with doubtful wisdom, admitted him to the inner circle of the government. For
four years he had filled the great judicial office of Lord Keeper.
The places
that the death of Leicester and Hatton left vacant were not empty long. Sir
Walter Ralegh had already attracted the Queen's
attention. His gallant bearing and felicitous power of flattering his sovereign
in melodious verse had already fascinated her; and she had eagerly welcomed the
compliment he paid her of giving in her honor the
name of Virginia to the tract of land on the American continent which he was
seeking to colonize. Ralegh remained to the end a member of the inner circle of the Court, though he
suffered many times the customary fortune of the Queen's favourites,
and was at intervals driven angrily from her presence. It was not however on Ralegh's shoulders that Leicester's mantle fell. The rĂ´le that the Earl of Leicester had played in his relations
to his sovereign was bestowed on a younger man, Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex.
1587-91] The rise of the Earl of Essex
Essex' kinship and education gave him some title to the succession. His
father died when he was nine, and Lord Burghley then became his guardian. When
he was thirteen years of age, his widowed mother married the Earl of Leicester,
and he thus stood to the Queen's favorite in the
relation of stepson. His "goodly person" attracted the Queen from
the day that he came to Court in his youth. "When she is abroad",
wrote a friendly observer in 1587, the year in which Essex attained his
majority, "nobody with her but my Lord of Essex; and at night my Lord is
at cards or one game or another with her that he cometh not to his own lodging
till birds sing in the morning." His vanity was flattered by such proofs
of the Queen's affection, and he formed a resolve to fill a predominant position
in State affairs. With the versatility characteristic of the epoch he set no
limits to the scope of his ambition. In the arts alike of war and peace he
hoped to outstrip all competitors. Of cultivated tastes, he had a distinct
measure of poetic genius. Endowed with much physical strength, he excelled in
athletic exercises, and was well able to bear the fatigues of active military
service. An exaggerated confidence in himself rendered him impatient of advice
and control. With small capacity for detail, he formed decided opinions on
political questions at home and abroad, and judged it practicable to impose his
views, by dint of passionate iteration, on the Queen herself and those who held
responsible office. His impetuosity blinded him to the obstacles which lay in
his path, and his career promised storm and strife.
On all who stood high in the Queen's favor Essex declared in due time
open war. He cared not what were the political views or personal merits of his
fellow-courtiers. Sir Walter Ralegh was as enthusiastic
an advocate of open war with Spain, and no less daring. Yet Ralegh was from first to last a formidable competitor with him in the race for the
exclusive control of the Queen, and was consequently treated by Essex as a
mortal foe. But Essex was clear-sighted enough to recognize that Lord Burghley and his son were the chief barriers between him and genuine
political power, and he devoted his main energies to counteracting their
influence. Every movement which the Lord Treasurer and his official allies
sought to check was encouraged by Essex. Every unsuccessful aspirant to
promotion at the Lord Treasurer's hands could count upon Essex as an ardent
patron and friend. He became the leader of opposition against the Queen's
official advisers and a centre of much concealed disaffection. He fought only
for his own hand. No large principles were embodied in his policy. He lived and
fell as a soldier of fortune. His reckless pursuit of selfish ends failed to
inflict any permanent injury on the administration of the country. But
circumstances so evolved themselves as to render him a menace to domestic peace
for nearly ten years.
There were attractive elements in Essex' personality
which gave him for a time a specious strength. Although he could not
subordinate himself to the authority of men in equal or superior stations, he
was genial in intercourse with his inferiors, and respected in those who served
him the powers of concentration in which he was himself deficient. He loved the
life of camps, and no suspicion of his personal courage was possible. He showed
to advantage in military society. When in the summer of 1591 he led a small
army of English volunteers to Normandy to aid Henry of Navarre in his struggle
with the army of the League, he easily won the friendship of that Prince and of
his chief general, Marshal de Biron. His virtues and
defects alike had the capacity of evoking popular sympathy.
Essex' position in the popular eye had been greatly improved by his
marriage in 1590. His wife was daughter of the Queen's Secretary of State, Sir
Francis Walsingham (who was lately dead), and the
widow of Sir Philip Sidney. He caught from the union some reflexions of the glamor and prestige attaching to the names of Sidney and of Walsingham. Sidney's knight-errantry was indeed after
Essex' own heart, and it was a grateful task to him to emulate it. His
father-in-law's skill in detective diplomacy was not easy for him to acquire;
but the example suggested to him one method of pursuing "the domestical greatness" after which he yearned, despite
his unfitness to attain it. He saw that his purpose of predominance would not
be gained unless he could induce the Queen to infuse something of his own
warlike spirit into the cautious foreign policy of Lord Burghley. Expert knowledge
of foreign affairs was necessary for effective criticism of the decisions of
the Queen's advisers. The Queen herself was always anxious to obtain early and
trustworthy information of events passing in foreign countries which concerned
herself and her subjects. Essex consequently took into his pay a number of
secretaries and clerks, who were to organise in his
own house a bureau of foreign intelligence. He was fortunate in his choice of
coadjutors.
Anthony Bacon, nephew of Lord Burghley's wife, who had traveled on the
Continent and was in touch with English and foreign spies throughout Europe,
was smarting under his uncle's cold indifference to his welfare. He was easily
persuaded to enlist in Essex' service as foreign secretary. Under Anthony Bacon's
direction Essex' house soon rivalled Lord Burghley's
Record Office in the quality and quantity of the foreign intelligence which
reached it. Essex for the time winged a lofty flight. He opened correspondence
with his old friend Henry IV of France, and with James VI of Scotland. He
promised to influence the English government in their interest. Lord Burghley
and his colleagues were gravely embarrassed by the respect which the foreign
sovereigns paid to their resolute critic, and Queen Elizabeth increased their
difficulties by listening with interest to the foreign dispatches which reached
Essex, and by inviting information from him in regard to critical foreign
questions.
1592-4] The trial and execution of Dr Lopez
Essex illustrated his normal method of work as an amateur and
self-appointed guardian of his sovereign by a charge which he brought against
the Queen's Jewish physician, Roderigo Lopez, of
conspiring against her life. Lopez had come from Portugal to England in 1559,
and had reached the highest place in the medical profession. He had a large
foreign correspondence and was politically useful to the government. In 1592
Essex welcomed to England a Portuguese adventurer, Don Antonio, who was a
pretender to the Spanish throne, and Lopez acted as the fugitive's interpreter.
Essex had already sought Lopez' aid as a collector of foreign news, but they
had not worked amicably. Lopez cultivated the society of foreign visitors to
London. Suspicion fell on him that he was in the pay of King Philip and was
conspiring to poison Queen Elizabeth and Don Antonio. When the matter was
brought to the Queen's attention she expressed incredulity; but Essex
undertook to prove the accusation true, and he left no stone unturned to bring
together sufficient evidence to secure a conviction. It was with reluctance that
the Queen signed the death-warrant. How far the facts justified the man's
execution is doubtful. Essex pressed into his service anti-Semitic as well as
anti-Spanish prejudice. But he claimed with pride to have rendered by his
vigilance a great public service, which the responsible ministers would have
been unable to accomplish without his cooperation. He believed that he had
damaged the government's credit by doing voluntarily and more thoroughly than
they their own work. He was sanguine of founding an Imperium in imperio.
Anthony Bacon was not the only member of his family who joined forces
with Essex and offered to aid his fortunes. Lord Burghley had alienated not
only Anthony Bacon, but also his brother, Francis, the possessor of the most
powerful intellect of the era, though at the moment he was known merely as a
struggling barrister. Francis Bacon, with characteristic cynicism, believed
that he might avenge himself on his neglectful kinsman by strengthening the
hands of an ambitious rival.
Francis Bacon was no good judge of men at close quarters, and he
misapprehended Essex' aims and character. He thought that under sagacious
guidance he might reach his goal of political predominance and even, to the
national advantage, enjoy power. In return for good counsel Bacon hoped to
receive from his patron official promotion.
The partnership looked more perilous to the stability of the responsible
government than it proved to be. Essex' erratic and impulsive temper was
incorrigible. He was not long able to apply himself to details of foreign
affairs. Nor was he attentive to the teachings of practical philosophy. Bacon
bade him retain the Queen's favor by affecting submission to her will. He was
to gain her confidence by his reasonableness in argument and width of view.
Above all he was to subdue his passion for military glory. But Essex could not
assimilate prudential maxims. Neither Anthony Bacon's tuition in details of
foreign affairs nor the rules of practical conduct which Francis Bacon poured
into his ears produced any real effect on his course of action. He was an
impulsive knight-errant, and neither close study nor carefully regulated behavior was adapted to his idiosyncrasy.
For a season, however, Essex' prospects steadily improved. Foreign
affairs were in 1595 inclining the balance of domestic power in favor of those
who were agitating for a spirited policy. A great opportunity seemed opening to
Lord Burghley's censors. A renewal of Spanish activity had robbed France of
Calais. England was threatened at closer quarters than ever by her pertinacious
foe. The peace party in the Council was seriously embarrassed. It was difficult
to justify inaction, with a Spanish army almost in sight of the English shore.
The party of aggression was loud in condemnation of delay. They urged as a
preliminary step active cooperation with France in an attempt to recover the
lost seaport. But the opposition were not altogether at one among themselves.
Essex and Ralegh both advised larger measures. They
were doubtful whether northern France offered England an adequate point of
attack on Spain. An expeditionary force for the relief of Calais was, however,
collected at Dover; and Essex, anxious to engage in any manner of active
service, accepted the command. But, before preparations were completed, the
plea for a more extended scheme of operations was pressed forward with vigor and success. The extreme section of the Council won
a victory over the cautious minister. Despite his hesitation, a thoroughgoing
attack on the shipping in Spanish ports was authorised.
Essex' position was strengthened by the course of events. In the expedition
which followed he took a very prominent part. To his dash and energy the
capture of Cadiz in 1596 was largely due. His repute rose high. He was the
popular hero of the campaign, and he overflowed with self-confident elation.
Essex downfall [1599-1600
Next year the aggressive party in the Council resumed its hold on the
country's foreign policy, and Essex thought to repeat his stirring exploits. He
engaged in the Islands' Voyage, in the assault on the Azores. But the result was
very different from that of the former expedition. Characteristic quarrels
among the commanders, for which he was largely responsible, rendered the
venture for the most part abortive. The Queen on his return reproached him with
his difficult temper. He made no secret of his resentment. The insecurity of
his footing at Court and the unreality of his political influence were patent
to all but himself. Thenceforth discussions in the Queen's Council increased in
bitterness and heat. The breach widened between Essex and Burghley. The burning
question of England's relations with Spain reached a new crisis in 1598, when
it was known that France and Spain were resolved on peace. Lord Burghley deemed
it prudent for England to follow the example of her neighbor,
and to bring the long struggle with Spain to an end by treaty. To this proposal
Essex declined to give a hearing. The problem was beset with difficulties. The
Low Countries warmly protested against an accommodation which would leave them
at the mercy of their ancient foe. To all the younger members of the Council it
seemed a point of honor to prolong the war with
Spain and continue an active alliance with the Dutch Protestants. Essex charged
himself with the duty of defeating Burghley's pacific scheme. His biting taunts
of cowardice and bad faith roused the veteran statesman's phlegmatic temper.
Drawing a prayer-book from his pocket Burghley replied to one of Essex'
harangues by quoting the text from the Psalms, "The bloodthirsty and
deceitful men shall not live out half their days." The Queen favored her minister's policy. She herself intervened in
one debate on his behalf, and bitterly reproached Essex for his rashness of
speech and bellicose sentiments. All his fellow-competitors for her favor were
present. Stung to the quick, he turned his back on the Queen with a gesture of
contempt, muttering an unpardonable insult. The Queen retaliated by striking
him a violent blow on the ear. Essex loudly exclaimed against the indignity.
The incident had a disastrous effect on Essex' future. Hurriedly
withdrawing from Court, he involuntarily forfeited to his rivals such influence
as he had lately acquired there. The effect of the warm debates in the Council
was the discomfiture of the peace party. The tedious war with Spain went on
after that power had made peace with France. The policy which was largely of
Essex' own devising triumphed; but his impulsive utterances had cost him the
rich rewards which with discretion he might have reaped from the victory. He
saw his error too late. He soon apologised to the
Queen for his misbehavior, and a reconciliation
followed. But it was a hollow settlement. Essex never recovered the ground he
had lost.
In spite of his loss of prestige at Court, Essex had many enthusiastic
admirers in the country; and their frequent demonstrations of regard buoyed
him up with a strange hope that he might yet with their aid turn the tables on
his enemies at Court. His sagacious advisers were beginning to despair of him.
Francis Bacon perceived the quicksands that he was
treading, and urged him to abandon his old courses and seek new avenues of
political reputation. The office of Lord Deputy of Ireland was vacant. The
English ascendancy there was threatened by rebellion. To give security in
Ireland to English rule was a difficult achievement. It had baffled the efforts
of a long series of Viceroys. Success in such a task promised an impregnable
position to him who won it. Bacon cynically told his patron that Ireland was
his destiny, and under his advice Essex sought and obtained the embarrassing
post of Governor of the distracted country. Essex himself seems to have
recognised that failure meant ruin. But there was a bare chance of such success
as would give him supreme influence hereafter. The appointment (1599) satisfied
his popular admirers. Shakespeare gave voice to a general public sentiment,
when in the Chorus to the last act of his new play of Henry V he promised an
enthusiastic reception to the "General of our gracious Empress" on
his home-coming from Ireland with "rebellion broached on his sword".
But the prognostications of evil came true. Essex' enemies were in his absence
once again all powerful in the Queen's councils; and he returned home only to
stand his trial for disobedience to royal orders and neglect of duty. After
tedious litigation he was dismissed from all offices of State, and all his
hopes were blighted.
Then there revived in his mind a desperate notion of forcibly removing
from the Queen's councils those to whom he attributed his ruin. He would appeal
from the Court to the people, whose regard he still believed that he enjoyed.
Elements of discontent existed in the mercantile classes, who felt the burden
of taxation, and among the Puritans, who were suffering from the penal laws.
Essex and his friends vainly hoped to draw representatives of these classes
into his quarrel. But with untamable presumption he aimed at enlisting the
sympathy of a more influential ally. Why should not James VI of Scotland make
common cause with him? Emissaries were despatched to
Edinburgh to suggest that it was in James' interest to obtain definite
assurances from the Queen's ministers of his title to the English throne. It
was argued that this object could be best attained by the despatch of an army to London, which on its march might combine with troops to be drawn
by Essex' private influence from Ireland, Wales, and the City of London. Essex
and his Scottish colleagues would then compel the Queen and her advisers to
abjure all rival claims to the succession. Such plans were clearly chimerical,
but Essex had a delusive ground for hope. With King James his epistolary
relations had long been cordial. He had played on the Scottish King's fear by
warnings that his right to the English Crown on Elizabeth's death would be
resisted, unless he himself was at the head of affairs. Although the King
declined to treat Essex' appeal seriously, he temporised with it. He was contemplating a mission to Elizabeth to discuss in general
terms the relations between the two countries. He agreed to give secret
instructions to his envoys to assist Essex in regaining the Queen's favor and
to follow his guidance. But in the end the negotiations, so far as Essex was
concerned, came to nothing. James was in no hurry to send his embassy. He
committed himself to little, hesitating to embroil himself in a movement which
had the aspect of a private feud at the Court of a royal neighbor.
Essex prepared documents for the instruction of the Scottish envoys, in which
he urged them to poison the Queen's mind against his enemies. But no active
help reached him from Scotland. The Scottish mission did not reach England
until Essex' rebellion had begun and ended.
The desperate design was doomed
from the outset. The authorities were soon on the alert, and their activity
forced Essex into a premature demonstration of rebellion. He believed that the
citizens of London would rise at the cry that the Queen's ministers were
compromising her relations with her people, and that the encroachments on her
authority of which they were guilty ought to be brought to the notice of a free
parliament. The manifesto evoked no response. Essex was arrested and, having
been put on his trial for high treason, was convicted and suffered death. The country repelled the invitation to rise in arms in Essex'
behalf. The episode, though of tragic interest, is of purely personal
significance. The government was far too firmly founded to suffer from assaults
of defeated ambition and personal resentment. Sir Robert Cecil was the
protector of too powerful a tradition of rule to give any chance of success to
a violent assault on his authority, which had no large public aim. The
dissatisfaction of the people with absolutism was in an embryonic stage: it
was not yet articulate. A leader of a calibre very
different to that of Essex was needed to resist with effect the government's
menaces of personal liberty.
The quarrels and rivalries of factions at Court closely affected the
country's foreign policy, but directly they produced little disturbance in the
general course of affairs at home. The issues at stake seemed to be remote from
the substantial interests of the people, who regarded as of small moment to
themselves the endeavor of this or that courtier to
win ascendancy in the Queen's favor or in the Council. A different class of
problems stirred the people's feelings. It was the attitude of the responsible
government towards matters of property and religion that touched their lives
most nearly.
The growth of Puritan dissent [1576-81
The Established Church of England was in theory the most imposing
embodiment of the nation's unity; and it was by a quarrel in which an
important section of the people directly engaged with the Church of England
that the internal peace of the nation was most seriously threatened in the
years following the Armada. Discontent on the part of a large section of the
Protestant population with the formularies of the Church of England had been
steadily gaining strength since the first decade of the reign; and a crisis
which threatened national unity was reached near its close. The revised Prayer
Book, which was legalised by the Act of Uniformity of
1559, had always savored of idolatry and Popery to
those Englishmen who, having accepted the tenets of Calvinism, regarded them
alone as consistent with the truths of Christianity. The asserted right on the
part of ministers of religion to follow the sole guidance of the Scriptures and
to exercise among themselves equal and uniform authority conflicted with the
pretensions of episcopacy, on which the Church of England was based. The
activity of dissent from the established religious doctrine was always a
valuable weapon in the hands of the leaders of Court factions. It lent some
popular color to their struggle with the Queen's
responsible ministers. The Queen's favorite, the
Earl of Leicester, and his successor in the royal regard, the Earl of Essex,
both patronized dissentient ministers of religion.
But the cause of nonconformity secured aid in the middle years of the Queen's
reign from a more authoritative quarter. For a time the highest ecclesiastical
dignitary of the kingdom gave the nonconformists open encouragement. The
Archbishop of Canterbury, Grindal, countenanced
evasion of the law of the land on the part of ordained ministers who doubted
the scriptural sanction of the Sacraments of the Church and the Prayer Book.
Under Archbishop Grindal's weak rule the power of the
Bishops was paralysed, and the Calvinistic opposition
to the Anglican establishment advanced by leaps and bounds. Puritan members
crowded the benches of the House of Commons. A Presbyterian organisation of the clergy on self-governing lines was inaugurated in many counties. One of
the Puritan leaders, Robert Browne, established a conventicle,
independent of episcopal authority, at Norwich.
Separatism or independence became the watchword of a formidable band of
clergymen and laity, who called themselves Brownists,
after the name of Robert Browne. It was forcibly argued that Church discipline
was dependent alone on the word of Scripture. "The discipline of Christ's
Church," wrote Cartwright, the main advocate of Presbyterianism, "that is necessary for all times is delivered by Christ, and set down in the
Holy Scriptures. Therefore the true and lawful discipline is to be fetched from
thence, and from thence alone. And that which resteth upon any other foundation ought to be esteemed unlawful and counterfeit.
The unity of the Church, and with it the unity of the nation were in imminent
peril.
To the Queen all zeal or fanaticism was obnoxious. Of a cold,
intellectual temperament, she ignored the warmth of spiritual feeling which
moved her Puritan subjects. Her worldly nature was antagonistic to strict
Puritan theories of life. Moreover the nonconformists appeared to her to call
in question one of her cherished prerogatives. She set immense store by the Act
of Supremacy, which made her the head of the episcopal establishment. Supreme authority in ecclesiastical matters was for her no less
valued a possession than supreme authority in secular politics. She identified
the rising tide of Puritan enthusiasm with lawlessness and rebellion, and
sternly prohibited the Puritan majority of the House of Commons from meddling
with religious topics. She deemed it a primary duty of government to enforce at
all hazards on the Protestant clergy and laity the law of the land, as embodied
in the Acts of Uniformity and Supremacy. All questioning of the principles on
which the religious establishment was based was in her eyes intolerable "presumption" or frivolous "newfangledness".
Grindal, who feebly temporised with dissent, was suspended from his archiepiscopal functions for five years (1577-82), and within a few months of his restoration
he died. Grindal's successor, Whitgift,
was a different type of churchman. If a resolute will and a genius for
discipline in the chief ecclesiastical officer of the realm could restore unity
to the divided Church of England, there could be no misgivings as to the result
of Whitgift's promotion. He had first come into
public notice as the strenuous opponent of Cartwright, the leading champion of
Presbyterian forms of Church government, and had contrived to drive him
temporarily from the country. A certain inconsistency of personal sentiment
distinguished the new Archbishop. With those theological doctrines of Calvinism
which were unconcerned with forms of Church government or ceremonies of public
worship he was himself in agreement; but in the justice and necessity of
episcopacy he faithfully believed, and no private predilections for Calvinistic
theology touched his conceptions of ritual or discipline. The maintenance of
the royal supremacy, of episcopal authority, of
uniformity of practice in the Church, was the primary article in his
ecclesiastical creed.
Whitgift's policy of repression [1583-6
Whitgift was
Archbishop of Canterbury from 1583 till the year following the Queen's death,
and he powerfully impressed his strong personality on the internal history of
England during the last years of the Queen's reign. He did not underrate the
value of external dignity. Possessed of a private fortune, he restored to the
primacy something of the feudal magnificence which had characterised it in earlier days. He maintained an army of retainers, and conducted his
visitations in princely state. He practised a lavish
hospitality. At once he won the full confidence of the Queen, whose sense of
the importance of dignified etiquette increased with her years. She was
frequently the Archbishop's guest at Lambeth; she
playfully called him "her little black husband", and until her death
the amity between them rarely knew interruption.
The stifling of Puritanism, especially in the ranks of the clergy, was Whitgift's accepted function. All opponents of the
established discipline, all critics of the established ritual, merited
punishment as disturbers of the public peace. No fear of stirring up intestine
strife was suffered to stay his heavy hand. He enunciated his convictions in
the first sermon which he preached after he became Archbishop, at St Paul's
Cross. The occasion was the annual celebration of the day of the Queen's
accession on November 17, 1583. His text sufficiently declared his policy. It
was 1 Corinthians, VI. 10: "Railers shall not
inherit the kingdom of Heaven". A direct acknowledgment of the Act of
Supremacy, a strict obedience to the Book of Common Prayer and to the
Thirty-nine Articles, were enjoined on every minister of religion under the
heaviest penalties for default. No laxity was permitted. No conscientious scruples
were respected.
No scrupulous sense of justice was suffered to interpose
obstacles to the fulfillment of Whitgiffs purpose. Under his influence the Court of High Commission did its work with
greater energy than before. Its powers were stringently employed with a view to
discovering heretics and schismatics, and subjecting
them, if detected, to deterrent punishment. Whitgift advised the administration to suspected ministers of an oath (called the oath ex officio), which bound them to confess on
examination all breaches of the law of which they were guilty. The practice of
forcing a man to convict himself of offences imputed to him has always excited
disgust in England. The Archbishop's high-handed policy consequently evoked
heated protests, not merely from the clergy and from many members of the Court
factions, but from the House of Commons and responsible officers of State. Even
Lord Burghley complained that Whitgiffs ex officio oath "too much savored of the Spanish
Inquisition". The method lacked charity; it was not likely, the Lord
Treasurer pleaded, "to edify or reform". But the Archbishop was
obdurate and declined all suggested modifications. He replied to Burghley's
criticism: "I know your Lordship desireth the
peace of the Church, but it cannot be procured after so long liberty and lack
of discipline if a few persons [i.e. the Puritan ministers], so meanly
qualified as most of them, are countenanced against the whole state of the
clergy."
Finally, the Archbishop put the seal on his repressive policy by an
attack on the liberty of public criticism. He secured early in 1586 the passage
of an ordinance by the Court of Star Chamber, prohibiting under severest
punishment any printer from putting any manuscript into type until it had been
licensed by himself or the Bishop of London. Over the Stationers' Company,
which had been licensed by royal charter of Queen Mary to regulate the printing
trade, the Archbishop asserted the fullest control. The number of presses was
to be diminished to such a number as he and the Bishop of London should deem
convenient; and their episcopal approval was decreed
to be necessary to the choice of new master-printers for admission to the
privileges of the craft. At the same time the Archbishop made it clear that,
should such provisions as these fail to produce the needful effect, it was
always possible to fall back on the statute passed in 1581, whereby the
publication of seditious or slanderous words was punishable on a first offence
by the pillory and prison, and on the second offence by death.
At a first
glance, the cause of Puritan dissent seemed unlikely to escape the toils with
which the new Archbishop encircled it. Under his vigorous leadership the
Bishops asserted their authority with unprecedented activity. John Aylmer,
Bishop of London, exceeded Whitgift in the violence
and rigor with which he ruled his clergy Soon after
the defeat of the Spanish Armada, on February 9, 1589, Dr Richard Bancroft, a
member of the Court of High Commission, who became eight years later Bishop of
London, and was ultimately Whitgift's successor in
the archbishopric, declared in an uncompromising sermon at St Paul's the Divine
Right of Bishops and their apostolical succession.
Resistance to episcopal dominion was identified by
the governors of the Church with heresy, and any truce on their part with
Puritan practices was denounced as sin.
Whitgift and his
friends were in the habit of asserting that Protestant dissent affected a very
small minority in the country, and its extirpation was merely a question of
administration. They ignored the plain fact that Puritanism had gained too
powerful a hold on the nation's sentiment to yield to force. Whitgift's policy stimulated the Puritans to new assertions
of their principles. The claims to independence or separatism were more
stringently defined and urged by their advocates; and though two of the
leading expounders, Henry Barrow and John Greenwood, who announced discipleship
to Robert Browne, were promptly imprisoned, their arguments remained unanswered.
Meanwhile a more direct mode of attack on the episcopal position was essayed. An endeavor was made to bring
home to the public mind the conviction that the ecclesiastical politicians, who
were committed to the paths of persecution and repression, were neglecting
their spiritual duties. This mode of assault was gradually developed and proved
peculiarly formidable.
1586-9] John Penry. The Martin
Mar-prelate controversy
While Parliament was in session in the late autumn of 1586, and chiefly
concerning itself with the attainders of overzealous champions of Queen Mary
Stewart, John Penry, a young Cambridge graduate of
Welsh origin, drew up in the form of a petition to Parliament an elaborate
statement, in which he described in moving terms the spiritual destitution of
Wales, and professed to trace the responsibility for the pagan ignorance that
prevailed there to the neglect of their just obligations by the Bishops and the
obedient clergy. Whitgift replied by summoning Penry before the Court of High Commission. But his offence
proved to be difficult of definition. The proceedings were inconclusive, and
the offender suffered only a few days' imprisonment.
The balance of victory lay with Penry, and the
attempt to silence him failed. Whitgift's repressive
régime naturally suggested to its victims clandestine attack. Anxious to pursue
his advantage from a position of greater safety, Penry resolved to undermine the credit of episcopacy. At the end of 1588 a small band
of Puritan clergymen and laymen, under Penry's guidance, devised a scheme whereby the country was deluged with secretly
printed denunciations of the personal characters and pretensions of the
Bishops, Printing-presses were set up in out-of-the-way districts, and a dozen
pamphlets were hastily prepared, all bearing the single pseudonymous signature
of "Martin Mar-prelate". The style employed by the writer was not
unknown in theological warfare. Insolent personalities had defaced religious
controversy earlier in the century; but the violent scurrility of the
Mar-prelate tracts followed the worst models of abuse. The private lives and
characters of the Bishops and their supporters were recklessly censured; and
they were likened to historical characters to whom universal odium attached
among churchmen. Whitgift, who received chief notice,
was declared to be more ambitious than Cardinal Wolsey, prouder than Bishop
Gardiner, more tyrannical than Bishop Bonner. The country was startled by this
open defiance of the recent endeavor of Whitgift and his colleagues of the High Commission Court
and Star Chamber to suppress freedom of speech. All the detective machinery of
the High Commission Court was at once set in motion, in order to track down and
break up the pamphleteering conspiracy. Whitgift conducted the operations in person. But the task proved difficult of
accomplishment. The Puritan advocates found numerous sympathisers,
and the libellers were effectively protected. For
more than a year they eluded pursuit of their episcopal foes.
Meanwhile Martin Mar-prelate excited reprisals in the press. It was
difficult for the Bishops and their friends to reply to the onslaughts of the
Martin Mar-prelate writers in the same unlicensed vocabulary. But they tacitly
welcomed the support of professional men of letters, including John Lyly and
Thomas Nash, to whom the preciseness and prudishness of Puritan ideals were
obnoxious. The "Anti-Martinists", as the
critics of Martin Mar-prelate were called, were not scrupulous in their
diction, and their intervention added fuel to the flames. The controversy went
on with increased ferocity. Each side lashed out at the other with vigor and received swingeing blows in return. Nonconformists of a philosophical turn regretted the
degradation of theological discussion. Moderate men of all parties agreed that
the interests of religion were compromised by the polemical vulgarities. But
the rival pamphleteers were thoroughly exasperated, and the fire had to burn
itself out. Whitgift and his officers redoubled their
exertions. But it was the exhaustion of the actors that mainly closed the
conflict. The net result of the pamphleteering war was to expose much weakness
in the episcopal armour.
The Bishops never succeeded in unravelling the whole
conspiracy. Only a few of the pamphleteers were hunted down. Penry escaped to Scotland for the time in safety. Public
opinion, so far as it could be gauged, deprecated harsh treatment of the
offenders; and, when John Udall, an aged minister, who was suspected of
complicity with Penry, was capitally convicted of a
seditious libel, he was promptly pardoned, although he died in prison. For the
moment he was the Bishops' only victim. Despite all the legal machinery at
their disposal, no means existed of avenging on a large scale this veiled
attempt at rebellion against episcopacy. But Whitgift was not to be readily deterred from his goal. He had experienced a check; but
the effect could be neutralised by greater vigour hereafter. In 1593 his opportunity arrived. Three
leaders of the Puritan army lay at his mercy. His action was swift and certain.
Henry Barrow and John Greenwood, separatists and censurers of the Book of
Common Prayer, who had long endured imprisonment, were tried and convicted, not
as offenders against the law of the Church, but under the secular statute which
was directed against disseminators of seditious libel. In the same year Penry was arrested in London and brought to trial, on a
vague charge of traducing the Queen in notes for a sermon which were said to
have been found in his study. The question of his complicity in the Martin
Mar-prelate controversy was not raised. But sufficient was held to be proved
against his loyalty under the criminal law of libel to warrant capital
punishment. Three of the most strenuous enemies of episcopacy were thus swept
from WhitgifVs path.
1590-3] The anti-Puritan Statute of 1593
But it was on the Parliament which met in the spring of 1593 that Whitgift relied to put the coping-stone to his repressive
policy. An Act was passed professing by its title to have the object of "restraining the Queen's subjects in obedience". It was directed in
unmistakable terms against Protestant nonconformists. Active support of
practices to which their principles impelled them, and the avoidance of
practices from which their principles restrained them, were alike declared
categorically to be heinous offences punishable by the heaviest penalties, not
excluding death. The Act included in its purview anyone who should dispute the
Queen's ecclesiastical authority, who should abstain from going to church, or
who should attend "any assemblies, conventicles or meetings under cover or pretence of any exercise of religion". Such
offenders were to be arrested and imprisoned until they gave a solemn assurance
of conformity. Should they fail to offer that assurance within three months,
they were to quit the realm, on oath not to return. If they refused to quit the
country on this condition, or if, having abjured the realm, they returned home,
they were liable to be hanged.
Legislation so stringent if put into force could not fail to reduce the
militant activity of nonconformity. Death was pronounced to be the doom of any
Puritan who was loyal to his convictions. If he set any value on his life, he
had to choose between renouncing his principles at home and adhering to them
abroad. Although the penal law of 1593 was administered with some reservation,
it went as far as was practicable towards the end that Whitgift had in view. Leading nonconformists who were unable conscientiously to submit
to the law of the Church quitted their homes. The less stalwart brethren were
at liberty to remain in England in the equivocal guise of conformists.
As far
as appearances went, the Anglican establishment was rendered homogeneous. The
bounds of the Church might be narrowed; but the Archbishop argued that, by way
of compensation for loss of numbers, she had gained the concentrated strength
that comes of unity. There were, however, limits to the triumph of episcopacy. Whitgift was unable to change the tendency of public
opinion which facilitated evasion of his oppressive law. Nor could he prevent
dissentients who openly left the fold from pursuing the agitation openly and
earnestly in a foreign country. The neighboring country of Holland eagerly welcomed the Protestant exiles. Separatist
congregations were formed at Middelburg, at Leyden, at Amsterdam; and there,
instead of recanting or forgoing any of their enthusiasm, English Puritans systematized the theological principles which Whitgift deemed fatal to the peace of their own country.
English Puritanism flourished in Holland in spite of Whitgift's efforts, and menaced the future of Whitgiffs Church.
Though manifestations of Puritan zeal might for the time be repressed at home,
its growth was not stayed. Abroad it enjoyed new and unembarrassed opportunity
of winning strength and consistency. By insisting on the irreconcilability of
Puritanism and Anglicanism, Whitgift had in effect
cleared the decks for a life and death struggle, and had indirectly and
involuntarily prepared the way for the temporary ascendancy of Puritanism in
the century, that followed.
But Whitgift was content with the instrument
forged by him against the spread of nonconformity in England. He deemed the
coercive power of the government sufficient, and during the final years of the
Queen's reign he turned his attention to schemes for improving the education of
the inferior clergy, and for the remedy of the abuses of non-residence. At the
same time he sought to confirm the independence of the Bishops' Courts, and he
protested against appeals from them to civil tribunals. He also, with apparent
self-contradiction, countenanced an endeavor to
reform the Creeds of the Church and impart to them a more pronounced
Calvinistic coloring. He wished to adopt the
doctrines of predestination and election without
qualification.
Whitgift had
always distinguished in his own mind between principles of theology and
principles of Church government. The offences at which he aimed in his penal
laws were active infringements of the political laws of the Anglican
establishment. He denied the title of martyrs of religion to his Puritan
victims. They suffered punishment because they had challenged the law of the
land and had rebelled against the cause of order. With a view to making his
theological position clearer, now that a delusive order was established, he, in
1595, summoned to Lambeth three Bishops and some old
Cambridge friends, and devised a series of nine Articles which modified on Genevan lines existing dogmas of the Church. They were
known as the "Lambeth Articles", and solely
involved questions of doctrine. No topics of ritual or discipline were touched.
But Whitgift's Lambeth Articles were never accepted by the Church of England. Queen Elizabeth showed a
surer grasp than her Archbishop of the needs of the ecclesiastical polity which
he had himself helped to frame. She hastily bade him disown a manifesto which
seemed to offend by its incongruity with his past action. He yielded to the
royal wish, and explained to her and to his friends that the new articles were
mere pious opinions of personal import, not designed to carry legal sanction;
but he at the same time assured his Cambridge friends with characteristic
resolution that "he did concur with them in judgment and would to the
end", nor would he suffer them to be impugned "openly or
otherwise."
1584-95] Bacon and Hooker
Few thoughtful men treated as final Whitgift's professed solution of the problem of Church government. To one sagacious
contemporary Whitgift's acts and arguments presented
as many false issues as might have been detected by an avowed champion, in the
seventeenth or eighteenth century, of comprehension or toleration. Bacon
entered the House of Commons in the year following Whitgift's acceptance of the office of Archbishop, and he at once surveyed the political
situation. He perceived the dangers of a Puritan schism; but to the policy of
repressing Puritanism by force he from the first announced himself as opposed.
He disclaimed any sympathy with the "preciseness" of Puritan
opinions. But it seemed to him that the Bishops were taking a dangerous course
in pressing too hardly on the Puritan clergy. Extreme measures of coercion
proclaimed to the world that the Protestant Church of England, which embraced
the nation, was a house divided against itself. Such a confession injured the
repute of the Queen and the country. In the second place, however little one
might approve the narrowness of Puritan doctrine, yet the Puritans were
stalwart enemies of the papist superstition, and by their preaching and
teaching formed a stout bulwark against the spread of Roman Catholic error. Whitgift and his colleagues ignored Bacon's pleas. But he
restated them in an Advertisement touching the Controversies of the Church of
England (1589), when the Martin Mar-prelate agitation was at its height. The
factious temper of the Puritans, he again asserted, merited no countenance; but
a rigid insistence on conformity among all English Protestants jeopardized the Protestant cause and the country's unity.
It was not, however, from the Bishops, nor from Bacon, that the most
imposing comments on the Puritan revolt proceeded. Richard Hooker, a student of
divinity, who held a small and ill-remunerated preferment, made a strenuous
effort to define the general principles which justified the predominance of the
Established Church and rendered untenable the Puritan position. Hooker wrote independently
of authority, though his effort was favourable to the
Church's pretensions, and consequently met with Whitgift's full approval. His Ecclesiastical Polity (1594-7), which was begun and
completed during Whitgift's archiepiscopate, is the
most important fruit of the contemporary struggle between Episcopacy and
Presbyterianism. Hooker went far beyond the immediate needs of the situation,
and made a contribution of first-rate importance to the theory of government,
both civil and ecclesiastical. He anticipated the great Whig doctrine of the
seventeenth century, that government had its origin in a primary contract
between the governor and the governed, and he endeavored to prove that the constitution of the Anglican Church rested on such an implied
contract, from which there was no right of withdrawal.
An Apologia for the
Church of England had come from the pen of Jewel, the learned Bishop of
Salisbury, at the opening of the Queen's reign, in 1562. But it was framed on
restricted lines. It mainly interpreted, in a sense favorable to the laws affecting the Reformation in England, a series of quotations from
the Scriptures, the Fathers, and the Councils of the medieval Church. Narrow in
conception, Jewel's Apologia only satisfied those who were already convinced,
and excited more dissent than agreement. Hooker appealed to his readers from a
wholly different point of view. He took little for
granted. He sought to show that scriptural authority was not in itself the sole
or the adequate test of ecclesiastical polity. In all relations of life man had
to seek guidance from reason as well as from the Divine revelation. There was a
moral law of Divine origin, which was not enshrined in the Bible; it was
deducible from other sources, and derived its sanction from man's rational
faculties. Christian Churches were under an obligation to organize themselves in conformity to both moral law and the scriptural word. Hooker's
ultimate object was to show that the creeds, ritual, and discipline of the
Episcopal Church of England had the sanction not merely of revelation but of
reason. He couched his arguments in language of singular force and dignity, and
by the cogency of his logical method, and command of learning, did far more
than any penal legislation to strengthen the Church of England. From many
points of view Hooker's work was in advance of the age and touched topics that
were not of pertinence to current affairs. It set on a firm and rational basis
the principles of orderly government. But Hooker addressed himself to a
minority of his countrymen. The holders of office were content to diagnose the
practical needs of the hour more roughly and readily than he.
1570-1] The political perils of Catholicism
The Queen's advisers had to deal not with Puritan dissent alone. They
had to face the enmity of the Roman Catholics. The relations of the government
with the English Roman Catholics both at home and abroad stood on a footing
different from that of their relations with the Puritans. Like the Puritans,
the Catholics were dissentients from the Established Church. But the
Elizabethan politician, while hostile to their theological opinions and
practices, did not view them primarily as religious nonconformists or enemies
of the Church. In his eyes they stood outside the ecclesiastical fold, and
there was no likelihood of their inclusion within it. They were dissentients
from the State rather than from the Church; they were political rather than
religious foes. However pacific were the sentiments or habits of many
professors of Catholicism resident in England, the English government reckoned
all members of the faith to belong to a single category. In the eyes of the
Queen and her advisers they were all strangers in the land, owing allegiance to
a foreign power; they formed collectively an advanced guard of a foreign army
which threatened invasion. Thus the Roman Catholic problem was an urgent
political danger. Its solution did not fall within the ecclesiastical sphere,
but solution was the first duty of the secular power in the country. There was
much to justify this view. Pope Pius V had in 1570 issued a Bull releasing the
subjects of Queen Elizabeth from their fealty to her. That edict was never
revoked. Pius V's successors, Gregory XIII and Sixtus V, treated it as of actively binding force. The Jesuits engaged as a body to do
all that was possible to give effect to the papal decree. Philip II of Spain subsidised a strong force of English Catholics abroad, who
were pledged to support the invasion and conquest of England. Both the Pope and
the King of Spain undertook to lend material aid to the Irish rebels.
Queen Elizabeth's ministers were all agreed that in stringent coercive
legislation lay the only safeguard against the Catholic peril; and they gave
thoroughgoing effect to their conviction. In the last half of the reign, the
urgency of the danger seemed to justify the expansion of the criminal law so as
to cover every manifestation of Catholic sympathy. The observance of the
ceremonies of the Catholic Church and the education of the children of Catholic
parents in Catholic doctrine became legal offences. The rigor of the penalties at length menaced the property, the liberty, and even the life
of every adherent of the faith.
The Act of Supremacy provided at the opening of the reign for the
capital punishment of anyone denying the Queen's headship of the Church. But it
was not till the year following the promulgation in 1570 of the papal Bull
releasing the Queen's subjects from their allegiance that the Elizabethan era
of penal legislation against the Catholics may be reckoned to have set in.
Another ten years intervened before the work acquired full strength. The
Parliament of 1571 replied to the action of Pius V by two statutes, of which
the first rendered it treasonable to call the Queen a heretic, schismatic, or usurper,
and the second punished with death the introduction into the country of any
papal Bull.
Meanwhile the English Catholics abroad were, under papal patronage,
forging an elaborate scheme for the reconversion of the country to Catholicism.
The militant leader of the English Catholics on the Continent was Father
William Alien. His chief contribution to his cause was the foundation in 1568
at Douay of a college or seminary for the preparation of Englishmen for the
Catholic priesthood. Alien's college was temporarily transferred for greater
security to Rheims for the fifteen years 1578-93;
but until 1585 he remained its active head. By his influence, too, an offshoot
of the Douay establishment was formed at Rome in 1577, and was ultimately
placed by the Pope under the government of the Jesuits, with whom Alien was in
full sympathy. Both the English colleges of Douay and Rome were designed to
supply an English mission, an army of priests that should spread themselves
over England, and reconcile the people to the Papacy.
Between 1574 and 1580 some hundred priests from the two seminaries had
come to England; and the work of reconversion was reported to have begun. In
July of the latter year the Jesuits Parsons and Campion arrived to take chief
command, and the movement acquired new vigor. The
English government deemed it needful to take action. A proclamation was at once
issued imposing the penalty of death on any Jesuits or seminary priests who
entered the Queen's dominions, and on any person harboring them there; the seminaries were warmly denounced as places for the propagation
of sedition. But the proclamation proved ineffective. The influence of the
missionaries grew. In the following year (1581) Parliament was called together
to strengthen the government's hands. An Act was passed, in the words of the
title, "to retain the Queen's Majesty's subjects in their due
obedience". Various clauses provided that any person reconciling another
to the Church of Rome was a traitor, while the convert was pronounced guilty
of mis-prision of treason, and was also liable to the
capital penalty. Fine, or imprisonment in default, was imposed on any persons
either saying or hearing mass.
1585-93] The loyal Catholics
The Act was at once put into execution, and thirteen persons, including
the Jesuit leader of the mission, Campion, were convicted under its provisions.
The sentence of death was passed upon all, and was carried out in the case of
ten, Campion being one of those who suffered. The three whose lives were spared
formally renounced the deposing power of the Pope. But the missionaries were
not easily daunted. The threats of invasion by Philip II and the intrigues
which centred in Mary Stewart rendered the general
political situation alarming. The government deemed it necessary to give statutory
force to the harsh proclamation of 1580, which forbade the presence of Jesuits
or seminary priests in the country. In 1585 Parliament decreed that all Jesuits
and seminary priests were to leave the kingdom within forty days, under the
capital penalty of treason. Catholic laymen who received priests into their
houses, or gave them any kind of assistance, were declared guilty of felony,
and were rendered liable to punishment by death. All students in the foreign
seminaries were to return home within six months, and take the oath of supremacy,
or be declared traitors. On their return and acceptance of the oath they were
forbidden to come within twelve miles of the Court for ten years. Persons who
sent youths to foreign seminaries were to forfeit £100,
and to incur the penalties of praemunire if they
forwarded money to any student already there. Seminarists were pronounced incapable of inheriting property from those who provided them
with cost of maintenance abroad.
In this Act of 1585 "against Jesuits,
seminary priests, and other suchlike disobedient persons "the tide of the
anti-Catholic penal legislation reached its high-water-mark. Among priests and
the harborers of priests it claimed a heavy toll of
victims in almost every one of the eighteen years that remained of the Queen's
reign. But the legislation did not answer all the expectations that were formed
of it. It proved inadequate to suppress Catholic worship. In spite of the
coercive restraints of law, it was still found possible to perform
clandestinely the ceremonial observances of the Catholic faith. Another turn of
the screw was needed to meet such evasion of the intention of the legislature.
In 1593 Parliament once again devoted its attention to "Popish
recusants". They were ordered to keep within five miles of their own houses; a fine of twenty pounds a month was imposed on any omitting to attend the
services in the parish church; inability to pay this fine was to be punished
by banishment; and, should the offenders refuse to leave the country, they
were to be tried for felony. One chance of escape from this repressive measure
was, however, offered to those whom it affected. A formal recantation of their
beliefs in the parish church would entitle them to pardon.
Despite the pertinacity with which the government pursued their coercive
policy, neither its prudence nor its justice went unchallenged in the Queen's
closing years. The coercive policy was based on the assumption that all
Catholics were politically hostile to the Queen, and were at one with Alien and
the Jesuits in seeking her deposition and the conquest of the country by Spain.
The patriotic action of the Catholics at home through the crisis of the
Spanish Armada proved the weakness of this assumption. In the hour of peril the
English Catholics placed loyalty to their Queen and country before all other
considerations. Catholic priests and laymen joined their Protestant
fellow-countrymen in concerting measures for the defeat of the threatened
invasion. The injustice of imputing treachery to the whole Catholic population
was proved beyond question. By the government and nation at large that
revelation was grudgingly received, and only a few men of sagacity acknowledged
the manifest fact. To meet the just needs of the situation some test was
clearly required to distinguish between those who set fealty to the Queen above
allegiance to the Pope, and those who allowed their religious obligations to
override all patriotic sentiment. Francis Bacon grasped the situation more
completely than anyone else then in public life. At the outset of his career he
urged that only those men deserved to be treated as traitors who declined to
bear arms against a foreign invader. An oath should therefore be imposed on all
Catholics, binding them to take up arms in the Queen's name against the Pope or
any foreign Prince who should threaten England's independence. Anyone who
declined to make the solemn declaration deserved the stigma of treachery; but
no other persons ought to be molested. The suggestion was statesmanlike and
craved serious attention. But those in authority were suspicious of arguments
that savoured of toleration; to the Protestant
conscience the Catholics were disciples of a papal Antichrist. Loyal and
disloyal Catholics continued to suffer persecution alike.
Not that Bacon's
point of view could be wholly ignored by the Queen's ministers. Loyalty among
the English Catholics steadily grew after the Armada. A large and increasing
section showed a hearty dislike of the prospects of foreign dominion, and
openly disclaimed sympathy with the disloyal intrigues of the leaders of the
party abroad. It was impossible that Elizabethan statesmen should close their
eyes to the change of sentiment which was moving a large part of the Catholic
community in England and was leading the way to a revolution in its whole
internal economy. The fact that the Catholic conspirators conducted their
operations at a safe distance from England, outside the scope of the penal
laws, was diminishing their credit with Catholics resident in England. It was only
the missionaries in England and their followers who were exposed to risk of
death or imprisonment. A hope was arising among some of them that if they
disowned their disloyal leaders they might yet exercise their religion in peace
in their native land. Aspirations such as these, in spite of the unreadiness of the Queen's ministers to acknowledge it,
brought on a new phase of the Catholic question as the Queen's reign drew to
its end.
The Catholic leaders abroad never withdrew from their original position.
They naturally recognised an added danger to their cause in the spread of loyal
sentiment among their fellow Catholics in England. A strong resident Catholic
party, which should be ready to support a foreign invader, was essential to the
success of their plans. The growing signs of loyalty among English Catholics at
home were disconcerting to the political intriguers, but they preferred to risk
division in the Catholic ranks rather than abate their hostility to Queen
Elizabeth's government.
1587-1601] The appointment of an Archpriest in England
The leaders of the English Catholics abroad clung with vehemence to the
policy of violence in which they placed all their hope. Father Alien had been
made a Cardinal at the request of Philip II before the despatch of the Armada, in order that, so soon as the conquest of England was
accomplished, he might reorganize the English Church
on a Catholic basis. He never modified his position, although he withdrew after
the rout of the Spanish fleet from political agitation. His mantle as the chief
instigator of foreign aggression fell on the Jesuit Robert Parsons, who
excelled his predecessor in his passionate advocacy of a policy of physical
force. He had won the ear of Philip II, and until the King's death in 1598
persistently urged him to renew the old schemes of invasion. Parsons paid small
heed to the rising spirit of loyalty among English Catholics; he thought to
shout it down. But his uncompromising action had an effect quite opposite to
that which he intended. The increasing heat with which he continued to preach a
crusade against Protestant England in printed books as well as by word of mouth
precipitated a schism in the ranks of English Catholics at home and on the
Continent. Parsons insisted on the doctrine that the Pope's Bull of deposition
justified the Queen's assassination. Catholics in England who had rallied round
the Queen in the time of the Armada viewed his arguments with constantly
increasing dismay. His sinister influence fanned the flame of intestine strife
throughout the Catholic world; and, while his malignity kept the English
government on the alert, it greatly diminished the dangers to be apprehended
from Catholic intrigue. Parsons' supporters in England made at his instance a
desperate bid for the control of the Catholic mission there. The extreme
faction petitioned Rome for the appointment in England of a Catholic Bishop,
who should enforce disloyal doctrine on all English Catholics. The Vatican was
at the moment reluctant actively to pursue its old quarrel with the English
government; but under Jesuit pressure the Pope agreed to create a new office,
that of Archpriest. This dignitary was invested with large powers over the
English secular clergy, a majority of whom favoured a
policy of peace.
The papal choice fell on George Blackwell, a secular priest, who was a
partisan of the Jesuits. His nomination (1598) was regarded as a triumph for
the aggressive party. But it proved a doubtful victory. The English government,
without committing itself to any modification of its coercive methods, intervened
with some astuteness in the internal quarrel and endeavored to draw from it an advantage for themselves in their conflict with the Catholic
Powers abroad. At least it seemed feasible with the aid of the pacific faction
to patch up the long-standing quarrel with the Vatican. The leaders of the
English mission had been placed in comparatively easy confinement at Wisbech Castle, and facilities were given to them in 1601
for the despatch to Rome of a delegation of four
representatives of the pacific clergy, who were anxious to appeal for the
cancelling of the Archpriest's appointment. The arguments which the four
delegates urged on the papal judges were all that the Queen's ministers could
have wished. It was explained to the Cardinals that disloyal Catholic books had
brought odium on the Church in England and provoked persecution; that attempts
to reduce England by force had greatly injured the position of the faithful
there; that the withdrawal of the Jesuits from the Courts and camps of princes
and a prohibition of their interference in secular politics were essential to
the security of Catholicism in England. But the Vatican was not prepared for
any thoroughgoing accommodation. All that the delegates could obtain from the
Pope was the cancelling of the clause in the Arch-priest's instructions which
bade him take counsel of the Jesuits. An official declaration against political
intrigue was refused; the Archpriest was left at liberty to organise English Catholics for rebellion, at his
discretion.
The proceedings seemed to Sir Robert Cecil and his colleagues to justify
their settled policy of coercion which had for a moment caused some of their
friends misgivings. Coercion had never been relaxed and was applied with
greater rigour as the Queen's death approached. An
Act of Parliament had in 1597 excepted from a somewhat illusory general pardon
all schismatics, heretics, and offenders against the
ecclesiastical government of the realm. No Catholic benefited by the Queen's
clemency. In 1598 an alleged conspiracy against her life was discovered; and,
although it is doubtful whether there was any genuine ground for alarm, the
episode was used as an excuse for refurbishing the persecuting machinery.
Edward Squire, a man of no account, who had held a post in the royal stables,
was charged with having, at the instigation of a priest, rubbed poison on the
pommel of the Queen's saddle with a view to her assassination. The evidence
against Squire was far from conclusive; but he was executed, and the public
was duly impressed with the danger of the situation, when a special order of
prayer and thanksgiving to celebrate the Queen's escape was directed by the
Council to be read in all churches. After the failure of the delegates of the
pacific Catholic party to obtain from Rome any condemnation of the disloyal doctrines of the Jesuits, a proclamation was once
more issued banishing Jesuits and secular priests alike from the country on
pain of death.
The position of Parliament [1597-1601
In the course of Queen Elizabeth's reign Parliament met only eleven times.
During the first thirty years it met seven times, during the last fifteen four
times. With the rarest exceptions, each Parliament was dissolved at the close
of a single session, which lasted on the average for six weeks. The national
legislature enjoyed little independence. The majority of the members of the
House of Commons were nominated by the Queen's responsible ministers; and any
attempt on the part of constituencies to assert the right of a free choice of
representatives was sternly reprobated. In 1597 Sir Robert Cecil officially
warned the boroughs through their mayors against returning "unmeet
men"; should such persons be sent up to the House of Commons, there would
be "occasion", the Queen's secretary wrote, "to enquire by
whose fault it so happened". The Queen deemed it the sole business of
Parliament to vote supplies and to register without criticism or demur the
decisions of herself as explained to Parliament by her ministers. "It is
her Majesty's pleasure", the Lord Keeper stated at the opening of the
Parliament in the spring of 1593, that "the time be not spent in devising
and enacting new laws, the number of which are so great already, as it rather burtheneth than easeth the
subject." Money was required for the better protection of the country from
threatened invasion. There was no reason why the Commons should concern
themselves with anything else. Yet, despite all the precautions taken by the
government to restrain freedom of election or debate, much independent
criticism of the Queen and her advisers managed to pass the lips of members of
the House of Commons. It was only on one domestic subject that the bulk of the
nation, so far as their views could be gauged by the declarations of
Parliament, invariably seemed enthusiastic supporters of the government. Doubts
of the necessity or prudence of the penal legislation against the Catholics
were never countenanced by the House of Commons.
The economic condition of the
country during the last years of the reign caused national concern. Public
opinion asserted itself, and ministers were unable to resist a widespread
desire among the people to bring economic grievances under the notice of
Parliament, in spite of the Queen's impatience of parliamentary interference in
affairs of State and her preference for enforcing her royal will by means of
proclamation rather than by parliamentary statute. Bad harvests were of
frequent occurrence; agricultural labor was at a
discount owing to the steadily progressing conversion of arable land into
pasture. Inhabitants of the villages were crowding into the towns. Men who had
engaged in the foreign wars vainly sought employment on their discharge. The
scarcity of employment was a constant menace to internal peace. It was with
great reluctance that the government squarely faced the economic problems that
beset the nation. The maintenance of the status quo was the only principle that
appealed to them. In 1580 the Queen endeavored to
stem the incursion of new-comers to London by a proclamation forbidding the erection
of any more houses there. Nine years later Parliament took the matter in hand,
and in the spirit of the Queen's proclamation forbade the erection of any
cottage unless four acres of land were attached to it. No new cottage,
moreover, might be in habited by more than a single family. Such measures,
designed to keep the people distributed on the land, were ill-adapted to check
the migration of the proletariat in search of work or to keep stationary the
population of the towns. The causes of the popular restlessness were not faced.
Later, it became necessary to approach more directly the problem of the
unemployed. The policy of coercion was invoked. A law for the rigorous
punishment of rogues, vagabonds, and sturdy beggars categories which were easily held to include the unemployed poor-was passed early in 1598.
But the evil was not stayed. At length, in the last Parliament of the reign,
the economic distress among the lower ranks of the population called for more
effective treatment from the people's representatives. The result was a piece
of legislation of the highest importance in the social and economic history of
the country. The government acknowledged the responsibility of providing
sustenance for that part of the nation which was unable to maintain itself. In
every parish a body of overseers of the poor was created. These officers were
to consist of the churchwardens together with from two to four householders to
be nominated by the justices of the peace. The overseers were empowered to levy
a rate on land, and with the proceeds to put to employment able-bodied men out
of work together with indigent children. Persons who were incapacitated for
work and had no near relatives to support them were to be relieved. Finally,
houses of correction were to be built for the reclamation of vagabonds, and
pauper children were to be apprenticed to trades. This Elizabethan poor-law was
a very practical contribution to the solution of a pressing economic problem;
and the principles on which it rested have never been abrogated by subsequent
legislation.
But it was not only among the labouring classes that economic distress bred discontent and insecurity. The commercial
classes complained bitterly of the demands made on them by the government. Many
quasi-legal devices were resorted to by the Queen in her last years. The
Council often raised money for the country's defences without appeal to
Parliament, and protests were not unfrequent. In 1596
a royal letter directed the mayor and aldermen of London to fit out ten new
ships. The Lord Mayor replied with a remonstrance to the Privy Council, in
which complaint was made of the excessive demands of recent years. The City's
wealth was diminished owing to a three years' dearth of corn. "Many
persons", the Lord Mayor continued, "before known to be of good
wealth, are greatly decayed and utterly disabled for all public service, being
hardly able by their uttermost endeavours to maintain
the charges of their private families in very mean sort." But such appeals
failed to move the Queen's ministers, and the discontent grew. Next year, the
Lord Mayor pointed out that the money borrowed by the government from many
citizens for the equipment of the Cadiz expedition had not yet been repaid. The
Lord Mayor reported to Sir Robert Cecil that there was great anxiety among the
citizens to "enter into consideration, by what authority the said payments were imposed upon them by the governors
and other ministers of State."
1593-1601] The Queen and monopolies
At the extreme end of the reign the Queen was herself roused to a sense
of the imprudence with which in one notable direction she had exerted her
fiscal powers. She had long been in the habit of granting to ministers and favorites the sole right to manufacture and sell one or
other article of commerce, with the result that the monopolist had it in his
power to raise the price of the monopolised articles,
to the injury of the consumer. The grievance was always real; but by the
Queen's reckless distribution of patents of monopoly in the last decade of her
life it had become an intolerable burden on the nation. When Elizabeth's last
Parliament assembled in October, 1601, strenuous complaint was made in the
House of Commons of the undue exercise of the prerogative in the matter of
granting monopoly patents. An Act was introduced by a private member, Lawrence
Hyde, declaring monopolies illegal and extortionate. Great frankness characterised the debate; the grants of monopolies were
declared to be derogatory to her Majesty, odious to the subject, and dangerous
to the commonwealth; the grantees were denounced as bloodsuckers of the
commonwealth. The Queen perceived at once the seriousness of the situation, and
showed infinite resource in her method of meeting the crisis. The Bill was well
received in the House and had reached its committee stage, when the Queen sent
down a message of singular astuteness. She understood, she declared, that the
patents which she had granted were grievous to her people; they should be
looked to immediately, and none be put into execution but such as should first
have a trial according to the law, for the good of the people; she was resolved
to defend her people from all aggression, and would take immediate order for
the reformation of the grievance.
The tone of the message stemmed for the
moment the tide of discontent. The tables were completely turned. Her
superiority to parliamentary power was asserted with the full assent of the
House of Commons. If genuine grievances needed redress she claimed the honour of performing the task, and that honour was thankfully accorded her. The parliamentary proceedings were abandoned.
Three days later the Queen by proclamation suspended all patents of monopoly,
until their legality should have been tested by the law officers of the Crown.
The whole House proceeded to Whitehall to thank her for her prompt action. In a
long, stirring speech she announced that her love for her people was the jewel
of richest price. She spoke with informal indignation of the oppressions of
which the patentees had been guilty, and declared that they should be well
punished. Her subjects' good was her sole aim in life, and she did not
wish to live or reign any longer than her life and reign should be for her
subjects' advantage. It was Queen Elizabeth's last speech to her people. There
was an equivocal ring in her heated condemnation of an oppressive practice for
which she was herself largely responsible. But the masterful, yet pathetic
assertion of her claim to her people's affectionate loyalty illustrated at once
the causes and the effects of her personal popularity.
The Royal Succession [1582-94
The physical activity and intellectual vivacity which the Queen showed
during her last Parliament remained unabated until within a few weeks of her
death, two years later. Her energy seemed to the nation at large to justify the
postponement of any final choice of a successor to her throne. It was not a
question that she would suffer to be discussed. In 1593 Peter Wentworth, a
member of the House of Commons, petitioned the House of Lords to join the Lower
House in a supplication to the Queen to entail the succession. Elizabeth
indignantly ordered the petitioner to the Tower, where he died three years
later. Yet in spite of the Queen's attitude to the subject, her ministers, her favorites, and the Catholic intriguers abroad were for
many years engrossed in secret by the critical topic which weighed unceasingly
upon their minds.
The Catholic intriguers long thought to find in a solution of
this doubtful and difficult question a final means of upsetting the equilibrium
of the State. Their chances of overthrowing Queen Elizabeth's government were
nearly extinguished. Their hopes of the future depended on their success in an endeavor to secure at her death a successor amenable to
their influence. The topic was one which naturally divided the two Catholic
factions. The party of peace desired to leave the problem of the succession
alone. Only the party of aggression regarded it as essential to solve it in
their own fashion. At first the choice of Cardinal Alien and his friends had
fallen on King James VI of Scotland, the son of Mary Stewart. Philip II and the
Duke of Parma had also been vaguely suggested, and a proposal was made to
support Arabella Stewart, a more reasonable claimant,
on condition that she should be married to the Duke of Parma. But these were
mere empty fancies ; and, when James of Scotland declared himself a Protestant,
it was necessary to seek elsewhere a candidate in the Catholic interest. On
Alien's withdrawal from active superintendence of the political business of the
Catholic party, Parsons, who stepped into his place, urged that Catholic
efforts should centre in the endeavour to place on
the English throne the Infanta of Spain, Philip II's
daughter. She was descended from John of Gaunt, whose second wife was a Spanish
Princess. In 1594 Parsons published under the pseudonym of "R. Doleman" an English tract entitled A Conference about
the next Succession to the Crown of England, which deeply stirred England and
indeed the whole of Europe. Here, after endeavouring to prove the right of the people to alter the line of succession on the ground
of religion and for other just causes, Parsons submitted to elaborate
examination the genealogy of the royal house and reached the conclusion that
the Infanta was Queen Elizabeth's rightful heir. By
the Queen's government the manifesto was promptly denounced as treasonable and
seditious, and its circulation in the country forbidden. The pacific Catholics
repudiated it as pestilential, and disclaimed any manner of sympathy with a
Spanish pretender to the English throne.
Parsons thought to take some obscure advantage of the rivalries of Court
factions by dedicating his insolent plea for the Infanta to the Earl of Essex. But both the responsible and irresponsible advisers of
the sovereign were agreed in the resolve to exclude a Catholic from the throne.
To the Queen the Infanta's name was of hateful
import, and it was only heard at Court when one favourite endeavoured to steal an advantage over another by
insinuating in the Queen's presence that his rival was toying with the fancy
that the Spanish Princess was fitted to become monarch of England. Essex had
long before his death made up his mind to support James of Scotland; and, when
his hopes of controlling the reigning sovereign dwindled, he thought to secure
future power by placing under some obligation to himself the Prince who was
likely to succeed Queen Elizabeth. He constantly assured the Scottish King that
he was working for his succession. But it was not Essex alone who set his heart
on the choice of James. Lord Burghley's son, Sir Robert Cecil, committed
himself to the support of the same candidate, and opened with him a secret correspondence
which, more effectual than that devised by Essex, ultimately set the Scottish
King on the English throne.
Elizabeth's defiant attitude of indifference to the question strikingly
illustrated the lack of consistency in her character. The Crown of the Tudors
had come to be regarded as the sovereign's personal property. It lay at the
testamentary disposition of the wearer. Henry VIII, Edward VI, and Queen Mary
each nominated with their dying breaths the person who was to succeed to the
royal estate. Edward VI's dying directions were, it is true, set aside; but
their rejection rested on a well-supported plea of his having submitted to
undue influence, and the accession of Queen Mary in the place of Lady Jane Grey
left the monarch's prerogative of choice in all essentials unquestioned. A
Tudor Parliament had, however much some members chafed in secret under royal
dictation, never refused to register the royal will. Thrice it sanctioned, at a
word from Henry VIII, the changes in the succession which his matrimonial
vagaries necessitated.
But no precedent succeeded in moving Elizabeth to confront the topic.
The terms which Wentworth had used in his suggestion of a petition to her
"to entail the succession" acknowledged her full ownership of the
royal estate, but such an admission failed to mollify her indignation at his
raising of the question. Strong as was her ultimate sense of public duty, it
failed her here. Her egotism blinded her to the dangers to which her refusal to
discuss the subject was likely to expose the State. The thought that her
dignities must, by the efflux of time, pass to another seems only to have
suggested to her the insecurity of her own tenure of them, and the coming
extinction of her authority. Such a prospect she could not nerve herself to
face.
Death of the Queen [1603
Twice during the reign-in 1571 and 1585-the word "succession"
found a place in Acts of Parliament. But both enactments were framed after the
Queen's own heart. Instead of indicating possible successors to the throne they
created disabilities in the case of all possible claimants. The work that the
Queen left undone her minister, Sir Robert Cecil, took upon his own shoulders.
The situation abounded in irony. A monarch whose jealousy of her prerogative
seemed often to reduce her ministers' authority to a shadow, left them, by her
own default, power to exercise at will one of the proudest of royal privileges.
Nor did Cecil, in definitely arranging that James VI of Scotland should succeed
to Elizabeth's Crown, defer to that settlement of the Crown which her father
had devised, the only settlement to which a legal sanction attached, apart from
the reigning sovereign's testamentary directions. There had been no repeal of
the stipulation made by Henry VIII, both in Act of Parliament and in his will,
that after the death without heirs of his three children, Edward, Mary, and
Elizabeth, the Crown should descend to the heirs of his younger sister, Mary
(who had issue only by her second husband, Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk),
to the exclusion of the heirs of his elder sister Margaret (from whom her
great-grandchildren, James VI of Scotland and Arabella Stewart, derived their claims). Consequently, the rightful heir, when Elizabeth
lay dying, was no scion of the Scottish House, but the eldest representative of
the Suffolk line-Princess Mary's great-grandson, Edward Seymour, Lord
Beauchamp. But Elizabeth's ministers were not the slaves of legal niceties. The
Queen's neutrality left their choice unfettered; and, though expectation of
personal profit largely moved them, their action proved politic. Lord Beauchamp
was a man of insignificant position and character; James VI, however
contemptible in many respects, had experience as a ruler, and a contiguous
kingdom to add to the endowments of the English Crown.
Every precaution to conceal the negotiation with Scotland from
Elizabeth's knowledge was deemed vital to its success. A word from her could
annul the plan, and her temperament might lead her to pronounce the word at any
moment. Often did Sir Robert Cecil tremble at the chance of her discovering his
design. The risk was great. Elizabeth, like himself, corresponded voluminously
with her Scottish "cousin," and the latter's replies were often
ill-considered. Fortunately no syllable about the succession escaped either
royal pen.
On Wednesday, March 23, 1603, the Queen was dying at Richmond, and her
Council then ventured a first and last despairing effort to obtain from her
such assent to their negotiations as would place James' title beyond cavil.
Representations have been made that the effort was successful; but there is
small ground for crediting the Queen, even in her last hours, with any
modification of her resolve to leave the subject of her succession severely
alone. The French ambassador is responsible for the statement that at an
earlier period of her illness she remarked that "the King of Scotland
would hereafter become King of Great Britain." More trustworthy witnesses
merely depose that on two occasions in her latest weeks, when the comments of
others in her presence compelled her to break silence, she took refuge in
oracular utterances which owe all their significance to the interpretation that
their hearers deemed it politic to place on them. Before leaving London for the
last time she is said to have told the Earl of Nottingham that "her throne
had always been a throne of Kings, and none but her next heir of blood and
descent should succeed her". Her next heir of blood and descent was, in the eyes of the law, Lord Beauchamp. The vague phrases attest her
settled policy of evasion. According to Sir Robert Carey, on the Wednesday
afternoon before her death at Richmond "she made for her Council to be
called, and by putting her hand to her head when the King of Scotland was named
to succeed her they all knew he was the man she desired should reign after her." Throughout her illness her hand had
passed restlessly to and from her head ; and a definite meaning could only
attach to the sign in the minds of those who, like the reporter, were already
pledged to seat James VI in her place. Her lady-in-waiting, Lady Southwell, gives a more disinterested account of this
episode of the Wednesday afternoon. The Council were not invited to the royal
presence, as Carey avers. They demanded admittance "to know whom"
the dying Queen "would have for King". She was hardly conscious and
could barely speak; but such preparation as her waning strength permitted for
the interview was made by her attendants. The councillors desired her to lift her finger when they named whom she approved. They
mentioned the King of France; she did not stir. They spoke of the King of
Scotland; she made no sign. They named Lord Beauchamp, the rightful heir under
Henry VIII's unrepealed settlement. Then only did
Elizabeth rouse herself, and with something of her old vivacity she gasped,
"I will have no rascal's son in my seat, but one worthy to be a
King." These are the only unquestioned words which afford any clue to the
Queen's wishes respecting her successor. At the best they are negative, and
cannot be tortured into a formal acceptance of James. The presence of her
Council at her bedside made her dimly realise that
her reign was over, and it is perhaps juster to
regard the utterance as a convulsive cry of anguish, wrung from her by the
thought that an unworthy successor had it in his power to work injury to her
fame. She died without speaking another word.
About 3 o'clock in the morning of the day following this interview
(March 24, 1603) Queen Elizabeth passed away in the seventieth year of her age
and forty-fourth year of her reign. Her father's and her own command of the
arts of sovereignty implanted in the mass of her people a deeply-rooted respect
for monarchical authority which rendered it easy for any accredited successor
to assume her throne. At the moment of her death some of the awe which she herself
inspired encircled those of her ministers whom she had honoured with her confidence. The spirit of passive obedience which she had nurtured in
the nation lent a validity that none contested to her Council's proclamation,
on the morning of her demise, of James VI of Scotland as the new monarch of
England. Prognostications of intestine strife seemed at once confuted. No
tumult followed, no contradiction, no disorders; every man went about his
business as readily, as peaceably, as securely, as though there had been no
change. The net result of the forty-four years of the Queen's reign thus
appeared to have set the monarchical principle of government on unshakable
foundations. But, even when James VI set forth from Edinburgh on his journey
south to enjoy his great inheritance, an intelligent observer might have
detected grounds for doubt of the monarchy's stability. The Tudor system of
rule was likened by an ambassador from Venice at the Court of Queen Mary Tudor
to that of the "Grand Turk" with his bureaucratic council; and there
was more to justify the comparison in the closing years of the century than in
its central decades. Elizabeth's political creed, even more avowedly than that
of her father, brother and sister, was the creed of despotism; and she held it
with increasing strength as time went forward.
In 1591, when she issued
letters-patent which set at defiance the ordinary law of the land regulating
the recovery of past debts, she wrote of "our prerogative royal which we
will not have argued nor brought in question." The country was frankly
governed by her unfettered will. Her councillors, by
whose advice and labor she profited, lived in dread
of her, and only retained her favor by a sickening tone of flattery and
obsequiousness. She acknowledged no power of restraint in Parliament. On rare
occasions she summoned her people's representatives together, not, as she told
them, "to make new laws, or lose good hours in idle speeches", but
to supply her treasury when threat of foreign invasion required that it should
be exceptionally full. Her appeal to Parliament was a concession rendered out
of the abundance of "her mercy and grace." By prescriptive right she
controlled revenues that sufficed for all the ordinary expenses of government,
while additional expenditure could be met with comparative ease by forced or
voluntary loans. In the result the people groaned under a taxation which was
rendered the heavier by a steady rise in prices and a fall in wages. Justice,
meanwhile, was administered with an almost oriental laxity. The Queen was
unsparing in her exercise of an arbitrary power of arrest, which constantly
involved persons obnoxious to her in restraint, without any pretence of legal
warrant. Finally, gross corruption flourished at Court and in the government
offices; and, if this sin could not be laid immediately at the Queen's door,
her own tendency to avarice caused her to view indulgently her servants'
venality.
But, although, Elizabeth's rule was infected by nearly all the vices of
absolutism, it had a saving grace. Her ruthless methods worked much oppression
and injustice, but her aim was noble. She regarded her "princely
authority" as an instrument given her by God wherewith to maintain her
kingdom in honor and prosperity. She intuitively
recognised that her ascendancy rested on her people's confidence in her ability
to exert her vast power for their good. She made no concealment of this
conviction. She never wearied of proclaiming her anxiety to secure her people's
happiness and her consequent title to her people's affections. "Far above
all earthly treasure," she said repeatedly, "I esteem my people's
love." The speech sank deep into her people's heart, and enlivened their
spirit, so that the heavy yoke of her government sat lightly on their necks. It
was the potency of her complex personality that alone made possible a
sovereignty like hers over a people alive with intellectual and physical
energy. The paradoxical union in her of the extremes of masculine strength and
feminine weakness fascinated a liberty-loving nation, and evoked an eager
acquiescence in the bondage of an unlimited monarchy. But with her death the
spell broke. Despotism, deprived of the halo of her genius, was seen in its
native ugliness. Her successor's graceless attempts at autocracy awoke in the
country a sense of loathing for irresponsible sovereignty, and, within half a
century of Elizabeth's death, despotism, such as she had practised,
was itself dead in England.
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